Los Angeles Times

For Californina tenants on the edge, paying the rent often takes more than half their income

LOS ANGELES - Even before their latest rent increase, Barbie Thompson and her husband, Juan, could barely afford the Rancho Santa Margarita apartment where they raised two children.

The company that paid her around $13 an hour to distribute samples at Costco often kept her on a part-time schedule, Thompson said. Her husband earned even less as a busboy. So to make ends meet, at times the couple used a food pantry, let auto bills lapse and turned their $1,845 rent in late - a budgeting tool that cost $50 in late fees.

"Sometimes we were down to the last couple of dollars," said Thompson, who estimated she and her husband spent at least 57 percent of

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times2 min read
Kelly Rowland Explains Her Viral Cannes Red Carpet Confrontation: 'I Have A Boundary'
Kelly Rowland is speaking out after her heated exchange on the Cannes Film Festival red carpet Thursday went viral. The "Destiny's Child" alum was photographed walking the Palais des Festivals staircase ahead of the premiere of "Marcello Mio," a Fren
Los Angeles Times2 min read
EVs And Hybrids Are Twice As Likely To Hit Pedestrians As Gas Cars, Study Shows
Young children are trained to stop, look and listen before they cross the street. In the electric car age, parents might want to put extra emphasis on the word “listen.” Pedestrians are twice as likely to be hit by an electric or hybrid car than by a
Los Angeles Times7 min readAmerican Government
Michael Hiltzik: With Democratic Assent, House Votes To Open Loopholes In Crypto Regulation
Money, as we all know, is the mother's milk of politics in America. It can look even more nourishing if you can manufacture it yourself. That's surely what accounts for the solicitude that the cryptocurrency industry has been receiving from Congress.

Related Books & Audiobooks