THE CURRENT STATUTE IS OUTDATED
Twenty-seven counties in Texas no longer have printed newspapers or no newspaper of any kind, as reflected in the 2023 Texas Newspaper Directory published by the Texas Press Association. That means facility owners in those counties must seek out the only current alternative of physically posting printed notices in five locations around town. Self-storage auction bidders do not look for lien sale advertisements in the newspaper. They go to auction websites and other online resources. This is part of a larger trend where private sector advertisements have migrated online—for example, for buying cars, real estate, merchandise or for political campaigns, etc.
THE PROPOSED CHANGES WILL NOT ELIMINATE PUBLICATION BY NEWSPAPER
The proposed bill language provides alternatives for publishing the public notice, updating the statute to include modern means of publishing a public sale. The changes do not eliminate publication by newspaper. Self-storage operators will still be able to utilize publication by newspaper if that is the best method in their county.
THE PROPOSED CHANGES WILL NOT CHANGE NOTICE TO THE TENANT
The purpose of the Notice of Public Sale is not to notify the tenant. This takes place at the end of the process, after the claim notice (Notice of Claim) as required by statute has been sent to the tenant, by verified mail and AFTER all phone calls, emails, texts and other attempts to contact the tenant to work with them on curing the delinquency has occurred. A delinquent tenant is not going to miss direct notifications but somehow notice a newspaper advertisement on a random day.
The Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) protections for our military personnel while on active duty and for up to one year later, as defined in Section 3958 of the act, remain unchanged by this bill.
THE ONLY PRIVATE INDUSTRY REQUIRED TO SUPPORT NEWSPAPERS
Self-storage owners have been singled out as the
only private industry with this requirement. Lien sales are not a profit source and are typically a last resort to clear the space in order to rent the space to a paying customer. The cost of the required newspaper ad typically exceeds any income received from the lien sale and is an unnecessary added expense. The newspapers always benefit financially from lien sales, while facility owners almost always lose money.
WILL TEXAS BE THE LAST STATE TO UPDATE THIS OUTDATED STATUTE?
As of January 2025, 33 states allow alternative methods of advertising in lieu of newspaper advertising or do not have any advertising requirement. Several additional states are pursuing this legislation this year.