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A Housing and Eviction Crisis Still Hangs Over the U.S., Just Like the Pandemic — Blogs

A Housing and Eviction Crisis Still Hangs Over the U.S., Just Like the Pandemic - Blogs

New research by Mary K. Cun­ning­ham, Ananya Har­i­ha­ran, and Olivia Fiol at the Urban Insti­tute quan­ti­fies the evic­tion cliff loom­ing over the coun­try as the Cen­ters for Dis­ease Con­trol and Pre­ven­tion’s fed­er­al evic­tion mora­to­ri­um is sched­uled to expire at the end of Jan­u­ary.

In this brief, we use new data the sec­ond wave of the Urban Insti­tute’s Track­ing Sur­vey, con­duct­ed Sep­tem­ber 11 through 28, 2020, to explore the ’s impact on hous­ing sta­bil­i­ty and renters’ vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty to evic­tion. We that near­ly 14 per­cent of renters, or 9.5 mil­lion renters, report­ed prob­lems pay­ing rent in the pre­vi­ous 30 days. 

The report also adds more evi­dence to describe the many ways in which low-income and com­mu­ni­ties of col­or are fac­ing dis­parate impacts dur­ing the pan­dem­ic. “More than one in four renters wor­ried about being able to pay rent in the next month. Almost one in two Hispanic/Latinx renters and more than one in four Black renters were wor­ried about pay­ing next mon­th’s rent,” accord­ing to Cun­ning­ham, Har­i­ha­ran, and Fiol. “Black and Hispanic/Latinx renters were more like­ly than white renters to have received an evic­tion notice or been threat­ened with evic­tion since March.”

The abstract for the brief notes that hous­ing inse­cu­ri­ty is also a pub­lic risk dur­ing the pan­dem­ic, back­ing up research pub­lished at the end of 2020 that con­nect­ed evic­tions with 433,700 excess coro­n­avirus infec­tions.

The ques­tion of how effec­tive the nation’s patch­work of evic­tion have been dur­ing the pan­dem­ic has also been the sub­ject of recent media and aca­d­e­m­ic scruti­ny. Researchers at the Kinder Insti­tute in Hous­ton recent­ly used the “Cost of Evic­tion Cal­cu­la­tor” cre­at­ed by the Inno­va­tion for Jus­tice Pro­gram at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Ari­zona E. Rogers of Law to cal­cu­late the cost of Evic­tions in Har­ris Coun­ty, Texas.

Luis Gua­jar­do reports the find­ings of that effort:

Last sum­mer, Kinder Insti­tute researchers esti­mat­ed that evic­tions cost Har­ris Coun­ty upwards of $240 mil­lion annu­al­ly (pre-pan­dem­ic fig­ures). We revis­it­ed the mod­el using post-shut­down evic­tion data (since March 15, 2020) and esti­mate that dur­ing the pan­dem­ic, evic­tions have cost Har­ris Coun­ty-area juris­dic­tions and non­prof­its upwards of $100 mil­lion. 

As not­ed, by Gua­jar­do, that $100 mil­lion could have been spent on the pub­lic health response and eco­nom­ic stim­u­lus, oth­er options. Some of these costs have been incurred by local poli­cies that failed to sup­port renters in eco­nom­ic dis­tress dur­ing an unprece­dent­ed eco­nom­ic shock.

The CDC’s mora­to­ri­um has­n’t been much help in Har­ris Coun­ty, which has for­gone the sup­port­ing ser­vices and leg­is­la­tion put in place in oth­er local juris­dic­tions. In anoth­er arti­cle exam­in­ing the Har­ris Coun­ty case study, Jen Rice cites data from Jan­u­ary Advi­sors that esti­mates the per­cent­age of evic­tions pre­vent­ed by the CDC’s mora­to­ri­um to equal a pal­try 9.3 per­cent. “That means 9,386 evic­tions were not stopped by the order, out of a total 10,383 evic­tion cas­es heard in Har­ris Coun­ty since Sep­tem­ber,” writes Rice.

Both Gua­jar­do and Rice offer , in Travis Coun­ty, as an exam­ple for Har­ris Coun­ty to emu­late in reduc­ing hous­ing stress. One way to pre­vent evic­tions and the social and health risk that fol­lows can be as sim­ple as offer­ing a grace peri­od, accord­ing to both arti­cles. 

Final­ly, anoth­er new study by the Los Ange­les-baed Eco­nom­ic Round­table cal­cu­lates the num­ber of peo­ple like­ly to become home­less in Cal­i­for­nia and the nation. Doug Smith reports:

Based on the effects of the 2008 reces­sion, the Eco­nom­ic Round­table report “Locked Out” con­cludes that pan­dem­ic-relat­ed unem­ploy­ment will start a bru­tal cycle of home­less­ness. It says the uptick began as a trick­le in 2020, but will triple this year and peak by 2023.

Here’s how the num­bers will look by 2023:

…the num­ber of addi­tion­al work­ing-age adults with no place of their own to sleep will reach more than 52,000 in Los Ange­les Coun­ty, 131,000 in Cal­i­for­nia and 600,000 across the nation, it said. The most recent fed­er­al esti­mate, for 2019, esti­mat­ed there were 568,000 home­less peo­ple nation­al­ly and 129,000 in Cal­i­for­nia. The 2020 count for Los Ange­les Coun­ty put the num­ber at just over 66,000, mean­ing the pro­jec­tion is for a near dou­bling.

Accord­ing to the study, the worst eco­nom­ic effects will be felt by peo­ple with jobs in sec­tors most impact­ed by the pan­dem­ic—” retail stores, restau­rants and bars, cler­i­cal jobs, child care, per­son­al care and, sur­pris­ing­ly, in non­prof­it insti­tu­tions.”

What­ev­er the solu­tion for the evic­tion cri­sis, in Har­ris Coun­ty and else­where in the coun­try, it’s not like­ly to come from the eco­nom­ic stim­u­lus pack­age approved by Con­gress and the pres­i­dent at the end of 2020. While the COVID-19 Emer­gency Relief Act of 2020 includes $25 bil­lion in eco­nom­ic relief for renters, the mon­ey does­n’t address rent debt incurred since the pan­dem­ic began, nor did it pro­vide finan­cial relief to the state and local gov­ern­ments on the front­lines of the eco­nom­ic down­turn, bare­ly grip­ping the edges of a social safe­ty net grow­ing more tat­tered with every pass­ing day, week, and month in this pan­dem­ic.

While it might seem like the coun­try has avoid­ed some of the gloomy pro­jec­tions about the evic­tions, home­less­ness, and fore­clo­sures that seemed pos­si­ble at the begin­ning of the year, the real­i­ty of the cri­sis is far from sta­ble. The worst effects of the eco­nom­ic down­turn on the hous­ing mar­ket are still high­ly plau­si­ble, and it’s already been a ter­ri­ble and trag­ic year for many Amer­i­cans strug­gling out­side the fick­le lime­light.

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