Michigan Real Estate News

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Biden’s Eviction Ban Policy Heads to the Supreme Court

The replacement evictions moratorium will stay in place for now, according to the federal appeals court. A spokesman for the National Association of Realtors is confident that the Supreme Court will block the policy. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention imposed the evictions moratorium on August 3 in counties where Covid-19 is accelerating. Currently, that covers about 91 percent of the counties in the United States. The Delta variant has caused new coronavirus cases to soar, while the $46.5 billion rental assistance funds appropriated by Congress have yet to be widely distributed.

 

Eviction Moratorium Extension Causes Angst

Metro Detroit landlords continue to wrestle with the eviction moratorium extension. Some have drained their savings and maxed out credit cards to cover costs on their rental properties. The eviction moratorium had recently ended, only to be extended again until October 3. Tenants who face eviction often lose everything when their belongings are disposed of. More than 18,000 applicants have been approved for more than $117 million in rent relief, with thousands more awaiting approval of their application. $400 million still needs to be distributed. Although the extension was intended for communities that had substantial Covid 19 spread, Wayne County now qualifies after entering the substantial transmission category on Wednesday afternoon.

Eviction Ban Reversal Upsets Lobbyists

Housing lobbyists are upset about President Biden’s decision to revive the eviction ban. The President’s unexpected move to reinstate the federal eviction moratorium is a political loss for the National Association of Realtors and its industry allies who say they were excluded from discussions on the ban with the White House. Despite millions of dollars in contributions, industry trade groups felt the sting of betrayal from progressive lawmakers. The eviction ban fight is making its way through the courts.