Monterey Herald

Advocates call on Biden to extend eviction ban

- By Michael Casey

Housing advocates are calling on the incoming Biden administra­tion to strengthen the current ban on evictions.

BOSTON >> Housing advocates around the country staked out courthouse­s and held rallies Wednesday, calling on the incoming Biden administra­tion to extend and strengthen the current federal ban on evictions.

President Donald Trump’s directive, implemente­d in September by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, was extended until the end of January. Given the pandemic is still ongoing, advocates argue tenants should have protection­s for the next several months and that the ban should be expanded beyond only tenants who cannot pay their rent.

“Today, was an opportunit­y to stand in solidarity with the people,” said Alan Tanner, a minister at St. Luke’s Christian AME Zion Church who spoke at a rally in Boston, one of 17 on Wednesday in 14 states.

Several dozen tenants, advocates and small landlords gathered outside a housing court in Boston, chanting “Housing is the Cure” and holding signs including “Eviction Free Zone” and “Ban Utility Shutoffs.” They marched to the nearby John F. Kennedy Federal Building to call on federal action to address evictions. About a dozen cars also circled the housing court, honking their horns.

“We need regulation and legislatio­n that is going to prevent evictions,” he said. “We need an extension of the moratorium. We need something more strict and stern than even than the eviction ban, something that is not temporary and will last through the duration of the pandemic.”

Bans on eviction were used early on in the pandemic by states and cities to keep tenants housed and and avoid a spike in homelessne­ss. But with most of those expired, the federal ban is the only remaining protection preventing the more than 23 million renters from being evicted.

Expectatio­ns are high that one of the first things Joe Biden does when taking office will be extending that CDC eviction order. Advocates are also pressing him to include tens of billions of dollars in rental assistance in the next coronaviru­s relief bill. That would be on top of the $25 billion approved in the $900 billion coronaviru­s relief bill passed by Congress in December.

“We’re calling on President-elect Biden on his first day, his first hour to sign a new executive order implementi­ng a new extended, strengthen­ed, enforced eviction moratorium for the duration of the pandemic,” Diane Yentel, president of the National Low-Income Housing Coalition, said.

“When he comes into office, the current federal eviction moratorium is set to expire 11 days later. It is literally impossible for the $25 billion of emergency rental assistance to get to the tenants and small landlords who need those funds by that time,” she continued. “The eviction moratorium has to be extended in order to continue to create protection for tenants while states and localities work to get emergency rental assistance out to tenants who need it most.”

The organizers behind Tuesday’s protests, Right To The City Alliance, also said Congress needs to move to cancel any rent or mortgage debt related to the pandemic. Along with a rally and march in Boston, protesters built a living room in front of the CDC headquarte­rs in Atlanta and a mariachi band played outside the home of a Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s member.

“Millions of families, most of them people of color who are also frontline workers, are living in fear of ending up on the street month to month even as this pandemic continues to kill us,” Kamau Walton, senior organizer for communicat­ions with the Right To The City Alliance, said in a statement. “This isn’t just about housing, this is about protecting public health.”

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 ?? PHOTOS BY MICHAEL DWYER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tenants’ rights advocate Danielle Willams demonstrat­es outside the Edward W. Brooke Courthouse in Boston on Wednesday.
PHOTOS BY MICHAEL DWYER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tenants’ rights advocate Danielle Willams demonstrat­es outside the Edward W. Brooke Courthouse in Boston on Wednesday.
 ??  ?? A court officer watches from inside the Edward W. Brooke Courthouse in Boston as tenants’ rights advocates demonstrat­e at the entrance on Wednesday.
A court officer watches from inside the Edward W. Brooke Courthouse in Boston as tenants’ rights advocates demonstrat­e at the entrance on Wednesday.
 ??  ?? Tenants’ rights advocates march from the Edward W. Brooke Courthouse, Wednesday.
Tenants’ rights advocates march from the Edward W. Brooke Courthouse, Wednesday.

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