Oroville Mercury-Register

Anxious tenants await assistance as evictions start up again

- By Michael Casey and Michelle Liu

COLUMBIA, S.C. >> Six months after Congress approved spending tens of billions of dollars to bail out renters facing eviction, South Carolina was just reaching its first tenants. All nine of them.

Like most states, it had plenty of money to distribute — $272 million. But it had handed out just over $36,000 by June. The pace has since intensifie­d, but South Carolina still has only distribute­d $15.5 million in rent and utility payments as of Aug. 20, or about 6% of its funds.

“People are strangling on the red tape,” said Sandy Gillis, executive director of the Hilton Head Deep Well Project, which stopped referring tenants to the program and started paying overdue rent through its own private funds instead.

The struggles in South Carolina are emblematic of a program launched at the beginning of the year with the promise of solving the pandemic eviction crisis, only to fall victim in many states to bureaucrat­ic hurdles, political inertia and unclear guidance at the federal level.

The concerns about the slow pace intensifie­d Thursday, after the Supreme Court blocked the Biden administra­tion from enforcing a temporary ban that was put in place because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Some 3.5 million people in the U.S. as of Aug. 16 said they face eviction in the next two months, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey.

“The Supreme Court decision undermines historic efforts by Congress and the White House to ensure housing stability during the pandemic,” Diane Yentel, CEO of the National Low Income Housing Coalition, said in a statement.

“State and local government­s are working to improve programs to distribute emergency rental assistance to those in need, but they need more time; the Supreme Court’s decision will lead to many renters, predominan­tly people of color, losing their homes before the assistance can reach them.”

The Treasury Department said this week that just over $5.1 billion of the estimated $46.5 billion in federal rental assistance — only 11% — has been distribute­d by states and localities through July. This includes some $3 billion handed out by the end of June and another $1.5 billion by May 31.

Nearly a million households have been served and 70 places have gotten at least half their money out, including several states, among them Virginia and Texas, according to Treasury. New York, which hadn’t distribute­d anything through May, has now distribute­d more than $156 million.

But there are 16 states, according to the latest data, that had distribute­d less than 5% and nine that spent less than 3%. Most, according to the National Low Income Housing Coalition, are red states, often with tough-to-reach rural population­s. Besides South Carolina, they include Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Iowa, Indiana, Florida, Nebraska, North and South Dakota, Mississipp­i and New Mexico.

There are myriad reasons for the slow distributi­on, according to the group. Among them is the historic amount of money — more than the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t’s annual budget — which required some 450 localities to create programs from scratch. Getting the money out is also complicate­d by the fact that checks aren’t sent directly to beneficiar­ies like, for example, the child tax credit.

States and localities have also struggled with technology and staffing, as well as reaching tenants without access to the internet, or small landlords unaware of the help. Some have applicatio­ns so complicate­d they scare off prospectiv­e applicants or have income documentat­ion and pandemic impact requiremen­ts that can be timeconsum­ing.

Efforts to use coronaviru­s relief money for rental assistance last year faced similar challenges.

“A lot of states are lagging behind,” said Emma Foley, a research analyst with the National Low Income Housing Coalition. “The fact that this many states still have distribute­d so little is worrisome.”

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Applicants at a rental assistance fair for Jackson residents at the Mississipp­i Trademart, line up to be assigned the proper station in the state Fairground­s in Jackson, Miss.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Applicants at a rental assistance fair for Jackson residents at the Mississipp­i Trademart, line up to be assigned the proper station in the state Fairground­s in Jackson, Miss.

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