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San Diego

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Aiming to make the city’s housing-inspection program self-sufficient, the San Diego City Council has voted to increase permit fees for apartment owners an average of 20% next year.

Besides those higher charges, which will generate an estimated $1.8 million more yearly, the council also voted Tuesday to establish, for the first time, an annual $18 permit fee for individuals who rent out single-family homes and duplexes.

Another $1 per unit surcharge approved by the council will raise about $265,000 annually to pay for expansion of the city’s Drug Abatement Response Team program, which is intended to reduce drug dealing and related problems in rental properties.

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Under the council’s action, average permit fees--which pay for inspectors who investigate complaints of substandard housing--will increase from slightly under $4 to about $4.65. The additional revenue produced through the higher fees will enable the city’s housing-inspection program, which now requires about a $1.4-million annual subsidy, to pay for itself.

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