Federal Appeals Court Upholds Nationwide Moratorium On Evictions
The freeze was enacted by public health officials as a way to keep people in their homes and out of crowded homeless shelters during the pandemic.
The Hill:
Appeals Court Rejects Bid By Landlords To Resume Evictions
A federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday denied a request by a group of landlords to resume evictions, leaving the temporary nationwide eviction moratorium intact for now. The ruling from the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals is the latest twist in a multifront legal challenge to the eviction freeze that was enacted by federal public health officials as a way to keep financially distressed renters in their homes and out of crowded homeless shelters during the coronavirus pandemic. (Kruzel, 6/2)
Bloomberg:
U.S. Eviction Moratorium Will Stay In Place, Appeals Court Says
The U.S. government’s nationwide prohibition on evictions can stay in effect, a federal appeals court ruled. A three-judge panel in Washington said the eviction moratorium instituted by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention can continue while the Biden administration appeals a lower-court ruling that overturned the ban last month. (Yaffe-Bellany, 6/2)
In other news about covid's economic toll —
PBS NewsHour:
‘Pandemic Misery Index’ Charts Far-Reaching, Imbalanced Impacts Of COVID-19
With more than 30 million people infected and 550,000 dead, the U.S. is among the nations hardest hit by the COVID-19 pandemic. From job loss to housing insecurity to mental distress, the social, psychological and economic hardships brought on by the pandemic are extensive and likely to outlast the pandemic itself. To better understand the breadth and depth of the pandemic’s impact on American lives, I worked with colleagues at the USC Dornsife Center for Economic and Social Research to develop an index of “pandemic misery.” We found that though few U.S. residents have survived the pandemic unscathed, hardship isn’t equally distributed across groups. (Thomas, 6/2)