2022
DOI: 10.1002/ajcp.12581
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Evictions and tenant‐landlord relationships during the 2020–2021 eviction moratorium in the US

Abstract: This study provisionally examined the effects of the US eviction moratorium instituted in response to the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID‐19) pandemic. Three waves of data collected May 2020–April 2021 from a nationally representative sample of middle‐ and low‐income US tenants (n = 3393 in Wave 1, n = 1311 in Wave 2, and 814 in Wave 3) were analyzed. Across three waves, 4.3% of tenants reported experiencing an eviction during the moratorium and 6%–23% of tenants reported delaying paying rent because of the mo… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Indeed, the COVID-19 crisis has both educated the public about the challenges of displacement and also presented an opportunity to implement some neighborhood stabilization policies. Anecdotal evidence from different cities suggests that temporary eviction moratoria and rental assistance have largely succeeded at keeping families in their homes (Raajkumar 2022;Reina et al 2021;Tsai et al 2022). This raises questions about how we can make these policies more permanent, perhaps in the form of an expanded rental assistance fund and just cause eviction policies in jurisdictions across the state.…”
Section: Role Of Policies and Public Sector Actionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, the COVID-19 crisis has both educated the public about the challenges of displacement and also presented an opportunity to implement some neighborhood stabilization policies. Anecdotal evidence from different cities suggests that temporary eviction moratoria and rental assistance have largely succeeded at keeping families in their homes (Raajkumar 2022;Reina et al 2021;Tsai et al 2022). This raises questions about how we can make these policies more permanent, perhaps in the form of an expanded rental assistance fund and just cause eviction policies in jurisdictions across the state.…”
Section: Role Of Policies and Public Sector Actionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While challenging to quantify, a single‐point‐in‐time count estimated that there were 580,000 people experiencing homelessness on a single night in January 2020 in the United States (National Alliance to End Homelessness, 2021). It is likely that the incidence of homelessness, and certainly housing insecurity, has further increased due to the societal and economic ramifications of COVID‐19 (Pawson et al., 2021; Tsai et al., 2022).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many renters facing eviction have also experienced repeated eviction issues before, so accumulated experiences with eviction may also take their toll . There is some evidence that the eviction moratoria may have had unintended consequences by exacerbating tenant-landlord relationships with delayed rent payments from renters and delayed maintenance by landlords and lessors . Instead of viewing evictions as an acute event, it may be that the eviction process, especially during the pandemic, was experienced as more of a chronic gradual health-deteriorating stressor for renters.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%