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The Coming Eviction Crisis: ‘It’s Hard to Pay the Bills on Nothing’
The moratoriums on tenant evictions and mortgage foreclosures has now ended. County Sheriffs will be supervising an avalanche of unfortunates being removed from wherever they call home.
The homeless living on the streets will increase. The homeless will include entire families. It's about to get very ugly in many American communities.
The federal government officials that could alleviate this misery are still employed and safe in their gated communities. A pox on their houses.

8/9/20
In Columbus, Ohio, judges have relocated eviction hearings to the cavernous halls of the city’s convention center, to ensure there’s plenty of space for the grim business of throwing families onto the street. In Savannah, Ga., the county sheriff, John Wilcher, announced at the start of the month that he would begin moving forward with about 500 pending evictions. Mr. Wilcher told reporters that he hadn’t carried out evictions for the last five months, but that “people after five months should have been able to come up with some kind of deal or something to help themselves out where they wouldn’t be evicted.” The sheriff didn’t offer any pointers on how to find a job in the midst of a pandemic. The last time the economy went over the cliff’s edge, in 2008, the federal government encased the banking system in plastic Bubble Wrap and allowed millions of Americans to lose their homes. It’s about to make the same mistake all over again. I was a housing reporter during the last crisis. I spent long days with young families and old ladies desperately trying to hold on; with sheriff’s deputies tasked with removing people from homes owned by faceless companies. The government dismissed the woes of homeowners and renters as personal tragedies that did not require the attention of the Treasury Department. The government was wrong.
Even on its own terms, the government’s indifference was a mistake. The massive dislocations shredded communities, as families were replaced by abandoned homes. Schools struggled to help displaced children, whose test scores declined and behavioral problems increased. Businesses lost their customers. Cities starved for property tax revenue slashed spending: Colorado Springs turned off one-third of its streetlights. The accumulation of individual tragedies left lasting scars on the economy and on society. Federal aid ended last month. More than 20 percent of households say that they don’t expect to be able to make their next monthly rent or mortgage payment. Americans once again are beginning to lose their homes. The dislocations could be worse than last time. Tens of millions of lower-income families already were struggling to afford a place to live. Millions already were evicted each year. And many more Americans have lost jobs this time around. In a policy memo published Friday, a group of housing policy experts and affordable housing advocates said, “The United States may be facing the most severe housing crisis in its history.” The Princeton sociologist Matthew Desmond has argued compellingly that eviction is not just a result of poverty — it is also a cause of poverty.
The moratoriums on tenant evictions and mortgage foreclosures has now ended. County Sheriffs will be supervising an avalanche of unfortunates being removed from wherever they call home.
The homeless living on the streets will increase. The homeless will include entire families. It's about to get very ugly in many American communities.
The federal government officials that could alleviate this misery are still employed and safe in their gated communities. A pox on their houses.