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What Legal Experts Expect As CDC Eviction Moratorium Ends

Outside the eviction courtroom at the Franklin County Municipal Court
星空无限传媒
Outside the eviction courtroom at the Franklin County Municipal Court

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's eviction moratorium ended on Saturday, leaving many who鈥檝e been unable to pay rent during the pandemic facing the possibility of losing their home. Tenant and landlord advocates spoke about what they expect to see now that it鈥檚 ended.

The CDC鈥檚 moratorium started last September, following the CARES Act moratorium that ended months earlier. They did it mainly to prevent the spread of COVID-19. If people get evicted, they鈥檒l maybe go live with family or friends. Or, they would become homeless and either have a higher risk of spreading the coronavirus while unsheltered or in a crowded shelter.

To combat this, the CDC created the moratorium, which had a broader coverage than the CARES Act, preventing people from getting evicted for nonpayment of rent.

But that鈥檚 where it gets a little tricky, and where social worker Chris Kelly from the Legal Aid Society of Columbus said tenants have been confused about.

During the moratorium, landlords could still file to evict tenants that were behind on rent payments. But Kelly said the moratorium gave tenants leverage in agreements with their landlords to at least stay housed.

鈥淚f you used the CDC moratorium 鈥 if you invoked it 鈥 you could still get a judgement against you, your case could still go against you," Kelly said. "But it only stayed the set out, so they couldn鈥檛 put you out physically.鈥

He added that there have been hundreds of cases in the last year where people have invoked the moratorium due to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.

鈥淲hether it鈥檚 the jobs aren鈥檛 available, or folks can鈥檛 get childcare to take a job or their kids are at home, a lot of people have been unable to do the basic things," Kelly said. "But that鈥檚 an old story.鈥

And he said because of the moratorium, many people in Columbus were able to stay in their homes because of it.

But now that the moratorium has ended, legal experts are mixed on what they expect to see.

Jyoshu Tsushima, a staff attorney with the housing division of the Legal Aid Society, said he believes they will see a lot more landlords starting to queue their eviction filings, especially now that the tenants don鈥檛 have the moratorium to use as leverage. But even so, he said it鈥檚 hard to know what the numbers will look like.

鈥淎 lot of the tenants that are being evicted right now, they鈥檙e going to be losing this protection that we鈥檝e been relying on for about the last year,鈥 Tsushima said.

But Dimitri Hatzifotinos doesn鈥檛 think this will be the case. He鈥檚 a lawyer with Willis Law Firm and represents many of the landlords who come to eviction court.

Hatzifotinos said he doesn鈥檛 expect to see a huge uptick in evictions due to the moratorium ending, mostly because it never prevented landlords from filing them in the first place. He added that statistically there have been 300 to 400 eviction cases per month lower than on average in the last 18 months. He added June, July and August are generally the biggest eviction filing months.

鈥淭here will be some properties that decide that they鈥檙e going to file some cases, but we鈥檝e seen that in the last three months, people have caught up relatively quickly because of the rental season,鈥 Hatzifotinos said.

However, even in the couple weeks just before the moratorium ended, Tsushima said there were around 500 evictions filed, which he mentioned was probably higher than average. And it usually takes two weeks for an eviction hearing to happen after one is filed.

Now, for tenants facing eviction, the main thing is they can do is apply for funding. Groups like IMPACT Community Action offer rental assistance for those unable to catch up on payments. And the financial assistance available is why those like Hatzifotinos said the moratorium ending will not have a huge impact.

But financial assistance isn鈥檛 always perfect, and Tsushima said they鈥檝e had clients that were unable to get those payments in time in accordance with the agreement with their landlords.

That鈥檚 why he wished the moratorium was longer, so that tenants could have more time to get back on their feet.

鈥淲e鈥檙e still in the middle of the pandemic, and especially with these new Delta variants coming out, we鈥檙e starting to see a lot of businesses and communities start to scramble again to figure out how they鈥檙e going to respond to it,鈥 Tsushima said.

Michael Lee joined 星空无限传媒 in 2021, but was previously an intern at the station in 2018. He is a graduate from Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism where he obtained his master's degree, and an alumnus of Ohio State University. Michael has previously worked as an intern at the Columbus Dispatch and most recently, the Chicago Sun-Times.
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