Evictions In North Carolina
When North Carolina Gov. Cooper signed executive orders extending the prohibition of evictions and shutting off utilities has come to an end for some folks Countrywide. This executive order does not mean that a person’s rent is waived completely, or that a tenant cannot be evicted for reasons other than the coronavirus. Who knows how long utilities will be shut off for people who cannot pay their bills because of the coronavirus, but customers will be given six months from July 29 to pay their late bills.
Health experts also worry an uptick in COVID-19 cases could follow in the month ahead because of possibly, thousands forced to move into shelters. You’ll be able to read about 25 US cities filing evictions, raising the national average. Five out of those 25 are in North Carolina, including Charlotte, which pre-pandemic averaged 25 homes evicted every single day. According to US census data, as of late June 2020, 16% of North Carolina renters said they have “no confidence” they’ll be able to pay next month’s rent. 44% had only “slight” or “moderate” confidence. Meanwhile, the federal CARES act eviction moratorium is set to expire July 27.
National housing researchers now predicting one in five of the 110 million Americans who rent, are at risk of eviction by September 30, 2020. Meanwhile, housing advocates on both the state and national level continue to push for more relief funds and debt forgiveness programs for renters; Scrambling help those who are days, or hours, from being on the street.