Washington (September 21, 2021) — Today, Senators Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.), Alex Padilla
(D-Calif.), Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Congresswoman Cori Bush (D-Mo.), Deputy
Whip of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and Member of the House Committee
on the Judiciary, and over three dozen of their colleagues introduced the
Keeping
Renters Safe Act of 2021 to
enact an urgently needed nationwide eviction moratorium. In direct response to
the Supreme Court’s decision to strike down President Biden’s initial eviction
moratorium on the grounds that the Secretary of the Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) lacked the statutory authority to mandate such a
moratorium, the
Keeping
Renters Safe Act of 2021 would
clarify that the HHS Secretary does permanently retain the authority to
implement an eviction moratorium in the interests of public health. More than
110,000 Massachusetts residents
report being
behind on rent.
“The coronavirus pandemic hasn’t ended and
neither should emergency housing protections,” said Senator Ed Markey. “As a million Americans face eviction
in the coming months, Congress has an urgent mandate to keep the eviction
moratorium in place through the remainder of this public health emergency. The Keeping Renters Safe Act will ensure renters can count on a
roof over their heads and not an eviction notice on their door. I thank Rep.
Bush for her continued leadership on this lifeline issue and my colleagues for
their partnership on this legislation.”
“This
pandemic isn’t over, and we have to do everything we can to protect renters
from the harm and trauma of needless eviction, which upends the lives of those
struggling to get back on their feet,” said Senator
Elizabeth Warren. “Pushing hundreds of thousands of people out of
their homes will only exacerbate this public health crisis and cause economic
harm to families, their communities, and our recovery. Congress must pass the Keeping Renters Safe Act of
2021 to put the eviction
moratorium back in place and clarify that HHS has the authority to protect
renters throughout this public health crisis. Safe housing saves lives.”
“Housing is a human right, not a bargaining chip
to let fall between bureaucratic cracks,” said Congresswoman Cori Bush.
“Nearly 40 million Americans have tested positive for COVID-19. Over 670,000
people have died of this virus, and countless are living permanently disabled
from its aftereffects. As the Delta variant continues to force individuals to
quarantine, close schools, and stifle businesses, we must do all we can to save
lives. That starts with keeping every person safely housed. The Keeping Renters Safe of
2021 will save lives and
give us more time: time for renters to receive financial assistance, time for
the economy to fully recover, and time for the pandemic to finally come to an
end. I’m humbled to introduce this critical, actionable legislation with
Senator Warren and so many of my colleagues.”
“We continue to face a historic housing and
homelessness crisis, which has only been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic,”
said Senator Alex Padilla.
“In California alone, over 161,000 people experience homelessness each night –
including families with young children, veterans, and victims of domestic
violence. That is why I am proud to co-lead the Keeping Renters Safe Act of 2021,
which will ensure people in California and across the country are protected from
unreasonable and dangerous evictions.”
A copy of
this bill text can be found
HERE
and a one-pager on this bill can be found
HERE.
The Keeping Renters Safe Act of 2021 will protect renters from eviction and curb the spread of
COVID-19 by:
- Amending section 361 of the Public Health Service
Act to grant
permanent authority to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
to implement a residential eviction moratorium to address public health
crises.
- Directing HHS to implement a national residential
eviction moratorium in response
to COVID-19 that:
- Must be
automatic, without requiring individuals to apply for coverage.
- Applies to
all residential eviction filings, hearings, judgments, and execution of
judgments.
- Allows the
Secretary to establish appropriate moratorium exceptions necessary to
protect the health and safety of others.
- Remains in
effect at least 60 days following the conclusion of the public health
emergency.
Since the
start of COVID-19, millions of renters have found themselves behind on rent for
the first time in their lives, laid off from their jobs or found their hours
cut during lockdowns. The federal, state and local eviction moratoria were
mandated because lawmakers at every level recognized the dire urgency of
preventing millions of people from being thrown out onto the street in the
middle of a deadly global pandemic.
Since then, the majority of those eviction
moratoria have lapsed, stimulus checks have come and gone, and unemployment
benefits have expired. Yet, a significant portion of Americans continue to
experience devastating levels of financial hardship. We know that the rental
assistance program has failed to distribute close to 90 percent of the nearly
$46 billion allocated to grantees and people are desperately waiting for help
we promised. The Keeping
Renters Safe Act of 2021 helps
fulfill that promise.
“With millions of vulnerable renters at risk of
being unhoused as COVID-19 deaths spike nationwide, Congress must act with
urgency to prevent the impending eviction crisis and the trauma that would
accompany it,” said Congresswoman
Ayanna Pressley. “Our bill does that by reinstating the federal
eviction moratorium so families can stay safely housed and access federal
emergency rental assistance while we recover from this ongoing pandemic.
Without collective action, COVID-19 will continue to spread, lives and homes
will continue to be lost, and the hurt our communities are experiencing will
only get worse. We've been fighting hard for this and we must act before it’s
too late.”
“Last month, I proudly stood alongside Rep. Bush
and fought to keep as many as 11 million Americans from becoming homeless. Now,
I’m proud to stand by her today as we continue that fight by introducing the Keeping Renters Safe Act,”
said Congressman Mondaire
Jones. “Despite how hard we fought, and the many days we stayed out on
those Capitol steps, the far-right, 6-3 majority on the Supreme Court, in a
dangerous, partisan decision, struck down the CDC’s eviction moratorium. This
left millions once again at risk of eviction. In the world’s richest nation, no
one should have to experience housing insecurity -- especially not during a
deadly pandemic with the Delta variant ravaging our communities. We have a
moral obligation to ensure every person remains safe and housed for the
duration of this pandemic and long after. That’s exactly what our bill, the Keeping Renters Safe Act,
would do.”
“At this very moment, families across the
country are facing the prospect of eviction from their homes,” said Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky.
“Not only does an eviction immediately threaten their safety and security but
it can follow a family for years, making finding new housing challenging and
limiting their opportunities. Housing is a human right. I’m proud to join my
colleague Cori Bush to protect these families from eviction. Congress must act
now to pass this legislation before even one more family loses their home.”
“I have lived through eviction,” said Vivian Smith, tenant leader,
Miami Workers Center and the Homes Guarantee Campaign at People’s Action.
“I have lived through homelessness. I have been forced to make choices between
feeding my kids and paying the rent. No one should have to make this choice.
During the pandemic, I’ve been forced to choose between my health and my home,
returning to work before it was safe in order to avoid eviction. Tenants like
me need Congress to act with urgency to pass an eviction moratorium, to end all
evictions, now and at least until the public health emergency is over.”
“Congress should enact this broad eviction
moratorium to keep millions of families safely and stably housed during the
pandemic,” said Diane
Yentel, president and CEO of the National Low Income Housing Coalition.
“The Supreme Court’s ruling to lift the moratorium will have devastating and
long-lasting consequences. The moratorium was a lifeline for millions of
renters, and the last federal protection keeping many of them stably housed as
they wait for emergency rental assistance to reach them. Without the moratorium
in place, families will be pushed deeper into poverty, communities will
struggle with increased spread of COVID-19, and our country will have a harder
time containing the virus.”
"The Metropolitan St. Louis Equal Housing
and Opportunity Council enthusiastically supports this proposed legislation,”
said Will Jordan,
Executive Director, Metropolitan St. Louis Equal Housing and Opportunity
Council. “As long as the pandemic continues and aid dollars sit
unspent, allowing evictions to proceed is both a moral and public health policy
failure. We urge congress to work with the urgency that this crisis demands,
and that this legislation be sent to the president's desk as quickly as
possible."
“Legal Services of Eastern Missouri provides
legal help to many clients in Missouri’s First Congressional District who are
vulnerable to potential eviction, or who are currently facing eviction,” said Dan K. Glazier, Executive
Director & General Counsel. Legal Services of Eastern Missouri, Inc. “The proposed legislation, the “Keeping
Renters Safe Act of 2021,” would likely impact the communities we serve by
helping them: 1) avoid homelessness; and 2) promote their health and the health
of others in the community by lowering the chances of our clients getting or
spreading Covid-19.”
“Right now, in the middle of a pandemic and the
climate crisis, millions of people risk losing their homes, their security, and
their safety because a partisan, undemocratic Supreme Court ended the eviction
moratorium,” said Lauren
Maunus, Sunrise Movement Advocacy Director. “In the wealthiest country
in the world, no one should be forced from their home or be houseless. Elected
officials must pass the Keeping
Renters Safe Act of 2021 so
families can remain in their homes as we deal with a deadly pandemic and
unrelenting climate crisis ravaging our most vulnerable communities.”
In the Senate, the bill is additionally co-sponsored
by: Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii.), Bernard Sanders (I-Vt.), and Kirsten Gillibrand
(D-N.Y.)
In the House, the bill is co-sponsored by: Reps.
Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), Jimmy Gomez
(D-Calif.), Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), Mondaire Jones (D-N.Y.), Jan Schakowsky
(D-Ill.), Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.), Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC.), Barbara Lee
(D-Calif.), Juan Vargas (D-Calif.), Jesús G. “Chuy” García (D-Ill.), Kaiali‘i
Kahele (D-Hawaii.), Danny K. Davis (D-Ill.), Frederica S. Wilson (D-Fla.),
Adriano Espaillat (D-N.Y.), Karen Bass (D-Calif.), Grace Meng (D-N.Y.), James
P. McGovern (D-Mass.), Bonnie Watson Coleman (D-N.J.), Jamie Raskin (D-Md.),
Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.), Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), Mark Takano (D-Calif.),
Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas.), Veronica Escobar (D-Texas.), Ritchie Torres
(D-N.Y.), Suzanne Bonamici (D-Ore.), Andy Levin (D-Mich), Alan Lowenthal
(D-Calif.), Melanie Stansbury (D-N.M.), Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.), Yvette Clarke
(D-N.Y.), David N. Cicilline (D-R.I.), Mark Pocan (D-Wisc.), Nanette Diaz
Barragán (D-Calif.), Tony Cárdenas (D-Calif.), Bennie G. Thompson (D-Miss.),
Nikema Williams (D-Ga.).
The bill is endorsed by 82 organizations: A Way Home America, Action Center on Race and the Economy,
Affordable Housing Network of Santa Clara County, ArchCity Defenders, Inc.,
Be:Seattle, Beyond Housing, Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation, Bull
City Tenants United, CA Renters Caucus, Charles House’, Citizen Action of New
York, Community Alliance of Tenants, Community Action for Safe Apartments,
Community Solutions, Covenant House, Detroit Action, Down Home NC, Empower
Missouri, Familia: Trans Queer Liberation Movement, Florida Rising, FreeSource,
Funders Together to End Homelessness, HOMES Campaign Delaware, Hometown Action,
Hoosier Action, Horizon Housing Development Company, Housing Justice Project,
HousingLOUISIANA, Human Impact Partners, Indivisible, Inquilinxs Unidxs por
Justicia (United Renters for Justice), Jane Addams Senior Caucus, JustFix,
Justice Democrats, KC Tenants, KY Tenants, Los Angeles Community Action
Network, Louisiana Fair Housing Action Center, Make the Road Nevada,
Metropolitan Development Council, Metropolitan St. Louis Equal Housing and
Opportunity Council, Missouri Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence,
National Center for Healthy Housing, National Coalition for Homeless Veterans,
National Coalition for Housing Justice, National Coalition for the Homeless,
National Education Association, National Health Care for the Homeless Council,
National Homelessness Law Center, National Housing Law Project, National Low
Income Housing Coalition, National Women's Law Center, New Jersey Citizen
Action, New Jersey Tenants Organization, ONE Northside, One Westlake, Our
Revolution, Palo Alto Renters' Association, People’s Action, PUSH Buffalo,
Progressive Leadership Alliance Of Nevada, Right to Counsel NYC Coalition,
Riverside Edgecombe Neighborhood Association, Rent Zero Kansas, RESULTS, Root
Cause Research Center, Safety Net Project: Urban Justice Center, Senior and
Disability Action, Show Up for Racial Justice, Social Security Works, South
Carolina Housing Justice Network, Street Vendor Project: Urban Justice Center,
Sunrise Movement, Tenants Political Action Committee, Unemployed Workers
United, Unified Citizens, Inc., United Vision for Idaho, Western Regional
Advocacy Project, Westside Health Authority, The Women's Building, Working
Families Party, Youth Collaboratory