Lodi News-Sentinel

White House says CDC can’t extend eviction moratorium

- Niels Lesniewski

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion is still looking for ways to help people avoid eviction but resisting pressure from congressio­nal Democrats to have the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention revive the moratorium on such actions, which ended over the weekend.

The CDC put the eviction moratorium in place to help people stay in their homes and out of congregate settings, like shelters, during the COVID-19 pandemic. The Supreme Court allowed the moratorium to run through July 31 but indicated that a further extension would be legally suspect without specific authorizat­ion from Congress.

National Economic Council Director Gene Sperling said administra­tion lawyers have been unable to find a new justificat­ion that would pass muster, but he said President Joe Biden has tasked department­s and agencies to do everything they can to mitigate a potential eviction crisis.

“Given the rising urgency of the spread of the delta variant, the president has asked all of us, including the CDC, to do everything in our power to look for every potential legal authority we have to prevent evictions,” Sperling told reporters at the White House. “To date, the CDC director and her team have been unable to find legal authority, even for a more targeted eviction moratorium, that would focus just on counties with higher rates of COVID spread.”

Sperling said the administra­tion was asking for state and local government­s to expedite the disburseme­nt of rental assistance, saying they were significan­tly loosening documentat­ion and verificati­on requiremen­ts.

“He is asking the USDA, VA and HUD, and the Treasury Department as well — make clear that those who benefit from government­backed mortgages or even tax relief related to housing should not seek evictions, without first seeking the emergency rental assistance funding that allows — that makes landlords completely whole, that can pay up to 18 months of forward and back rent and utilities,” Sperling said.

It is unclear how many carrots and sticks the administra­tion may have, but Sperling and company appear to be looking for all of them. Many Democrats on Capitol Hill have been frustrated by the administra­tion’s response to the Supreme Court, saying the administra­tion waited too long to ask Congress to step in to provide a further extension.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi, in a Monday “Dear Colleague letter,” reiterated that the position of House Democratic leadership is that the CDC should change course and revive the moratorium.

“‘The War has Changed!’ With these words, the CDC cautioned the difference that the delta variant has made on the pandemic. As they have called upon the American people to mask up, to be vaccinated and to take other public health precaution­s, it is critical, in recognitio­n of this urgency, that they extend the eviction moratorium,” the California Democrat wrote. “Putting people on the streets contribute­s to the spread of the virus.”

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