Texas 2023 88th Regular

Texas House Bill HB4771 Engrossed / Bill

Filed 05/12/2023

                    88R26188 MZM-F
 By: Bhojani, Rosenthal, Jones of Harris, H.B. No. 4771
 Stucky, Lambert


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the creation of tenant legal services offices by local
 governments to assist low-income residential tenants in eviction
 cases and in cases involving discrimination based on the tenants'
 disabilities.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Subtitle C, Title 5, Local Government Code, is
 amended by adding Chapter 181 to read as follows:
 CHAPTER 181. TENANT LEGAL SERVICES OFFICE
 Sec. 181.001.  DEFINITIONS. In this chapter:
 (1)  "Brief legal assistance" means individualized
 legal assistance provided in a single consultation by a tenant
 legal services office to a tenant.
 (2)  "Disability" has the meaning assigned by Section
 301.003, Property Code.
 (3)  "Full legal representation" means ongoing legal
 services provided by a tenant legal services office to a tenant,
 including court filings and appearances and other legal advice,
 advocacy, or assistance associated with a tenant's case.
 (4)  "Indigent" means having earnings that are not more
 than 200 percent of the income standard established by applicable
 federal poverty guidelines.
 (5)  "Local government" means a municipality or county
 or any combination of municipalities or counties.
 (6)  "Low-income" means having earnings that are not
 more than 400 percent of the income standard established by
 applicable federal poverty guidelines.
 (7)  "Reasonable accommodation" is a change,
 exception, or adjustment to a rule, policy, practice, or service
 that may be necessary for a tenant with disabilities to have an
 equal opportunity to use and enjoy a dwelling, including public and
 common use spaces.
 (8)  "Reasonable modification" means a reasonable
 structural change made to existing premises that may be necessary
 for a tenant with disabilities to have full enjoyment of a dwelling,
 including public and common use spaces.
 Sec. 181.002.  TENANT LEGAL SERVICES OFFICE. (a) A local
 government may create a tenant legal services office to provide
 legal representation and services to tenants as provided by
 Subsection (b).
 (b)  A tenant legal services office may provide:
 (1)  full legal representation to a tenant:
 (A)  in a residential eviction case if the tenant
 is indigent; or
 (B)  in a case involving a violation of Section
 301.025, Property Code, if the tenant is a low-income individual
 with a disability; or
 (2)  brief legal assistance to a tenant in a
 residential eviction case if the tenant is a low-income individual
 who is not indigent.
 (c)  A local government may establish a department of the
 local government or by contract may designate a nonprofit
 corporation to serve as the tenant legal services office for the
 local government.
 (d)  Any combination of municipalities or counties may agree
 by entering into an interlocal contract under Chapter 791,
 Government Code, to jointly implement or administer a tenant legal
 services office under this chapter.
 (e)  A local government by ordinance, order, or interlocal
 contract may adopt rules and procedures necessary to implement this
 chapter.
 Sec. 181.003.  PROPOSALS BY NONPROFIT CORPORATIONS. (a)
 Before contracting with a nonprofit corporation to serve as a
 tenant legal services office, a local government shall solicit
 proposals for the office.
 (b)  A local government shall require a written plan from a
 nonprofit corporation proposing to serve as a tenant legal services
 office.
 (c)  The written plan must include:
 (1)  a budget for the tenant legal services office,
 including salaries;
 (2)  a description of each personnel position,
 including the director of legal services position;
 (3)  the maximum allowable caseload for each attorney
 employed by the office;
 (4)  provisions for personnel training;
 (5)  a description of anticipated overhead costs for
 the office; and
 (6)  a policy to ensure that the director of legal
 services and other attorneys employed by the office do not provide
 representation to a tenant if doing so would create a conflict of
 interest that has not been waived by the client.
 (d)  After considering each proposal submitted by a
 nonprofit corporation to a local government under this section, the
 local government shall select a proposal that reasonably
 demonstrates that the proposed tenant legal services office will
 provide adequate quality representation for tenants in disputes
 described by Section 181.002(b).
 (e)  The total cost of a proposal may not be the sole
 consideration in selecting the proposal.
 Sec. 181.004.  DIRECTOR OF LEGAL SERVICES. A tenant legal
 services office must be directed by a director of legal services
 who:
 (1)  is a member of the State Bar of Texas;
 (2)  has practiced law for at least three years; and
 (3)  has substantial experience in the practice of
 landlord-tenant law.
 Sec. 181.005.  FUNDING. (a)  A tenant legal services office
 is entitled to receive funds for personnel costs and expenses
 incurred in operating the office in amounts determined by the local
 government and paid out of the appropriate local fund.
 (b)  This chapter does not authorize a local government to
 disburse, administer, or otherwise allocate funds received by the
 local government from the basic civil legal services account
 established under Section 51.943, Government Code, to create or
 operate a tenant legal services office.
 Sec. 181.006.  EMPLOYEES. (a) A tenant legal services
 office may employ attorneys and other personnel necessary to
 perform the duties of the office as specified by the local
 government.
 (b)  The director of a tenant legal services office must
 designate at least one employee of the office to assist tenants with
 disabilities in obtaining compliance with laws that apply to
 housing for tenants with disabilities.
 Sec. 181.007.  DENIAL OF REPRESENTATION. A tenant legal
 services office may not represent a tenant if:
 (1)  a conflict of interest exists that has not been
 waived by the client;
 (2)  the office has insufficient resources to provide
 adequate representation for the tenant;
 (3)  the office is incapable of providing
 representation for the tenant in accordance with the rules of
 professional conduct; or
 (4)  the office shows other good cause for not
 accepting the request for representation by the tenant.
 Sec. 181.008.  INVESTIGATION OF FINANCIAL CONDITION. A
 tenant legal services office may investigate the financial
 condition of a tenant who requests representation by the office.
 Sec. 181.009.  PUBLIC HEARING. (a) The director of a tenant
 legal services office shall hold an annual public hearing to
 receive recommendations about the office.
 (b)  Not later than the 30th day before the date of the
 hearing, the director shall:
 (1)  provide notice of the hearing:
 (A)  to each interested party and official; and
 (B)  by publishing the notice in a newspaper of
 general circulation in the local government;
 (2)  provide a copy of the notice to an appropriate
 officer or employee of the local government who shall post the
 notice:
 (A)  in each department or office of the local
 government responsible for providing social services for the
 residents of the local government; and
 (B)  if the local government maintains an Internet
 website, on:
 (i)  the website of the local government;
 and
 (ii)  if applicable, each webpage of the
 website dedicated to a department or office described by Paragraph
 (A); and
 (3)  provide a copy of the notice to an appropriate
 officer or employee of each local court that has original
 jurisdiction over eviction cases or cases regarding violations of
 Section 301.025, Property Code, who shall post the notice in an
 appropriate place at the court on behalf of the director.
 (c)  The director shall produce a transcript of the hearing
 and post the transcript on the local government's Internet website
 not later than the 30th day after the date of the hearing.
 Sec. 181.010.  REPORT. Not later than September 1 of each
 even-numbered year, the director of a tenant legal services office
 shall submit a report to the governing body of the local government
 and post the report on the local government's Internet website that
 contains the following information that relates to the office for
 the preceding two years:
 (1)  the estimated number of tenants in the office's
 jurisdiction that are eligible for legal services;
 (2)  the number of tenants that received legal
 services, disaggregated by the following characteristics of the
 tenants, if voluntarily disclosed by the tenant:
 (A)  household size;
 (B)  estimated length of tenancy;
 (C)  approximate household income;
 (D)  disability; and
 (E)  types of reasonable accommodations or
 modifications needed;
 (3)  the types of legal services provided;
 (4)  the outcomes immediately following the provision
 of full legal representation, as applicable and available,
 including the number of:
 (A)  case dispositions in which:
 (i)  tenants remained in their residences;
 (ii)  tenants were evicted from their
 residences;
 (iii)  tenants with disabilities remained in
 their residences; and
 (iv)  tenants with disabilities were
 displaced from their residences;
 (B)  case dispositions regarding reasonable
 accommodations or modifications for tenants with disabilities
 that:
 (i)  were approved, including the types of
 accommodations or modifications that were approved; and
 (ii)  were disapproved, including the types
 of accommodations or modifications that were disapproved; and
 (C)  cases in which the attorney was discharged or
 withdrew;
 (5)  the expenditures for the office; and
 (6)  any other information required by the local
 government.
 SECTION 2.  This Act takes effect immediately if it receives
 a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as
 provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution.  If this
 Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this
 Act takes effect September 1, 2023.