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Santa Clara County

Latest COVID-19 County Update

The SCC-Moratorium applies to all nonpayment of rent due to impacts of the Covid-19 outbreak for residential and commercial tenants within the cities and unincorporated areas of Santa Clara County.

An ordinance that is enacted by a City or unincorporated area will replace the Santa Clara County Ordinance only if it is more protective of the Affected Tenants.

Landlord’s Duty:

If a tenant does not pay rent during the SCC-Moratorium period, a landlord must serve the tenant the following three documents:

1. 3-Day Notice to Pay Rent or Quit, which shall be in compliance with Code of Civil Procedure Section 1161(2);
2. Notice of Tenant's rights under this Ordinance; and
3. Notice of Emergency Rental Assistance Programs. (Collectively the “SCC-Moratorium Packet”).

The landlord is not required to, but should also, serve the tenant copies of the State Moratorium and SCC-Moratorium.

No-fault evictions are permitted under the State-Moratorium and SCC-Moratorium; however, if the tenant is deemed an Affected Tenant, then a landlord is not permitted to proceed with a no-fault eviction. The State-Moratorium precludes all California Superior Courts from issuing a Writ of Possession against an Affected Tenant and precludes law enforcement from enforcing any Writs until the expiration date of May 31, 2020.

Noncompliance with the SCC-Moratorium is an affirmative defense for the Affected Tenant, voids any termination of tenancy notice, treble damages and landlords may be subject to civil fines and penalties as set forth in Division A1 of the County Ordinance Code.

Tenant’s Duty:

A tenant who has been impacted by Covid-19 (“Affected Tenant”) must notify their landlord in writing of such financial hardship to stop an eviction based upon nonpayment of rent.

There is no mandatory notification form that the Affected Tenant must use, so they may prepare their own notice.

In such notification, the Affected Tenant must provide documented proof of their loss or decrease of income, substantial out of pocket medical expenses for themselves or their immediate family members related to the 2020 Covid-19 pandemic, which includes but is not limited to:

1. Termination letter/reduced hours letter from employer citing Covid-19;
2. Paycheck stubs from before/after Covid-19 outbreak;
3. Bank statements from before/after Covid-19 outbreak; or
4. Other objectively verifiable proof of the same.

Though Affected Tenants will not have to pay rent during the SCC-Moratorium period, they remain liable for the unpaid rent once the SCC-Moratorium period expires on May 31, 2020. The SCC-Moratorium is a delayed payment of rent, not a waiver of rent; thus, Affected Tenants will have to pay the back rent owed within 120 days after the expiration of the SCC-Moratorium.

The SSC-Moratorium states that a landlord cannot collect late fees or other costs associated with nonpayment of rent; however, landlords may collect such fees if the Affected Tenant has not paid the back rent within 120 days after expiration of the SSC-Moratorium.

Tenants who have not been impacted by Covid-19 shall pay rent in their usual course.

NOTE - this is one of the few moratoriums that currently also applies to certain commercial tenants, primarily those considered to be small businesses.

 Santa Clara County Eviction Moratorium

READ ORDER

 Sunset Date: May 31, 2020 

Cities in Santa Clara County

Campbell  •  Cupertino  •  Gilroy  •  Los Altos  •  Los Altos Hills  •  Los Gatos  •  Milpitas  •  Monte Sereno  •  Morgan Hill  •  Mountain View  •  Palo Alto  •  San Jose  •  Santa Clara  •  Saratoga  •  Sunnyvale

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