East Bay Times

Eviction looms for millions of state’s renters

Pandemic pushes tenants, their kids toward the brink of financial disaster

- By Nigel Duara CalMatters

Two million California­ns could be forced from their rental homes early next year, and the bad omens are appearing now, all around them. They’re in the credit card bills they stack in a corner, the personal relationsh­ips they test by borrowing money, the hours waiting on the phone hoping to get their unemployme­nt claim approved — all of it adding up to debts on paper and holes in their lives.

These renters — people like struggling single mother Aleida Ramirez of Concord — are on the edge of an eviction cliff. Once they fall, there’s no telling how long it will take them to climb back up, especially in a state like California, where nearly everything costs more.

Using a U.S. census survey on how the coronaviru­s is affecting households across the country, Carolina Reid, associate professor of city and regional planning at UC Berkeley, estimates there are at least 2 million people, including children, at risk of eviction based on the 600,000 California households that fell behind on rent in August. Since then, the number of renters at risk of eviction has fluctuated, but the number of California adults reporting that they’re behind on rent in November has topped 1 million.

“This really is a crisis that’s broad,” Reid said, “and income losses are hitting households across

the spectrum.”

Recovering from an eviction is almost certainly more difficult in California than in any other state. Fortyfive percent of the state’s residents rent their homes. The median fairmarket rent for a one-bedroom apartment is $1,522, and $1,922 for a twobedroom, according to the National Low Income Housing Coalition. To afford one bedroom, someone working for the state minimum wage of $13 would have to work 90 hours each week.

So how are renters getting by in the pandemic? They are racking up debt, leaning on government aid and asking friends and family for help. This month, the census estimated that more than 3 million California renters turned to credit cards or loans, more than 3 million tapped savings or sold assets, and roughly 2 million borrowed from friends or family.

California’s mixed response to the economic and housing fallout during the pandemic hasn’t helped matters. Some states were quicker with their unemployme­nt payouts while California’s system has been beset by problems both technical and administra­tive. And without government action, it’s estimated that 750,000 California­ns will run out of unemployme­nt benefits the day after Christmas. Beyond that, the state’s eviction moratorium expires Feb. 1 and landlords can take tenants to court starting March 1.

The clock is ticking for California to head off an eviction tsunami for renters.

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