County toughens rules on drug crimes in unincorporated areas

King County now requires landlords in unincorporated areas to address drug crimes on their properties head-on instead of turning a blind eye.

King County now requires landlords in unincorporated areas to address drug crimes on their properties head-on instead of turning a blind eye.

The Metropolitan King County Council passed an ordinance July 28 aimed at providing relief to residents living in unincorporated King County near properties where drug crimes are occurring. An area in the Eastgate portion of Bellevue south of I-90 still is unincorporated.

The new county law is based on open communication between property owners and the King County Sheriff’s Office. It relies on establishing a list of rental properties with tenants that are a cause for concern.

The ordinance, called “Safer Neighborhoods Ordinance” and sponsored by council member Reagan Dunn, whose district includes part of Bellevue, requires landlords to take active

steps to eliminate crime on their properties.

Existing detective teams with the sheriff’s office will identify properties deputies frequently visit or receive complaints about.

Class A and B felonies and drug and sex offenses, among other crimes, will be tracked at these locations. Each time a serious crime takes place, the sheriff’s office will notify the property owner by letter.

Once three notifications have been issued within a six-month time frame, the owner of the property will be required to take action, such as assisting the sheriff’s office in decreasing the crime, taking a class to learn what to look for to identify possible criminal activity — or evicting the tenant.

“(The landlord) doesn’t have to go down and confront them, but it means the landlord can’t just look the other way,” said Sgt. John Urquhart, King County Sheriff’s Office spokesman.

If an eviction process is launched, the letters will help convince a judge that the action is necessary, a spokesman for Dunn said. If no action is taken, the owner could face fines up to $125 per crime occurred on the property.

Deputies will not notify tenants that their landlord has been told of the criminal activity taking place, Urquhart said. If landlords fear for their safety and are reluctant to take action against their tenants, they may seek assistance from the sheriff’s office, he said.

The ordinance means a landlord must do something about the crime, not ignore it, Urquhart said.

Contact Jacinda Howard: jhoward@fedwaymirror.com or 253-925-5565.

Funds available

The Safer Neighborhoods Ordinance is not expected to suffer from the King County Sheriff’s Office $7.5 million 2009 budget cut, Sgt. John Urquhart said. The detective teams that will track the drug crimes and notify landlords are expected to remain in place through 2009, he said.

In June, the sheriff’s office announced that because of the budget cut, beginning next year, it will no longer have the resources to investigate large-scale drug operations, fraud, Internet, identity theft, “cold case” and property crimes under $10,000.