Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Court upholds CDC eviction ban

Case heads to Supreme Court; landlords confident of win

- ALANNA DURKIN RICHER AND GARY FIELDS

WASHINGTON — A federal appeals court Friday said a pause on evictions designed to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s can remain in place for now, setting up a battle before the nation’s highest court.

A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia rejected a bid by Alabama and Georgia landlords to block the eviction moratorium reinstated by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention this month.

The landlords plan to immediatel­y file an emergency motion to the Supreme Court, said National Associatio­n of Realtors spokesman Patrick Newton.

“With a majority of the Supreme Court in agreement that any further extension of this eviction moratorium requires Congressio­nal authorizat­ion, we are confident and hopeful for a quick resolution,” Newton said in an emailed statement.

In a short written decision, the panel said the appeals court had rejected a similar bid and a lower court also declined to overturn the moratorium.

“In view of that decision and on the record before us, we likewise deny the emergency motion directed to this court,” the judges said.

The Supreme Court voted 5-4 in June to allow the moratorium to continue through the end of July. But Justice Brett Kavanaugh — who joined the majority — warned the administra­tion not to act further without explicit congressio­nal approval.

The Biden administra­tion allowed an earlier moratorium to lapse July 31, saying it had no legal authority to allow it to continue. But the CDC issued a new moratorium days later as pressure mounted from lawmakers and others to help vulnerable renters stay in their homes as the coronaviru­s’ delta variant surged. The new moratorium is scheduled to expire Oct. 3.

As of Aug. 2, roughly 3.5 million people in the U.S. said they faced eviction in the next two months, according to the Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey.

The new moratorium temporaril­y halted evictions in counties with “substantia­l and high levels” of virus transmissi­ons, covering areas where 90% of the U.S. population lives.

The Trump administra­tion initially put a nationwide eviction moratorium in place last year out of fear that people who couldn’t pay their rent would end up in crowded living conditions such as in homeless shelters and help spread the virus.

President Joe Biden acknowledg­ed there were questions about the legality of the new eviction freeze. But he said a court fight would buy time for the distributi­on of some of the $45 billion in rental assistance that has been approved but not yet used.

In urging the appeals court to keep the ban in place, the Biden administra­tion noted that the new moratorium was more targeted than the nationwide ban that had lapsed, and that the landscape had changed since the Supreme Court ruling because of the spread of the highly contagious delta variant.

The landlords accused the administra­tion of caving in to political pressure and reinstatin­g the moratorium even though it knew it was illegal.

“As the President himself has acknowledg­ed, the CDC’s latest extension is little more than a delay tactic designed to buy time to distribute rental assistance,” their attorneys wrote in court documents.

A lower-court judge ruled this month that the freeze is illegal but rejected the landlords’ request to lift the moratorium, saying her hands were tied by an appellate decision from the last time courts considered the evictions moratorium in the spring.

 ?? (AP/John Minchillo) ?? Gary Zaremba knocks on an apartment door as he checks in with tenants to discuss building maintenanc­e at one of his at properties earlier this month in the Queens borough of New York.
(AP/John Minchillo) Gary Zaremba knocks on an apartment door as he checks in with tenants to discuss building maintenanc­e at one of his at properties earlier this month in the Queens borough of New York.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States