by Council Staff | Mar 12, 2026 | Add Council Logo, Council News, Press Release, Rachel Miller
Today, Providence City Council sponsors of the proposed rent stabilization ordinance announced a slate of amendments shaped by extensive public engagement, policy research, and stakeholder feedback.
The amendments respond to suggestions and feedback raised during multiple community listening sessions throughout the city, a public hearing that lasted more than five hours, and more than 700 written comments submitted to the City Clerk. Councilors also reviewed feedback from the Mayor’s administration, and from organizations including RIHousing, Stop Wasting Abandoned Property Inc. (SWAP Inc.), and the American Civil Liberties Union of Rhode Island (ACLU of Rhode Island).
The amendments clarify exemptions, elaborate on Rent Board procedures, address substantial rehabilitation and utility cost issues, and revise the ordinance’s treatment of new construction. Taken together, the proposed amendments fine-tune the ordinance, while preserving its central goal of ensuring rent increases are stable and predictable for tenants while maintaining clear pathways for property owners to address legitimate operating costs.
“Good policy is built through listening and careful refinement,” said Council President Rachel Miller. “Over the past several months, the ordinance has been shaped by the people who will live with it. We’ve heard from renters, nonprofit developers, property owners, and policy experts. These amendments reflect what we learned. They strengthen the proposal while keeping its core purpose intact: bringing stability to Providence’s rental market while ensuring property owners have the flexibility they need to maintain and invest in their buildings.”
The public is invited to submit additional comments on the proposed amendments or share their feedback at the Tuesday, March 17 meeting of the Special Committee on Health, Opportunity, Prosperity, and Education (HOPE) at 6 p.m. on the third floor of City Hall.
The following are key highlights of the proposed amendments.
New Construction Exemptions
The amendments modify the ordinance’s new construction exemption in several significant ways.
First, the base exemption period for new construction has been reduced from 15 years to 10 years. This preserves a fair transition period for new development while ensuring that units enter the rent stabilization framework within a reasonable timeframe.
Second, a longer 20-year exemption is made available for developments that meet strong labor standards. Projects where workers are paid prevailing wages and where at least 10% of total project hours are performed by registered apprentices will qualify for the longer exemption. This approach provides a pathway to a longer exemption for projects that create high-quality construction jobs, invest in local workers, support apprenticeship pipelines, and strengthen the state’s skilled building trades.
Third, the retroactive application of the exemption has been narrowed. Instead of applying to buildings up to 15 years old, the exemption will now apply only to units that received certificates of occupancy within five years prior to the ordinance’s effective date.
Together, these changes ensure that the exemption supports continued housing development while also strengthening local labor standards.
Affordable Housing Exemptions
The ordinance’s affordable housing exemptions have been revised based on feedback from nonprofit housing developers.
The updated language replaces the original provisions with clearer exemptions for deed-restricted affordable housing and publicly operated or project-based subsidized housing. These are clarifying amendments that match the language to the original intent.
The revised language incorporates the definition used in Rhode Island’s Low and Moderate Income Housing Act, which reflects the typical 30-year affordability restrictions used in most housing programs. It also distinguishes project-based assistance from tenant-based vouchers, which do not limit rent and therefore should not be exempted from the ordinance.
The amendments also direct the Executive Director of the Rent Board to maintain a limited registry of exempt units for transparency and administrative clarity.
Substantial Rehabilitation
The amendments add a clear definition and process for substantial rehabilitation, addressing concerns raised by RIHousing about how the ordinance would treat major renovation projects.
Substantial rehabilitation is defined as a comprehensive renovation that replaces or significantly upgrades at least two major building systems and where construction costs reach at least 15% of the property’s post-rehabilitation value. Cosmetic improvements, routine maintenance, or finish upgrades do not qualify. The amendments establish a process that allows property owners to petition the Rent Board to establish a new base rent for the first tenancy after a qualifying rehabilitation project is completed. In technical terms, it provides for the possibility of one-time vacancy decontrol in the case of substantial rehabilitation.
Utilities and Master-Metered Buildings
The sponsors also addressed concerns raised about master-metered buildings, where utilities are not separately metered and billed by apartment. This is common in older housing stock.
The ordinance already allows landlords to petition the Rent Board for above-standard rent increases based on documented operating cost increases, including utilities. To ensure this issue receives appropriate attention, the amendments now direct the Rent Board to specifically address relief for landlords of master-metered buildings in its rulemaking procedures.
Strengthening Rent Board Procedures
Several amendments clarify how the Rent Board will operate and adopt regulations.
These updates respond to feedback from the ACLU of Rhode Island and many individual testimonies. The amendments add advance notice requirements, a public comment period, a petition process allowing Providence residents to request rulemaking, and a limited emergency rule procedure. Additional changes clarify the roles of the Rent Board and its Executive Director, ensuring a clear distinction between the Board’s policy rulemaking authority and the Director’s day-to-day administrative procedures, and that the Board’s authority is final in the event of a conflict.
As the Council models a robust public feedback process on this ordinance, these changes signal to an incoming board the sponsors’ expectations that transparency and community engagement continue in earnest through the rulemaking process.
Budgetary, Legal, Administrative, and Minor Updates
Additional amendments make several technical, legal, and budgetary improvements to the ordinance.
The amendments establish compensation for Rent Board members, with a stipend starting at $10,000 per year for members and $12,000 per year for the chair. Limited compensation for the Board members is intended to recognize their unique and critical role in the ordinance’s successful enforcement.
In private meetings and public testimony, Mayor Smiley and his administration repeatedly criticized a line in the ordinance that Board funds “be sufficient to ensure full implementation of the Board’s duties.” The amendments remove this line to avoid creating an enforceable statutory obligation that the city cannot guarantee. Removing it does not in any way prevent nor discourage City Council from fully funding the Board with the resources it would need to be successful.
The amendments also modestly expand the owner-occupied exemption from properties with up to three units to properties with up to four units. This aligns the ordinance with federal mortgage standards used by programs administered by RIHousing, which treat owner-occupied properties with up to four units as small residential properties eligible for first-time homebuyer financing. This is intended to ensure the policy does not discourage owner-occupants from purchasing small multifamily homes.
A provision related to misinformation was removed following guidance from the ACLU of Rhode Island to avoid potential First Amendment concerns.
A complete redline of the proposed amendments is available here.
These amendments reflect months of research, community engagement, and policy refinement. Sponsors believe the updated ordinance represents a balanced, Providence-specific approach to addressing rising housing costs—providing stability and predictability for renters while ensuring property owners retain the ability to successfully manage their properties. As the proposal continues through the Council process, sponsors remain committed to a thoughtful public dialogue about how Providence can build more housing while protecting the residents who call the city home.
The ordinance will continue through the committee process in the coming weeks before returning to the full City Council for consideration. The next chance for community feedback will be at the HOPE committee meeting at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, March 17th.
by Council Staff | Feb 19, 2026 | Add Council Logo, Council News, Juan Pichardo, Press Release, Rachel Miller
Tonight, Providence City Council held a full meeting in the Council Chamber on the third floor of City Hall.
At the meeting, councilors unanimously passed a resolution urging the return of Providence public schools to local control. The resolution, introduced by Council President Rachel Miller (Ward 13), supports House Bill H-7414, which would provide for the return of the Providence Public School District to local governance by nullifying the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education’s recommendation that the turnaround plan be continued, and its Senate companion bill, entitled “An Act Relating to Education – The Paul W. Crowley Rhode Island Student Investment Initiative.” Should the state nullify the recommendation with these bills, local governance would return to PPSD on July 1, 2026.
Earlier this week, the Providence School Board unanimously passed a resolution calling for a return to local governance, which would fall under their jurisdiction. Mayor Brett Smiley included an end to the state takeover in his state legislative package last month. With this resolution, City Council demonstrates unity across city partners confirming readiness and eagerness for a return to local control.
“The Mayor, School Board, and City Council are on the same page here. Providence is ready to resume local control. We’re grateful to RIDE for all the work they’ve done with PPSD to help our schools and our students succeed in the long-term,” said President Pro Tempore Juan M. Pichardo (Ward 9). “Thanks to the Turnaround Action Plan, our students and teachers have made tremendous strides over the last several years. With the full support of the School Board, Mayor, and City Council, we’re confident in PPSD’s ability to keep this momentum going.”
This term, City Council has been a consistent partner in the turnaround of the Providence Public Schools, including by negotiating into the budget the largest increase in funding on record, by making massive investments in new and like-new school buildings, and by committing to maintain the funding obligations laid out in the 2024 settlement agreement. Copies of this resolution will be transmitted to the Office of Governor Daniel McKee, Speaker of the House K. Joseph Shekarchi, Senate President Valarie Lawson, and the Providence Delegation.
After receiving public comment in the Committee on Ordinances last week, councilors granted first passage to an ordinance amendment regulating building design standards. As part of the 2024 Comprehensive Plan, these updated standards would offer a guide to ensure new housing developments fit into the character of Providence’s distinct neighborhoods.
Councilors also granted first passage to updates to the utility permits ordinance that clarify and strengthen existing requirements on planned and unplanned emergency utility work. This quality-of-life measure aims to improve residents’ awareness of work schedules, expectations around clean-up, and overall accessibility.
Both ordinances will undergo a second vote at the next full City Council meeting on March 5, 2026.
In response to continued snow and ice obstructions at city bus stops, councilors introduced a resolution compelling the Rhode Island Public Transit Authority (RIPTA) to clear snowbanks from all bus stops, not just shelters. The resolution was referred to the Committee on Public Works .
In a continued effort to increase accessibility to City Council proceedings, Council now offers live Spanish translation. Constituents who would like to use the technology can scan a QR code or upload a link providing two options: they can either listen to translation from an AI voice, or they can read subtitles in Spanish. This will be available for use during every public meeting moving forward. The QR code will be available on the docket for City Council meetings, outside the Chamber, and on the home screen before each meeting. Languages other than Spanish or English can be accommodated upon request.
A regular meeting of the Special Committee on Health, Opportunity, Prosperity and Education will be held at 5:30 p.m. on Monday, February 23rd, in the Council Chamber on the third floor of City Hall. Councilors will discuss the rent stabilization ordinance, including the public testimony received via email and during the public hearing last night. The public and press are invited to attend, but there will be no public comment or vote during this meeting.
by Council Staff | Feb 5, 2026 | Add Council Logo, Council News, Jill Davidson, John Goncalves, Oscar Vargas, Press Release, Rachel Miller, Shelley Peterson, Sue AnderBois
Providence, RI – Tonight, the Providence City Council held a full meeting in the Council Chamber on the third floor of City Hall.
Councilors unanimously approved a resolution denouncing Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s campaign of aggression around the country, and specifically the unjust killings of Alex Pretti and Renee Good, who were tragically killed by immigration enforcement agents in Minneapolis. As communities organize to support and protect each other from these violent, reckless attacks, Providence councilors extend solidarity and support to the people of Minneapolis.
“Federal officers are leading a campaign of terror in Providence and around the country, violating the constitutional rights of residents en masse,” said Council President Rachel Miller (Ward 13). “Today we stand with Minneapolis, and we rise together to defend democracy here and everywhere by calling on our Congressional delegation to abolish an agency that is perverting the principles of justice and fair treatment under the law.”
As Providence residents continue to report difficulty navigating snow and ice on the city’s streets, several councilors introduced a resolution seeking information, reflection, and accountability on the City’s storm preparation and management. The City Council’s Committee on Public Works held a public meeting with DPW leadership to discuss the handling of the storm on Tuesday, February 3. The resolution, which requests a formal report from the Department of Public Works, was referred to the Committee on Public Works.
“Obviously, a combination of intense snow accumulation, extreme cold, and insufficient resources led to a less-than-stellar response by DPW,” said Councilwoman Shelley Peterson (Ward 14). “I look forward to reading DPW’s report so we can join the Administration in finding ways to improve our storm planning and management in the future.”
In response to reports that many stores in the greater Providence area have sold out of road salt, Councilman Oscar Vargas (Ward 15), who chairs the Committee on Public Works, presented a resolution requesting DPW distribute at least one ton of the city’s salt supply to residents to help clear sidewalks and driveways. The resolution was passed on the floor.
“Unfortunately, over the last week DPW’s plows have pushed snow into constituents’ sidewalks and driveways, causing accessibility issues,” said Councilman Vargas. “We’ve been experiencing extreme cold temperatures, and not all of the snow and ice has melted. With the lack of road salt available for purchase, we’re proposing that DPW provide some of their salt to Providence residents to melt the ice so pedestrians, strollers, and wheelchairs can once again get around safely.”
Councilors also introduced a resolution promoting sustainable and equitable funding for stormwater and sewer management. Providence has experienced 13 significant flooding events in the past three years that have endangered residents and damaged homes and businesses. In response, a Sustainable Stormwater and Sewer Assessment Study Task Force recommended establishing dedicated user fees for stormwater and sewer management. The resolution, which was introduced by Councilor Jill S. Davidson (Ward 2) and Task Force member Councilor Sue AnderBois (Ward 3), supports working in collaboration with the Administration to advance the task force’s recommendations, engage community members, and develop an implementation framework. It was referred to the Special Committee on Environment and Resiliency.
In a continued effort to advocate for safe, affordable housing, councilors heard two resolutions supporting state legislation that addresses housing issues. Councilors unanimously passed a resolution, introduced by Council President Miller, which supports $25 million general obligation housing bonds in the General Assembly. A second resolution introduced by Councilwoman Peterson supports H-7199 and S-2291, which amend the Residential Landlord and Tenant Act to allow victims of domestic violence and sexual abuse to terminate a lease early without penalty or liability. This resolution was referred to the Special Committee on State Legislative Affairs.
Councilors also unanimously approved a resolution introduced by Councilman John Goncalves (Ward 1) recognizing International Holocaust Remembrance Day, which took place on January 27, 2026. January 27th is the anniversary of the day the Red Army liberated the Auschwitz-Birkenau Nazi concentration and extermination camp.
Councilors approved Mayor Brett Smiley’s appointment of Andrew Bramson, President and CEO of Onward We Learn, to the Providence School Board for Region 1. Bramson is currently serving as the Board Chair of the Central Falls School District.
The next city council meeting will take place on February 19th, 2026.
by Council Staff | Jan 22, 2026 | Add Council Logo, Council News, Jo-Ann Ryan, John Goncalves, Juan M. Pichardo, Press Release, Rachel Miller
Providence, RI — Tonight, a majority of the City Council formally introduced the highly anticipated rent stabilization ordinance. This proposal was announced at an event on Tuesday, January 20th, with Council President Rachel Miller (Ward 13) and President Pro Tempore Juan M. Pichardo (Ward 9), other sponsoring councilors, landlords, renters, and housing advocates. Together, they emphasized the urgent need for this policy proposal. The ordinance was referred to the Special Committee on Health, Opportunity, Prosperity, and Education (HOPE), where there will be a robust public process including considerable opportunity for public input.
Just days after Brown University students returned to campus for the first time since December’s tragic shooting, councilors unanimously approved a resolution recognizing the countless first responders and community members who supported distressed students and neighbors during and after the attack. The heroic, generous efforts of the Providence Police Department, Brown University Department of Public Safety, RIPTA bus drivers, Brown staff, mutual aid networks, and others helped our community navigate this unprecedented tragedy with care and grace.
In addition, councilors unanimously approved a resolution supporting General Assembly legislation to raise the maximum reimbursement from PILOT aid from 27% to 30%, bringing much-needed revenue to the City following last year’s court settlement on school funding. The resolution was introduced by Councilman John Goncalves (Ward 1).
Councilman Goncalves also introduced a resolution urging passage of the 2026 Save RIPTA Legislative package in response to a $10 million budget deficit that affected 45 of the system’s 63 routes and reduced overall service by 15%. If enacted, the package would support the long-term health of the bus system and those who depend on it by providing reliable funding avenues and addressing capital improvement issues. The resolution was referred to the Committee on State Legislative Affairs.
The Council approved a resolution from Councilwoman Jo-Ann Ryan (Ward 5) establishing the Special Commission on the History of the Providence City Council. The commission will be tasked with the preservation of the Council’s institutional, legislative, and structural history, and with assembling and organizing records of the Council’s past actions, development, operation and governance practices to ensure their accessibility to the public and to current and future City leaders.
Rent Stabilization
Providence has the fastest rent growth in the country, even while the national median rent decreased. The median rent in Providence is 40% higher today than it was in 2020. Rising costs have forced working families out of the city and have directly contributed to rising rates of homelessness. Since March 2020, Providence has experienced more than 24,000 evictions. Between 2023 and 2024, Rhode Island experienced a 35% rise in homelessness, the second-highest increase in the country.
Sponsoring councilors developed the ordinance in order to create stability and predictability for Providence renters while supporting a healthy housing market. It allows owners of covered properties to raise rents up to 4% annually, includes exceptions for major tax increases and substantial capital improvements, provides for exemptions for a variety of properties including new construction and small owner-occupied buildings, and establishes a Rent Board to enforce tenant protections, grant exemptions to property owners, and resolve disputes. The ordinance is a balanced, Providence-specific approach—one that stabilizes housing for Providence families while ensuring property owners achieve a fair rate of return.
“Providence renters are cost-burdened—we are the least affordable city for renters in the country. We have to act now to create some stability for Providence families,” said Council President Miller. “This ordinance takes immediate action to give residents the breathing room they need. It stabilizes costs, slows a runaway rent pricing problem that will not regulate itself, and prevents our residents from being forced out of our city, all without slowing growth.”
Notable features of the Providence Rent Stabilization Ordinance include:
- Caps annual rent increases at 4%. A landlord cannot raise the rent by more than 4%, absent a special circumstance, in any 12-month period.
- Sets base rent as the rent charged 180 days before the ordinance takes effect, preventing last-minute price spikes before the law goes into force.
- Establishes a Rent Board to administer and enforce the rules. This five-member board and their staff will review landlord petitions for larger increases, hear tenant complaints, and ensure the ordinance is followed fairly.
- Tenants can report suspected violations and are protected from any landlord retaliation for exercising their rights. The Rent Board can roll back unlawful rent hikes, order landlords to refund overcharged rent, and the City can levy fines for serious violations.
- Exemptions for small, owner-occupied buildings with one to three units, such as duplexes and triple-deckers where the owner lives on-site. A narrow exemption for one additional small property owned by the same individual (not a corporation).
- A 15-year exemption for new construction, including currently existing buildings, to ensure that rent stabilization does not interfere with housing production or financing.
- Built-in flexibility for landlords to address major expenses. Owners can seek approval for a higher rent increase if they make significant capital improvements or have other special circumstances where a larger increase is necessary to ensure they can earn a fair return.
- Automatic flexibility for large property tax increases, allowing landlords to pass on a fair portion of unusually high tax hikes above a 5% threshold using a clear formula.
- Rent can only be increased one time by 4% when a tenant moves out and a new tenant moves in, maintaining stability through vacancies.
- Complaint-based enforcement, allowing tenants to report violations without creating a large new bureaucracy or annual reporting burden on property owners.
- Utility charges must reflect actual costs, ensuring that landlords may only pass through the real price of utilities and not mark them up.
- Properties must be up to code to qualify for annual rent increases, meaning landlords must maintain safe, habitable buildings in order to apply the standard 4% increase.
Since the start of the term in 2023, the City Council has invested $55 million in the City’s Affordable Housing Trust Fund, overhauled the City’s zoning policy to increase density citywide, and incentivized private development through tax stabilization agreements. These policies have brought hundreds of housing units to the City—in both deeply affordable income restricted developments and market rate new construction. The Council has also increased annual budget allocations to the City’s home repair program that provides forgivable no cost loans to residents to maintain their properties and made a one-time $3 million allocation to the program with American Rescue Plan dollars.
Last year, the Council’s Housing Crisis Task Force concluded a two-year investigation into the issues residents—including those at risk of homelessness—face in finding and keeping stable housing with the release of an extensive report, which included rent stabilization among its recommendations.
For answers to commonly asked questions, the councilors sponsoring the ordinance have put together an FAQ, which will be updated on the City Council’s website at council.providenceri.gov/housinghub/rentstabilizationfaq/. You can also read Council President Miller’s opinion piece in The Boston Globe from January 20th on how rent stabilization could help solve Providence’s housing crisis.
by Council Staff | Jan 21, 2026 | Add Council Logo, Council News, Press Release, Rachel Miller
In an op-ed published in The Boston Globe yesterday, Jan. 20th, City Council President Rachel Miller made the case for rent stabilization in Providence. The ordinance will be introduced officially at tomorrow’s City Council meeting. You can read the full op-ed here or at the Globe web site.
Ask any Rhode Island politician what their top priority is, and you’re likely to get the same answer: Housing.
For us local elected officials, the reason is clear. We hear the same thing from just about every person we speak with: “I can’t afford my rent.”
They’re not alone. Forty-seven percent of Providence renters are now considered “cost burdened,” meaning rent accounts for more than 30 percent of their income. According to an April rent.com report, from March 2023 to March 2024, Providence experienced the highest rent increase in the nation, with average rents rising by 16 percent.
The trend continued in January 2025, when a Redfin report named Providence the single least-affordable city for renters, who make up more than 60 percent of city residents. And, this month, according to apartments.com, the average rent of a 2-bedroom apartment in Providence in January 2026 is $2,603. If you go by the 30 percent rule, a tenant would need to earn $104,120 to afford that much in rent.
We are working hard on long-term solutions.
Since I became Council President in 2023, the Providence City Council has taken serious steps to address the housing shortage fueling much of the crisis. We have invested $55 million in the Housing Trust and lowered the income threshold to ensure this investment goes to those most in need. This funding has already led to hundreds of affordable new units. The Council also advanced zoning changes in the Comprehensive Plan that loosen restrictions on building denser housing, especially along transit corridors.
But building housing at the scale needed takes time, and time is not on our side. Providence families are in crisis. Navigating a full-blown rent emergency can’t wait. We need an immediate stopgap to provide stability for families living in precarity.
That’s where rent stabilization comes in.
Today, I’m introducing an ordinance to cap standard annual rent increases at 4 percent.
We need to slow skyrocketing rents, while the policies and investments we’ve made in new construction come to fruition. We need predictability, so renters know their housing costs from year-to-year and aren’t pushed into homelessness or displaced from their neighborhoods.
And we need to do so responsibly.
That’s why the ordinance I’m introducing balances stability for renters with fair returns for property owners. It exempts new construction and installs a rent board to hear petitions for exceptions in cases of meaningful capital improvements or demonstrated extenuating circumstances that would prevent a fair return. The ordinance also automatically allows property owners to exceed 4 percent in the case of significant property tax hikes.
Recognizing that homeowners renting out the small, one-to-three unit buildings in which they live, plus one additional small building, are part of the solution, not the problem, the ordinance exempts them as well.
This commonsense approach allows us to stabilize costs for renters while maintaining our existing housing stock and supporting small neighborhood landlords, all without slowing down the development we desperately need.
I know the market won’t solve this problem on its own. Meaningful, thoughtful intervention is necessary to protect the interests of Providence families.
I’m a renter myself—a rare breed among elected officials.
In 2022, researchers from Boston University and the University of Georgia analyzed 1,800 city councilors and mayors from 190 cities, including Providence, and found that an estimated 93 percent of them own their homes. As one of the 7 percent of local officeholders who rents, I feel the challenges and the urgency for solutions. It’s my own experience, and that of my neighbors I’m proud to represent, that has led me to take this necessary step.
Rent stabilization is about who we are as a city. Do we want Providence to be a place where you have to be upper middle class just to survive? Or do we want to be a city where artists can pursue their dreams, immigrants can build a thriving future, and union workers aren’t pushed out of the neighborhoods they built? Providence’s strength has always come from its mix—of cultures, of ideas, of people from all walks of life who care about each other and our collective success. Rent stabilization is the next chapter for Providence.
To win meaningful change that creates predictability in the rental market will require solidarity and grit. We are up against big developers and a real estate lobby that will do whatever it takes to maximize profit, even at the expense of family and neighborhood stability. But this is our city. Ours to live in, ours to love, ours to afford.
Now, the rent stabilization ordinance will be thoroughly vetted before it comes to a vote. There will be public hearings, community meetings, conversations in living rooms and on street corners. If you have concerns with aspects of it, I hope you’ll express them. And if you support it, I hope you’ll do so loudly.
Because if we raise our voices together, there is no amount of monied special interest lobbying that can stop us from keeping people in their homes.
by Council Staff | Jan 21, 2026 | Add Council Logo, Council News, Juan M. Pichardo, Press Release, Rachel Miller
City Council President Rachel Miller and President Pro Tempore Juan M. Pichardo are set to introduce an ordinance that allows for reasonable annual rent increases while exempting small owner-occupant landlords
Providence, RI – Today in Providence’s Elmwood neighborhood, Providence City Council President Rachel Miller and President Pro Tempore Juan M. Pichardo announced the introduction of a highly anticipated rent stabilization, joined by a large crowd of community members.
“Providence renters are cost-burdened—we are the least affordable city for renters in the country. We have to act now to create some stability for Providence families,” said Council President Miller. “This ordinance takes immediate action to give residents the breathing room they need. It stabilizes costs, slows a runaway rent pricing problem that will not regulate itself, and prevents our residents from being forced out of our city, all without slowing growth.”
The ordinance will create stability and predictability for Providence renters while supporting a healthy housing market. It allows owners of covered properties to raise rents up to 4% annually, includes exceptions for major tax increases and substantial capital improvements, provides for exemptions for a variety of properties including new construction and small owner-occupied buildings, and establishes a Rent Board to enforce tenant protections, grant exemptions to property owners, and resolve disputes. The ordinance is a balanced, Providence-specific approach—one that stabilizes housing for Providence families while ensuring property owners achieve a fair rate of return.
“Most small, local landlords already try to keep rents reasonable and tenants stable,” said Gabe Long, owner-occupant and local landlord. “This ordinance reflects that reality. It sets clear rules, allows flexibility for real costs, and protects renters from extreme hikes, while still making it possible to keep our buildings safe. It gets the balance right, and it makes clear that this housing should be about stability for communities, not profit-maximizing for large corporate landlords.”
Providence has the fastest rent growth in the country, even while the national median rent decreased. The median rent in Providence is 40% higher today than it was in 2020. Rising costs have forced working families out of the city and have directly contributed to rising rates of homelessness. Since March 2020, Providence has experienced more than 24,000 evictions. Between 2023 and 2024, Rhode Island experienced a 35% rise in homelessness, the second-highest increase in the country.
“Rent stabilization is about keeping Providence livable for the people who call it home,” said President Pro Tempore Juan M. Pichardo. “It brings predictability and fairness to a chaotic housing market by putting an end to excessive rent hikes and creating enforceable guardrails on a market that has been out of control for too long. This is a commonsense, Providence-specific approach that protects working families. It gives large property owners a simple path to seek exemptions as necessary, ensuring continued investment in maintenance and repair. And it recognizes that small, local landlords by and large already operate in the framework envisioned by the ordinance—making modest annual rent adjustments to increase costs.”
Councilors point to the introduction of the rent stabilization as the next step in a three-pronged housing strategy—increase the supply of housing at all income-levels, protect the existing housing stock, and stabilize rent prices.
Since the start of the term in 2023, the City Council has invested $55 million in the City’s Affordable Housing Trust Fund, overhauled the City’s zoning policy to increase density citywide, and incentivized private development through tax stabilization agreements. These policies have brought hundreds of housing units to the City—in both deeply affordable income restricted developments and market rate new construction. The Council has also increased annual budget allocations to the City’s home repair program that provides forgivable no cost loans to residents to maintain their properties and made a one-time $3 million allocation to the program with American Rescue Plan dollars.
“Decades of research on housing markets and displacement show that predictable rent increases help families maintain stability and remain in their homes,” said Dr. Eric Hirsch, Professor of Sociology at Providence College. “The market alone has clearly failed to provide meaningful affordability, making public intervention necessary. By establishing clear limits, thoughtful exemptions, and a strong enforcement structure, Providence’s rent stabilization ordinance aligns evidence-based policy with local conditions, giving residents the ability to plan for their futures while supporting a functioning rental market.”
Last year, the Council’s Housing Crisis Task Force concluded a two-year investigation into the issues residents—including those at risk of homelessness—face in finding and keeping stable housing with the release of an extensive report, which included rent stabilization among its recommendations.
The ordinance will be formally introduced at the regular meeting of the City Council at 6 p.m. on Thursday, January 22nd. It will be referred to committee, where there will be a robust public process including considerable opportunity for public input.
Notable features of the Providence Rent Stabilization Ordinance include:
- Caps annual rent increases at 4%. A landlord cannot raise the rent by more than 4%, absent a special circumstance, in any 12-month period.
- Sets base rent as the rent charged 180 days before the ordinance takes effect, preventing last-minute price spikes before the law goes into force.
- Establishes a Rent Board to administer and enforce the rules. This five-member board and their staff will review landlord petitions for larger increases, hear tenant complaints, and ensure the ordinance is followed fairly.
- Tenants can report suspected violations and are protected from any landlord retaliation for exercising their rights. The Rent Board can roll back unlawful rent hikes, order landlords to refund overcharged rent, and the City can levy fines for serious violations.
- Exemptions for small, owner-occupied buildings with one to three units, such as duplexes and triple-deckers where the owner lives on-site. A narrow exemption for one additional small property owned by the same individual (not a corporation).
- A 15-year exemption for new construction, including currently existing buildings, to ensure that rent stabilization does not interfere with housing production or financing.
- Built-in flexibility for landlords to address major expenses. Owners can seek approval for a higher rent increase if they make significant capital improvements or have other special circumstances where a larger increase is necessary to ensure they can earn a fair return.
- Automatic flexibility for large property tax increases, allowing landlords to pass on a fair portion of unusually high tax hikes above a 5% threshold using a clear formula.
- Rent can only be increased one time by 4% when a tenant moves out and a new tenant moves in, maintaining stability through vacancies.
- Complaint-based enforcement, allowing tenants to report violations without creating a large new bureaucracy or annual reporting burden on property owners.
- Utility charges must reflect actual costs, ensuring that landlords may only pass through the real price of utilities and not mark them up.
- Properties must be up to code to qualify for annual rent increases, meaning landlords must maintain safe, habitable buildings in order to apply the standard 4% increase.
For answers to commonly asked questions, the councilors sponsoring the ordinance have put together an FAQ, which will be updated on the City Council’s website at council.providenceri.gov/housinghub/rentstabilizationfaq/.
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Concejales de Providence proponen estabilización de renta para mantener a las familias en sus hogares
La Presidenta del Concejo Rachel Miller y el Presidente Pro Tempore Juan M. Pichardo presentarán una ordenanza que limita los aumentos de renta cada año, mientras no aplica a propietarios locales que viven en sus edificios.
Providence, RI – Hoy, en el vecindario de Elmwood, miembros del Concejo Municipal de Providence la Presidenta del Concejo Rachel Miller y el Presidente Pro Tempore Juan M. Pichardo anunciaron la introducción de una esperada propuesta de estabilización de renta, acompañados por una gran cantidad de residentes de la comunidad.
“Los inquilinos de Providence están sobrecargados por los altos costos — somos la ciudad menos asequible para los que alquilan en todo el país. Tenemos que actuar ahora para darles a las familias algo de estabilidad,” dijo la Presidenta del Concejo Rachel Miller. Esta ordenanza estabiliza los costos, frena un aumento descontrolado de las rentas y evita que nuestros residentes se vean obligados a abandonar la ciudad, todo sin frenar el crecimiento de nueva construcción.”
Esta propuesta busca dar estabilidad a los inquilinos, mientras mantiene un mercado de vivienda saludable. Para las propiedades a las que aplica esta ordenanza, se permiten aumentos de renta de hasta un 4% al año, con excepciones para incrementos grandes de impuestos y mejoras importantes a los edificios. Quedan fuera ciertos tipos de propiedades, como construcciones nuevas y edificios pequeños donde el propietario vive allí. Además, se establece una Comisión de Renta para supervisar el cumplimiento de la ley, resolver disputas, proteger a los residentes que alquilan y a los propietarios, así como permitir excepciones en casos específicos. Es un enfoque balanceado, diseñado específicamente para Providence.
“La mayoría de los propietarios locales ya mantienen las rentas razonables,” dijo Gabe Long, propietario que vive en su edificio. “Esta ley pone reglas claras, permite flexibilidad cuando hay costos reales, y protege a los inquilinos de aumentos extremos, mientras garantizando que los edificios se mantengan seguros y habitables. Este enfoque logra un equilibrio adecuado: protege la estabilidad de las comunidades, y deja claro que la vivienda debe enfocarse en el bienestar de los vecinos, y no en maximizar ganancias para grandes corporaciones.”
Providence tiene el crecimiento de renta más rápido del país, mientras que la renta promedio nacional ha disminuido. Hoy, la renta promedio en la ciudad es un 40% más alta que en 2020, lo que ha obligado a muchas familias trabajadoras a mudarse y ha contribuido al aumento de las personas sin hogar. Desde marzo de 2020, se han registrado más de 24,000 desalojos forzados, y entre 2023 y 2024, la cantidad de personas sin hogar en Rhode Island creció un 35%, el segundo mayor incremento del país.
“La estabilización de la renta se trata de mantener Providence habitable para las personas que lo llaman su hogar,” dijo el Presidente Pro Tempore Juan M. Pichardo. “Brinda estabilidad y justicia a un mercado de vivienda caótico, poniendo fin a los aumentos excesivos de renta y estableciendo límites claros en un mercado que ha estado fuera de control por demasiado tiempo. Es un enfoque de sentido común, adaptado específicamente a Providence, que protege a las familias trabajadoras. Además, ofrece a los grandes propietarios un camino sencillo para solicitar excepciones cuando sea necesario, garantizando que se siga invirtiendo en mantenimiento y reparaciones. Reconoce, asimismo, que los propietarios locales, en general, ya operan de manera similar a lo que propone esta ordenanza, haciendo ajustes anuales modestos en las rentas.”
Los concejales señalan que la introducción de la estabilización de rentas es el siguiente paso dentro de una estrategia de vivienda en tres frentes: aumentar la oferta de viviendas para todos los niveles de ingresos, proteger el inventario de viviendas existente y estabilizar los precios de renta.
Desde 2023, el Concejo Municipal ha invertido 55 millones de dólares en el Fondo de Viviendas Asequible de la ciudad, ha reformado las políticas de zonificación para aumentar la densidad en toda la ciudad y ha incentivado el desarrollo privado mediante acuerdos de estabilización de impuestos. Estas políticas han traído cientos de unidades de viviendas a la ciudad, tanto en proyectos de vivienda profundamente asequible como en construcciones nuevas a precio de mercado. El Concejo también ha incrementado los fondos anuales para el programa de reparación de viviendas, que otorga préstamos perdonables sin costo a los residentes para mantener sus propiedades, y ha hecho una asignación única de 3 millones de dólares al programa con fondos del American Rescue Plan.
“Décadas de investigaciones sobre los mercados de vivienda y el desplazamiento muestran que aumentos de renta predecibles ayudan a las familias a mantener estabilidad y a permanecer en sus hogares,” dijo el Dr. Eric Hirsch, profesor de Sociología en Providence College. “El mercado por sí solo claramente ha fallado en ofrecer una verdadera asequibilidad, por lo que la intervención pública es necesaria. Al establecer límites claros, excepciones bien pensadas y un sistema de cumplimiento sólido, la ordenanza de estabilización de rentas de Providence aplica políticas basadas en evidencia a nuestra realidad local, dando a los residentes la posibilidad de planificar su futuro mientras se mantiene un mercado de alquiler funcional.”
El año pasado, el Grupo de Trabajo sobre la Crisis de Vivienda del Concejo completó una investigación de dos años sobre los problemas que enfrentan los residentes —incluyendo quienes están en riesgo de quedarse sin hogar— para encontrar y mantener una vivienda estable, y publicó un extenso informe que incluyó la estabilización de rentas entre sus recomendaciones.
La ordenanza será presentada oficialmente en la reunión del Concejo Municipal el jueves 22 de enero a las 6:00 p.m. Luego pasará a comité, donde habrá un proceso público con muchas oportunidades para que la comunidad participe.
Puntos clave de la Ordenanza de Estabilización de Renta:
- La renta no puede subir más de 4% en 12 meses, excepto en casos especiales.
- Establece la renta base como la renta cobrada 180 días antes de que la ordenanza entre en efecto, evitando aumentos de último minuto.
- Crea una Comisión de Renta para administrar y hacer cumplir la ley. Sus cinco miembros y su personal revisarán las solicitudes de aumentos mayores por parte de los propietarios, atenderán quejas de los inquilinos y se asegurarán de que la ordenanza se cumpla de manera justa.
- Los inquilinos pueden reportar violaciones sin temor a acciones en su contra de los propietarios. La Comisión de Renta puede revertir aumentos ilegales, ordenar reembolsos por renta cobrada en exceso y la ciudad puede imponer multas por infracciones graves.
- Exenciones para edificios pequeños ocupados por sus dueños, de una a tres unidades, como dúplex o triple-deckers donde el dueño vive en la propiedad.
- También hay una exención limitada para una propiedad adicional pequeña del mismo propietario (no corporativa).
- Exención de 15 años para construcciones nuevas, incluidas las existentes, para asegurar que la estabilización de rentas no interfiera con la producción o financiación de viviendas.
- Flexibilidad incorporada para que los propietarios puedan cubrir gastos importantes. Los propietarios pueden solicitar un aumento mayor si realizan mejoras de capital significativas u otras circunstancias especiales que hagan necesario un incremento más alto para obtener un retorno justo.
- Flexibilidad automática para grandes aumentos de impuestos a la propiedad, permitiendo que los propietarios trasladen una parte justa de incrementos por encima del 5% utilizando una fórmula clara.
- La renta solo puede incrementarse una vez en 4% cuando un inquilino se muda y entra uno nuevo, manteniendo estabilidad durante los cambios de ocupante.
- Permitiendo a los inquilinos reportar violaciones sin crear una gran burocracia nueva ni cargas anuales para los propietarios.
- Los cargos por servicios públicos deben reflejar el costo real, evitando que los propietarios los aumenten por encima del precio pagado.
- Las propiedades deben cumplir con el código de construcción para calificar para los aumentos anuales, asegurando que los edificios sean seguros y habitables antes de aplicar el aumento estándar del 4%.
Para respuestas a preguntas frecuentes, los concejales patrocinadores de la ordenanza han preparado un FAQ, que se actualizará en el sitio web del Concejo Municipal: council.providenceri.gov/housinghub/rentstabilizationfaq.