Congress considers emergency eviction moratorium as cdc authority lapses

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Eviction notices like this one may become legion. Photo: Stephen Zenner/Getty Images Many things looked one way at the start of the summer, as COVID rates dropped and restrictions lifted,


but are starting to look quite different as the Delta variant spreads across the U.S. Among them is the national eviction moratorium imposed by the CDC in September of 2020 and extended


three times until July 31 of this year. Other than among directly affected parties, it didn’t get massive attention until June, when the U.S. Supreme Court (via the deciding vote in a 5-4


ruling, that of Justice Brett Kavanaugh) tersely gave the CDC just one more month to utilize an eviction moratorium authority it clearly considered illegitimate. With the Delta variant


raging, it is reasonable to wonder if federal courts will now look differently on renewals of the eviction moratorium. But time has already run out: With the moratorium due to expire this


weekend, President Biden has called on Congress to supply the CDC with the clear legal authority the Supreme Court thought it lacked, at least for another month. As the New York _Times_


reports, it came as something of a nasty surprise to members of Congress, who figured the administration would try to act on its own once again or would speed up disbursements of previously


appropriated rental-relief funds: > The decision to ask Congress for help comes as the White House > continues to struggle with a $47 billion rental relief program that > has been 


plagued by delays, confusion and red tape. Just 600,000 > tenants have been helped by the program, passed as part of two > coronavirus relief packages in 2020 and 2021. >  > The 


request caught Democratic leadership by surprise. An attempt to > pass an extension by a voice vote this week is expected to fail in > the Senate, according to several people close to 


the situation. >  > The expiration of the moratorium will almost certainly lead to an > increase in evictions across the country, with estimates ranging > from 300,000 to more 


than a million families in the first month > after the freeze ends. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who called the moratorium extension a “moral obligation,” is expected to rush a measure


through the Rules Committee and the full House as quickly as she can. But to work, this maneuver would require acceptance by the Senate by unanimous consent, which seems very unlikely given


the presence of COVID-19-response naysayers like Rand Paul and Ron Johnson. Biden and his administration are not completely helpless. The president has already ordered the Departments of


Housing and Urban Development, Agriculture, and Veterans Affairs to extend eviction (and for that matter, foreclosure) moratoriums on single-family homes they finance or insure until the end


of September. And evictions take time to execute. But assuming Congress won’t act and Biden won’t challenge the Supreme Court ruling further, the main protections against evictions for the


time being may be at the state level. As CNBC reports, eviction moratoriums extending into August are in place in Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, New York (with a demonstration of hardship), and


Washington, D.C.; until the end of September in California (for tenants who pay at least one-fourth of their current rent); and until the end of the year in New Jersey. The above-mentioned


federal rental-assistance program was supposed to relieve pressure on tenants by paying landlords back and current rent; and perhaps if evictions can be slowed down, federal funds can have a


big impact. In California, for example, the state has announced a back-rent initiative that when fully implemented should satisfy both sides in landlord-tenant rent battles, as the Los


Angeles _Times_ reports: > California tenants will be protected from evictions for another > three months, and those with low incomes will have all of their > past-due rent paid by 


the state, under a bill signed Monday by Gov. > Gavin Newsom in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. >  > “California will significantly increase cash assistance to > low-income 


tenants and small landlords under the state’s $5.2 > billion rent relief program, making it the largest and most > comprehensive COVID rental protection and rent relief program of any


> state in the nation,” said a statement by Newsom’s office. Nationally, though, federal, state, and local protections for renters and payments for landlords at best represent a patchwork


with many holes at a time when rents are rising and rental housing inventory is lagging. Biden is going to take some grief for waiting this long to deal with the CDC moratorium and then


issuing a panic-stricken plea to Congress for help at the eleventh hour. Those wanting action may have to grimly hope that if the pandemic does stage a comeback, so, too, will a sense of


urgency about dealing with a surge in homelessness along with a surge in infections.