Boston Herald

CDC halts evictions nationwide

Trump orders moratorium through end of the year

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WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion has issued a directive halting the eviction of certain renters though the end of 2020 to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Federal, state and local government­s have approved eviction moratorium­s during the course of the pandemic for many renters, but those protection­s are expiring rapidly.

A moratorium approved by the Legislatur­e and signed by Gov. Charlie Baker in April was extended until Oct. 17 in an effort to allow people impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic to stay in their homes to fight the spread of the virus.

A recent report from one think tank, the Aspen Institute, stated that more than 20 million renters live in households that have suffered COVID-19-related job loss and concluded that millions more are at risk of eviction in the next several months.

The administra­tion’s action stems from an executive order that President Trump issued in early August. It instructed federal health officials to consider measures to temporaril­y halt evictions. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention followed up Tuesday by declaring that any landlord shall not evict any “covered person” from any residentia­l property for failure to pay rent.

Senior administra­tion officials explained that the director of the CDC has broad authority to take actions deemed reasonably necessary to prevent the spread of a communicab­le disease.

Renters covered through the executive order must meet four criteria. They must: Have an income of $198,000 or less for couples filing jointly, or $99,000 for single filers.

Demonstrat­e they have sought government assistance to make their rental payments.

Affirmativ­ely declare they are unable to pay rent because of COVID-19 hardships.

Affirm they are likely to become homeless if they are evicted.

Officials said local courts would still resolve disputes between renters and landowners about whether the moratorium applies in a particular case.

Brian Morgenster­n, a deputy White House press secretary, said the announceme­nt means that people struggling to pay rent due to COVID-19 would not have to worry about being evicted and risking the spread of the disease or exposure to it.

 ?? Getty ImaGes; beloW, ap FIle ?? ‘CANCEL RENT’: Demonstrat­ors march during a ‘No Evictions, No Police’ national day of action on Tuesday in New York. Below, a pedestrian walks past graffiti in April that reads ‘Rent Strike’ in Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborho­od.
Getty ImaGes; beloW, ap FIle ‘CANCEL RENT’: Demonstrat­ors march during a ‘No Evictions, No Police’ national day of action on Tuesday in New York. Below, a pedestrian walks past graffiti in April that reads ‘Rent Strike’ in Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborho­od.
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