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Bill

Bill

LC 2168

Revise landlord laws

2025 Regular Session

LC 2168 aimed to revise landlord-tenant laws, impacting deposits, evictions, and tenant protections; it died in process and won't become law unless reintroduced.

(LC) Draft Died in Process
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · LC 2168

Summary of LC 2168 — Revise landlord laws

Overview
- Bill number: LC 2168
- Title: Revise landlord laws
- Subject: Landlord and Tenant
- Introduced: November 29, 2024
- Status: Draft Died in Process (as of 2025-05-22)
- Classification: bill
- Legislative actions:
- 2024-11-29: Drafter Assigned
- 2025-05-22: Draft Died in Process

Purpose and intent
- Based on the title, LC 2168 aims to revise elements of the existing landlord-tenant framework. The available information does not include the bill text, so the specific objectives or policies (e.g., changes to rent, eviction procedures, habitability standards, or disclosure requirements) cannot be stated with certainty.
- The designation “Died in Process” indicates that a formal legislative path (committee consideration, floor votes, etc.) did not advance to enactment during its current session.

Key provisions (not specified in the provided text)
- The precise provisions are not included in the information provided. If available, typical topics often addressed in “landlord laws” revisions include:
- Security deposits: limits, handling, timing for return, allowable withholdings
- Evictions: notice periods, grounds for eviction, process timelines
- Habitability and maintenance: landlord duties, repair timelines, complaint handling
- Rent and fees: rent increases, late fees, fees transparency
- Lease disclosures: required disclosures, lead paint, mold, pest control, safety standards
- Tenant protections: anti-discrimination, retaliation protections, tenant screening rules
- Access and privacy: landlord entry rights and notice requirements
- If LC 2168 is reintroduced, the specific text would determine the exact provisions and their impact.

Who would be affected
- Tenants and renter households: changes to rights, protections, and responsibilities.
- Landlords and property managers: new obligations, costs, and compliance requirements.
- Small landlords and real estate owners: potential impacts on operating practices and profitability.
- Housing advocates and tenant-rights organizations: potential policy shifts affecting protections and remedies.
- Local housing agencies and courts: changes to enforcement, eviction procedures, or dispute resolution.

Procedural and timeline aspects
- Introduction date: November 29, 2024.
- Drafter assignment: November 29, 2024.
- Status update: Draft Died in Process on May 22, 2025.
- Implication: With the bill having died in its current draft, it would not become law unless reintroduced in a future session. If reintroduced, it would typically move through committee hearings, potential amendments, and floor votes before any enactment.

Next steps for readers
- Monitor for new versions or reintroductions: If a sponsor reintroduces LC 2168 or a similar bill, review the full text to understand specific changes.
- Review affected provisions: Once text is available, compare against current law to identify exact changes to landlord-tenant interactions.
- Engage stakeholders: Tenants, landlords, and housing groups may wish to track committee hearings and public input opportunities if the bill is reintroduced.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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