Houston Chronicle

More federal rental aid is reaching tenants

- By Michael Casey

Almost a month after a federal eviction moratorium ended, the Treasury Department said Friday that states and cities distribute­d money for nearly 1.4 million payments in August and that the pace picked up from the month before.

More than 16.5 percent of the tens of billions of dollars in federal rental assistance reached tenants last month, compared with 11 percent in July. The latest data from the department, which oversees the program, also found that states and cities that were slow to get their programs off the ground are now sending tens of millions of dollars out the door.

Lawmakers approved $46.5 billion in spending on rental assistance, but so far states and cities are mostly allocating the first installmen­t of $25 billion, which must be spent by Sept. 30, 2022. Allocation of the second installmen­t of $21.5 billion, can go through Sept. 30, 2025.

Treasury officials acknowledg­ed they were not satisfied with the total distributi­on. But they insisted that what has gone out so far represente­d meaningful numbers and that the money was having an impact in helping keep families in their homes.

The latest update comes as pressure is building to more quickly distribute the money after the Supreme Court in late August allowed evictions to resume. The court’s conservati­ve majority blocked the Biden administra­tion from enforcing a temporary freeze put in place because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Though evictions have not spiked in most communitie­s, there is a concern that millions of tenants who qualify for help could be tossed out before the money arrives. As of Sept. 13, nearly 3.3 million people said they were very or somewhat likely to face eviction in the next two months, according to the Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey. In the survey, which ran through Aug. 30, more than 3.6 million said they faced eviction.

Treasury officials said the strong signs of progress came from New Jersey, New York and South Carolina, which have struggled to get their programs going. New Jersey, for example, sent out no money in the first quarter but now has distribute­d 78 percent of its first-installmen­t money and doubled the number of households served in August compared with July.

Spending in Florida increased from $60.9 million in July to $141.4 million in August, while South Carolina went from $10.6 million to $25.3 million. New York saw a jump from $8.5 million to $307 million.

Among cities and counties, New York, Los Angeles and Miami-Dade County collective­ly reached nearly 27,000 households and spent more than $347 million in August, compared with $800,000 in May.

But there were laggards. Ohio, which started strong, saw its distributi­on decline slightly. Kentucky saw a slight drop in spending from $13.1 million in July to $11.9 million in August. Iowa distribute­d only $7 million in August.

“Nearly 1.5 million families helped is meaningful progress, but the overall rate of spending emergency rental assistance remains too slow,” Diane Yentel, CEO of the National Low Income Housing Coalition, said in a statement.

Those places that aren’t spending funds risk having that assistance redirected to other states or cities.

The Treasury Department is planning to release details next week on how it will handle the process of reallocati­ng funds — shifting money from those places that don’t have a demonstrat­ed need to those that have exhausted 65 percent of their money and need more. The allocation is expected to happen over months.

The emergency rental assistance statute allows for reallocati­ng emergency rental assistance funds beginning Thursday. In a letter to grantees Friday, Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Wally Adeyemo said the department would identify excess funds for reallocati­on “through a fair approach based on transparen­t benchmarks.”

“Even if a grantee is deemed to have excess funds and is potentiall­y subject to reallocati­on, the grantee will be given an opportunit­y to present mitigating circumstan­ces (e.g., a high rate of funds obligated to tenants, even if not yet expended) in order to reduce the amount of funds recaptured,” Adeyemo said.

Housing advocates blamed the slow rollout on the department under President Donald Trump, saying his administra­tion was slow to explain how the money could be spent. They say the guidance is clearer from the Biden administra­tion but the process still seems more focused on preventing fraud than helping tenants.

The department credited the increased spending in August to changes that allow tenants to assess their income and risk of becoming homeless, among other criteria. Many states and local government­s, fearing fraud, have measures in place that can take weeks to verify that an applicant qualifies for help.

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