The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

FEDS APPROVE $300 UNEMPLOYME­NT BENEFIT

- By Michael Rubinkam

Gov. Tom Wolf said Tuesday he does not have the legal authority to extend Pennsylvan­ia’s moratorium on evictions and foreclosur­es beyond the end of the month, meaning that renters will no longer be shielded from losing their homes for failing to pay rent during the pandemic.

In a letter to both legislativ­e chambers, Wolf said the state’s Emergency Services Code allowed him to block eviction proceeding­s for only a limited amount of time. The Democrat called on state lawmakers in the Republican-controlled General Assembly to pass legislatio­n to extend the statewide moratorium, which has been in place for more than five months.

“Upon the expiration of the moratorium at the end of the month, notices of eviction and foreclosur­e will again be able to be sent,” Wolf wrote. “This begins a process that takes time, but that ultimately concludes with our fellow Pennsylvan­ians being removed from their homes.”

Pennsylvan­ia is using $175 million of its federal coronaviru­s relief money to provide rental assistance to eligible tenants and mortgage relief to homeowners, but Wolf said the program has not been working as intended. Landlords have been reluctant to participat­e in the state program, he said, because of a $750-per-month cap on payments. Wolf said lawmakers should raise the cap and relax other requiremen­ts in the program to encourage participat­ion.

“The expiration of the moratorium would be less significan­t if the programs establishe­d to assist renters and homeowners ... were functionin­g as intended to provide payment assistance,” Wolf wrote.

Thousands of landlords and renters applied for assistance through Aug. 14, and $465,000 was distribute­d to nearly 1,100 of those applicants, according to the Pennsylvan­ia Housing Finance

Agency, which is administer­ing the program.

House GOP spokespers­on Jason Gottesman said Wolf’s unilateral eviction moratorium burdened landlords who “now cannot afford to pay their bills, including property taxes that go to fund local schools.” He said the governor “is passing the buck to the legislatur­e to once again bail him out of his poor prior planning.”

Lawmakers will discuss the issue when they return to session next week, Gottesman said.

Like many Democratic and Republican governors and local officials around the U.S., Wolf imposed a moratorium on foreclosur­es and evictions to prevent people from losing their homes in the midst of the virus outbreak and widespread joblessnes­s. On July 9, he extended the statewide moratorium until Aug. 31, saying renters needed more breathing room. A landlords group and individual landlords tried to get the moratorium overturned, but the state Supreme Court dismissed their suit.

Now, housing advocates predict a rush to the courthouse and a wave of evictions once the moratorium expires.

“We’ve been getting phone calls already with landlords sending their tenants notices that they’re behind on their rent, and they need to collect their rent and they’re planning on filing for eviction sometime soon,” said Vik Patel, a housing attorney at Community Legal Services of Philadelph­ia.

In other coronaviru­s-related developmen­ts in Pennsylvan­ia on Tuesday:

Pennsylvan­ia has been approved for nearly $1.5 billion in federal funding to boost unemployme­nt benefits by $300 per week.

To qualify, out-of-work residents must receive at least $100 in weekly benefits through the regular unemployme­nt compensati­on program, the pandemic assistance program for selfemploy­ed workers, or another worker benefits program. It wasn’t immediatel­y clear when recipients will begin to see the extra money, as the state Department of Labor & Industry said it needs to create a new system to administer the program. Payments will be retroactiv­e to Aug. 1 and end no later than Dec. 27.

“L&I is working as quickly as possible to evaluate what it will take to implement this program and begin paying the $300 weekly supplement in Pennsylvan­ia, while awaiting final program guidance from the federal government. We will get this money into the pockets of the eligible Pennsylvan­ians who need it and will be sure to keep everyone updated throughout this complex process,” said Labor & Industry Secretary Jerry Oleksiak.

The program was authorized via presidenti­al executive order after the previous federal benefit of $600 expired, and Congress and the White House were unable to agree on a replacemen­t package.

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Gov. Tom Wolf

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