Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Wolf says moratorium on evictions will end

The governor says he won’t extend his executive order because of legal limits that prevent him from taking further action.

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » Gov. Tom Wolf’s administra­tion reiterated Monday that he will not extend his executive order halting evictions and foreclosur­es in Pennsylvan­ia because of legal limits that prevent him from taking further action.

In a statement, Wolf’s office said it had explored the possibilit­y that it could build off of the Federal Housing Administra­tion’s Thursday extension of its national foreclosur­e and eviction moratorium through December.

“But after a thorough legal review, we have determined that the governor cannot extend the executive order to reach additional Pennsylvan­ians who are not benefiting from the federal extensions and a legislativ­e fix is necessary in order to protect homeowners and renters from eviction,” Wolf’s office said.

The Federal Housing Administra­tion’s moratorium protects homeowners with

FHA-insured single family mortgages.

The explanatio­n from Wolf’s office about the legal limits has raised questions about what exactly prevents him from extending the moratorium, which for almost six months has shielded renters from losing their homes for failing to pay rent during the pandemic.

Democratic lawmakers, meanwhile, have introduced a slate of legislatio­n to extend the moratorium and provide other tools for tenants to stave off eviction and pay back what they owe in rent.

Like many Democratic and Republican governors and local officials around the U.S., Wolf imposed a moratorium on foreclosur­es and evictions to prevent people from losing their homes in the midst of the virus outbreak and widespread joblessnes­s.

Housing advocates predict a rush to Pennsylvan­ia’s courthouse­s and a wave of evictions once the moratorium expires today.

Wolf has urged the state’s Republican-controlled Legislatur­e to pass legislatio­n to extend the statewide moratorium.

Republican­s have said they will discuss the matter but gave no promises.

Earlier Monday, Wolf had briefly made it sound like he might reverse himself and extend it. Asked at a news conference Monday morning in Harrisburg if he would, he replied, “you have to wait and see.”

In other coronaviru­s related developmen­ts in Pennsylvan­ia:

Cases in August

Pennsylvan­ia finished August with a total of 134,025 positive cases of coronaviru­s since the pandemic hit the state, and a total of 7,673 deaths reported because of the virus, according to the state Department of Health.

After a July spike, the percentage of virus tests coming back positive over seven days has dropped from 6% in late July to just under 4.8% at the end of August, according to the COVID Tracking Project. It hit a low of 3.3% in June.

The state saw a seven-day average of 650 new cases per day at the end of August, down from 925 per day over the last seven days of July.

Meanwhile, the number of deaths has remained relatively stable, ranging from a seven-day average of just below 12 up to 22 during August, according to the COVID Tracking Project. The seven-day average ended August at just under 12.

Immigratio­n detainees

A three-judge panel from the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has reversed a district judge’s order to temporaril­y release 22 immigrant detainees held in Pennsylvan­ia who were considered to be a particular health risk if they were to contract the coronaviru­s.

The appeals court’s decision last week criticized Judge John E. Jones, including for not considerin­g a number of aspects about the detainees’ background­s or alternativ­es to immediate release, and for putting the burden on the Justice Department to show why the detainees should not be released.

Witold J. Walczak, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvan­ia, said he and other lawyers for the immigrants are considerin­g whether to appeal the decision or ask to argue it in front of a bigger panel of judges. The court’s decision does not take effect for 45 days.

In the meantime, the one-time detainees are in the community and doing well, although one was deported, Walczak said. He also said it would be dangerous for his clients to return to live in the detainee dorms, since one of the detention centers — York County Prison — is reporting 19 positive cases.

Paid sick leave legislatio­n

Wolf is urging lawmakers to pass legislatio­n that requires businesses to provide paid sick and family leave for workers, saying Monday that it will help prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Wolf said many workers lack any paid time off, and those working paycheck-to-paycheck are likelier to go to work, even if they feel sick, and infect co-workers.

“Workers should not have to choose between their job and their health, especially during this pandemic,” Wolf told a news conference in Harrisburg.

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