Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Yes, ‘millions’ in US could lose homes

- D.L. Davis

The COVID-19 pandemic has upended the economy, and that has been felt especially in the housing sector. To prevent widespread evictions that would likely mean more people being unhoused or homeless, the federal government implemente­d a moratorium on evictions.

But that safety net is unraveling as the U.S. Supreme Court on Aug. 26, on a 6-3 vote, ended the pandemic-related federal moratorium on residentia­l evictions put in place by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

At least four states, Illinois, California, New Jersey, New Mexico as well as Washington, D.C., will continue to ban evictions, at least temporaril­y. In at least five states, renters who’ve put in an applicatio­n for rent assistance but haven’t received the funding yet are entitled to some protection from eviction. Those are Washington state, Oregon, Minnesota, New York and Nevada. The White House called on more states to take action to prevent evictions.

“Horrifying to think that millions of Americans have to worry about losing their housing in the middle of a pandemic,” U.S. Rep. Mark Pocan, D-Wis., tweeted on Aug. 27.

Is Pocan right that “millions of Americans” could lose their housing in the middle of a pandemic?

Let’s take a look.

When asked to support the claim, Pocan’s office referred PolitiFact Wisconsin to the U.S. Census Bureau’s Week 35 Household Pulse Survey: August 4 – August 16. The HPS, according to the Census Bureau, is designed to provide near real-time data on how the pandemic has affected people’s lives.

Under the category of “Likelihood of leaving this home due to eviction in next two months,” 1,292,008 responded Very Likely and 2,219,048 responded Somewhat Likely. That is a total of 3,511,056 facing the “likelihood” of eviction in the next two months.

Media reports

The New York Times in an Aug. 27 article “Supreme Court’s Decision Opens Door to Millions of Evictions” reported that “Millions of Americans around the country face the prospect of losing their homes after the Supreme Court on Thursday rejected the Biden administra­tion’s latest federal moratorium on evictions.”

The article pointed out that the Biden administra­tion is working to speed up the distributi­on of billions of dollars in federal aid to people who are behind in rent because of the economic fallout from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In an Aug. 3 report, PolitiFact National discussed “What’s happening with the federal eviction moratorium and rental assistance?”

The PolitiFact article, citing Census Bureau reports, noted that about 3.6 million people face eviction within two months, and about 6 million households are behind on their rent; estimates of the back rent owed are in the tens of billions of dollars.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel in a July 8 article noted, “A surge in evictions is almost certain to happen when the moratorium ends. But the truth is they’ve been happening all along.” The special report said evictions in Milwaukee County were continuing despite the moratorium.

“In reality, the eviction ban is far from absolute, and only covers tenants who meet its criteria, which includes a substantia­l loss of income or extraordin­ary out-of-pocket medical expenses,” according to the Journal Sentinel report.

Housing advocate weighs in

Attorney Carmen Ayers, Legal Action of Wisconsin’s housing law priority coordinato­r, said the agency is seeing many clients “facing the pain and trauma of losing their home, and often many of their belongings, to eviction.”

“Millions of Americans are at risk of eviction,” Ayers said in an email. “In Wisconsin alone, about 23,000 tenants are likely to face eviction in the next two months, according to census surveys. Being homeless during a pandemic is horrifying — people are risking their health and lives when they double up with friends or family or seek refuge in crowded homeless shelters, and it exacerbate­s the risk to public health overall.”

Ayers went on to note that evictions and facing homelessne­ss “has always been traumatic and consequent­ial.”

“It pushes families further into poverty and harms communitie­s. But to force families from their homes — many who are immunocomp­romised, elderly, or families with children too young to be vaccinated — as the pandemic rages on is simply inhumane,” Ayers said.

Our ruling

Pocan said the end of the eviction moratorium means “millions of Americans” could lose “their housing in the middle of a pandemic.”

The U.S. Census Bureau’s weekly Household Pulse Survey found that 3,511,056 respondent­s are facing the “likelihood” of eviction in the next two months. Several media reports also noted that the threat of homelessne­ss could affect millions as the U.S. Supreme Court ended the pandemic-related federal moratorium. However, there are a few states that have implemente­d eviction moratorium­s at the state level. Wisconsin is not one of those states.

For a statement that is accurate and there’s nothing significant missing, our rating is True.

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