RELEASE: Pittsburgh Budget and Policy Center Releases Brief on Evictions’ Return to Pre-Pandemic Levels

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Pittsburgh Budget and Policy Center


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 15, 2022

To arrange interviews with the author of the new Pittsburgh Budget and Policy Center brief on housing, contact Kirstin Snow, snow@pennbpc.org.

NEW BRIEF: Rising Eviction Filings and Rental Arrears Sound Warning Bell for Pittsburgh and Importance of Addressing Housing Affordability in City’s 2023 Budget

Pittsburgh, PA — With the expiration more than a year ago of COVID-19 pandemic eviction moratoriums, Pittsburgh eviction filings and rental arrears have now risen back to pre-pandemic levels, according to a new policy brief from the Pittsburgh Budget and Policy Center. In addition, most of the emergency rental assistance funds provided in federal pandemic relief bills have been spent. Together, with an increasing homelessness crisis across the country, these developments underscore that housing affordability must be a priority for Pittsburgh’s new mayor and city council as they finalize the city budget for 2023.

Even before the pandemic, Pittsburgh and Allegheny County—like many other communities across the nation— faced a severe shortage of affordable housing. In Pittsburgh, more than half of the population rent, and roughly half of renters pay more than 30% of their income for housing, which makes them “cost-burdened,” according to the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development. Furthermore, eviction filings and increasing amounts owed to landlords in eviction cases have an above-average impact on majority-Black neighborhoods and female-headed households with children.

As eviction filings increase across Pennsylvania, some communities are responding by drawing on innovative tools to avoid evictions deployed in the pandemic. For example, “eviction diversion” efforts in Philadelphia and Chester County serve as an example of how municipalities in Pennsylvania continue to aid renters by mediating the resolution of eviction filing cases before families end up on the street.

Author Nthando Thandiwe said, “Pandemic rental relief and eviction diversion kept millions of families and children in their homes in the pandemic. Our city and county need to deploy these tools and increase investments in affordable housing to avoid a slow-motion tsunami of evictions that leads to devastating long-term impacts on health, education, earnings, and other indicators of well-being.”

The city and county can take steps to address this need by increasing investments in the preservation and production of affordable housing; an increase of funding for rental assistance; support for current eviction diversion efforts, including renter and landlord mediation; and support for legal assistance to renters.

 

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