Realtors Urge Supreme Court To Block Eviction Moratorium
They argue that the moratorium has resulted in "over $13 billion in unpaid rent per month," CNN reported. On Wednesday, a federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., denied a request by a group of landlords to resume evictions.
CNN:
Realtor Groups Ask Supreme Court To Block CDC's Eviction Moratorium
A coalition of Realtor groups asked the Supreme Court on Thursday night to block the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's order that prohibits landlords nationwide from evicting tenants who fail to pay rent amidst the Covid-19 pandemic. The current moratorium is set to expire on June 30. A district court ruled against the CDC, holding that the moratorium was unlawful, but then put its ruling on hold pending appeal. The DC Circuit declined to lift the stay. (de Vogue, 6/3)
NBC News:
Landlord Group Asks Supreme Court To Lift Moratorium On Evicting Tenants
A group representing some of the nation's property owners asked the U.S. Supreme Court late Thursday to block enforcement of an order from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that has stopped landlords from evicting tenants who aren't paying their rent during the Covid-19 pandemic. Keeping that order in place "will prolong the severe financial burdens borne by landlords under the moratorium for the past nine months," the group said, in an emergency application directed to Chief Justice John Roberts filed by the Alabama Association of Realtors. (Williams, 6/3)
In related news about covid's economic toll —
The Wall Street Journal:
Jobless Claims Drop To Another Pandemic Low
Worker filings for initial jobless claims have dropped by 35% since late April, adding to signs of a healing labor market as the U.S. economy ramps up. Weekly unemployment claims, a proxy for layoffs, fell to 385,000 last week from a revised 405,000 the prior week, the Labor Department said Thursday. Last week’s decline in claims marked the fifth straight week that new filings fell, from 590,000 the week ended April 24. (Guilford, 6/3)