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Eviction in the United States

Eviction in the United States refers to the pattern of tenant removal by landlords in the United States.[1] In an eviction process, landlords forcibly remove tenants from their place of residence and reclaim the property.[2] Landlords may decide to evict tenants who have failed to pay rent, violated lease terms, or possess an expired lease.[1] Landlords may also choose not to renew a tenant's lease, however, this does not constitute an eviction.[2] In the United States, eviction procedures, landlord rights, and tenant protections vary by state and locality.[2] Historically, the United States has seen changes in domestic eviction rates during periods of major socio-political and economic turmoil—including the Great Depression, the 2008 Recession, and the COVID-19 pandemic. High eviction rates are driven by affordable housing shortages and rising housing costs.[3] Across the United States, low-income and disadvantaged neighborhoods have disproportionately higher eviction rates.[4] Certain demographics—including low income renters, Black and Hispanic renters, women, and people with children—are also at a greater risk of eviction.[4] Additionally, eviction filings remain on renters' public records. This can make it more difficult for renters to access future housing, since most landlords will not rent to a tenant with a history of eviction.[1] Eviction and housing instability are also linked to many negative health and life outcomes, including homelessness, poverty, and poor mental and physical health.

Evicted men and child with belongings on street. New York City, 1910s.

Unfortunately, the United States eviction crisis is not fully understood due to poorly documented eviction records and limited research on the topic.[5] Landlord-initiated expulsion of tenants is not officially tracked or monitored by the federal government and has not been subject to comprehensive analysis. In 2016, sociologist Matthew Desmond published Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City which brought wide-scale attention to the United States eviction crisis.[6] In his book, Desmond researches and analyzes eviction patterns in impoverished Milwaukee neighborhoods. Desmond also emphasizes racial and gender disparities in eviction rates and the subsequent social cost on these evictees.[6] In 2017, Desmond established The Eviction Lab: an interactive website that publicizes data on eviction trends across the United States.[7]

History edit

19th century edit

The Trail of Tears edit

See main article: Trail of Tears

The Trail of Tears refers to the mass eviction of around 100,000 American Indians from their homelands, which stretched across Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, and Alabama. The majority of evictions occurred after the passage of the United States Indian Removal Act of 1830.[8]

In 1832, the Supreme Court ruled on the case Worcester v. Georgia, stipulating that the evacuation of the American Indian tribes was unconstitutional. However, because the president at the time, Andrew Jackson, did not agree with the ruling, it was not enforced. The evacuation of natives in the southern states continued.[9]

In 1834, the Treaty of New Echota was passed. This required the Cherokee tribe to move to Oklahoma within two years for a compensation of five million dollars. However, when many Cherokees remained in 1838, they were forcibly removed by the military with deaths totaling over 4,000 people.[9]

20th century edit

The Great Depression edit

See main article: Great Depression in the United States

During the Great Depression, eviction rates increased significantly due to high unemployment rates.[10] In 1933, U.S. unemployment rates reached an all time high of 24.9%.the US.[11]

These evictions led to the Great Rent Strike War of 1932.[12]: 12  During the strike, which started in The Bronx, tenants withheld their rent while demanding decreases in rent and evictions. Tenants who did not pay were evicted, and police officers forced residents out of their apartments. Tenants violently fought police officers, leading to arrests. At first, the strikes were unsuccessful because landlords were legally supported. Eventually, strikes spread across the country and led to decreases in rent and eviction rates.[13]

One result of housing issues that occurred during the Great Depression was the passage of the Housing Act of 1937, often referred to as the Wagner-Steagall Act. This act established public housing in the United States.[14] Within the first four years of its establishment, 170,000 housing units were created.[15]

Japanese American internment during WWII edit

See main article: Internment of Japanese Americans

During World War II, mass evictions of Japanese Americans on the West Coast occurred due to perceived threats of national security after the Pearl Harbor bombings.[16] Evictions began in early 1942 after the inaction of Executive Order 9066 by president Franklin Roosevelt.[17] Within six months, 112,000 people were sent to internment camps. Those who were forced into these internment camps were slowly released after the end of the war in 1945.[16] The last internment camp did not close until nine months after the end of the war. In 1948, Congress passed a law that would reimburse Japanese Americans for their material losses; however, only ten cents of every dollar was repaid. In 1988, President Ronald Reagan signed a bill that paid each survivor of internment camps $20,000.[17]

21st century edit

Great Recession edit

 
In Minneapolis, Hennepin County community members protest to demand accountability from the banking industry, following the 2008 recession. May 21, 2013.

See main article: Great Recession

During the recession of 2008, eviction rates rose significantly due to property foreclosures. In the early months of the recession, renters were evicted with little notice due to landlords foreclosing on properties. However, in May 2009, the Protecting Tenants at Foreclosure Act was passed. This law required "new owners to provide at least 90 days notice to vacate and to honor the terms of any existing leases."[18]

COVID-19 pandemic edit

During the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, mass job loss and unemployment led to fears of mass evictions as tenants became unable to pay rent. An analysis by the Aspen Institute indicated between 19 and 23 million, or 20 percent of renters, were at risk for eviction by the end of September, 2020;[19] a separate July 2021 United States Census Bureau survey projects 7 million households unable to pay rent and at risk of eviction, with a potential 3 million eviction filings in the next two months.[20]

In response, the federal CARES Act included an eviction moratorium for federally-backed rental properties; however, this expired on July 24, 2020,[21] and no enforcement mechanism was provided.[22] States and cities also passed a variety of temporary eviction moratoriums.[23][24][25] As these moratoriums expired over the course of 2020, there were fears of a massive wave of evictions; by mid-June 2020, over 40% of states offered renters no protections.[26]

Nevertheless, on September 4, 2020, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued an Agency Order known as Temporary Halt in Residential Evictions To Prevent the Further Spread of COVID-19.[27] This agency order will be effective from September 4 to December 31, 2020, during which time, "a landlord, owner of a residential property, or another person with a legal right to pursue eviction or possessory action, shall not evict any covered person from any residential property in any jurisdiction to which the order applies."[27]

Under The Temporary Halt in Residential Evictions To Prevent the Further Spread of COVID-19, a covered person is a tenant that has given their landlord the legal right to evict them, but has declared, under penalty of perjury, that: available housing assistance has been pursued; homeless status is likely after the eviction; the tenant is making their best efforts to pay at least part of the rent, there was a substantial household income loss that prevents the tenant from paying rent; and the tenant will not earn more than $99,000 USD in annual income for the taxable year of 2020, or will not be required to report incomes in 2019, or, under the CARES Act received an Economic Impact Payment.[28] This eviction moratorium was allowed to expire on July 31, 2021.[29]

However, that does not mean that the individual obligations to comply with the agreements on the tenancy contract are relieved. The order does not eliminate individual obligations to make housing payments, pay the rent, or add interest, if applicable.[30] Moreover, tenants can still be evicted for other reasons apart from not complying with the timely payment. For instance, evictions due to criminal activity, violation of building codes, and threats to other residents' safety are allowed under the order.[30]

In addition, the agency order will not apply in areas that already have an eviction moratorium. For example, the Governor of California stated that the Temporary Halt will not apply in the state because they have established a stronger protection.[31] Furthermore, the order allows states to enact other actions aimed to provide even further assistance to tenants, which implies that tenants not covered by the federal order, could be covered by some state protection.[25]

In this way, there are states and cities that issued their own eviction moratoriums.[25] For instance, the state of Massachusetts issued the "Bill providing temporary protections for renters and home owners during the COVID-19 emergency". However, the moratorium waived on October 17, 2020. Hence, the CDC order will take effect.[32]

On August 3, 2021, the CDC issued a new eviction moratorium in areas with substantial and high transmission of COVID-19.[33][34][35] On August 26, 2021, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against the federal eviction moratorium put in place by U.S. President Joe Biden and ruled that the CDC had exceeded its authority by enforcing it.[36][37][38]

Eviction process edit

Reasons for eviction edit

Landlords can evict tenants for failing to pay rent, violating lease agreements, or having an expired lease.[2] Landlords can also expel tenants for breaking the law, damaging property, engaging in violence or causing a disturbance. Other legitimate reasons for eviction include improper property use, such as illegal subletting or cannabis cultivation.[39] However, most renters are evicted for non-payment of rent.[39] In 2018, a DC eviction report found that 93% of eviction filings in DC were initiated for non-payment of rent.[40][41]

Landlords may also file for evictions in situations where the tenant is not culpable, known as a "no-fault eviction". In most American municipalities, landlords have the legal right to expel tenants at their discretion, even if the tenant has not broken any lease agreements. For example, landlords can evict tenants if they want to sell or reoccupy their property.[42] Additionally, landlords have no legal obligation to renew a tenant's lease and may choose not to for any reason.[2]

Legal protections edit

While landlords may evict tenants for various reasons, there are legal protections that protect tenants and prohibit unfair evictions. Foremost, landlords may only carry out evictions that follow federal, state, and local statutes. For example, the Federal Fair Housing Act prohibits housing discrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, or disability.[43] Thus, it is illegal for a landlord to evict a tenant based on any of these characteristics. Additionally, landlords cannot evict tenants who have filed a fair housing complaint or discrimination lawsuit against them.[2] Tenants also have the right to report housing code violations without the risk of retaliatory evictions. This protection extends to lease renewals—in Edwards v. Habib, the court established that landlords cannot refuse to renew a tenant's lease for reporting a code violation.[44] In some states, landlords are prohibited from issuing an eviction following any form of a tenant-initiated report.[2]

Certain demographic groups are granted further protections to protect against unjust evictions. For example, federal housing assistance recipients cannot be evicted through "no-fault" evictions.[45] Tenants using federal housing expenditures—such as LIHTC, Section 8 vouchers, or public housing can still be evicted—but these evictions must be initiated for lease violations or rent non-payment.[45]

Prior to an eviction, landlords must issue an eviction notice, often referred to as a Notice to Quit.[2] In this notice, landlords must provide sufficient information detailing the reason for eviction and options available for the tenant.[46] Landlords are prohibited from threatening, harming, harassing, or intimidating evictees, even if they are non-compliant.[46] If an evicted tenant refuses to leave the property, landlords cannot create a hostile environment that would force a tenant to leave the property, a process known as "constructive eviction".[47] For example, landlords may not change a tenant's locks, cut off water or heat, or shut off other essential utilities.[48]

Eviction law edit

A fair eviction process is regulated through federal law, state law, local law, common law, and court procedures.[2] There are limited federal laws dedicated specifically to domestic eviction regulation. However, there are federal protections in place that protect tenants against unlawful housing practices. For example, the federal Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination in housing based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, disability, or familial status.[49] While eviction laws vary by region, most state and local legislation mirrors the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (URLTA) or the Model Residential Landlord-Tenant Code.[2] Eviction procedures are also regulated by common law—law based on legal precedents, rather than formal statutes.[2] In other words, when no written law applies to an eviction case, past court decisions are used to guide judge rulings. In some cases, lease terms can override common law.[2] Additionally, court procedures—which vary by municipality—can influence an eviction case.[2] For instance, the organization of a court's docket systems can impact the amount of time it takes a landlord to carry out an eviction.[2] During Covid-19, the federal government passed the CARE Act, which included a temporary eviction moratorium for eligible renters.

Causes edit

 
Number in Poverty and Poverty Rate: 1959 to 2015. United States.

Each year, millions of renters and homeowners are evicted across the United States.[50] Rising housing costs and affordable housing shortages have catalyzed a nationwide housing insecurity crisis, driving up eviction rates. Over the past few decades, housing prices have outpaced the median household income, making it increasingly difficult for renters and homeowners to secure affordable housing.[51] The Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University found that 26.5% of US renters were severely cost-burdened in 2013, almost twice the rate as in 1960.[51] Further, most renting families under the poverty line spend more than 50% of their income on rent, with one in four such families spending over 70% of their income on rent and utilities.[52] For low-income renters, rising rents and housing affordability issues are exacerbated by a shortage of low-cost housing units.[53] In 2019, the US had a shortage of 7 million affordable housing units for renters at or below the poverty line, according to data from the National Low Income Housing Coalition.[53] In 2015, only one in four eligible low-income renters received housing assistance, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.[54] In a climate of housing insecurity, cost-burdened renters face an increased risk of eviction.

In addition to individual risk factors, neighborhood composition is highly correlated with eviction patterns.[45] The risk of eviction is significantly higher in neighborhoods with high degrees of racial or economic segregation.[45] Using data from Princeton University's Eviction Lab, a 2020 study found that eviction filings were significantly higher in black-majority neighborhoods than in white majority neighborhoods.[55] Additionally, an analysis of eviction rates in Southern California found that a neighborhood's racial or economic composition was a greater predictor of eviction filings than housing market changes.[56] In other words, neighborhoods with a greater concentration of low-income or black tenants had higher eviction rates than neighborhoods with rising rent.[56] Similar patterns can be seen with inter-neighborhood dynamics—research indicates that low-income neighborhoods in Seattle not only faced higher eviction rates, but neighborhoods bordering low-income areas also faced higher eviction rates.[45] Disadvantaged neighborhoods with high eviction rates face constant instability, which further disincentivizes community investment and involvement.[57]

When housing pressures are extreme, even middle-class and working-class renters are evicted by landlords eager to capitalize on the rising market rates, such as in San Francisco during the various tech booms. In such circumstances, landlords may seize upon minor violations that were previously tolerated, such as keeping a small pet or storing a bicycle in the hallway, to evict renters. The situation in California is aggravated by the Ellis Act, which allows landlords to evict tenants and immediately sell vacant apartments as condominiums.[58]

Disproportionately impacted evictees edit

Low-income renters edit

Low-income renters and homeowners face higher eviction rates and are also disproportionately impacted by the consequences of eviction.[1] Foremost, low-income renters often lack the financial means to navigate the eviction process. For example, an Alabama Law study found that only 16.4% of Illinois households received any form of legal representation for their legal problems, with housing being the second most common legal issue for low-income households.[1] A lack of financial resources can be a barrier to accessing legal representation, which puts low-income renters at a disadvantage in court. This disparity is especially prevalent in eviction cases, since eviction law is complex and difficult to interpret. In a study referenced in Pepperdine Law Review, researchers found that unrepresented low-income tenants in New York City fared significantly worse in court than represented low-income tenants—unrepresented tenants were more likely to default in court and more likely to receive a warrant of eviction.[59] Without legal support, defendants may not be able to build or articulate a sound defense that holds up in a court. One study of Philadelphia's housing court found that tenants who had legal representation were almost 20 times more likely to prevail in court than those without legal representation.[60] Additionally, eviction-related court hearings in Chicago are almost two minutes shorter when the landlord has a legal defense and the tenant does not.[1]

Unexpected financial costs—such as job loss, drop in income, or medical bills—can jeopardize housing stability and potentially lead to eviction.[61] This is especially true for poor tenants, who may not have the financial safety net to absorb unexpected costs. In addition, low-income individuals are more likely to lack financial literacy skills, which is associated with an increased likelihood of eviction.[39] Similarly, low-income renters who fail to seek out or use housing-related subsidies are at increased risk of future eviction.[39]

Black and Hispanic renters edit

Black tenants face significantly higher filing and eviction rates than their white counterparts.[7] Looking at neighborhood racial composition in Milwaukee, sociologist Matthew Desmond found that majority-black neighborhoods had an average annual eviction rate of 7.4%, compared to 1.4% in majority-white neighborhoods.[4] In this study, Desmond also emphasizes the dual disadvantage black women face in housing—black women face the highest eviction rates of any demographic group.[4] In an interview with The Atlantic, Desmond reported that approximately one in five black women will experience eviction, compared to one in fifteen white women.[62] Eviction rates are also linked to the racial concentration of neighborhoods. The RVA Eviction Lab, in Richmond, Virginia, estimates that as the proportion of a neighborhood's black population increases by 10%, eviction rates would increase by 1.2%.[63]

Hispanic renters also face higher filing and eviction rates than their white counterparts. In a study published in the Harvard Civil Rights–Civil Liberties Law Review, researchers investigated the relationship between Hispanic origin and eviction in Milwaukee. These researchers saw a strong correlation between Hispanic tenants' risk of eviction and neighborhood racial composition.[57] In Milwaukee neighborhoods that were two-thirds white, approximately 80% of landlords were white. In these same neighborhoods, the average eviction rate was 25%, yet the eviction rate for Hispanics was upwards of 35%.[57] The study also found that Hispanic renters were significantly more likely to be evicted by white landlords than non-white landlords.[57] According to Greenberg et al, these findings suggest that discrimination contributes to racial disparities in Milwaukee eviction rates.[57]

Women edit

Women, especially minority women, are disproportionately impacted by eviction. Between 2003 and 2007, women made up 60.6% of the evicted population in Milwaukee and 62% of people who appeared in eviction court. This is likely because women are more likely to be impoverished in America, and therefore have less access to legal resources.[57] When homeless men and women were asked why they were homeless, women cited eviction nearly twice as often as much as men did, according to a study in the Journal of Social Distress and the Homelessness.[64] Black and Hispanic women face the highest eviction rates and are the most represented demographic in eviction hearings.[6] For example, in Baltimore, 79% of tenants in eviction cases were black women, yet black women only make up 34% of Baltimore's population.[1]

According to Desmond, women face higher eviction rates than men because they have more difficulty paying rent. Across the United States, the wage gap disadvantages women, with women earning less on average than their male counterparts.[65] Additionally, women spend more money than men on child and domestic expenses, further driving income inequality and inhibiting women from paying rent.[4]

Families with children edit

Renters with children are at increased risk of eviction.[45] According to Matthew Desmond, renters with children have an eviction rate three times higher than the average.[62] This is because landlords believe that children have the potential to be problematic. In addition, neighborhoods with more children will also have higher rates of evictions.[45] Greenberg et al found that having a child is more strongly correlated with neighborhood eviction patterns than race, gender, or class.[57]

By the age of 15, approximately 15% of children will have experienced eviction. This has a negative impact on the behavioral development, education, and health of children.[66] A study following low-income urban mothers revealed that evicted mothers are "more likely to suffer from depression, report worse health for themselves and their children, and report more parenting stress."[67] After two years, mothers who experienced evictions still reported significantly higher levels of mental distress.[67] Pregnancy during eviction is also related to negative health outcomes for women and their offspring. Pregnant women who experienced evictions have significantly lower infant birth weights and infant prematurity rates compared to non-pregnant women.[68]

Consequences edit

Housing insecurity and poverty edit

Experiencing eviction is associated with many negative socioeconomic outcomes, including an increased risk of housing instability, job loss, homelessness, and poor health.[57] Having a record of eviction makes it extremely difficult to secure decent housing.[57] A legal eviction will nearly always go on an evictee's permanent record, barring them from future housing opportunities.[69] When an eviction is filed in the court system, this record becomes available to landlords. Landlords can look up the records of prospective renters through a tenant screening report.[1] Through this screening, landlords can find information about prospective tenants' criminal backgrounds, credit scores, and eviction history. If an individual has any history of eviction, this will show up on their record—even if the case was dismissed and the tenant was found not guilty.[1] Most landlords will not accept tenants with any form of an eviction record.[1] Tenants with a record of eviction can also be denied subsidized housing. This exclusion further exacerbates housing instability for minority groups who are most reliant on subsidized housing—in 2019, 42% of HUD program-assisted renters were Black, 19% were Hispanic, and 36% had children, according to the US Department of Housing and Urban Development.[45]

According to sociologist Matthew Desmond, eviction is a cause of poverty, as well as a result of it.[6] Evicted individuals are often forced to accept lower quality housing and move to neighborhoods with higher crime and poverty rates.[45] Experiencing an eviction also increases the risk of job loss and job instability, which exacerbates housing instability.[70] Evicted individuals are uprooted from their communities, forcing them to sever ties with family, schools, religious organizations, and other social support systems. Following an eviction, tenants may also lose personal property—personal possessions are routinely thrown away, left on the sidewalk, or placed in storage that can only be accessed by paying a fee.[71] Protecting or recovering personal possessions can be particularly difficult for poor, elderly, and disabled individuals, who may be unable to access or afford storage.[71]

Following an eviction, evictees may spend months, or even years, searching for decent housing.[1] In some cases, securing housing becomes impossible and eviction leads to homelessness—In Eric Lindblom's book, Homelessness in America, Lindblom found that one in two homeless adults reports eviction or rent affordability as the cause of their homelessness.[72] In 2010, a New York City report estimated that 47% of homeless families in New York City homeless shelters had experienced eviction.[1]

 
Protesters linking arms to prevent San Francisco Sheriffs' deputies from evicting elderly tenants. August 4, 1977.

Mental health edit

Various studies have emphasizes that evictees are more likely to experience negative mental health outcomes, including anxiety, depression, psychological distress, and suicide.[73] Research has found that the stress of even receiving an eviction notice is so substantial that it can be a predictor of a tenant's future housing insecurity, even if the tenant is not evicted.[45] The eviction process is also tied to long-term psychological issues for tenants and their children.[1] In a longitudinal study on eviction, Matthew Desmond found that evicted adults were more likely to report poor mental health both one year and eight years following their eviction.[74] Individuals who experience eviction have disproportionately higher rates of anxiety and depression. In a sample of evicted adults, the Michigan Recession and Recovery Study found that 13.9% of those evicted in the past 12 months suffered from major or minor depression and that 33.8% had experienced an anxiety attack in the last 4 weeks.[75] Additionally, across the 27 states that participate in the National Violent Death Reporting System in 2015, 3.8% of those who committed suicide with known circumstances had recently experienced eviction.[76]

Physical health edit

One physical health impact that eviction has on tenants evicted is an increased spread and contraction of COVID-19. This is because of actions tenants take after being evicted. When evicted, residents must find other places to live, such as a homeless shelter or a friend's house. According to the CDC, "adding as few as two new members to a household can as much as double the risk of illness." Additionally, when people are living in the same household, it is much harder to adhere to social distancing protocols. The mental health consequences of eviction also weaken the immune system, increasing transmission.[77]

In addition, eviction predisposes tenants to hazardous housing conditions, which can lead to negative health outcomes.[78] Following an eviction, low-income renters often cannot secure decent housing, forcing them to settle for poorly maintained or unsafe units. Renters in substandard housing units may face increased exposure to dust, mold, allergens, pests, and other hazards.[1] Additionally, evictees are often forced into improvised neighborhoods, which typically have higher levels of air and water pollution.[79] As a result, renters face an increased risk of respiratory illness, cardiovascular disease, and other health issues.[1] Substandard housing is also more likely to contain lead-contaminated walls and water, which can be particularly dangerous for children. Exposure to lead, even in small doses, can have serious health consequences for children, including developmental delays, decreased intelligence, and serious neurological and brain damage.[1]

Eviction rates also create a higher risk for one to contract sexually transmitted infections. There is a variety of factors that increase this risk for those evicted. Often those evicted do not have access to STI protection to condoms. Additionally, those evicted could participate in sexual activity for resources. Mental health also plays a role in the increased transmission of STIs, as sexual activity has been seen to be used as a coping mechanism for the associated stress with eviction. Eviction also has an impact on monogamous relationships, which can lead to increased partners and an increased risk for STIs.[80]

Rates and locations edit

There is no government reporting system on eviction, so variance by location and time were, at best, little understood and, at worst, invisible. This began to change with the implementation of Princeton University's Eviction Lab which published the results of an analysis of 900,000 eviction notices that occurred in 2016.[81]

 
Steel screen installed over windows as an evicted tenant's property is removed. Minneapolis, Minnesota.
 
A house in Minneapolis is boarded up in 2009 after the tenant was evicted.
 
Striking workers in Pittsburgh being evicted, 1909
Large U.S. cities with highest eviction rates, 2016[82]
Rank City Eviction Rate
1 North Charleston, South Carolina 16.5%
2 Richmond, Virginia 11.44%
3 Hampton, Virginia 10.49%
4 Newport News, Virginia 10.23%
5 Jackson, Mississippi 8.75%
6 Norfolk, Virginia 8.65%
7 Greensboro, North Carolina 8.41%
8 Columbia, South Carolina 8.22%
9 Warren, Michigan 8.08%
10 Chesapeake, Virginia 7.9%

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Eviction". 2022. LII / Legal Information Institute. https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/eviction .
  3. ^ Raymond, Elora L.; Duckworth, Richard; Miller, Benjmain; Lucas, Michael; Pokharel, Shiraj (December 2016). "Corporate Landlords, Institutional Investors, and Displacement: Eviction Rates in Singlefamily Rentals" (PDF). SSRN 2893552. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ a b c d e Desmond, Matthew (July 2012). "Eviction and the Reproduction of Urban Poverty". American Journal of Sociology. 118 (1): 88–133. doi:10.1086/666082. S2CID 44826562.
  5. ^ Tsai, Jack; Huang, Minda (May 2019). "Systematic review of psychosocial factors associated with evictions". Health & Social Care in the Community. 27 (3): e1–e9. doi:10.1111/hsc.12619. PMID 30014532. S2CID 51657469.
  6. ^ a b c d Desmond, Matthew. Evicted: Poverty and profit in the American city. Crown, 2016.
  7. ^ a b "The Eviction Lab". Eviction Lab. Retrieved 2022-10-21.
  8. ^ Thornton, Russell (1984). "Cherokee Population Losses during the Trail of Tears: A New Perspective and a New Estimate". Ethnohistory. 31 (4): 289–300. doi:10.2307/482714. JSTOR 482714. PMID 11616951.
  9. ^ a b Sundquist, Matthew L. (2010). "Worcester v. Georgia: A Breakdown in the Separation of Powers". American Indian Law Review. 35 (1): 239–255. JSTOR 41148666. SSRN 1751125.
  10. ^ Abbott, Edith; Kiesling, Katherine (1935). "Evictions during the Chicago Rent Moratorium Established by the Relief Agencies, 1931-33". Social Service Review. 9 (1): 34–57. doi:10.1086/631571. JSTOR 30010392. S2CID 144058836.
  11. ^ U.S, Full Bio Follow Linkedin Kimberly Amadeo is an expert on; Economies, World; investing; Analysis, With Over 20 Years of Experience in Economic; Amadeo, business strategy She is the President of the economic website World Money Watch Read The Balance's editorial policies Kimberly. "Compare Today's Unemployment with the Past". The Balance. Retrieved 2021-04-25. {{cite web}}: |first5= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
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  13. ^ "Recalling the Great Depression's anti-eviction struggles". www.workers.org. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
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  15. ^ "United States Housing Act (1937)". Living New Deal. 18 November 2016. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
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  20. ^ "Week 33 Household Pulse Survey: June 23 – July 5". United States Census Bureau. 2021-07-14. from the original on 2021-08-06. Retrieved 2021-08-08.
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External links edit

eviction, united, states, refers, pattern, tenant, removal, landlords, united, states, eviction, process, landlords, forcibly, remove, tenants, from, their, place, residence, reclaim, property, landlords, decide, evict, tenants, have, failed, rent, violated, l. Eviction in the United States refers to the pattern of tenant removal by landlords in the United States 1 In an eviction process landlords forcibly remove tenants from their place of residence and reclaim the property 2 Landlords may decide to evict tenants who have failed to pay rent violated lease terms or possess an expired lease 1 Landlords may also choose not to renew a tenant s lease however this does not constitute an eviction 2 In the United States eviction procedures landlord rights and tenant protections vary by state and locality 2 Historically the United States has seen changes in domestic eviction rates during periods of major socio political and economic turmoil including the Great Depression the 2008 Recession and the COVID 19 pandemic High eviction rates are driven by affordable housing shortages and rising housing costs 3 Across the United States low income and disadvantaged neighborhoods have disproportionately higher eviction rates 4 Certain demographics including low income renters Black and Hispanic renters women and people with children are also at a greater risk of eviction 4 Additionally eviction filings remain on renters public records This can make it more difficult for renters to access future housing since most landlords will not rent to a tenant with a history of eviction 1 Eviction and housing instability are also linked to many negative health and life outcomes including homelessness poverty and poor mental and physical health Evicted men and child with belongings on street New York City 1910s Unfortunately the United States eviction crisis is not fully understood due to poorly documented eviction records and limited research on the topic 5 Landlord initiated expulsion of tenants is not officially tracked or monitored by the federal government and has not been subject to comprehensive analysis In 2016 sociologist Matthew Desmond published Evicted Poverty and Profit in the American City which brought wide scale attention to the United States eviction crisis 6 In his book Desmond researches and analyzes eviction patterns in impoverished Milwaukee neighborhoods Desmond also emphasizes racial and gender disparities in eviction rates and the subsequent social cost on these evictees 6 In 2017 Desmond established The Eviction Lab an interactive website that publicizes data on eviction trends across the United States 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 19th century 1 1 1 The Trail of Tears 1 2 20th century 1 2 1 The Great Depression 1 2 2 Japanese American internment during WWII 1 3 21st century 1 3 1 Great Recession 1 3 2 COVID 19 pandemic 2 Eviction process 2 1 Reasons for eviction 2 2 Legal protections 2 3 Eviction law 3 Causes 4 Disproportionately impacted evictees 4 1 Low income renters 4 2 Black and Hispanic renters 4 3 Women 4 4 Families with children 5 Consequences 5 1 Housing insecurity and poverty 5 2 Mental health 5 3 Physical health 6 Rates and locations 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory edit19th century edit The Trail of Tears edit See main article Trail of TearsThe Trail of Tears refers to the mass eviction of around 100 000 American Indians from their homelands which stretched across Virginia North Carolina South Carolina Georgia Tennessee and Alabama The majority of evictions occurred after the passage of the United States Indian Removal Act of 1830 8 In 1832 the Supreme Court ruled on the case Worcester v Georgia stipulating that the evacuation of the American Indian tribes was unconstitutional However because the president at the time Andrew Jackson did not agree with the ruling it was not enforced The evacuation of natives in the southern states continued 9 In 1834 the Treaty of New Echota was passed This required the Cherokee tribe to move to Oklahoma within two years for a compensation of five million dollars However when many Cherokees remained in 1838 they were forcibly removed by the military with deaths totaling over 4 000 people 9 20th century edit The Great Depression edit See main article Great Depression in the United StatesDuring the Great Depression eviction rates increased significantly due to high unemployment rates 10 In 1933 U S unemployment rates reached an all time high of 24 9 the US 11 These evictions led to the Great Rent Strike War of 1932 12 12 During the strike which started in The Bronx tenants withheld their rent while demanding decreases in rent and evictions Tenants who did not pay were evicted and police officers forced residents out of their apartments Tenants violently fought police officers leading to arrests At first the strikes were unsuccessful because landlords were legally supported Eventually strikes spread across the country and led to decreases in rent and eviction rates 13 One result of housing issues that occurred during the Great Depression was the passage of the Housing Act of 1937 often referred to as the Wagner Steagall Act This act established public housing in the United States 14 Within the first four years of its establishment 170 000 housing units were created 15 Japanese American internment during WWII edit See main article Internment of Japanese AmericansDuring World War II mass evictions of Japanese Americans on the West Coast occurred due to perceived threats of national security after the Pearl Harbor bombings 16 Evictions began in early 1942 after the inaction of Executive Order 9066 by president Franklin Roosevelt 17 Within six months 112 000 people were sent to internment camps Those who were forced into these internment camps were slowly released after the end of the war in 1945 16 The last internment camp did not close until nine months after the end of the war In 1948 Congress passed a law that would reimburse Japanese Americans for their material losses however only ten cents of every dollar was repaid In 1988 President Ronald Reagan signed a bill that paid each survivor of internment camps 20 000 17 21st century edit Great Recession edit nbsp In Minneapolis Hennepin County community members protest to demand accountability from the banking industry following the 2008 recession May 21 2013 See main article Great RecessionDuring the recession of 2008 eviction rates rose significantly due to property foreclosures In the early months of the recession renters were evicted with little notice due to landlords foreclosing on properties However in May 2009 the Protecting Tenants at Foreclosure Act was passed This law required new owners to provide at least 90 days notice to vacate and to honor the terms of any existing leases 18 COVID 19 pandemic edit See also COVID 19 eviction moratoriums in the United States During the COVID 19 pandemic in the United States mass job loss and unemployment led to fears of mass evictions as tenants became unable to pay rent An analysis by the Aspen Institute indicated between 19 and 23 million or 20 percent of renters were at risk for eviction by the end of September 2020 19 a separate July 2021 United States Census Bureau survey projects 7 million households unable to pay rent and at risk of eviction with a potential 3 million eviction filings in the next two months 20 In response the federal CARES Act included an eviction moratorium for federally backed rental properties however this expired on July 24 2020 21 and no enforcement mechanism was provided 22 States and cities also passed a variety of temporary eviction moratoriums 23 24 25 As these moratoriums expired over the course of 2020 there were fears of a massive wave of evictions by mid June 2020 over 40 of states offered renters no protections 26 Nevertheless on September 4 2020 the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CDC issued an Agency Order known as Temporary Halt in Residential Evictions To Prevent the Further Spread of COVID 19 27 This agency order will be effective from September 4 to December 31 2020 during which time a landlord owner of a residential property or another person with a legal right to pursue eviction or possessory action shall not evict any covered person from any residential property in any jurisdiction to which the order applies 27 Under The Temporary Halt in Residential Evictions To Prevent the Further Spread of COVID 19 a covered person is a tenant that has given their landlord the legal right to evict them but has declared under penalty of perjury that available housing assistance has been pursued homeless status is likely after the eviction the tenant is making their best efforts to pay at least part of the rent there was a substantial household income loss that prevents the tenant from paying rent and the tenant will not earn more than 99 000 USD in annual income for the taxable year of 2020 or will not be required to report incomes in 2019 or under the CARES Act received an Economic Impact Payment 28 This eviction moratorium was allowed to expire on July 31 2021 29 However that does not mean that the individual obligations to comply with the agreements on the tenancy contract are relieved The order does not eliminate individual obligations to make housing payments pay the rent or add interest if applicable 30 Moreover tenants can still be evicted for other reasons apart from not complying with the timely payment For instance evictions due to criminal activity violation of building codes and threats to other residents safety are allowed under the order 30 In addition the agency order will not apply in areas that already have an eviction moratorium For example the Governor of California stated that the Temporary Halt will not apply in the state because they have established a stronger protection 31 Furthermore the order allows states to enact other actions aimed to provide even further assistance to tenants which implies that tenants not covered by the federal order could be covered by some state protection 25 In this way there are states and cities that issued their own eviction moratoriums 25 For instance the state of Massachusetts issued the Bill providing temporary protections for renters and home owners during the COVID 19 emergency However the moratorium waived on October 17 2020 Hence the CDC order will take effect 32 On August 3 2021 the CDC issued a new eviction moratorium in areas with substantial and high transmission of COVID 19 33 34 35 On August 26 2021 the U S Supreme Court ruled against the federal eviction moratorium put in place by U S President Joe Biden and ruled that the CDC had exceeded its authority by enforcing it 36 37 38 Eviction process editReasons for eviction edit Landlords can evict tenants for failing to pay rent violating lease agreements or having an expired lease 2 Landlords can also expel tenants for breaking the law damaging property engaging in violence or causing a disturbance Other legitimate reasons for eviction include improper property use such as illegal subletting or cannabis cultivation 39 However most renters are evicted for non payment of rent 39 In 2018 a DC eviction report found that 93 of eviction filings in DC were initiated for non payment of rent 40 41 Landlords may also file for evictions in situations where the tenant is not culpable known as a no fault eviction In most American municipalities landlords have the legal right to expel tenants at their discretion even if the tenant has not broken any lease agreements For example landlords can evict tenants if they want to sell or reoccupy their property 42 Additionally landlords have no legal obligation to renew a tenant s lease and may choose not to for any reason 2 Legal protections edit While landlords may evict tenants for various reasons there are legal protections that protect tenants and prohibit unfair evictions Foremost landlords may only carry out evictions that follow federal state and local statutes For example the Federal Fair Housing Act prohibits housing discrimination on the basis of race color national origin religion sex familial status or disability 43 Thus it is illegal for a landlord to evict a tenant based on any of these characteristics Additionally landlords cannot evict tenants who have filed a fair housing complaint or discrimination lawsuit against them 2 Tenants also have the right to report housing code violations without the risk of retaliatory evictions This protection extends to lease renewals in Edwards v Habib the court established that landlords cannot refuse to renew a tenant s lease for reporting a code violation 44 In some states landlords are prohibited from issuing an eviction following any form of a tenant initiated report 2 Certain demographic groups are granted further protections to protect against unjust evictions For example federal housing assistance recipients cannot be evicted through no fault evictions 45 Tenants using federal housing expenditures such as LIHTC Section 8 vouchers or public housing can still be evicted but these evictions must be initiated for lease violations or rent non payment 45 Prior to an eviction landlords must issue an eviction notice often referred to as a Notice to Quit 2 In this notice landlords must provide sufficient information detailing the reason for eviction and options available for the tenant 46 Landlords are prohibited from threatening harming harassing or intimidating evictees even if they are non compliant 46 If an evicted tenant refuses to leave the property landlords cannot create a hostile environment that would force a tenant to leave the property a process known as constructive eviction 47 For example landlords may not change a tenant s locks cut off water or heat or shut off other essential utilities 48 Eviction law edit A fair eviction process is regulated through federal law state law local law common law and court procedures 2 There are limited federal laws dedicated specifically to domestic eviction regulation However there are federal protections in place that protect tenants against unlawful housing practices For example the federal Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination in housing based on race color national origin religion sex disability or familial status 49 While eviction laws vary by region most state and local legislation mirrors the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act URLTA or the Model Residential Landlord Tenant Code 2 Eviction procedures are also regulated by common law law based on legal precedents rather than formal statutes 2 In other words when no written law applies to an eviction case past court decisions are used to guide judge rulings In some cases lease terms can override common law 2 Additionally court procedures which vary by municipality can influence an eviction case 2 For instance the organization of a court s docket systems can impact the amount of time it takes a landlord to carry out an eviction 2 During Covid 19 the federal government passed the CARE Act which included a temporary eviction moratorium for eligible renters Causes edit nbsp Number in Poverty and Poverty Rate 1959 to 2015 United States Each year millions of renters and homeowners are evicted across the United States 50 Rising housing costs and affordable housing shortages have catalyzed a nationwide housing insecurity crisis driving up eviction rates Over the past few decades housing prices have outpaced the median household income making it increasingly difficult for renters and homeowners to secure affordable housing 51 The Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University found that 26 5 of US renters were severely cost burdened in 2013 almost twice the rate as in 1960 51 Further most renting families under the poverty line spend more than 50 of their income on rent with one in four such families spending over 70 of their income on rent and utilities 52 For low income renters rising rents and housing affordability issues are exacerbated by a shortage of low cost housing units 53 In 2019 the US had a shortage of 7 million affordable housing units for renters at or below the poverty line according to data from the National Low Income Housing Coalition 53 In 2015 only one in four eligible low income renters received housing assistance according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities 54 In a climate of housing insecurity cost burdened renters face an increased risk of eviction In addition to individual risk factors neighborhood composition is highly correlated with eviction patterns 45 The risk of eviction is significantly higher in neighborhoods with high degrees of racial or economic segregation 45 Using data from Princeton University s Eviction Lab a 2020 study found that eviction filings were significantly higher in black majority neighborhoods than in white majority neighborhoods 55 Additionally an analysis of eviction rates in Southern California found that a neighborhood s racial or economic composition was a greater predictor of eviction filings than housing market changes 56 In other words neighborhoods with a greater concentration of low income or black tenants had higher eviction rates than neighborhoods with rising rent 56 Similar patterns can be seen with inter neighborhood dynamics research indicates that low income neighborhoods in Seattle not only faced higher eviction rates but neighborhoods bordering low income areas also faced higher eviction rates 45 Disadvantaged neighborhoods with high eviction rates face constant instability which further disincentivizes community investment and involvement 57 When housing pressures are extreme even middle class and working class renters are evicted by landlords eager to capitalize on the rising market rates such as in San Francisco during the various tech booms In such circumstances landlords may seize upon minor violations that were previously tolerated such as keeping a small pet or storing a bicycle in the hallway to evict renters The situation in California is aggravated by the Ellis Act which allows landlords to evict tenants and immediately sell vacant apartments as condominiums 58 Disproportionately impacted evictees editLow income renters edit Low income renters and homeowners face higher eviction rates and are also disproportionately impacted by the consequences of eviction 1 Foremost low income renters often lack the financial means to navigate the eviction process For example an Alabama Law study found that only 16 4 of Illinois households received any form of legal representation for their legal problems with housing being the second most common legal issue for low income households 1 A lack of financial resources can be a barrier to accessing legal representation which puts low income renters at a disadvantage in court This disparity is especially prevalent in eviction cases since eviction law is complex and difficult to interpret In a study referenced in Pepperdine Law Review researchers found that unrepresented low income tenants in New York City fared significantly worse in court than represented low income tenants unrepresented tenants were more likely to default in court and more likely to receive a warrant of eviction 59 Without legal support defendants may not be able to build or articulate a sound defense that holds up in a court One study of Philadelphia s housing court found that tenants who had legal representation were almost 20 times more likely to prevail in court than those without legal representation 60 Additionally eviction related court hearings in Chicago are almost two minutes shorter when the landlord has a legal defense and the tenant does not 1 Unexpected financial costs such as job loss drop in income or medical bills can jeopardize housing stability and potentially lead to eviction 61 This is especially true for poor tenants who may not have the financial safety net to absorb unexpected costs In addition low income individuals are more likely to lack financial literacy skills which is associated with an increased likelihood of eviction 39 Similarly low income renters who fail to seek out or use housing related subsidies are at increased risk of future eviction 39 Black and Hispanic renters edit Black tenants face significantly higher filing and eviction rates than their white counterparts 7 Looking at neighborhood racial composition in Milwaukee sociologist Matthew Desmond found that majority black neighborhoods had an average annual eviction rate of 7 4 compared to 1 4 in majority white neighborhoods 4 In this study Desmond also emphasizes the dual disadvantage black women face in housing black women face the highest eviction rates of any demographic group 4 In an interview with The Atlantic Desmond reported that approximately one in five black women will experience eviction compared to one in fifteen white women 62 Eviction rates are also linked to the racial concentration of neighborhoods The RVA Eviction Lab in Richmond Virginia estimates that as the proportion of a neighborhood s black population increases by 10 eviction rates would increase by 1 2 63 Hispanic renters also face higher filing and eviction rates than their white counterparts In a study published in the Harvard Civil Rights Civil Liberties Law Review researchers investigated the relationship between Hispanic origin and eviction in Milwaukee These researchers saw a strong correlation between Hispanic tenants risk of eviction and neighborhood racial composition 57 In Milwaukee neighborhoods that were two thirds white approximately 80 of landlords were white In these same neighborhoods the average eviction rate was 25 yet the eviction rate for Hispanics was upwards of 35 57 The study also found that Hispanic renters were significantly more likely to be evicted by white landlords than non white landlords 57 According to Greenberg et al these findings suggest that discrimination contributes to racial disparities in Milwaukee eviction rates 57 Women edit Women especially minority women are disproportionately impacted by eviction Between 2003 and 2007 women made up 60 6 of the evicted population in Milwaukee and 62 of people who appeared in eviction court This is likely because women are more likely to be impoverished in America and therefore have less access to legal resources 57 When homeless men and women were asked why they were homeless women cited eviction nearly twice as often as much as men did according to a study in the Journal of Social Distress and the Homelessness 64 Black and Hispanic women face the highest eviction rates and are the most represented demographic in eviction hearings 6 For example in Baltimore 79 of tenants in eviction cases were black women yet black women only make up 34 of Baltimore s population 1 According to Desmond women face higher eviction rates than men because they have more difficulty paying rent Across the United States the wage gap disadvantages women with women earning less on average than their male counterparts 65 Additionally women spend more money than men on child and domestic expenses further driving income inequality and inhibiting women from paying rent 4 Families with children edit Renters with children are at increased risk of eviction 45 According to Matthew Desmond renters with children have an eviction rate three times higher than the average 62 This is because landlords believe that children have the potential to be problematic In addition neighborhoods with more children will also have higher rates of evictions 45 Greenberg et al found that having a child is more strongly correlated with neighborhood eviction patterns than race gender or class 57 By the age of 15 approximately 15 of children will have experienced eviction This has a negative impact on the behavioral development education and health of children 66 A study following low income urban mothers revealed that evicted mothers are more likely to suffer from depression report worse health for themselves and their children and report more parenting stress 67 After two years mothers who experienced evictions still reported significantly higher levels of mental distress 67 Pregnancy during eviction is also related to negative health outcomes for women and their offspring Pregnant women who experienced evictions have significantly lower infant birth weights and infant prematurity rates compared to non pregnant women 68 Consequences editHousing insecurity and poverty edit Experiencing eviction is associated with many negative socioeconomic outcomes including an increased risk of housing instability job loss homelessness and poor health 57 Having a record of eviction makes it extremely difficult to secure decent housing 57 A legal eviction will nearly always go on an evictee s permanent record barring them from future housing opportunities 69 When an eviction is filed in the court system this record becomes available to landlords Landlords can look up the records of prospective renters through a tenant screening report 1 Through this screening landlords can find information about prospective tenants criminal backgrounds credit scores and eviction history If an individual has any history of eviction this will show up on their record even if the case was dismissed and the tenant was found not guilty 1 Most landlords will not accept tenants with any form of an eviction record 1 Tenants with a record of eviction can also be denied subsidized housing This exclusion further exacerbates housing instability for minority groups who are most reliant on subsidized housing in 2019 42 of HUD program assisted renters were Black 19 were Hispanic and 36 had children according to the US Department of Housing and Urban Development 45 According to sociologist Matthew Desmond eviction is a cause of poverty as well as a result of it 6 Evicted individuals are often forced to accept lower quality housing and move to neighborhoods with higher crime and poverty rates 45 Experiencing an eviction also increases the risk of job loss and job instability which exacerbates housing instability 70 Evicted individuals are uprooted from their communities forcing them to sever ties with family schools religious organizations and other social support systems Following an eviction tenants may also lose personal property personal possessions are routinely thrown away left on the sidewalk or placed in storage that can only be accessed by paying a fee 71 Protecting or recovering personal possessions can be particularly difficult for poor elderly and disabled individuals who may be unable to access or afford storage 71 Following an eviction evictees may spend months or even years searching for decent housing 1 In some cases securing housing becomes impossible and eviction leads to homelessness In Eric Lindblom s book Homelessness in America Lindblom found that one in two homeless adults reports eviction or rent affordability as the cause of their homelessness 72 In 2010 a New York City report estimated that 47 of homeless families in New York City homeless shelters had experienced eviction 1 nbsp Protesters linking arms to prevent San Francisco Sheriffs deputies from evicting elderly tenants August 4 1977 Mental health edit Various studies have emphasizes that evictees are more likely to experience negative mental health outcomes including anxiety depression psychological distress and suicide 73 Research has found that the stress of even receiving an eviction notice is so substantial that it can be a predictor of a tenant s future housing insecurity even if the tenant is not evicted 45 The eviction process is also tied to long term psychological issues for tenants and their children 1 In a longitudinal study on eviction Matthew Desmond found that evicted adults were more likely to report poor mental health both one year and eight years following their eviction 74 Individuals who experience eviction have disproportionately higher rates of anxiety and depression In a sample of evicted adults the Michigan Recession and Recovery Study found that 13 9 of those evicted in the past 12 months suffered from major or minor depression and that 33 8 had experienced an anxiety attack in the last 4 weeks 75 Additionally across the 27 states that participate in the National Violent Death Reporting System in 2015 3 8 of those who committed suicide with known circumstances had recently experienced eviction 76 Physical health edit One physical health impact that eviction has on tenants evicted is an increased spread and contraction of COVID 19 This is because of actions tenants take after being evicted When evicted residents must find other places to live such as a homeless shelter or a friend s house According to the CDC adding as few as two new members to a household can as much as double the risk of illness Additionally when people are living in the same household it is much harder to adhere to social distancing protocols The mental health consequences of eviction also weaken the immune system increasing transmission 77 In addition eviction predisposes tenants to hazardous housing conditions which can lead to negative health outcomes 78 Following an eviction low income renters often cannot secure decent housing forcing them to settle for poorly maintained or unsafe units Renters in substandard housing units may face increased exposure to dust mold allergens pests and other hazards 1 Additionally evictees are often forced into improvised neighborhoods which typically have higher levels of air and water pollution 79 As a result renters face an increased risk of respiratory illness cardiovascular disease and other health issues 1 Substandard housing is also more likely to contain lead contaminated walls and water which can be particularly dangerous for children Exposure to lead even in small doses can have serious health consequences for children including developmental delays decreased intelligence and serious neurological and brain damage 1 Eviction rates also create a higher risk for one to contract sexually transmitted infections There is a variety of factors that increase this risk for those evicted Often those evicted do not have access to STI protection to condoms Additionally those evicted could participate in sexual activity for resources Mental health also plays a role in the increased transmission of STIs as sexual activity has been seen to be used as a coping mechanism for the associated stress with eviction Eviction also has an impact on monogamous relationships which can lead to increased partners and an increased risk for STIs 80 Rates and locations editThere is no government reporting system on eviction so variance by location and time were at best little understood and at worst invisible This began to change with the implementation of Princeton University s Eviction Lab which published the results of an analysis of 900 000 eviction notices that occurred in 2016 81 nbsp Steel screen installed over windows as an evicted tenant s property is removed Minneapolis Minnesota nbsp A house in Minneapolis is boarded up in 2009 after the tenant was evicted nbsp Striking workers in Pittsburgh being evicted 1909 Large U S cities with highest eviction rates 2016 82 Rank City Eviction Rate 1 North Charleston South Carolina 16 5 2 Richmond Virginia 11 44 3 Hampton Virginia 10 49 4 Newport News Virginia 10 23 5 Jackson Mississippi 8 75 6 Norfolk Virginia 8 65 7 Greensboro North Carolina 8 41 8 Columbia South Carolina 8 22 9 Warren Michigan 8 08 10 Chesapeake Virginia 7 9 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eviction in the United States Home ownership in the United States Housing insecurity in the United States Homelessness in the United States Poverty in the United States Legal aid in the United States Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant ActReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Gold Allyson E Fall 2016 No home for justice how eviction perpetuates health inequity among low income and minority tenants Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law amp Policy 24 1 59 88 SSRN 2992594 Gale A488711843 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Eviction 2022 LII Legal Information Institute https www law cornell edu wex eviction Raymond Elora L Duckworth Richard Miller Benjmain Lucas Michael Pokharel Shiraj December 2016 Corporate Landlords Institutional Investors and Displacement Eviction Rates in Singlefamily Rentals PDF SSRN 2893552 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c d e Desmond Matthew July 2012 Eviction and the Reproduction of Urban Poverty American Journal of Sociology 118 1 88 133 doi 10 1086 666082 S2CID 44826562 Tsai Jack Huang Minda May 2019 Systematic review of psychosocial factors associated with evictions Health amp Social Care in the Community 27 3 e1 e9 doi 10 1111 hsc 12619 PMID 30014532 S2CID 51657469 a b c d Desmond Matthew Evicted Poverty and profit in the American city Crown 2016 a b The Eviction Lab Eviction Lab Retrieved 2022 10 21 Thornton Russell 1984 Cherokee Population Losses during the Trail of Tears A New Perspective and a New Estimate Ethnohistory 31 4 289 300 doi 10 2307 482714 JSTOR 482714 PMID 11616951 a b Sundquist Matthew L 2010 Worcester v Georgia A Breakdown in the Separation of Powers American Indian Law Review 35 1 239 255 JSTOR 41148666 SSRN 1751125 Abbott Edith Kiesling Katherine 1935 Evictions during the Chicago Rent Moratorium Established by the Relief Agencies 1931 33 Social Service Review 9 1 34 57 doi 10 1086 631571 JSTOR 30010392 S2CID 144058836 U S Full Bio Follow Linkedin Kimberly Amadeo is an expert on Economies World investing Analysis With Over 20 Years of Experience in Economic Amadeo business strategy She is the President of the economic website World Money Watch Read The Balance s editorial policies Kimberly Compare Today s Unemployment with the Past The Balance Retrieved 2021 04 25 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a first5 has generic name help CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Walkowitz Daniel November 29 2021 The Jewish Working Class in America Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199329175 013 935 ISBN 978 0 19 932917 5 Recalling the Great Depression s anti eviction struggles www workers org Retrieved 2021 04 25 Key HUD Statutes HUD gov U S Department of Housing and Urban Development HUD www hud gov Retrieved 2021 04 25 United States Housing Act 1937 Living New Deal 18 November 2016 Retrieved 2021 04 25 a b Japanese American Internment During World War II National Archives 2016 08 15 Retrieved 2021 04 14 a b Ng Wendy 2001 12 30 Japanese American Internment during World War II A History and Reference Guide A History and Reference Guide ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 09655 6 Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University Rental Market Stresses Impacts of the Great Recession on Affordability and Multifamily Lending What Works Collaborative July 2011 20 Million Renters Are at Risk of Eviction Policymakers Must Act Now to Mitigate Widespread Hardship The Aspen Institute 2020 06 19 Archived from the original on 2021 08 06 Retrieved 2020 07 11 Week 33 Household Pulse Survey June 23 July 5 United States Census Bureau 2021 07 14 Archived from the original on 2021 08 06 Retrieved 2021 08 08 Foreclosure and Eviction Moratoriums Under the CARES Act natlawreview com The National Law Review Archived from the original on 2021 05 26 Retrieved 2020 07 19 Ernsthausen Jeff Simani Ellis Elliott Justin 16 April 2020 Despite Federal Ban Landlords Are Still Moving to Evict People During the Pandemic ProPublica org ProPublica Archived from the original on 2021 08 05 Retrieved 2020 07 26 Shaw Al Simani Ellis Ernsthausen Jeff May 18 2020 Can I Be Evicted During Coronavirus ProPublica org ProPublica Archived from the original on 2021 06 13 Retrieved 2020 07 19 Eviction Lab COVID 19 Housing Policy Scorecard Eviction Lab Evictionlab org Archived from the original on 2021 08 02 Retrieved 2020 07 26 a b c O Connell Ann Attorney Emergency Bans on Evictions and Other Tenant Protections Related to Coronavirus nolo com Retrieved 2020 07 26 Lussenhop Jessica 2020 08 07 Why US is expecting an avalanche of evictions BBC News Archived from the original on 2021 08 01 Retrieved 2021 08 08 a b Temporary Halt in Residential Evictions To Prevent the Further Spread of COVID 19 federalregister gov Federal Register 2020 09 04 Archived from the original on 2021 04 25 Retrieved 2020 11 10 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention HHS CDC TEMPORARY HALT IN RESIDENTIAL EVICTIONS TO PREVENT THE FURTHER SPREAD OF COVID19 FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS PDF CDC gov Archived from the original PDF on 2021 06 23 Retrieved 2020 11 10 Shepardson David 2021 08 01 U S COVID 19 eviction ban expires leaving renters at risk Reuters Archived from the original on 2021 08 06 Retrieved 2021 08 08 a b National Center for State Courts 2020 09 08 Temporary halt in residential evictions to prevent the further spread of COVID 19 Retrieved 2020 11 10 Gov Newsom CDC eviction ban does not apply in California California Apartment Association 2020 09 02 Retrieved 2020 11 10 Mass Ban on Pandemic Evictions Foreclosures Ending NBC Boston 17 October 2020 Retrieved 2020 11 16 CDC Issues Eviction Moratorium Order in Areas of Substantial and High Transmission Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2021 08 03 Archived from the original on 2021 08 06 Retrieved 2021 08 08 Temporary Protection from Eviction Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2021 08 03 Archived from the original on 2021 08 06 Retrieved 2021 08 08 Temporary Halt in Residential Evictions in Communities with Substantial or High Levels of Community Transmission of COVID 19 to Prevent the Further Spread of COVID 19 PDF Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2021 08 03 Archived PDF from the original on 2021 08 06 Retrieved 2021 08 08 Supreme Court throws out Biden administration eviction moratorium CNN 27 August 2021 Retrieved 28 August 2021 Liptak Adam Thrush Glenn 26 August 2021 Supreme Court Ends Biden s Eviction Moratorium New York Times Retrieved 28 August 2021 Sherman Mark 27 August 2021 Supreme Court allows evictions to resume during pandemic Associated Press Retrieved 28 August 2021 a b c d Holl Marieke van den Dries Linda Wolf Judith R L M September 2016 Interventions to prevent tenant evictions a systematic review Health amp Social Care in the Community 24 5 532 546 doi 10 1111 hsc 12257 PMID 26109137 McCabe Brian J Rosen Eva 2020 Eviction in Washington DC Racial and geographic disparities in housing instability PDF a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Eviction in Washington DC Racial and Geographic Disparities in Housing Instability Georgetown McCourt 22 October 2020 Rodriguez Dod Eloisa 2013 But My Lease Isn t Up Yet Finding Fault with No Fault Evictions University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review 35 4 839 870 SSRN 2972266 Housing Discrimination under the Fair Housing Act HUD gov U S Department of Housing and Urban Development HUD https www hud gov program offices fair housing equal opp fair housing act overview Rabin Edward 1 March 1984 Revolution in Residential Landlord Tenant Law Causes and Consequences Cornell Law Review 69 3 517 584 a b c d e f g h i j Preston Gregory Reina Vincent J 3 September 2021 Sheltered From Eviction A Framework for Understanding the Relationship Between Subsidized Housing Programs and Eviction Housing Policy Debate 31 3 5 785 817 doi 10 1080 10511482 2021 1879202 S2CID 234352840 a b Lindsey Lauren 1 January 2010 Protecting the Good Faith Tenant Enforcing Retaliatory Eviction Laws by Broadening the Residential Tenant s Options in Summary Eviction Courts Oklahoma Law Review 63 1 101 Constructive Eviction Legal Information Institute Legal Information Institute https www law cornell edu wex constructive eviction Frey David J 1974 Landlord Tenant Law Reform in Cincinnati University of Cincinnati Law Review 43 175 Massey Douglas S June 2015 The Legacy of the 1968 Fair Housing Act Sociological Forum 30 Suppl 1 571 588 doi 10 1111 socf 12178 JSTOR 43654407 PMC 4808815 PMID 27034538 Hartman Chester Robinson David 1 January 2003 Evictions The hidden housing problem Housing Policy Debate 14 4 461 501 doi 10 1080 10511482 2003 9521483 S2CID 153979584 a b Charette Allison Chris Herbert Andrew Jakabovics Ellen Tracy Marya and Daniel T McCue Projecting trends in severely cost burdened renters 2015 2025 Harvard University s Joint Center for Housing Studies and Enterprise Community Partners Inc 2015 http www wikisolver com wp content uploads 2015 09 Rent Crisis 2015 pdf Why Eviction Matters Eviction Lab Princeton University 2018 04 16 Retrieved 2018 04 16 a b Out of Reach National Low Income Housing Coalition https nlihc org sites default files oor 2021 Out of Reach 2021 pdf Keene Danya E Niccolai Linda Rosenberg Alana Schlesinger Penelope Blankenship Kim M 2020 Rental Assistance and Adult Self Rated Health Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved 31 1 325 339 doi 10 1353 hpu 2020 0025 PMC 8969280 PMID 32037334 Merritt Breanca Farnworth Morgan D 3 September 2021 State Landlord Tenant Policy and Eviction Rates in Majority Minority Neighborhoods Housing Policy Debate 31 3 5 562 581 doi 10 1080 10511482 2020 1828989 S2CID 228865645 a b Lens Michael C Nelson Kyle Gromis Ashley Kuai Yiwen December 2020 The Neighborhood Context of Eviction in Southern California City amp Community 19 4 912 932 doi 10 1111 cico 12487 S2CID 214200041 a b c d e f g h i Deena Greenberg Gershenson Carl Desmond Matthew 2016 Discrimination in Eviction Empirical Evidence and Legal Challenges PDF Harvard Civil Rights Civil Liberties Law Review 51 115 158 Christie Les 2014 10 29 Rents are soaring and so are evictions CNN Money Retrieved 2018 04 16 Taylor Poppe Emily Rachlinski Jeffrey 13 June 2016 Do Lawyers Matter The Effect of Legal Representation in Civil Disputes Pepperdine Law Review 43 4 881 944 Eldridge David L September 2002 The Construction of a Courtroom The Judicial System and Autopoiesis The Journal of Applied Behavioral Science 38 3 298 316 doi 10 1177 0021886302038003003 S2CID 141504997 Desmond Matthew Gershenson Carl February 2017 Who gets evicted Assessing individual neighborhood and network factors Social Science Research 62 362 377 doi 10 1016 j ssresearch 2016 08 017 PMID 28126112 a b White Gillian B 2016 04 01 America s Insidious Eviction Problem The Atlantic Retrieved 2018 04 16 Teresa Benjamin F The geography of eviction in Richmond beyond poverty RVA Eviction Lab Retrieved from https evictioninnovation org wp content uploads 2021 04 Richmond GeographiesofEviction pdf Tessler Richard Rosenheck Robert Gamache Gail January 2001 Gender Differences in Self Reported Reasons for Homelessness Journal of Social Distress and the Homeless 10 3 243 254 doi 10 1023 A 1016688707698 S2CID 141199166 Misra Joya Murray Close Marta November 2014 The Gender Wage Gap in the United States and Cross Nationally The Gender Wage Gap in the United States and Cross Nationally Sociology Compass 8 11 1281 1295 doi 10 1111 soc4 12213 Jula Megan 2020 Eviction s long reach Knowable Magazine doi 10 1146 knowable 092320 1 S2CID 224855644 a b Desmond Matthew Kimbro Rachel Tolbert 2015 Eviction s Fallout Housing Hardship and Health Social Forces 94 1 295 324 doi 10 1093 sf sov044 JSTOR 24754254 Himmelstein Gracie Desmond Matthew 1 May 2021 Association of Eviction With Adverse Birth Outcomes Among Women in Georgia 2000 to 2016 JAMA Pediatrics 175 5 494 500 doi 10 1001 jamapediatrics 2020 6550 PMC 7922232 PMID 33646291 S2CID 232078369 McCabe Brian J and Eva Rosen Eviction in Washington DC Racial and geographic disparities in housing instability 2020 Fowler Katherine A Gladden R Matthew Vagi Kevin J Barnes Jamar Frazier Leroy February 2015 Increase in Suicides Associated With Home Eviction and Foreclosure During the US Housing Crisis Findings From 16 National Violent Death Reporting System States 2005 2010 American Journal of Public Health 105 2 311 316 doi 10 2105 AJPH 2014 301945 PMC 4318323 PMID 25033148 a b Weiser Larry Treu Matthew 1 January 2008 Adding Injury to Injury Inadequate Protection of Tenants Property During Eviction and the Need for Reform Loyola Consumer Law Review 20 3 247 Lindblom Eric N Preventing homelessness Homelessness in America 1996 187 200 Vasquez Vera Hugo Palencia Laia Magna Ingrid Mena Carlos Neira Jaime Borrell Carme 1 February 2017 The threat of home eviction and its effects on health through the equity lens A systematic review Social Science amp Medicine 175 199 208 doi 10 1016 j socscimed 2017 01 010 PMID 28107704 Melton Fant Courtnee Harrison Austin Mason Katy Ramsey April 2022 Race mental health and evictions filings in Memphis TN USA Preventive Medicine Reports 26 101736 doi 10 1016 j pmedr 2022 101736 PMC 8866154 PMID 35242502 Burgard Sarah A Seefeldt Kristin S Zelner Sarah December 2012 Housing instability and health Findings from the Michigan recession and recovery study Social Science amp Medicine 75 12 2215 2224 doi 10 1016 j socscimed 2012 08 020 PMID 22981839 Stone Deborah M Simon Thomas R Fowler Katherine A Kegler Scott R Yuan Keming Holland Kristin M Ivey Stephenson Asha Z Crosby Alex E 8 June 2018 Vital Signs Trends in State Suicide Rates United States 1999 2016 and Circumstances Contributing to Suicide 27 States 2015 MMWR Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 67 22 617 624 doi 10 15585 mmwr mm6722a1 PMC 5991813 PMID 29879094 Benfer Emily A Vlahov David Long Marissa Y Walker Wells Evan Pottenger J L Gonsalves Gregg Keene Danya E February 2021 Eviction Health Inequity and the Spread of COVID 19 Housing Policy as a Primary Pandemic Mitigation Strategy Journal of Urban Health 98 1 1 12 doi 10 1007 s11524 020 00502 1 PMC 7790520 PMID 33415697 Baker Emma Lester Laurence H Bentley Rebecca Beer Andrew October 2016 Poor housing quality Prevalence and health effects Journal of Prevention amp Intervention in the Community 44 4 219 232 doi 10 1080 10852352 2016 1197714 PMID 27712557 S2CID 23212452 Banzhaf Spencer Ma Lala Timmins Christopher 1 February 2019 Environmental Justice The Economics of Race Place and Pollution Journal of Economic Perspectives 33 1 185 208 doi 10 1257 jep 33 1 185 PMID 30707005 S2CID 73414940 Niccolai Linda M Blankenship Kim M Keene Danya E January 2019 Eviction From Renter occupied Households and Rates of Sexually Transmitted Infections A County level Ecological Analysis Sexually Transmitted Diseases 46 1 63 68 doi 10 1097 OLQ 0000000000000904 PMC 6289707 PMID 30148755 Badger Emily Bui Quoctrung 7 April 2018 In 83 Million Eviction Records a Sweeping and Intimate New Look at Housing in America The New York Times Top Evicting Large Cities in United States Ranked by Eviction Rate Eviction Lab Princeton University 2018 04 16 Retrieved 2018 04 16 External links editEviction Lab from Matthew Desmond at Princeton University a nationwide database of evictions Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eviction in the United States amp oldid 1201201437, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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