Biden extends nationwide ban on evictions for 30 days
WASHINGTON — The Biden administration has extended the nationwide ban on evictions for 30 days to help tenants who are unable to make rent payments during the coronavirus pandemic.
Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, extended the evictions moratorium until July 31. It had been scheduled to end June 30.
The White House had acknowledged Wednesday that the emergency pandemic protection will have to end at some point. The trick is devising the right sort of off-ramp to make the transition without massive social upheaval.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the separate bans on evictions for renters and mortgage holders were “always intended to be temporary.”
Gov. Gavin Newsom is expected to extend regulations that protect struggling renters from eviction beyond June 30, but confusion over the rules has sowed fears.
In California, the extension of the nationwide moratorium will protect renters from eviction next month in the event that the state’s own, stronger protections expire, as currently scheduled, at midnight June 30. However, both landlord and tenant groups expect the state to extend its moratorium as well.
Neither the state nor federal rules stop all evictions, but they provide renters protection if they can’t pay rent. They also don’t stop landlords from filing an eviction case, so tenants must respond to a filing or they could face a default judgment and be evicted.
Times staff writer Andrew Khouri contributed to this report.
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