U.S. Tenants Face Eviction Amid Surging Costs
VIRGINIA (AFP) -- For nearly eight years, driving for a ride-hailing platform and making deliveries helped Laine Carolyn pay her bills -- but a sudden deterioration in health forced her to stop work and fall behind on rent.
Carolyn, 32, is among an increased number of U.S. tenants confronting eviction risks in the face of high inflation, elevated rents and with the end of pandemic-era aid.
The country sees 3.6 million eviction cases filed in a typical year, said Peter Hepburn, associate director of Eviction Lab at Princeton University. But that number slowed to a trickle during the pandemic.
Now, with Covid-era legal protections and assistance lifted, it is surging again, Eviction Lab’s figures show.
At courthouses in Virginia, tenants living paycheck-to-paycheck told AFP how an unexpected accident or medical bill was enough to land them before a judge with an eviction filing.
Carolyn said she owes over $10,000 in rent and other fees. But she could not return to employment after being diagnosed with Graves’ disease and hospitalized last November.
“It was giving me double vision and it wasn’t safe for me to drive,” she said. “There is brain fog, and it makes it almost impossible to think,” the Alexandria resident added.
Carolyn said that she cannot afford to appeal her eviction case, which requires her to repay her rent -- so she is out of options. Now she is waiting for the axe to fall.
There has been a “steady increase” in eviction filings over the last year, and nationwide numbers are now close to where they were before the pandemic, said Hepburn of Eviction Lab.
In the 10 states and 34 cities that the group tracks, the number of such cases filed rose from around 6,600 in April 2020 during the pandemic to over 96,800 in January.
Carolyn had worked out a payment plan with her landlord but it became increasingly hard to work as her health worsened: “I just couldn’t make enough money.”
“I managed to make $800 before I really got too sick to work. I had to choose between paying that towards rent or having food and some medicine,” she said.
“There is anger, there is frustration, there is guilt and even some shame that I probably shouldn’t be taking on because... I really am actually sick, and it’s something I gotta finish accepting,” she added.
Over a third of the U.S. population rent their homes.
“We haven’t even seen a flattening out yet” after a dramatic rise in eviction filings,