Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Housing officials bracing for evictions

- Cary Spivak Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – WISCONSIN

Courts and housing officials nationwide are ramping up to deal with millions of tenants who are on the verge of losing their homes now that the federal eviction moratorium has expired.

The question is will it be a tsunami or merely a flood of evictions.

“Pick any term you want —it’s going to be bad,” said Matt Mleczko, a graduate research assistant at Princeton University’s Eviction Lab. The Eviction Lab was founded by Matthew Desmond, who wrote “Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City” after studying the situation in Milwaukee.

There are “upwards of ten million adult renters behind on their rent,” said Mleczko, who based his calculatio­n on the US Census Bureau Household Pulse Survey,

That report found that nearly 25% of the renters surveyed have slight or no confidence in their ability to pay next month’s rent. In addition the nonpartisa­n Center on Budget and Policy Priorities estimates that one out of seven tenants are behind on their rent.

In Wisconsin, the Census Bureau found that about 21% of the renters surveyed had slight or no confidence in their ability to pay next month’s rent.

“Those are staggering numbers,” Mleczko said. “It’s clear that there are still a staggering amount of people facing the risk of eviction.”

Many of those people have been protected from evictions since Sept. 4 when the federal Centers for Disease Control and Protection imposed a moratorium that prevented many evictions from occurring. That moratorium expired Saturday.

Bid in Congress to extend moratorium fails

The Biden administra­tion announced Thursday it would allow the nationwide ban to expire, saying it wanted to extend it due to rising infections but its hands were tied after the U.S. Supreme Court signaled in June that it wouldn’t be extended beyond the end of July without congressio­nal

action.

House lawmakers on Friday attempted, but failed, to pass a bill to extend the moratorium even for a few months. Some Democratic lawmakers had wanted it extended until the end of the year.

Social Service agencies such as the Social Developmen­t Commission are doling out millions of dollars in rent assistance payments in the hopes of keeping a roof over the heads of tenants who have lost jobs or had their income slashed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Nationally, government­s and social service agencies have been criticized for the sluggish pace of distributi­ng even though the money is desperatel­y needed by tenants and landlords — two groups that have been hard hit by the economic fallout caused by the pandemic.

“People are on the brink and they need that money,” said Raphael Ramos, head of the Eviction Defense Project. “They should access it as soon as they can.”

George Hinton, chief executive at the Social Developmen­t Commission, said the agency is working with tenants to ensure forms are filled out correctly so they could be processed quickly.

“We got people working overtime, we’re adding people,” Hinton said. “We’re pushing out money as fast as we can.”

In the past year SDC has distribute­d more than $20 million in rent assistance and it has $6 million more to distribute, said Kim Brooks, agency spokespers­on.

An additional $25 million in rent assistance has been paid since June 2020 by Community Advocates, a nonprofit that also works with cash-strapped and low-income tenants. The agency has an additional $6 million on hand but estimates it will need about $80 million to meet the needs through September 2022, said Deb Heffner, Community Advocates housing strategy director.

The rent assistance money are federal dollars that flow through the state. Nearly $46 million of the $322 million in federal funding received by the state in February has been distribute­d to more than 12,500 households to date, according to a state Department of Administra­tion spokespers­on. The funds can be used for rent and utility payments.

The state expects to receive an additional $250 million through the federal Emergency Rental Assistance program.

Early signs eviction filings are rising

Despite the millions in rent assistance, court officials are bracing for an increase in eviction filings now that tenants are no longer protected by the moratorium.

“We hope and pray that the (eviction) numbers don’t increase to pre-COVID levels, said Maudwell Kirkendoll, chief operating officer at Community Advocates.

Colleen Foley, executive director at the Legal Aid Society of Milwaukee, notes that about 160 eviction suits were filed in Milwaukee County Circuit Court in each of the last two weeks, a significant increase over what was filed in each of the previous three weeks.

“It feels a little foreboding to me,” Foley said.

The eviction moratorium did not ban all evictions. It only covered tenants who met certain criteria, which included a substantia­l loss of income or extraordin­ary out-of-pocket medical expenses. Tenants had to sign a declaratio­n swearing they met the criteria of the moratorium in order to be shielded from evictions.

Nearly 1,500 eviction orders — about a third of the historical average — were issued in Milwaukee County during the moratorium, said Branden DuPont, lead eviction researcher for the Medical College of Wisconsin. More than 6,000 eviction suits — about half the historical average — were filed during the same period, DuPont said.

Mary Triggiano, Milwaukee County chief judge, said she hopes the availabili­ty of rent assistance money will help prevent eviction numbers from climbing back up.

“I expect more (eviction filings) but not convinced there will be a deluge,” she said in an email.

Triggiano is preparing for an increase in eviction filing and hearings by making more judges and court commission­ers available to work on eviction cases if needed.

Both Legal Aid and Legal Action have hired or are hiring additional attorneys who could help clients in eviction cases. In addition, the right to counsel program in Milwaukee County aimed at providing tenants facing eviction with attorneys is scheduled to begin on Sept. 1.

And, it appears that tenants are getting anxious about the end of the moratorium.

In recent days Legal Aid has been receiving more calls from potential clients, Foley said.

“It’s a recognitio­n that things are going to change in a hurry,” she said.

The Associated Press contribute­d to this report.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States