USA TODAY US Edition

City looks to cancel rent due to COVID-19

Homeowners, landlords would also get relief

- Matt Steecker and Kelly Tyko

As states begin to lift moratorium­s on evictions that have been in place since the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic, one city in New York is moving in the opposite direction. Not only has the state’s eviction moratorium been extended until Aug. 20, but the city of Ithaca is looking to cancel unpaid rent.

Ithaca is believed to be the first U.S. city to approve a resolution to seek this sort of rent relief – a historic move in a city where 70% of the population are believed to be renters.

The council is asking New York state government if its Mayor Svante Myrick can obtain the power to cancel rent because of the COVID-19-induced economic malaise that has resulted in job losses and loss of income.

If the state health department approves the June 3 resolution, it would bestow Myrick with an unpreceden­ted amount of power for a mayor that would allow him to cancel all residentia­l and small business rent payments and additional fees that were due between April and June.

The resolution also urges the state to authorize the mayor to obligate landlords to offer lease extensions at the current rate during the duration of the declaratio­n of emergency.

According to the state Department of Labor, Ithaca lost 9,200 private sector jobs in April, a 16.2% decrease from the previous year. The unemployme­nt rate in Ithaca is approachin­g 11%.

The city is asking for approval through an executive order from Gov. Andrew Cuomo, which has allowed for the suspension and modificati­on of laws relating to the COVID-19 emergency. It collaborat­ed on the resolution with the newly formed Ithaca Tenants Union.

New York’s first eviction ban expires next week on June 20. Cuomo extended the ban through Aug. 20, but the new extension provides less protection.

“You can still be served papers and driven to court,” said Ithaca Tenants Union organizer Genevieve Rand. “You have to have a defense that can prove you have had economic hardship because of COVID-19.”

Will New York approve request?

Ithaca does not yet have a plan as to how it would execute rent cancellati­on if the state approves its request.

“We would have a chance to structure something more fully once we know we could move forward with rent cancellati­on,” Myrick said. “Even if granted these powers, would I cancel rent tomorrow? I wouldn’t.”

If the state approves rent cancellati­on powers for Myrick, the earliest the council would be able to meet to create the plan would be July.

“What I would do is put together a working group that would allow us to find real rent relief that likely would include rent cancellati­on, but it would only come in partnershi­p with relief for small landlords and homeowners,” Myrick said.

If Myrick is granted the power from the state to cancel rent, the new city code would cover students who reside in dormitorie­s and Ithaca tenants who are not students. However, if tenants are able to pay their rent, they need to continue to do so, the resolution states.

Officials aren’t sure if their request for rent cancellati­on powers has any chance of passing.

What about landlords?

The Ithaca Common Council also is urging the state Senate to pass a bill that would provide financial assistance for small landlords and homeowners by increasing penalties on banks that refuse mortgage deferral, and mandating that the state use federally allocated funds to provide vouchers to landlords for lost revenue.

The council will send a letter to members of Congress to push for the inclusion of a national rent and mortgage forgivenes­s fund in the next COVID-19 relief package.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States