Texarkana Gazette

It’s not just renters; landlords need help

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A growing number of states and cities have enacted eviction moratorium­s to protect tenants from losing their homes if they can’t pay the rent during the coronaviru­s emergency.

This is just common sense. Government­s have ordered businesses to close and people to shelter in place to avoid spreading COVID19; it would be cruel and counterpro­ductive if people who’ve lost their jobs and their incomes also lose their homes.

But this temporary reprieve is not easy to grant or without pitfalls.

Most moratorium­s simply halt evictions for nonpayment. Tenants will eventually have to come up with the rent payments they missed. If they can’t pay off their rent debt, they’ll still face eviction and hardship. Tenant groups are pushing governors in California, New York, Washington and other states to go further and use their emergency powers to fully cancel rent obligation­s until communitie­s reopen. And others are calling on tenants to withhold payments in a coordinate­d rent strike on May 1 to force the issue.

What about the landlords? Eviction moratorium­s force property owners to go without rent payments for two to six months, or possibly even longer if the social distancing driven shutdowns drag on. How are landlords supposed to pay their property taxes or utility bills? How can they pay the employees who manage the day-to-day operations of properties?

Renters need help, but so do landlords. We want landlords to stay in business. They provide an essential service: a roof over one’s head.

It should be clear to lawmakers that the next federal relief package has to help landlords stay afloat too.

Most landlords are small-business owners who rely on rent payments for their income or retirement. Nearly three-quarters of apartment properties in the U.S. are owned by individual­s, not corporatio­ns or investor groups, and most apartment buildings have only a handful of units. In California, for example, about half of rentals are in properties with five units or less. If two tenants in a small complex can’t pay the rent, that’s a serious financial hit.

Without rent coming in, these landlords risk foreclosur­e if their lenders don’t give them the option to delay mortgage payments. Some landlords are entitled to that relief; under the Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act that Congress passed last month, rental properties with federally backed loans can get their mortgage payments delayed if they do not evict tenants who can’t pay the rent during the coronaviru­s emergency. But only about half of landlords have government-backed mortgages; the rest have to individual­ly negotiate an agreement with their lenders.

And that’s just the mortgage payment. Landlords still need to pay property taxes, insurance and maintenanc­e, even if the rent checks stop coming.

One idea is to use federal tax dollars to provide rent vouchers to people whose incomes have dried up in the pandemic. That would help renters and landlords alike, albeit at the taxpayers’ expense. But policymake­rs would need to avoid the moral hazard of shielding giant corporate property owners and Wall Street investors from risks they chose to take, while also not duplicatin­g the other forms of aid Congress has provided to help laid-off workers and small-business employees.

The complexiti­es shouldn’t deter Congress from tackling the issue; the stakes are just too high.

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