PDA

View Full Version : New local laws aim to stop rising evictions



Teh One Who Knocks
12-27-2021, 12:57 PM
By Will Parker | The Wall Street Journal


https://i.imgur.com/0aEJ8yRl.jpg

Dozens of cities and states are enacting new laws to protect tenants facing eviction, aiming to stem a tide of new cases and offer renters more ways to settle conflicts with property owners.

Eviction filings nationwide started ticking up in September after a yearlong national eviction moratorium ended. By October, the more than 48,000 filings represented a 24% increase over those registered in August, according to Eviction Lab, a research group at Princeton University that tracks filings in 31 cities and six states.

National filings are only about 60% of their pre-pandemic levels, thanks to national rental assistance and local pandemic eviction protections. But in some places, the eviction rate is already higher than before the onset of COVID-19. In New Orleans, which throughout the fall had fewer tenant protections than a number of large cities, November eviction filings surpassed their November 2019 levels, Eviction Lab said.

To ease pressure on renters, 21 states and the District of Columbia passed eviction-related legislation in 2021, and a total of 40 states have proposed such laws, according to research from the Pew Charitable Trusts. The 195 proposed eviction laws nationwide this year is 65% more than legislators introduced in 2019.

The new laws include measures that change how evictions are filed to ensure due process and laws that provide tenants the right to legal counsel or mediation services.

New Orleans is resolving about half its new eviction cases through its eviction diversion program, said Marjorianna Willman, director of the Office of Housing Policy and Community Development for the city. The program works directly with landlords and tenants to secure federal rental aid and keep tenants housed. After spending most of this money, New Orleans has applied for more.

https://i.imgur.com/j9aWqIU.png

Starting next month, New Orleans will tap federal dollars to fund a $2 million program that gives tenants the right to legal counsel, a measure that an increasing number of states and cities are adopting around the country.

"It’s an ideal situation to reduce the number of displaced," Ms. Willman said.

Washington state, Connecticut and Maryland each passed right-to-counsel laws in 2021. Kansas City, Mo., is the latest local government to pass a law guaranteeing free legal representation, after a vote cleared its city council in December. In Winston-Salem, N.C., advocates marched recently and presented a petition to local officials, asking them to implement a right-to-counsel program using available federal money.

"The cases we’re doing, 90% of them wouldn’t have a lawyer before," said Scott Crain, a housing attorney on the staff of the Northwest Justice Project, which is based in Washington state. "We’re doing things like getting cases dismissed, we’re renegotiating rental agreements and we’re getting people to stay in their housing."

Landlords have reacted skeptically to many of the changes. The National Apartment Association, a real-estate lobbying and trade group, has described right-to-counsel programs as a potential misuse of money that could be better put into direct rental assistance.

Since many tenants with unpaid rent—even those represented by attorneys—are likely to have to leave their homes anyway, they end up incurring costs from moving and renting a new apartment. The back rent they owe will still be unpaid, landlords say.

Congress approved more than $45 billion in aid this year to help tenants behind on rent payments. Many local programs charged with distributing the funds struggled to handle the high volume of applications, and the process was slow early on. But by the end of October, the Treasury Department said it had distributed more than $13 billion in aid.

Tenant advocates say anything governments can do to help renters avoid judgments of eviction on their records is well worth the effort, even when it doesn’t resolve the root problem that leads to evictions in the first place. Evictions are a stigma that can jeopardize a tenant’s ability to secure housing for years.

"The bottom underlying factor is delinquent rent," said Ms. Willman. "So that will still be out there after we exhaust all the rental assistance funding."

Pony
12-27-2021, 02:11 PM
:facepalm:

Teh One Who Knocks
12-27-2021, 02:19 PM
What are they going to do when people completely stop offering rentals period because they don't want to get screwed by bullshit like this?

lost in melb.
12-27-2021, 02:23 PM
I think it's ok, as long as the landlords get paid.

RBP
12-27-2021, 05:54 PM
I think it's ok, as long as the landlords get paid.

I don't know, man. Case by case I guess. For the huge number of people that just stopped paying rent because they couldn't get evicted, should the taxpayers be on the hook for that? I see both sides, but SO many people have gotten lazy in the last 2 years.

I don't think there should have ever been a moratorium. If people could justify a pandemic driven hardship, then rental assistance is fine. But the rest. Fuck you. What blows my mind is the amount of money that went to people on the government tit. For what? their economic situation didn't change AT ALL. Prisoners were eligible for stimulus checks. Yes, while incarcerated.

See, I am getting better. I took a long breath with a slow exhale to lower my set point. Good job, RBP. Rant avoided.

deebakes
12-27-2021, 06:01 PM
after my divorce, i rented for a little bit until i got my financial situation a little better under control. the minute the person raised my rent above what the neighboring units were going for, i was out. take control of the situation so you don't get fucked and be responsible for your own situation :2cents:

Teh One Who Knocks
12-27-2021, 06:02 PM
I don't know, man. Case by case I guess. For the huge number of people that just stopped paying rent because they couldn't get evicted, should the taxpayers be on the hook for that? I see both sides, but SO many people have gotten lazy in the last 2 years.

I don't think there should have ever been a moratorium. If people could justify a pandemic driven hardship, then rental assistance is fine. But the rest. Fuck you. What blows my mind is the amount of money that went to people on the government tit. For what? their economic situation didn't change AT ALL. Prisoners were eligible for stimulus checks. Yes, while incarcerated.

See, I am getting better. I took a long breath with a slow exhale to lower my set point. Good job, RBP. Rant avoided.

What makes it even worse, beyond the fact that people were getting free government money, many of whom didn't even need it, these people that stopped paying rent because they knew they couldn't get evicted just blew through the money. They wasted it on crap that they wanted to buy instead of putting ANY of it aside to pay their rent.

deebakes
12-27-2021, 06:04 PM
and now with inflation there is even more need :unimpressed: