for evicted tenants like susan wetsell whose landlord evicted her, an enforced 60 day cap could have made all the difference. thee lived in a tasker unit and paid 1700 per month for rebt after living there for 11 years. her landlord then evicted her to do year round air b and b rentals. he is making five times what she paid in rent and he now charges $250 a night for that unit. if there was a 60-day cap which would permit air b and b rentals 5 days a month, he could only make $1250 a month converting her unit and therefore would not have the incentive to kick this person out. if the cap was 120 days as the mayor and supervisor farrell propose, this landlord would still make a profit from evicting susan because that would mean he could rent it out 10 days a month and he can make $2500 a month. $800 a month more than the rent. this cap allows for casual air b and b use but would help protect tenants like susan. colleagues, bottom line is that we need strong measures and effective enforcement to ensure that this industry doesn't continue to exacerbate the current housing crisis and what