Daily Breeze (Torrance)

CDC reissues national eviction ban until early October, slightly longer than California’s ban.

California’s ban ends Sept. 30 — giving it 3 more days to help

- By Josh Boak, Lisa Mascaro and Jonathan Lemire

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a new eviction moratorium that will last until Oct. 3, as the Biden administra­tion seeks to quell intensifyi­ng criticism from progressiv­es that it was allowing vulnerable renters to lose their homes during a pandemic.

The ban announced Tuesday could help keep millions in their homes as the coronaviru­s’ delta variant has spread and states have been slow to release federal rental aid. It would temporaril­y halt evictions in counties with “substantia­l and high levels” of virus transmissi­ons and would cover areas where 90% of the U.S. population lives.

California has its own eviction moratorium in place until Sept. 30. State officials say only 8% of applicatio­ns (20,000) for rental aid have been processed so far.

The CDC’s announceme­nt was a reversal for the Biden administra­tion, which allowed an earlier moratorium to lapse over the weekend after saying a Supreme Court ruling prevented an extension. That ripped open a dramatic split between the White House and progressiv­e Democrats who insisted the administra­tion do more to prevent some 3.6 million Americans from losing their homes during the COVID-19 crisis.

Speaking at the White House on Tuesday, Biden said he pushed the CDC to again consider its options. But he still seemed hesitant as to whether the new moratorium could withstand lawsuits about its constituti­onality, saying he has sought the opinions of experts as to whether the Supreme Court would approve the measure.

“The bulk of the constituti­onal scholarshi­p says that it’s not likely to pass constituti­onal muster,” Biden said. “But there are several key scholars who think that it may and it’s worth the effort.”

The president added that the moratorium — even if it gets challenged in court — “will probably give some additional time” for states and city to release billions of dollars in federal relief to renters.

Politicall­y, the extension could help heal a rift with liberal Democratic lawmakers who were calling on the president to take executive action to keep renters in their homes. The administra­tion had spent the past several days scrambling to reassure Democrats and the country that it could find a way to limit the damage from potential evictions through the use of federal aid.

But pressure mounted as key lawmakers said it was not enough.

Top Democratic leaders joined Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo., who has been camped outside the U.S. Capitol for several days. The freshman congresswo­man once lived in her car as a young mother and pointed to that experience to urge the White House to prevent widespread evictions.

As she wiped her eyes before a crowd at the Capitol after the CDC’s announceme­nt, Bush said she was shedding “joyful tears.”

“My God, I don’t believe we did this,” she said. “We just did the work, just by loving folks to keep millions in their homes.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said it was a day of “extraordin­ary relief.”

“The imminent fear of eviction and being put out on the street has been lifted for countless families across America. Help is Here!” Pelosi said in a statement.

Administra­tion officials had previously said a Supreme Court ruling stopped them from setting up a new moratorium without congressio­nal backing. When the court allowed the eviction ban to remain in place through the end of July by a 5-4 vote, one justice in the majority, Brett Kavanaugh, wrote that Congress would have to act to extend it further.

But on Tuesday, the CDC cited the slow pace of state and local government­s disbursing housing aid as justificat­ion for the new moratorium.

Aside from the moratorium, Biden has insisted that federal money is available — some $47 billion previously approved during the pandemic — that needs to get out the door to help renters and landlords.

“The money is there,” Biden said.

 ?? AMANDA ANDRADE-RHOADES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rep. Mondaire Jones, D-N.Y., Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y. and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., celebrate the announceme­nt that the Biden administra­tion will enact a targeted nationwide eviction moratorium.
AMANDA ANDRADE-RHOADES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rep. Mondaire Jones, D-N.Y., Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y. and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., celebrate the announceme­nt that the Biden administra­tion will enact a targeted nationwide eviction moratorium.

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