Skip to main content
U.S.

CDC issues another eviction ban days after the last one ran out

Aug 03, 2021

Share

Just three days after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s eviction ban expired, the CDC issued another one Tuesday. The video above shows President Joe Biden answering reporter questions about the ban.

The new moratorium is set to last until Oct. 3. It’s seen as a reversal for the Biden administration, who said a Supreme Court ruling was the reason the previous moratorium had to expire.

“The courts made it clear that the existing moratorium was not constitutional,” President Biden said. “It wouldn’t stand. And I made that clear back in July 15th, on July 18th.”

Biden went on to say, “Any call for a moratorium based on the Supreme Court recent decision is likely to face obstacles.”

The President said he sought input from legal scholars about whether there were other options available to him.

According to Biden, the advice was mixed, although some of them said, “It’s worth the effort.”

The CDC has identified a legal authority for a new and different moratorium for areas with high and substantial increases in COVID-19 infections. It would protect 90 percent of Americans.

In addition to talking about the moratorium, Biden urged states and cities to disburse the nearly $47 billion in relief for renters facing eviction in the next 60 days.

“We’re urging them to distribute those funds to the landlords. I believe that would take care of the vast majority of what needs to be done to keep people in their, in their apartments now,” Biden said.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen briefed House Democrats over the phone Tuesday about the work underway to make sure the $47 billion gets in the hands of renters and landlords. She gave them data on how their districts and states are performing with distributing the relief, according to a person on the call.

According to this person, Yellen agrees “we need to bring every resource to bear” and she wants “to leave no stone unturned.”

Tags:

Joe Biden, U.S. President: “Any call for a moratorium based on the Supreme Court recent decision is likely to face obstacles. I’ve indicated to the CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) I’d like to look at other alternatives than the one that is in power, in existence, which the court has declared they’re not going to allow to continue. And the CDC will have something to announce to you in the next hour to two hours.”

“The courts made it clear. That the existing moratorium was not constitutional. It wouldn’t stand. And I made that clear back in July 15th, on July 18th. In the meantime, what I’ve been pushing for and calling for is we have billions of dollars given to states to provide for rent and utilities for those people who can’t afford to stay in their homes because they can’t afford an apartment, they can’t pay their rent. And so we’re urging them to distribute those funds to the landlords. I believe that would take care of the vast majority of what needs to be done to keep people in their, in their apartments now. And so that’s what we’re working on. Some states have done it and some communities have, but they have not. The money is there not, we don’t have to send it out. It’s been sent out to the states and counties billions of dollars for the express purpose of providing for back rent and rent the people who are in the middle of this crisis. And that’s there, that’s what we’re pushing now. And we’ve been pushing that. That’s the immediate thing to do.”