Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Advocates scramble to help renters after eviction ruling

- By Michael Casey

BOSTON — The recent court ruling striking down a national eviction moratorium has heightened concerns that tenants won’t receive tens of billions of dollars in promised federal aid in time to avoid getting kicked out of their homes.

A federal judge last week found the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention exceeded its authority when it imposed the moratorium last year. Housing advocates believe the ban saved lives and not only should continue, but be extended past its initial June 30 deadline.

For now, the moratorium remains: A judge stayed the court’s order following an appeal from the Justice Department.

Without the moratorium, advocates say, the only thing standing between many tenants and eviction is the nearly $50 billion allocated by Congress for rental assistance. Advocates say few tenants have received any of the money — which is up to individual states to distribute — and they fear it won’t get to the neediest people in time if the moratorium is scrapped.

“Unfortunat­ely, rental assistance funds are not reaching struggling families nearly as quickly as is needed,” said Oren Sellstrom, litigation director for the Lawyers for Civil Rights in Boston. “Here in Massachuse­tts, tenants report that submitting a rental assistance applicatio­n is like sending it into a black hole.”

The government didn’t do much better last year, when several states failed to spend the federal coronaviru­s relief money they had set aside for rental assistance, the advocates said. Among them were Kansas, Louisiana, Mississipp­i, New York and Pennsylvan­ia.

“Getting rental assistance funds into the hands of those renters and rental housing providers who need it most is the only way to prevent irrevocabl­e harm to our nation’s housing supply,” said Bob Pinnegar, president & CEO of the National Apartment Associatio­n.

President Joe Biden’s administra­tion Friday announced changes aimed at doing just that.

Government agencies implementi­ng the rental relief program will be required to offer assistance directly to renters if landlords choose not to participat­e, said Gene Sperling. He is the White House coordinato­r of Biden’s American Rescue Plan, a $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package Congress passed to help the country defeat the coronaviru­s and nurse the economy back to health. Also, the waiting time for delivering the assistance to renters is cut in half if landlords aren’t involved, Sperling said.

The eviction ban was put in place last year to prevent families from losing their homes and moving into shelters or sharing crowded conditions with relatives or friends, conditions health officials said could exacerbate the spread of the highly contagious coronaviru­s.

Proponents of the moratorium argue it is necessary since the pandemic is still a threat. Nearly 4 million people said they faced eviction or foreclosur­e in the next two months, according to a Census Bureau survey.

 ?? MICHAEL DWYER/AP 2020 ?? Activists erect a sign in front of Massachuse­tts Gov. Charlie Baker’s house in Swampscott. Advocates blast that state’s rental assistance applicatio­n process.
MICHAEL DWYER/AP 2020 Activists erect a sign in front of Massachuse­tts Gov. Charlie Baker’s house in Swampscott. Advocates blast that state’s rental assistance applicatio­n process.

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