Yellen says new U.S. eviction moratorium buys time to speed rental aid
funds
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[August 05, 2021] By
Rich McKay
ATLANTA (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury Secretary
Janet Yellen said on Wednesday her department will use a 60-day
extension of a moratorium on residential evictions to try to accelerate
the distribution of aid to struggling renters and landlords.
Some $46 billion in federal rental assistance funds from coronavirus
relief bills passed in December and March has been slow to reach
households in need, with just $3 billion issued through June for rent,
utilities and related expenses, according to Treasury data.
Yellen told reporters after touring a social services agency in Atlanta
that part of the problem is that the housing aid is being channeled
through state and local governments that had little experience in
administering such programs.
"This is a completely new infrastructure. Most state and local
governments didn't have agencies that did this kind of work. The delays
partly reflect the difficulties they have in starting something new,"
Yellen said.
In June, rental assistance disbursements surged to $1.5 billion; Yellen
said she expected further increases going forward.
While the last eviction moratorium ordered by the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention expired on July 31, the Biden administration
extended it for another 60 days for most counties, covering over 90% of
the U.S. population, amid pressure from progressive Democrats.
Yellen said the extension was important and that over the next two
months the Treasury "will try to get emergency rental assistance
programs operating more effectively."
Among the issues identified by the Treasury have been excessive state or
local requirements for income documentation that people under the
distress of an eviction threat may have difficulty producing.
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U.S. Representative Cori Bush (D-MO) speaks to the demonstrators,
who joined her in protest against residential evictions, following
the news that the CDC issued a new 60-day moratorium on residential
evictions, on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., August 3, 2021.
REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein
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In a separate statement, Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo said that some
jurisdictions are ignoring Treasury guidance that they can accept renters'
self-attestations - written declarations about their income status - while other
governments are adding their own requirements not sought by the Treasury.
"State and local agencies administering emergency rental assistance should make
full use of the documentation flexibilities provided by Treasury," Adeyemo said,
adding that the Treasury has published sample application forms used by state
and local governments that had more success in distributing funds.
The Treasury also said it would make clear to jurisdictions with
"underperforming" programs that they may lose their allocation of rental
assistance funds if they don't take action to reach as many people in need as
possible.
The department said it is "reiterating to all grantees that Treasury has a
statutory obligation to reallocate funds from underperforming jurisdictions
beginning in the fall."
The Biden administration altered the rental assistance program in May to allow
agencies to offer aid to renters directly before first offering it to landlords.
(Additional reporting by David Lawder; Writing by David Lawder; Editing by
Aurora Ellis)
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