The financial firm
reported that $70 billion could be owed to landlords in January, after a
federal moratorium on evictions—put in place in September by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, in the absence of any action from the
Republican-led Senate aimed at helping working people—expires on December 31.
"Renters will owe up to $70 billion in back rent when eviction moratorium expires, more than they can possibly pay... Congress must extend the moratorium and provide rent relief now."
According to the
Washington Post, many landlords have begun filing paperwork to evict struggling
tenants already and others have joined renters in appealing to Congress for
significant unemployment benefits and another round of $1,200 direct payments
to Americans.
Separately from
Moody's, the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia reported in October that 1.3
million households that have faced unemployment during the pandemic owed an
average of $5,400 in back payments to landlords and utilities. According to the
U.S. Census Bureau, 29% of Black renters and 17% of Latino renters are behind
in payments, and 21% of families with children have been pushed into debt.
Some families have
been forced to begin selling their belongings since the Republican-led Senate
allowed weekly unemployment benefits of $600 expire in July, according to the
Post. Lawmakers on Monday were negotiating a new aid package after a bipartisan
group of senators introduced a $908 billion bill last week.
According to Post
reporter Jeff Stein, the package currently includes a $300 weekly payment which
would be offered only from January to April, with no retroactive payments to
help families who owe rent and other payments from recent months. The package
includes $25 billion for rental housing assistance—far less than what's
expected to be owed by families in January and only half of what the House
Democrats' HEROES Act includes for low-income renters—and a proposal by Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) did not include anything for struggling
renters.
"This is like a
Charles Dickens novel," Mark Wolfe, executive director of the National
Energy Assistance Directors' Association, told the Post. "It's an evolving
story of how people at the bottom are suffering."
Diane Yentel,
president and CEO of the National Low Income Housing Coalition, called on
Congress to extend the current eviction moratorium and provide rent relief to
struggling households.
Former Labor Secretary Robert Reich highlighted the reports of struggling renters as the latest evidence that Georgia voters must elect two Democrats, Rev. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff, in the runoff election scheduled for January 5, to give the country any hope of having a Senate which will help working families in the coming year.
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