CDC eviction moratorium ends, Biden administration rushes to disperse billions in aid
Biden asking to extend eviction ban proves stimulus ‘failure’: Rep. Hill
Rep. French Hill, R-Ark., argues the Biden administration has failed at successfully providing pandemic relief to landlords and tenants.
The White House allowed a federal eviction moratorium to expire Saturday, urging Congress to take legislative action to keep it going and pushing for the distribution of billions of dollars of relief to help those who could now face being pushed out of their homes.
Democrats were dismayed by President Biden's decision not to challenge the Supreme Court's June ruling that the moratorium had to end after July, leaving lawmakers scrambling to draft a bill following the president's Thursday announcement that he would not try to extend it.
HOUSE DEMS MAKE LAST-DITCH EFFORT TO EXTEND EVICTION MORATORIUM
"We are only hours away from a fully preventable housing crisis," Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., said Saturday from the Senate floor.
"We have the tools and we have the funding," Warren continued. "What we need is the time."
Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., rushed to draft a bill that would have extended the moratorium through the end of 2021, but Republicans opposed the hasty action.
"This is not the way to legislate," Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., said.
The moratorium was put in place in September 2020 by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Its end means that landlords will be able to force out tenants who have been unable to pay their rent during a time when the coronavirus pandemic led to industries being shut down and jobs being lost.
GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS DISTRIBUTED JUST 6.5% OF AVAILABLE RENTAL AID IN FIRST HALF OF 2021
As of last month, approximately 7 million households were not caught up on rent payments, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau, which raised concerns about a surge in evictions that may occur when the policy is lifted.