Hamilton Journal News

States struggle to get relief to tenants amid pandemic

- By Michael Casey AP

G o v. Andrew Cu o mo announced last July that New York would spend $100 million in federal coronaviru­s relief to help cash-strapped tenants pay months of back rent and avert evictions.

By the end of October, the state had doled out only about $40 million, reaching 15,000 of the nearly 100,000 people looking for help. More than 57,000 applicants were denied because of criteria set by lawmakers that many said was difficult to meet.

New York’s experience played out nationwide, with states failing to spend tens of millions of federal dollars aimed at helping renters avoid eviction. Burdensome requiremen­ts, poorly administer­ed programs and landlords refusing to cooperate meant tens of thousands of tenants never got assistance. Some states also shifted funding away from rental relief, fearing they’d miss a year-end mandate to spend the money — a deadline that got extended.

The problem, housing advocates said, was that the federal government didn’t specifical­ly earmark any of the coronaviru­s aid for rental relief, leaving states scrambling to set up programs with no guidance on how the money should be allocated. As much as $3.43 billion in federal aid was spent on rental assistance, according to National Low Income Housing Coalition. But advocates said more should have been done, given tenants faced as much as $34 billion in unpaid rent through January, according to a report released by the National

Council of State Housing Agencies.

States’ rental relief programs “were a very mixed success. It was sort of a patchwork of programs,” Maryland Democratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen said in February. “There was a lot of experiment­ation — some successful, some not.”

Several states have since made changes, hoping to be better positioned to handle their portion of more than $45 billion in rental assistance coming from Congress in the coming months.

 ??  ?? Bonney Ginett, whose massage therapy business dried up during the pandemic, owes more than $26,000 in back rent on her New York apartment and fears eviction.
Bonney Ginett, whose massage therapy business dried up during the pandemic, owes more than $26,000 in back rent on her New York apartment and fears eviction.

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