The Mercury News

Lifting eviction moratorium­s leads to higher COVID-19 infection rates and deaths

- By Laurence Du Sault ldusault@ bayareanew­sgroup.com This article is part of the California Divide, a collaborat­ion among newsrooms examining income inequality and economic survival in California.

As the state faces its most stringent business shutdowns since spring and as moratorium­s protecting many from eviction threaten to sunset, California lawmakers have started debating more protection­s for vulnerable renters and landlords whose finances were affected by the pandemic’s deepening economic crisis.

Now a new study of 44 states that enacted eviction moratorium­s links evictions to an increase in coronaviru­s deaths and cases.

“We wanted to know whether these moratorium­s could protect people from COVID,” said Kathryn Leifheit, lead author on the study and researcher at UCLA’s Fielding School of Public Health. And they do, the study found. “But the flip side of that is, when you get rid of them, people experience more COVID cases and deaths.”

Nationwide, the lifting of moratorium­s led to an extra 365,200 to 502,200 coronaviru­s cases and 8,900 to 12,500 deaths, according to the study by researcher­s from UCLA’s Fielding School of Public Health and the John Hopkins University, Bloomberg School of Public Health, among others. “Any deaths would be upsetting, but these are large estimates,” Leifheit said. “You’re talking about big numbers.”

The study, pending peer review but published amid the urgency of the research, followed from March to September the 44 U. S. states that enacted eviction moratorium­s. Researcher­s then compared data from the 27 states that lifted protection­s with the 17 states that kept them — including California, where existing protection­s are set to expire Jan. 31. The federal moratorium ordered by the Centers for Disease Control expires Dec. 31.

“The nature of the pandemic is temporary but the consequenc­es for people’s lives can be lifelong; COVID can lead to death,” said Julia Raifman, co-author of the study and assistant public health professor at Boston University. “But also I think that children might never recover from the state of homelessne­ss.”

After 16 weeks, states that had lifted their moratorium­s had roughly twice as many cases than those that hadn’t, and their coronaviru­s mortality rates jumped: they were 5.4 times higher than those who had kept them, the study found. Texas, whose population is closest to California’s but that lifted its moratorium in mid-May, would have had at least 120,650 less cases and 4,456 less deaths if moratorium­s remained, the study found.

“Rates of COVID compared to now were relatively lower back then,” Leifheit said. “Now, thinking of January, we’re talking of a bunch of states losing those protection­s all at once and we’re talking of a phase of the pandemic where we’re getting 1 million cases a week.”

The researcher­s noted that not everyone who contracted the virus as a result of lifted moratorium­s had necessaril­y been evicted. Rather, some of the additional cases and deaths were caused by what Madeline Howard, senior housing attorney at the Western Center on Law and Poverty, called a “ripple effect” of people moving in with friends and family, couchsurfi­ng or crowding homeless encampment­s. “It’s not only about people affected by the evictions, it hurts the whole community,” Howard said.

“All of the additional exposure, it’s the opposite of shelter in place,” said Amie Fishman, executive director for Non-Profit Housing of Northern California.

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