‘I am beside myself’: millions in the US face
evictions amid looming crisis
Coronavirus
outbreak
About 19 to 23 million people are estimated to be at
risk of being evicted after federal programs to help 30 million unemployed
Americans expired in late July
Amanda
Holpuch
Amanda
Holpuch in New York
@holpuch
Tue 25 Aug
2020 10.30 BSTLast modified on Tue 25 Aug 2020 11.41 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/aug/25/millions-of-americans-face-evictions-crisis
One night
last week instead of sleeping Florence Hobbs hopped around her apartment on a
broken ankle, trying to pack everything she owned as fast as was possible. Her
landlord had given her a 24-hour eviction notice and she didn’t want her things
tossed out of the apartment in Charleston, South Carolina, when the clock ran
out.
The
51-year-old hadn’t been able to pay rent since April, when her job as a
caregiver ended with the death of her patient. She then had surgery, caught
Covid-19 and broke her ankle while working at a new job. Friends helped her
clear the apartment and are giving her a place to stay, but she is at a loss
for what she is supposed to do next.
“There’s
nothing being done to help my situation. I’m just in a dark place right now,”
said Hobbs.
Housing
advocates have warned of a looming eviction crisis after federal programs to
help the 30 million unemployed Americans and to prevent evictions during the
pandemic expired in late July. The Aspen Institute estimated 19 to 23 million
people were at risk of eviction before the end of September because of the
economic crisis. In late July, 13.3 million renters told the US Census Bureau
they could not pay rent the month before.
On 8
August, Donald Trump signed an executive order which he said would minimize
evictions and foreclosures. The actual order is not, as was hoped, an extension
of the moratorium which expired in late July and has fallen short of what is
needed to protect vulnerable renters.
It is
impossible to calculate exactly how many evictions have taken place during the
pandemic because the government doesn’t track that data. The closest thing to a
national database, Princeton University’s Eviction Lab, has not yet found a
sustained spike in evictions, though some states have seen spikes after local
eviction moratoriums ended.
Cea Weaver,
campaign coordinator at a coalition for tenants and advocates in New York,
Housing Justice For All, said with eviction protections fizzling out, the
system which favors landlords over renters was laid bare.
“I think
what we are experiencing is a baseline of how weak tenants protections are in
this country compared to other places in the world,” Weaver said.
The
country’s fragmented eviction moratoriums have only added to confusion about
what rights people actually have. In Austin, Texas, for instance, there is an
eviction moratorium through September, though the state itself never had one.
“Different
states have different protections, or not, and it’s been really hard for folks
to know what’s going on,” Weaver said. “So that means you hear the governor say
one thing and the judge say another thing, then you see [US treasury secretary]
Steve Mnuchin or Trump say a third.”
With the
mangled communication and lack of a nationwide plan to address the eviction crisis,
groups like Housing Justice for All have stepped in.
Equality
for Flatbush, a member of the coalition, blocked evictions in a 7 July standoff
with a landlord in Brooklyn. And support for the organization has skyrocketed.
Weaver said when the pandemic began, her mailing list had 6,000 people. Five
months later, it had grown to more than 100,000.
“We’ve been
saying for a really long time that everyone is one paycheck away from an
eviction, that’s sort of an adage in the tenant movement, but I think what’s
happening is everyone is waking up to that,” Weaver said.
The country
entered the pandemic and economic downturn, with an already existing eviction
crisis. The most recent data from Eviction Lab shows 2.3 million Americans were
evicted from their homes in 2016.
In South
Carolina, Nicole Paluzzi, housing attorney at Charleston Pro Bono Legal
Services, has long been on the frontlines of the crisis. In 2016, North
Charleston was found to have the most evictions in the country, with an average
of 10 per day, by Eviction Lab.
South
Carolina’s eviction moratorium ended in May. The day after it expired, a worker
in the court clerk’s office told Paluzzi that 160 new filings had been filed
before lunchtime.
“We did
anticipate that people who were living paycheck to paycheck with very little
emergency resources would be hit first, but we are also seeing people who are
leaving their tenancies and moving back in with their parents and are in their
thirties,” Paluzzi said.
Paluzzi
said people who have been evicted include those with salaries of $80,000 to
$120,000 a year. One man paying $2,200 a month in rent lost his job and
couldn’t afford payments for private student loan payments and other bills. He
was selling his computer to make ends meet before being evicted.
Paluzzi
emphasized that there are understanding landlords and reasonable attorneys, but
she has also seen property owners skirting evictions laws.
The federal
moratorium only stopped people from being evicted if they couldn’t pay rent. So
some landlords in South Carolina would say their eviction filing was about
infractions such as “smelling marijuana” and not a missed payment. They did not
have to prove the allegation was true to see their case ushered through
eviction court.
Before the
pandemic, the people at highest risk of eviction were low-income women of
color. Paluzzi said this was bearing out anecdotally in Charleston and North
Charleston.
“My clients
are overwhelmingly single Black women with children,” Paluzzi said. “My client
today was and my client yesterday was. And all of my clients last week were
single Black females with children.”
This
includes Hobbs, who was on her way back from a mental health intake appointment
when she got word that she had 24 hours to leave her home. She has one grown
daughter and was supporting herself in the apartment.
After
losing her job, and having to pay out of pocket for a medical procedure, Hobbs
sought help from aid groups. She was approved for rental assistance at two
separate agencies, but the funding ran out before she was able to collect it.
She is staying with a friend, but can only contribute so much with the $260 in
worker’s comp she gets each week.
“I have to
figure out a way now to help him [my friend] as well,” Hobbs said. “His bills
are not going to stop. Nobodies bills are going to stop. And now that I am
evicted this is going to be on my record as well.”
The
question of what’s next is almost too big for Hobbs to grapple with. She is
focused instead on survival.
About 1,000
miles north-west, Sheri and Dean Slater, both 64 years old, have one week to
move out of their apartment in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
They are
vulnerable to the effects of Covid-19 because of their age and underlying
health conditions, but each day, Sheri conducts hours-long searches in-person
and online for their next home.
Their
landlord decided he didn’t want to be a landlord anymore and once eviction
protections in the state evaporated, he told the couple to find somewhere else
to live.
Sheri has
heart disease, diabetes and arthritis. She has to work to stay calm when
thinking about their problems because she is worried about having a fourth
heart attack. Dean, who lost his job at a pizza restaurant when the pandemic
began in March, has just been diagnosed with a nervous system disorder.
Each trip
Sheri makes to a property is a risk to the couple’s health because of the other
people who are visiting it, but she has no other options. When she does have to
move, she’s worried about it being done safely.
“I don’t
know how much more I can handle,” Sheri said. “I am doing the best I can. And
God forbid, at the end of the month, if the government doesn’t do anything… I
don’t know what we’re going to do.”
Christine
Donahoe, the housing priority coordinator at Legal Action of Wisconsin, helped
the Slaters get an extra month in their apartment after their landlord told
them they had to leave at the end of July. But there is no law which accounts
for the coronavirus risks some may face when being forced to move.
“Essentially,
we’re acting like business as usual when it comes to evictions here in
Wisconsin,” Donahoe said.
From late
March to late May, Wisconsin had a 60-day eviction moratorium. The state also
provided $25m in rent assistance. Donahoe said the assistance, with federal
government programs such as the unemployment expansion, seemed to have reduced
possible evictions. But once the moratorium lifted, evictions jumped 25% in
June compared to how many were filed in June 2019.
One lasting
change is that some eviction courts are only holding hearings online. This
brings a “whole new universe of problems”, Donahoe said, because people who are
being evicted are more likely to not be able to afford internet access.
In the
courtroom, tenants also face judges, attorneys and landlords who may not have
the latest information on eviction laws.
“At the
beginning of this there were judges that hadn’t even heard of the federal
eviction moratorium for weeks after it had been instituted,” Donahoe said. “And
it’s understandable but it’s also really frightening to think of what our
clients and tenants will be facing in court if the judges aren’t up to speed.”
She is also
worried about the state’s database for evictions. Tenants who have a filing
against them struggle to find housing later, even if the court rules in their
favor. With so many changes to the laws, more improper evictions can be filed,
leaving more people looking like bad tenants.
“There are
still a lot of boarded up homes and blighted neighborhoods from the housing
crash, and that was over ten years ago, so I really worry about what impact
this will have,” Donahoe said.
Sheri
Slater said the city had a tough market for renters and that every place she
looked at was snapped up quickly.
In an ideal
world, someone else would buy the house they are living in and they could rent
it from that person. At one point, they had hoped to buy the four-bedroom house
themselves but that was ruled out when Dean lost his job.
The Slaters
both grew up in the neighborhood and said the house is comfortable in
Wisconsin’s harsh winters and hot summers.
“It doesn’t
seem like it’s reality,” Slater said in mid-August. “It seems like the worst
movie you could ever watch in your life. I am beside myself. We have two weeks
today to find a place, pack everything, the two of us, and move.”
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário