Oroville Mercury-Register

As CA’s eviction ban ends, protection­s remain

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO » With a statewide eviction moratorium ending Friday, officials in California are rushing to make sure tenants with unpaid rent know they can still stay in their homes after that date — but only if they have applied for assistance from the state.

California is using billions of federal dollars to pay off up to 18 months of most people’s rent dating back to April 2020, the first full month of the state’s stayat-home order because of the coronaviru­s. To qualify, people must earn 80% or less of their area’s median income and must have been affected by the pandemic — a nondescrip­t requiremen­t nearly everyone can meet.

Through Thursday of this week, state law automatica­lly bans landlords from evicting people for unpaid rent. But beginning Friday, tenants with unpaid rent can only be protected from evictions if they have applied for assistance.

As of Monday, more than 309,000 households have applied for assistance, asking for nearly $3 billion. The state has paid nearly $650 million to about 55,000 households so far, and they have approved another $950 million in assistance that is in the process of being paid.

That’s important, because it means California has allocated at least 65% of it’s initial allocation of $1.5 billion from the federal government. If they didn’t do that, the federal government could have taken some of that money back and Cal

ifornia likely wouldn’t get any more.

Now, however, California stands to get even more money — as much as $1.8 billion, state officials said — in a second round of funding, ensuring the state will have enough money to continue paying off people’s unpaid rent.

The federal eviction moratorium ended last month. Last week, federal officials said state and local government­s had allocated more than 16.5% of the money available for rental assistance in August, up from 11.1% in July.

In California, there is no deadline to apply for the money. The state will pay off rent tenants owe and they will even preemptive­ly pay people’s rent for the next three months. If tenants still can’t pay after that, the state will pay for another three months after that. But tenants can only receive 18 months worth of assistance, per federal rules.

Russ Heimerich, spokesman for the Department of Housing and Community Developmen­t, said the state would continue to pay people’s rent “as long as we have the money to do it.”

California has a total of $5.2 billion to pay for all of

this, with the money split between the state and local government­s.

“Applying for rental assistance is the best way to protect yourself from being evicted,” Lourdes Castro Ramírez, secretary of the Business, Consumer Services and Housing Agency, said during a news conference on Monday.

But tenant advocates worry many renters won’t know about the protection­s. Tina Rosales, an attorney and policy advocate for the Western Center

on Law and Poverty, said some tenants don’t know they can halt an eviction proceeding by simply completing an applicatio­n for assistance and many don’t have lawyers to help them. She’s afraid some might get spooked once the moratorium ends and “selfevict.”

“Yes, (state law) does have protection­s, but those protection­s rely heavily on a legal system that is not tenant friendly at all,” she said.

The state Legislatur­e included

$40 million in this year’s budget to pay for lawyers to help renters and homeowners avoid eviction and foreclosur­e, with a commitment to spend an additional $40 million over the next two years. Assemblyma­n David Chiu, a Democrat from San Francisco and chair of the Assembly Housing and Community Developmen­t Committee, said if tenants are served eviction notices after Friday they should contact a legal services agency for help.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Demonstrat­ors call for passage of rent forgivenes­s and stronger eviction protection­s legislatio­n as they carry a mock casket past the Capitol in Sacramento California’s statewide eviction moratorium ends Friday, Oct. 1. But tenants with unpaid rent can still stay in their homes beyond that date if they apply for assistance from the state. California is using billions of federal dollars to pay off up to 18months of most people’s rent dating back to April 2020.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Demonstrat­ors call for passage of rent forgivenes­s and stronger eviction protection­s legislatio­n as they carry a mock casket past the Capitol in Sacramento California’s statewide eviction moratorium ends Friday, Oct. 1. But tenants with unpaid rent can still stay in their homes beyond that date if they apply for assistance from the state. California is using billions of federal dollars to pay off up to 18months of most people’s rent dating back to April 2020.

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