Providence to Consider a Cap on Yearly Rent Increases

As rent becomes more expensive in Providence, city council president Rachel Miller says the city should place a cap on yearly increases

Downtown Providence
Providence City Council President Rachel Miller says the city should place a cap on yearly increases.
Joe Tasca/The Public’s Radio
Share
Downtown Providence
Providence City Council President Rachel Miller says the city should place a cap on yearly increases.
Joe Tasca/The Public’s Radio
Providence to Consider a Cap on Yearly Rent Increases
Copy

Providence City Council President Rachel Miller has lived in the West End for over 20 years. During that time, she says the neighborhood has become virtually unaffordable for most working-class residents.

“I’ve seen rent grow at first very slowly, and then, since 2020, very fast,” Miller said. “Apartments that were, maybe $1,100 are now $2,200. Our incomes have not grown to that level.”

Miller says it’s time for Providence to consider a rent stabilization ordinance that would cap annual rent increases. She suggests a 4% cap as a good starting point for conversation, but says she’s open to adjusting that number.

Miller says the cap is necessary, in part, because some landlords are simply taking advantage of their tenants.

“Providence has been topping these national lists of fastest increase in rent,’ Miller said. “Anecdotally, I hear from folks all over that they have a $600 rent increase overnight, more than 50% sometimes.”

Miller says any rent stabilization proposal would make some exemptions, including for landlords in the process of making property improvements.

Opponents of the rent stabilization proposal say it would result in a significant loss in city revenue and lower property values.

In his new PBS documentary The American Revolution, Burns revisits the fight for independence through a fresh lens — highlighting Rhode Island’s pivotal contributions and what history still teaches us today
The young sports editor for the Woonsocket Call witnessed Carlton Fisk’s epic 12th-inning home run that ended 4 hours and 1 minute of Game 6 World Series drama
The school enrolls a smaller proportion of Hispanic students than the district at large, which is 68% Hispanic
An after-action report calls the July fire one of the most complex in city history, credits first responders for their decisive efforts, and urges stricter fire codes for other high-risk facilities across Massachusetts
A conservative news site and GOP critics accuse Magaziner of hypocrisy for celebrating $39 million in Rhode Island defense projects included in a bill he opposed — but his campaign says he rejected it over anti-abortion provisions
After a life-altering ski accident, University of Rhode Island researcher Jake Bonney is charting a new course in ocean engineering — pioneering remote ROV operations and inspiring others through his comeback story