US CDC issues new eviction moratorium - CDC declares itself to be above the SCOTUS

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CDC issues new eviction moratorium​


The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is issuing a new, "temporary" moratorium on evictions, the agency announced Tuesday. The new moratorium, which CBS News confirmed earlier Tuesday would be announced, will be separate from the CDC's prior eviction moratorium that expired over the weekend.

The new order, which expires on October 3, covers counties experiencing "substantial" or "high" levels of COVID-19 spread. One source familiar with the moratorium said that currently includes about 80% of U.S. counties, or 90% of the U.S. population.

"The emergence of the delta variant has led to a rapid acceleration of community transmission in the United States, putting more Americans at increased risk, especially if they are unvaccinated," CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said Tuesday. "This moratorium is the right thing to do to keep people in their homes and out of congregate settings where COVID-19 spreads."

The latest moratorium order could face legal challenges, after the Supreme Court determined the Biden administration couldn't extend the previous moratorium eviction through executive action. As the latest eviction moratorium was about to end last week, the White House told Congress to act, while Congress called on the White House to act. The White House said it lacked the authority to extend the moratorium.

In June, the Supreme Court decided in a 5-4 decision to allow the eviction ban to continue through the end of July. One of the justices voting in the majority, Justice Brett Kavanaugh, made clear that he would block any additional extensions unless there was "clear and specific congressional authorization."

President Biden told reporters Tuesday afternoon he isn't sure whether the new eviction moratorium will pass constitutional muster, but any litigation would "probably give some additional time" for rental assistance funds to flow.

"Any call for a moratorium based on the Supreme Court's recent decision is likely to face obstacles. I've indicated to the CDC I'd like to look at other alternatives," the president told reporters Tuesday.

Meanwhile, public health officials raised concerns that allowing evictions to resume while the coronavirus is surging again could lead more people to get sick and die unnecessarily.

Representative Cori Bush has slept outside the Capitol to protest the end of the eviction moratorium, and call for action. She tweeted Tuesday afternoon that "our movement moved mountains."

"On Friday night, I came to the Capitol with my chair," Bush tweeted. "I refused to accept that Congress could leave for vacation while 11 million people faced eviction. For 5 days, we've been out here, demanding that our government acts to save lives. Today, our movement moved mountains."
 
If I recall, the implications on the last Supreme Court ruling was that if the CDC did this shit again, they wouldn't just strike it down, they would look into outright limiting the CDCs authority.

I hope Kavanagh has the balls to follow through on that. The CDC is out of control.
The Biden Regime and CDC have now directly asserted that they have more authority than SCOTUS.

They do not.

The question now is what will SCOTUS do.
 
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Because the moratorium won't last forever and when it does expire you'll not only be evicted but also have 20k+ worth of debt in collections.
Most people will be judgement proof but there will be a pretty good chunk of people who didn't think through not paying rent when they could and the LL couldn't do anything about it. I look forward to reading their sobstories in the Times.
 
I've been wondering why I even bother paying rent if they can't evict me.
A temporary hold on evictions is not a temporary hold on rent obligations. Anyone who has stopped paying rent because of the pause on evictions will find themselves evicted with thousands of dollars of debt.

Debt collectors can ruin your life if you don't give them their money. There's a fear of every letter that comes through the letterbox is another letter demanding money, threatening court proceedings, that every knock on the door is someone there to demand money and to take your stuff. Debt collectors aren't nice polite understanding old ladies who will take no for an answer. They are big, ugly bald meatheads who (at least where I live) don't get paid if they don't collect any money.

I'm hoping there will be some kind of meltdown compilation video when these people eventually meet reality.
 
Because the moratorium won't last forever and when it does expire you'll not only be evicted but also have 20k+ worth of debt in collections.
If they are even marginally poor they’ll never be able to get anything out of them to be worth court costs.

Basically its free rent for two years at the cost of a black mark on your renting record that millions will have.
 
I guess I need a virgin/chad meme for the virgin rent/mortgage payer versus the chad rent dodger. I never missed a payment, always on time and got nothing for my efforts. The chad rent dodger has all this extra money in his pocket, a roof over his head and probably a hot new gaming rig from his sweet Bidenbux. Out fucking standing.
 
If I recall, the implications on the last Supreme Court ruling was that if the CDC did this shit again, they wouldn't just strike it down, they would look into outright limiting the CDCs authority.

I hope Kavanagh has the balls to follow through on that. The CDC is out of control.
The thing ends just as the SCOTUS comes back in session.
 
I don't understand how an organization like the CDC has the power to issue such things, but I don't really understand America in general.

What happens to landlords who need to evict people? How many small landlords with a handful of units are going to be destroyed by this?
Essentially they get fucked. Its a mess all around. And there are a lot of landlords who have legitimate reasons for needing to evict beyond finances such as dealing with shithead destructive tenants, but they're unable to because all the tenants have to do is point a finger and say it's over money. They are abusing the hell out of it.
Its all part of the plan to eliminate the middle class and put a firm divider between the wealthy rulers and the plebs like us. They'll make it untenable for small rental outfits or private renters to do business and companies with ties to the administration will move in and buy them out, profiting hugely.
My guess is that the next move will be to abuse Biden admins HUD plans for expansion that are included in the infrastructure packages and coof bills by offering federal contracts to companies with CEOs that have ties to him or people close to him - build a bunch of cheap section 8 housing for the plebs using some of the lots you just scooped up on the cheap from companies like blackrock that bought it dirt cheap from a bankrupt landlord, er I mean born again plebian.

As much as people talked about Trump like he was a goofy mob figure, Biden and the people in his administration 100 fucking perfect act like you'd expect a geriatric Sopranos crew to act.
 
The local talk radio station was interviewing a bunch of smaller landlords this morning over the new moratorium.

Every. single. one. said they will never rent to retail or unskilled labor again. Too much of a risk when the next pandemic hits.

That's going to have some nasty long term consequences when the lower end of society just can't find housing even if they barely make enough money. These new moratoriums are literally hurting people they're meant to protect.

:stress:
 
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A temporary hold on evictions is not a temporary hold on rent obligations. Anyone who has stopped paying rent because of the pause on evictions will find themselves evicted with thousands of dollars of debt.

Debt collectors can ruin your life if you don't give them their money. There's a fear of every letter that comes through the letterbox is another letter demanding money, threatening court proceedings, that every knock on the door is someone there to demand money and to take your stuff. Debt collectors aren't nice polite understanding old ladies who will take no for an answer. They are big, ugly bald meatheads who (at least where I live) don't get paid if they don't collect any money.

I'm hoping there will be some kind of meltdown compilation video when these people eventually meet reality.
The local sheriffs handle the eviction process. I can't wait to the see meltdowns on YouTube
 
The local talk radio station was interviewing a bunch of smaller landlords this morning over the new moratorium.

Every. single. one. said they will never rent to retail or unskilled labor again. Too much of risk when the next pandemic hits.

That's going to have some nasty long term consequences when the lower end of society just can't find housing even if they barely make enough money. These new moratoriums are literally hurting people they're meant to protect.

:stress:
Most "good intentioned" policies hurt the people they ostensibly protect.
 
The local sheriffs handle the eviction process. I can't wait to the see meltdowns on YouTube
That's interesting. I didn't think the police would get involved in civil disputes. Where I live we have different tiers of bailiffs with different powers. Evictions are carried out by them. They aren't police officers but the moment someone they are dealing with starts shouting, making a scene or threatening anyone the police get called.
The local talk radio station was interviewing a bunch of smaller landlords this morning over the new moratorium.

Every. single. one. said they will never rent to retail or unskilled labor again. Too much of risk when the next pandemic hits.

That's going to have some nasty long term consequences when the lower end of society just can't find housing even if they barely make enough money. These new moratoriums are literally hurting people they're meant to protect.

:stress:
That's extremely interesting. I wonder if in the future you'll have to pay rent in advance rather than in arrears.

"Sure thing single mother struggling to find somewhere to live we can rent you a place to live, we just need the $30,000 upfront and you're all set"
 
The local talk radio station was interviewing a bunch of smaller landlords this morning over the new moratorium.

Every. single. one. said they will never rent to retail or unskilled labor again. Too much of a risk when the next pandemic hits.

That's going to have some nasty long term consequences when the lower end of society just can't find housing even if they barely make enough money. These new moratoriums are literally hurting people they're meant to protect.

:stress:
I hope they're all comfortable with squatting in run-down buildings or on public land in tents. You're gonna be seeing a lot more of that in the near future unless newly-made plebs take after Brazil and SA and build entire shantytowns out of tin and wood scrap.
 
Its going to reach a point where its less hassle for landlords to just hire criminals to get them out.
You mean private security guards?
If I recall, the implications on the last Supreme Court ruling was that if the CDC did this shit again, they wouldn't just strike it down, they would look into outright limiting the CDCs authority.

I hope Kavanagh has the balls to follow through on that. The CDC is out of control.
If Kavanaugh had balls, he would've back investigating the election when it mattered. Even if he did it to own the feminists, that would have been good enough.
 
Does anyone have an idea when SCOTUS might respond to this? I'm eager for the next chapter of this story.
The Court is currently on summer break and won't convene for their new year term until October. Even if they did take it up, they would have to fit it in the docket, allow arguements, then rule. The Court usually declares all their rulings at the end of the term around early summer unless an issue is immediate.

This new moratorium is very intentionally designed to expire right as they come back to avoid lawsuit issues as much as possible. The legal point is moot if it's expired when the court reviews it. In such cases, the Court usually just drops it.

Wouldn't be surprised if the conservative wing of the Court is mighty pissed though. This directly flies in the face of their previous rulings. Kavanaugh even said in his opinion, "don't do this shit again".
 
That's extremely interesting. I wonder if in the future you'll have to pay rent in advance rather than in arrears.

"Sure thing single mother struggling to find somewhere to live we can rent you a place to live, we just need the $30,000 upfront and you're all set"
That's already a thing in London.

 
The Court is currently on summer break and won't convene for their new year term until October. Even if they did take it up, they would have to fit it in the docket, allow arguements, then rule. The Court usually declares all their rulings at the end of the term around early summer unless an issue is immediate.

This new moratorium is very intentionally designed to expire right as they come back to avoid lawsuit issues as much as possible. The legal point is moot if it's expired when the court reviews it. In such cases, the Court usually just drops it.

Wouldn't be surprised if the conservative wing of the Court is mighty pissed though. This directly flies in the face of their previous rulings. Kavanaugh even said in his opinion, "don't do this shit again".
what the hot shiiiittt. what a sneaky-ass dictatorship we've got on our hands, then. Looks like that next chapter I was eager for will need to wait a little longer..
 
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