The DC Council recently passed a few laws that give DC renters new rights. For example, no landlord can serve a 30-Day Notice on a tenant until at least 60 days after the end of the Public Health Emergency. In DC, the 30-Day Notice generally has to come before the filing of an eviction case, so this added protection will give folks a little more time before their landlords begin the process to evict them.
However, Bread for the City is not satisfied now that tenants have a little more time before they get evicted. We need the evictions themselves to cease. In the many lessons we have learned from the pandemic of COVID-19 colliding with the epidemic of racism in America, some glaring truths stand out: All people need housing to be safe. All people need housing to be healthy. All people need housing to thrive.
Halloween will have to be a more low-key event than usual this year. Instead of haunted houses and corn mazes, we have something else to keep us scared: the looming crisis of homelessness and displacement facing our city. A recent report predicts that between 14,000 – 23,000 DC households will be at risk of eviction by January 2021. At this point it seems clear that the pandemic and its economic effects will last long past January 2021, so that number can only grow unless our city’s leaders take bold action soon. Another study estimates that homelessness could rise by 45%.
In DC, we know all too well who will bear the brunt of the trauma of eviction and displacement. The majority of the District’s evictions happen in Wards 7 and 8: the wards with the largest share of Black residents and highest poverty rates in the District, due to decades of disinvestment and deliberate neglect. District leaders must take bold action before it’s too late to invest in a truly equitable recovery from this pandemic.
Here are some common-sense solutions that we support:
We do not accept the “Wait and See” attitude that several Council members offered during the Summer 2020 budget conversations. We know that the District has the resources to prevent the devastating cycles of displacement, homelessness, and trauma. All we need is the political will.