PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Tenants, who crowded housing courts amid concerns about a spike in evictions, got a reprieve Tuesday after the Biden administration announced an eviction ban that lapsed over the weekend would be extended 60 days in most of the country.
The move will protect areas where 90% of the U.S. population lives, making the drama that played out a day earlier in Rhode Island, Ohio, North Carolina and elsewhere in the country short-lived.
Among them was Gabe Imondi, a 74-year-old Rhode Island landlord who went to court Monday hoping to get his apartment back. He was tired of waiting for federal rental assistance and wondered aloud "what they're doing with that money?"
Hours later, Luis Vertentes, in a different case, was told by a Rhode Island judge he had three weeks to clear out of his one-bedroom apartment in nearby East Providence. The 43-year-old landscaper said he was four months behind on rent after being hospitalized for a time.
"I'm going to be homeless, all because of this pandemic," Vertentes said. "I feel helpless, like I can't do anything even though I work and I got a full-time job."
But by Tuesday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had identified a legal authority for a new and different moratorium that would be for areas with high and substantial increases in COVID-19 infections.
The move followed protests from Democratic lawmakers over the swift end to the moratorium and concerns that the historic amount of rental assistance allocated by Congress wasn't reaching tenants.
That assistance had been expected to avert a crisis, but the distribution has been painfully slow. Only about $3 billion of the first tranche of $25 billion had been distributed through June by states and localities. A second amount of $21.5 billion will go to the states.
More than 15 million people live in households that owe as much as $20 billion to their landlords, according to the Aspen Institute. As of July 5, roughly 3.6 million people in the U.S. said they faced eviction in the next two months, according to the U.S. Census Bureau's Household Pulse Survey.
In Columbus, Ohio, Chelsea Rivera showed up Monday at a Franklin County court after receiving an eviction notice last month. A single mom, she's behind $2,988 in rent and late fees for the one- bedroom apartment she rents for herself and three young sons.
The 27-year-old said she started to struggle after her hours were cut in May at the Walmart warehouse where she worked. She's applied to numerous agencies for help but they're either out of money, have a waiting list, or not able to help until clients end up in court with an eviction notice.
Rivera said she's preparing herself mentally to move into a shelter with her children.
"We just need help," she said, fighting back tears. "It's just been really hard with everyday issues on top of worrying about where you're going to live."
But there was more optimism in Virginia, where Tiara Burton, 23, learned she would be getting federal help and wouldn't be evicted. She initially feared the worst when the moratorium lifted.
"That was definitely a worry yesterday," said Burton, who lives in Virginia Beach. "If they're going to start doing evictions again, then I'm going to be faced with having to figure out where me and my family are going to go. And that's not something that anyone should have to worry about these days at all."
She was relieved to learn she was approved for assistance through the Virginia Rent Relief Program. Her court hearing was postponed 30 days, during which time she and her landlord can presumably work things out.
"I'm grateful for that," she said. "That's another weight lifted off of my shoulders."
For some tenants, getting assistance has proven impossible.
After her landlord refused federal assistance to cover $5,000 in back rent, Antoinette Eleby, 42, of Miami, expects an eviction order within two to three weeks. She is sending her five children to live with her mother in another county.
"My main concern is that now that I have an eviction, how will I find another place? Some places will accept you and some will not," said Eleby, whose entire family got COVID-19 earlier this year.
Around the country, courts, legal advocates and law enforcement agencies had been gearing up for evictions to return to pre-pandemic levels, a time when 3.7 million people were displaced from their homes every year, or seven every minute, according to the Eviction Lab at Princeton University.
Some cities with the most cases, according to the Eviction Lab, are Phoenix with more than 42,000 eviction filings, Houston with more than 37,000, Las Vegas with nearly 27,000 and Tampa more than 15,000. Indiana and Missouri also have more than 80,000 filings.
While the moratorium was enforced in much of the country, there were states like Idaho where judges ignored it, said Ali Rabe, executive director of Jesse Tree, a non-profit that works to prevent evictions in the Boise metropolitan area. "Eviction courts ran as usual," she said.
That was much the way things played out in parts of North Carolina, where on Monday Sgt. David Ruppe knocked on a weathered mobile home door in Cleveland County, a rural community an hour west of Charlotte.
"We haven't seen much of a difference at all," he said.
He waited a few minutes on the porch scattered with folding chairs and toys. Then a woman opened the door.
"How are you?" he asked quietly, then explained her landlord had started the eviction process. The woman told Ruppe she'd paid, and he said she'd need to bring proof to her upcoming Aug. 9 court date.
Ruppe, who has two young sons, said seeing families struggle day-after-day is tough.
"There's only so much you can do," he said. "So, if you can offer them a glimmer of hope, words of encouragement, especially if there's kids involved. Being a father, I can relate to that."
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