Lodi News-Sentinel

Crisis spirals for landlords awaiting $47 billion in relief

- Prashant Gopal and Noah Buhayar

More than a year since Covid-19 lockdowns put millions of apartment dwellers out of work, almost $47 billion in U.S. government rent relief is hitting the streets. For many landlords, it’s coming much too slowly.

Joaquin Villanueva, an airport janitor who owns a three-unit rental house in East Boston, had to take out a home-equity loan just to pay the bills. One tenant, eight months behind on rent, vanished one night in March. An unemployed restaurant dish washer in another unit owes $5,000.

“I don’t want to lose my house so I’m doing whatever I have to do,” said the El Salvadoran immigrant who wipes the floors at nearby Logan Internatio­nal Airport. “I’m not rich like a Donald Trump.”

While the government passed sweeping measures last year to prevent mass homelessne­ss among renters, there was no targeted help for mom-and-pop property owners who provide much of America’s affordable housing. Like their tenants, these landlords are more likely to be nonwhite or to be immigrants using real estate for their economic foothold. Now, mortgage, maintenanc­e and tax bills are piling up, putting landlords in danger of losing their buildings or being forced to sell to wealthier investors hunting for distressed deals.

The tens of billions of dollars that Congress allocated for rent relief — starting in December and then with a second allotment in March — was supposed to help by covering back rent and unpaid utility bills. But the rollout has been moving at the speed of bureaucrac­y, which varies from state to state.

“The fact that we’re over a year into the pandemic really puts a lot of these landlords at risk,” said Rick Sharga, executive vice president at RealtyTrac, which provides property data for investors.

Rent shortfalls have drained owners and tenants of goodwill. But to save themselves, both sides will need to cooperate. Local government­s, to prevent fraud, often require long, detailed applicatio­ns signed by both parties.

There’s little data showing what share of landlords are in desperate situations, but it doesn’t take much to fall behind if income stops coming from one tenant in a small building. With each passing month, the problems get bigger and harder to solve.

Many landlords don’t qualify for federal Covid-19 mortgage forbearanc­e, because less than a third have mortgages backed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac or another federal agency. And local government­s can’t afford to forgo property taxes, especially in cities that have been hardhit by the pandemic.

“The long-term concern here, over the course of a few years, is that a growing share of mom and pop landlords will be forced to sell and rents will go up,” said Peter Hepburn, an assistant professor of sociology at Rutgers University who researches housing inequality. “There’s a lot of private equity interest and a real possibilit­y of growing consolidat­ion.”

Lincoln Eccles, who owns a 14-unit building in the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn, New York, says he is flooded with unsolicite­d phone calls, texts and e-mails from investors. Selling would bring some relief — the pandemic has put him a year behind on taxes and gas bills. But he’d like to pass the building, acquired by his Jamaican immigrant father, to his first son, born this month.

Still, headaches are mounting. One tenant owes more than $40,000 in back rent, five units are empty and Eccles can’t afford to replace or even fix a boiler that broke down again in March. The rent relief program will help only so much. He’s unlikely to get government grants to cover losses from a tenant who left in November owing $96,000.

Small owners are getting hit from many directions, said Roy Ho, who runs the Property Owners Associatio­n of Greater New York, which has 800 members who are mostly Chinese. Some also have retail businesses or are commercial landlords with stores, nail salons and restaurant­s now fighting to stay afloat.

Some of their residentia­l tenants left the city during the pandemic, leaving vacancies, while others paid late or not at all, Ho said. The situation can get awkward when owners and renters live in the same building.

“It’s difficult to have a complete breakdown when one is living upstairs and the other downstairs,” he said. “But because of Covid, they talk less.”

Landlords are constraine­d by government bans from evicting tenants who missed rent during the pandemic. The federal moratorium will expire June 30, unless President Joe Biden extends it again.

Some property owners say eviction bans leave them saddled with tenants who were delinquent even before the pandemic. But many renters are in the same boat as landlords with debts mounting, said Cea Weaver, campaign coordinato­r for Housing Justice For All in New York.

“The eviction ban is a blunt instru

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Cities remain largely popular despite reports to the contrary, and rising mortgage rates won't matter as much for housing affordabil­ity as limited supply.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Cities remain largely popular despite reports to the contrary, and rising mortgage rates won't matter as much for housing affordabil­ity as limited supply.

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