Bozeman Tenants Ignite Montana's First Rent Strike in 50+ Years
BOZEMAN, Mont. — More than 50 Bozeman tenants launched the state's first rent strike in over 50 years on April 25, 2026, withholding payments from landlords amid median rents that have surged 45% since 2020 to $2,100 for a one-bedroom apartment. Organized by the Montana Tenants Union, which boasts over 1,000 members across Bozeman, Billings and Missoula, the strike targets chronic issues like black mold, broken heating systems and illegal rent hikes in complexes such as The Willows and Peaks at Cajun. KBZK first reported the action, highlighting tenants' frustrations in a city where housing costs have outpaced wages by 30%, per U.S. Census data.
Union leader Debi Bosworth, a longtime Bozeman renter, rallied strikers at a downtown park rally on April 28, vowing, 'We're done begging for heat in winter or mold remediation—landlords will fix this or face empty units.' The group credits its growth to post-pandemic organizing, culminating in 2024's passage of Bozeman's Tenants' Right to Counsel ordinance—the first in Montana—providing city-funded lawyers for low-income renters in eviction court. Strikers have escrowed rents in a union-managed account, a tactic echoing 1970s Missoula actions but updated with legal safeguards.
Landlords, represented by the Gallatin Valley Apartment Association, decry the strike as 'economic sabotage,' warning of potential mass evictions. Yet tenant numbers swell daily, with solidarity actions planned in Missoula. As Bozeman's population hits 60,000—up 25% in five years—the standoff spotlights Montana's housing crisis, where 40% of renters now spend over half their income on housing, according to state housing reports.
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