
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Step into an eviction court and you’ll likely see it: most landlords have attorneys while tenants do not. Eviction cases move quickly, and representation can be the thing that balances the scale — making it easier for people to understand their rights and to navigate the complex system.
From New York to California’s Central Valley, tenants are fed up and demanding the right to counsel. It’s a movement that has gained more attention in the wake of the pandemic, and in the face of rising rents. Today, we go to court.
Read the episode transcript here.
By KQED4.5
389389 ratings
Step into an eviction court and you’ll likely see it: most landlords have attorneys while tenants do not. Eviction cases move quickly, and representation can be the thing that balances the scale — making it easier for people to understand their rights and to navigate the complex system.
From New York to California’s Central Valley, tenants are fed up and demanding the right to counsel. It’s a movement that has gained more attention in the wake of the pandemic, and in the face of rising rents. Today, we go to court.
Read the episode transcript here.

7,850 Listeners

8,304 Listeners

714 Listeners

398 Listeners

97 Listeners

3,766 Listeners

246 Listeners

1,061 Listeners

79 Listeners

112,333 Listeners

56,404 Listeners

185 Listeners

433 Listeners

16,222 Listeners

1,510 Listeners

3,557 Listeners

31 Listeners

6,372 Listeners

1,224 Listeners

537 Listeners

531 Listeners