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Landlords say tenants are not tapping rent relief

- By Kristian Hernández Stateline.org

FORT WORTH, Texas — On the morning of April 8, landlord Margarita Palacios went before a Tarrant County, Texas, judge via Zoom and tried to explain why she wanted to evict a tenant who owed $4,350 in back rent.

Palacios, representi­ng The Palace apartments, began to explain, “We sent her links to rental assistance programs and offered to help fill out the applicatio­ns in our office, but —”

“I don’t really need to know,” said Justice of the Peace Mary Tom Curnutt, interrupti­ng Palacios midsentenc­e. “I don’t really have a dog in the fight, I will just tell you that if there’s still any chance of you getting your money then don’t take the judgment, but if you want to get them out of there, let’s get them out of there.”

Even as states and the federal government have allocated billions of dollars in assistance, a year into the coronaviru­s pandemic, more than 14.5 million Americans don’t know whether they can pay their rent, according to a recent U.S. Census Bureau survey.

In the past year, nearly every state, including Texas, has protected tenants through eviction moratorium­s. And last September, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention imposed a federal moratorium to protect public health.

But landlords struggling to pay their own bills say many tenants don’t qualify for the CDC order. And the moratorium in Texas expired at the end of March.

As COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns continue and many leaders push for a return to normalcy this spring, some states are ready to let landlords move tenants out. That means residents’ fates are often determined in local courtrooms, before justices of the peace who can decide on their own how vigorously they want to enforce the federal moratorium.

Greg Brown, senior vice president for government affairs for the National Apartment Associatio­n, said many of his members have expressed frustratio­n with residents who are unresponsi­ve and don’t show up to court.

The latest estimate for outstandin­g rental debt nationwide is $58 billion, averaging about $6,000 per renter, according to Brown. He said only $0.10 of every $1 that a housing provider receives is profit, with the remainder going to mortgage payments, property taxes or other operating expenses.

“Many, especially small owners, are in a really tough spot,” Brown said. “Some have had to drain their savings or whatever they have to do to keep the lights on so to speak.”

Texas already has begun evictions.

Stephanie Graves owns a 15-unit property while also helping manage 1,600 units in the Houston area. Her company Q10 Property Advisors has tallied more than $1 million in delinquent rent since the start of the pandemic. She said there is a resident that owes $8,900 and refuses to file for city, state or any government assistance.

“There is no way he is ever going to catch up,” Graves said. “That’s the problem with the eviction moratorium that isn’t seen. The debt doesn’t go away.” Countless people being evicted after accruing delinquent debt will have a really hard time finding housing in the future, she said.

“That’s the crisis we’ve created with this tenant base and these moratorium­s,” Graves said. “If they leave before we get the money, then their debt goes with them.”

After Moratorium­s

Early in the pandemic, state and local emergency eviction moratorium­s aiming to stop the spread of COVID-19 and keep the newly unemployed in their homes provided some protection to renters. At its peak this past summer, 43 states had moratorium­s, according to Eviction Lab, a research organizati­on at Princeton University.

As of April 14, only 13 states still had standing eviction moratorium­s, according to Eviction Lab. This leaves renters at an increased risk of losing their homes and opens the eviction floodgates, according to housing advocates.

The CDC moratorium orders landowners not to evict any covered person from any residentia­l property in any state or U.S. territory for nonpayment of rent.

The CDC moratorium is not automatic, however. Tenants must invoke it by completing an affidavit, under penalty of perjury, saying they meet the eligibilit­y criteria. One of the requiremen­ts is

that tenants attest they have done their best to make timely partial payments and to get government assistance.

When a tenant who has been unresponsi­ve tries to invoke the CDC moratorium during an eviction hearing, Graves and her staff will show the judge emails, texts and written letters that prove the eligibilit­y criteria don’t apply.

Graves said her staff offers help to those who aren’t eligible for the CDC moratorium to apply for the millions of dollars available to Texas renters through various assistance programs.

Through the Coronaviru­s Relief Fund, the CARES Act provided $150 billion in payments to state, local and tribal government­s to help with the impact of COVID-19. In Tarrant County, 2,378 households received $7.9 million in rental assistance allocated through the fund, according to Kristen Camareno, interim director of the county’s Community Developmen­t and Housing Department.

The Emergency Rental Assistance program establishe­d under President Donald

Trump made available $25 billion to assist households that are unable to pay rent and utilities due to the pandemic.

Tarrant County received $24 million from the program, which launched March 29. In the first week, more than 400 people applied, but it can take six weeks before any payments are allocated, said Camareno. Renters qualify for up to 12 months in back rent and three months in future rent from the time of the applicatio­n.

And in February, Texas began a $1.3 billion rent relief program. At least 72,000 people have completed applicatio­ns, but by the end of March only 250 had received a payment, according to a report from the Texas House Urban Affairs Committee released earlier this month.

“Personally, yes, I wish we had more time,” Camareno said. “Ideally landlords never have to file the eviction because they’ve heard about our programs and are willing to wait a month or six weeks. But that really puts the pressure on us to make sure to get the word out about the program and that we get in front of this problem.”

Weak Protection­s

Last fall, the Texas Supreme Court’s 34th Emergency Order adopted federal rules and added state rules requiring the CDC order to be included with every eviction citation. The move temporaril­y halted the eviction process for anyone who could attest they were financiall­y affected by COVID-19.

But Texas’ moratorium ended two weeks ago.

Almost immediatel­y, the Texas Justice Court Training Center, which provides residentia­l eviction guidance to justice courts, issued a recommenda­tion for judges to allow eviction cases to proceed regardless of the CDC order.

That means most Texas renters outside of Dallas and Austin, which have their own eviction ordinances, are at the mercy of local judges who can choose to enforce or ignore the federal moratorium. Housing advocates were alarmed.

“It makes absolutely no sense to have tens of thousands if not more Texas homeless sitting outside of empty dwelling units that they just got evicted from while right across the street is billions of dollars that could have saved them and bailed out both the tenant and the landlord,” said Mark Melton, a Dallas attorney who’s been helping renters pro bono since the start of the pandemic.

At least four justices of the peace in Tarrant County have proceeded with evictions despite the CDC order, according to Stuart Campbell, a tenant rights attorney with Legal Aid of Northwest Texas, a nonprofit organizati­on that provides free civil legal help to low-income residents.

 ?? John Moore/getty Images North America/tns ?? Maricopa County constable Darlene Martinez arrives to an apartment complex to post an eviction order on Oct. 1, 2020 in Phoenix, Arizona. More than 14.5 million Americans don’t know whether they can pay their rent, according to a recent U.S. Census Bureau survey.
John Moore/getty Images North America/tns Maricopa County constable Darlene Martinez arrives to an apartment complex to post an eviction order on Oct. 1, 2020 in Phoenix, Arizona. More than 14.5 million Americans don’t know whether they can pay their rent, according to a recent U.S. Census Bureau survey.

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