What to know ahead of this weekend’s eviction moratorium expiration
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[October 02, 2021]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The state’s eviction
moratorium will expire Sunday, and what comes next for renters will
likely depend on their county of residence, as county courts and
sheriffs will all have different approaches to executing evictions.
The original eviction moratorium was issued in March 2020 when the
COVID-19 pandemic began shutting down the state and national economy,
and it has been amended several times in the months following. The most
recent iteration prevented law enforcement officials from carrying out
evictions on “covered persons,” while a coinciding state Supreme Court
order prevented certain trials and final judgements on eviction cases.
Both will expire Sunday.
Bob Palmer, policy director at Housing Action Illinois, said during a
phone call that he’s hopeful there won’t be a crush of evictions to
happen on the day the moratorium expires, because the Supreme Court’s
order has slowed the process of eviction cases moving through the
courts.
Susan Simone, director of litigation and advocacy at Land of Lincoln
Legal Aid, said during a phone call her organization has “already
started to see a huge upswing in cases being filed.”
Land of Lincoln Legal Aid provides services such as legal advice and
court representation free of charge to low-income individuals in central
and southern Illinois. More information is available at lincolnlegal.org
or by calling 877-342-7891.
“I ran some numbers earlier in September and we saw a 40 percent
increase in housing calls from pre-COVID to 2021,” Simone said. “In
August, we had 45 to 60 calls per week which was up from 25 to 35 in the
weeks before.”
Simone said the organization had 405 open cases at the beginning of
September, and that had increased to 480 open cases as of Friday.
“I don't know what's going to happen come Monday, but I do know that
some landlords are waiting, or some landlords’ attorneys are waiting
until Monday and have cases stacked up,” she said. “Some have already
started filing. In Sangamon County, one attorney, we understand, filed
over 55 cases just last week.”
Landlord groups have said the stay on eviction processes has stressed
landlords, particularly those with smaller footprints. The Chicago-based
Neighborhood Building Owners Alliance, an alliance of several smaller
neighborhood building owners associations in the area, said in a news
release eviction proceedings are a necessary tool for landlords, even if
they don’t always lead to an eviction.
“Just because we can begin the eviction process doesn’t mean that we
want to,” Michael Glasser, president of NBOA, said in a statement. “Our
housing providers don’t want to go through the long and painful legal
process of eviction, especially when they have the opportunity to
receive rental assistance.”
Gov. JB Pritzker’s office said it has released $443 million in legal aid
Illinois has received from the federal government. There’s $61 million
still to be distributed, and another $60 million is available through a
court-based rental assistance program which is meant to serve as a
“safety net” for those who may be eligible for rent assistance but
otherwise have not applied. Landlords must include information on the
program in court filings, and more information can be found at https://ilrpp.ihda.org.
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A Sept. 17 executive order from Gov. JB Pritzker
scheduled the state's eviction moratorium to expire Sunday, Oct. 3.
The state has received more than 99,000 applications
for rental aid and approved about 49,100 of them, according to the
governor’s office. IHDA is reaching out to applicants who had
incomplete or incorrectly filed applications, and applicants can
check their status at https://ilrpp.ihda.org/status.
The NBOA noted that in Cook County, the eviction
process can take months, and it offers many opportunities to settle.
It’s the same in virtually every county, Palmer said.
In the Chicago area, renters seeking assistance can visit https://chicookilrenthelp.org.
Assistance may also still be available in certain areas through the
Illinois Department of Human Services and the Illinois Housing
Development Authority, the two state agencies overseeing
disbursement of federal funding, at . The IHDA call center can be
reached at 866-454-3571.
Free legal assistance, such as that offered by Land of Lincoln Legal
Aid, may be accessed through Eviction Help Illinois by visiting
https://evictionhelpillinois.org or calling 855-631-0811.
Simone said there are also several rights that renters should be
aware of if they are facing eviction.
“I think people really need to understand that if they get a summons
for eviction, they have to go to court,” she said. “They have to get
there on time, because orders are entered into if they're not
there.”
Renters can always request a trial, especially if they believe their
landlord is refusing to apply for rental aid, and they should not
agree to anything they don’t understand or that is not very
specific.
“If the landlord's attorney says, you know, ‘do you agree to be
out?’ and they are agreeable to being out, make sure they know what
the date’s going to be, that they understand they have to be gone by
that date. If they need more time, they should ask for more time,”
Simone said.
Simone said those who fear they are facing eviction should call
their county sheriff to see if there’s anything scheduled in terms
of an eviction date. If there is an eviction order entered, if it’s
more than 120 days old, she said, the sheriff should not be
enforcing it, and the landlord is required to get an extension order
from the court.
Despite all of the efforts to prevent homelessness, Simone said,
she’s seen an uptick anecdotally in homelessness in the Land of
Lincoln territory.
“I travel around our service territory a fair amount and everywhere
I go I see homeless people now that I didn't see before,” she said.
Palmer said Housing Action Illinois maintains a database of
homelessness prevention services, including local Continuum of Care
networks. It can be viewed at . Housing Action Illinois can be
reached by phone at 312-939-6074.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |