Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Judge overrides CDC’s ban on evictions

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A federal judge in Washington on Wednesday ruled the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention oversteppe­d its legal authority by issuing a nationwide eviction moratorium, a ruling that could affect millions of struggling Americans.

U. S. District Court Judge Dabney Friedrich’s 20page order says the protection, first put in place during the coronaviru­s pandemic under the Trump administra­tion and now set to run out on June 30, goes too far.

“It is the role of the political branches, and not the courts, to assess the merits of policy measures designed to combat the spread of disease, even during a global pandemic,” the order stated. “The question for the Court is a narrow one: Does the Public Health Service Act grant the CDC the legal authority to impose a nationwide eviction moratorium? It does not.”

The ruling is a setback for the Biden administra­tion, which has also seen its proposed freeze on deportatio­ns halted by a court. The White House is

facing several other legal challenges, including on offshore drilling, on the Keystone XL pipeline permit and on COVID-19-relief legislatio­n from Republican-led state attorneys general.

The Biden administra­tion is expected to appeal the decision.

Landlords and property owners have consistent­ly challenged the CDC order, arguing the policy sets an undue financial burden on business owners.

“We’ve argued from the beginning that the CDC lacked statutory authority to impose this, and we’ve had multiple courts agree with us on that,” said Luke Wake, an attorney for the Pacific Legal Foundation who has represente­d landlords in similar cases. “Today’s decision again vindicates our argument.”

Housing advocates, however, argued the new ruling only throws more confusion into an already chaotic policy space. Despite the moratorium, evictions have continued due to loopholes and opposing legal interpreta­tions. According to the Census Bureau, 1 in 7 renters recently reported they were behind on payments.

After Wednesday’s decision, tenants’ rights advocates called for the Biden administra­tion not only to defend the policy but also step up legal protection­s that will keep people in their homes.

“While this latest ruling is written more starkly than previous ones, it likely has equally limited applicatio­n impacting only the plaintiffs who brought the case or, at most, renters in the district court’s jurisdicti­on,” said Diane Yentel, the president and CEO of the National Low Income Housing Coalition. “The DOJ should immediatel­y appeal and the Biden administra­tion should continue to vigorously defend and enforce the moratorium, at least until emergency rental assistance provided by Congress reaches the renters who need it to remain stably housed.”

Within hours of the decision, the Department of Justice indicated it would file a notice of appeal on the D.C. Circuit decision vacating the CDC moratorium and ask for a stay of decision until the appeal is decided.

The Biden administra­tion has been trying to unwind the financial stress caused by the pandemic. The Treasury Department is in the process of getting almost $47 billion in relief out to states and municipali­ties to help people cover rental arrears and unpaid utility bills.

Since the moratorium’s early days, both tenants and landlords have wondered if the action was the right policy tool for the job.

As the pandemic burned across the country and spread economic damage and job loss in its wake, an estimated 40 million Americans were facing eviction, according to an August 2020 report by the National Low Income Housing Coalition, the Aspen Institute Financial Security Program, and the COVID-19 Eviction Defense Project.

A month later, the CDC rolled out a moratorium halting evictions for tenants who could not meet their monthly rent obligation­s because of the pandemic. The order only applied to individual­s making $ 99,000 annually, or $198,000 for couples.

But both tenants and landlords quickly found fault with the order. The policy’s wording left wide room for legal interpreta­tion, leaving local judges latitude to apply the moratorium as they saw fit. New guidance issued in October did little to clarify the situation, triggering a series of legal challenges filed by landlords.

Six federal judges have weighed in on the ban, with three ruling it illegal and three supporting its legality.

Many of the recent challenges, included the case featured in Wednesday’s decision, have hinged on the CDC’s authority. Backers of the moratorium argue that although the action is outside the typical scope of the agency, Congress’ decision to extend the moratorium last December should have been taken as a sign legislator­s approved.

“Congress was trying to preserve the status quo by keeping the moratorium in effect through the presidenti­al transition,” said Eric Dunn, director of litigation for the National Housing Law Project. “Well, that implies that Congress was approving that the CDC has the authority.

Whether the recent decision will trigger a wave of evictions is unclear, advocates say. “There are now numerous conflictin­g court rulings at the district court level, with several judges ruling in favor of the moratorium and several ruling against,” Ms. Yentel said.

Mr. Dunn argued that the policy has become so confused by now that the moratorium’s effect, particular­ly in jurisdicti­ons without state or local protection­s, have diluted the impact.

“Practicall­y, all these decisions have already made it so the CDC protection is basically a lottery ticket for tenants,” he said. “If you qualify you can sign the declaratio­n and it may protect you or it may not. The judge may decide it applies to you or her or she may decide it does not.”

 ?? Stephen Zenner/Getty Images ?? An eviction notice is posted and the lock is changed on a residence on March 3 in Galloway, west of Columbus, Ohio. A federal judge ruled Wednesday that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention oversteppe­d its authority when it instituted a national moratorium on evictions.
Stephen Zenner/Getty Images An eviction notice is posted and the lock is changed on a residence on March 3 in Galloway, west of Columbus, Ohio. A federal judge ruled Wednesday that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention oversteppe­d its authority when it instituted a national moratorium on evictions.

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