Bill
LC 3393
Generally revise landlord tenant laws
Aims to broadly overhaul residential landlord-tenant law, potentially changing leases, notices, deposits, repairs, rent, and eviction procedures.
Bill
LC 3393
Aims to broadly overhaul residential landlord-tenant law, potentially changing leases, notices, deposits, repairs, rent, and eviction procedures.
LC 3393 is a bill classified as a general revision of landlord-tenant laws. The available information indicates the bill aims to overhaul the broader framework governing residential tenancy, but the actual text detailing specific provisions has not been provided in the summary you shared.
Status terminology:
- “Draft On Hold” means the draft was not advanced for consideration at that time.
- “Drafter Assigned” indicates staff were appointed to prepare the bill text.
- “Draft Died in Process” (later action) indicates the draft did not progress to enactment within the session.
If a bill titled “Generally revise landlord-tenant laws” moves beyond the drafting stage, it could affect areas such as:
- Leases and required disclosures
- Notices and timelines for termination, eviction, and renewals
- Security deposits and handling of funds
- Habitability standards and repair obligations
- Rent increases, fee practices, and allowable charges
- Enforcement, penalties, and remedies for violations
- Procedures for dispute resolution and access to justice for tenants and landlords
- Protections for vulnerable tenants or rent-stabilization mechanisms (if included)
Note: These are common topics in broad landlord-tenant reform efforts. Without the actual text, none of these provisions can be attributed to LC 3393 specifically.
If you obtain the actual bill text or committee analyses, I can produce a detailed section-by-section summary highlighting exact changes and their practical impact.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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