The Sun (Lowell)

Housing activists march on Gov. Baker’s home

- By Steve Leblanc

Housing activists marched to Gov. Charlie Baker’s home in Swampscott on Wednesday to call on him to support more robust protection­s against evictions and foreclosur­es during the ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic.

About 100 to 150 protesters said the Republican governor and Democratic leaders in the Massachuse­tts Legislatur­e need to back a comprehens­ive eviction prevention measure intended to help stabilize renters, homeowners and small landlords for a year as Massachuse­tts weathers the ongoing crisis

he bill would ensure tenants cannot be evicted because of missed rent if the nonpayment was because of COVID-19, giving them time to get owed rental payments and other assistance in place.

It would also prevent “no fault” evictions and rent increases for 12 months following the state of emergency, guard against foreclosur­e and strengthen forbearanc­e protection­s, allowing homeowners and landlords with up to 15 units to pause their mortgage and put missed payments on the end of the loan. the march — said Baker’s plan doesn’t go far enough to protect tenants, homeowners and small landlords.

Del Castillo said plans to expand the state’s legal infrastruc­ture to cope with a backlog of potential evictions is an admission the state is facing a housing crisis. He said relying on the federal government for help is dicey.

“The governor needs to do what he has to do for his particular state,” Del Castillo said Wednesday. “We need policies on the state level that don’t leave us vulnerable to the whims of the federal government.”

Advocates have pointed to a report by the Massachuse­tts Area Planning Council that found more than 100,000 renters and homeowners will have trouble paying their housing bills as the pandemic drags on.

Baker’s proposal is “woefully insufficie­nt to address the scale of the crisis facing Massachuse­tts renters,” Carlene Pavlos, executive director of the Massachuse­tts Public Health Associatio­n, said in a press release.

Pavlos was among a coalition of about 300 public health and health care workers who signed an open letter to Baker, Senate President Karen Spilka, and House Speaker Robert Deleo calling on them to adopt tougher protection­s.

When the state moratorium expires Saturday, a moratorium establishe­d by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will take effect in Massachuse­tts.

The CDC moratorium will prevent. evictions through December for non-payment for qualified tenants who submit a written declaratio­n to their landlord. Protection is limited to households who meet certain income and vulnerabil­ity criteria.

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