New York’s Pandemic Rent Crisis (2024)

Findings

1. As Many as 595,000 Households Remain Behind on Rent.

New York’s Emergency Rental Assistance Program (ERAP), funded with over $2 billion in available rent relief, opened in June 2021. After taking office in late August, Governor Kathy Hochul was responsible for greatly accelerating the pace of approving applications for ERAP. Between the program opening on June 1 and August 23, a day before Governor Hochul took office, New York State had paid out $203 million in rent relief.[3] As of November 19, the State had paid out $1.05 billion and approved $1.03 billion more, exhausting the program funds.[4] The State closed the ERAP application portal to almost all New Yorkers on November 14, and reported that 296,511 total applications had been submitted as of January 18, 2022. Of those applications, 108,242 payments were made and another 52,889 applications were approved pending landlord verification, totalling 161,131 applications paid or approved. [5]

On January 27, 2022, Governor Hochul announced New York State requested an additional $1.6 billion from the Federal government, which the State claims could serve 174,000 households. However, ANHD’s analysis of the most recent Census Household Pulse Survey Data showed that as of January 10, 2022, 17.2% of respondents in New York were behind on rent payments, translating to 595,000 of the State’s 3,461,000 renter households. [6] This means that the number of households behind on rent in mid-January was almost four times the number of households that have received or been approved for relief and almost twice the number of households who would be served even if New York were to be granted the requested $1.6 billion.

Additional funding of $1.6 billion would offer significant relief to households that have already applied to the program, but our analysis indicates there may be hundreds of thousands of households it would not reach. Ongoing rent debt remains a severe problem that requires immediate intervention, as well as sustained attention and prioritization for the duration of the pandemic and beyond.

2. Landlords Have Filed Over 110,000 Eviction Cases During the Pandemic.

Throughout the pandemic, New York State has issued an amalgamation of orders and regulations that have offered tenants varying levels of protection against eviction at different times. Among these are:

Following a lawsuit brought by the Legal Aid Society, New York State was subsequently compelled to reopen the ERAP Portal on January 11, 2022. This has returned a layer of protection to tenants, but the situation remains confusing and disorienting. Furthermore, ERAP-based eviction protection depends on the portal remaining open, which is subject to legal action and not guaranteed. On January 15 2022, CEEFPA expired. CEEFPA was an important source of stability and protection against eviction for tenants who have not been able to keep up with their rent, and its expiration was a blow to tenants who have experienced severe uncertainty about their ability to stay in their homes. Despite the layers of eviction protections in place, landlords were able to file tens of thousands of eviction cases during the pandemic, subjecting those tenants to eviction as soon as various protections expire. Based on data from the New York State Office of Court Administration, we estimate that landlords filed over 110,000 residential eviction cases in New York State during the pandemic, 75,500 of which are still active. For now, applying to ERAP allows tenants protection from eviction while the case is under review–however, without additional funding to address enormous remaining rent debts, a pause is only a temporary solution.

  • The Tenant Safe Harbor Act, which prevents eviction for rent owed during the pandemic, but allows landlords to collect money judgments – which could result in tenants owing tens of thousands of dollars in back rent.
  • The COVID-19 Emergency Eviction and Foreclosure Prevention Act (CEEFPA), which allowed tenants to sign a hardship declaration asserting that they were financially impacted by COVID-19 and unable to pay their rent, which would stop their eviction case from proceeding.
  • ERAP, which stops an eviction case from proceeding while an application is being processed and protects tenants from eviction for nonpayment of rent during the period for which they were granted relief.

New York State’s closure of the ERAP portal to most New Yorkers in November 2021 cut off tenants who had not yet applied from the eviction protections it offered. Following a lawsuit brought by the Legal Aid Society, New York State was subsequently compelled to reopen the ERAP Portal on January 11, 2022. This has returned a layer of protection to tenants, but the situation remains confusing and disorienting. Furthermore, ERAP-based eviction protection depends on the portal remaining open, which is subject to legal action and not guaranteed..

On January 15, 2022, CEEFPA expired. CEEFPA was an important source of stability and protection against eviction for tenants who have not been able to keep up with their rent, and its expiration was a blow to tenants who have experienced severe uncertainty about their ability to stay in their homes.

Despite the layers of eviction protections in place, landlords were able to file tens of thousands of eviction cases during the pandemic, subjecting those tenants to eviction as soon as various protections expire. Based on data from the New York State Office of Court Administration, we estimate that landlords filed over 110,000 residential eviction cases in New York State during the pandemic, 75,500 of which are still active. [7]

For now, applying to ERAP allows tenants protection from eviction while the case is under review–however, without additional funding to address enormous remaining rent debts in New York, this pause is only a temporary solution.

3. Rent Debt And Risk Of Eviction Impact New Yorkers Of Color At Dramatically Higher Rates.

During the pandemic, the rate of eviction filings in majority-people of color zip codes across New York State has been over twice as high as majority-white zip codes. [8]In zip codes where over 50% of residents are people of color, the number of eviction filings from March 23, 2020 through January 7, 2022 was 5.2 per 100 renter households. In zip codes where over 50% of residents are white, the rate was 2.5. This finding parallels trends ANHD found in March 2021, that eviction rates in zip codes with the highest rates of COVID death, also predominantly communities of color, had an eviction filing rate almost four times as high as neighborhoods hit least hard by COVID. [9]

New York’s Pandemic Rent Crisis (1)

The trend is clear when honing in on New York City. All but one majority-white zip code, 10018 in West-Midtown, had a rate of fewer than five eviction filings per 100 renter households. On the other hand, over one-third of majority-people of color zip codes (36 out of 97) had an eviction filing rate over five per 100 households. Five majority-POC zip codes had eviction rates over nine per 100 households, in northwest Staten Island (10303), Corona in Queens (11368), and three zip codes concentrated in the South Bronx and Kingsbridge Heights/Fordham neighborhoods, a clear hotspot (10468, 10457, and 10452).

The demographics of those who are currently behind on rent mirror the racialized patterns of eviction cases, and the racial and ethnic disparities are alarming. Of all New Yorkers who are behind on rent, 35.8% are Black, two and a half times the share of the general population (14.3%). Hispanic and Latinx New Yorkers make up 35.1% of those who are behind on rent, versus 19.0% of the general population. And white New Yorkers make up only 14.5% of those who are behind on rent, which is less than one third of their share of the general population (55.6%). Combined, people of color constitute 85.5% of New Yorkers who are behind on their rent, but just 44.4% of the general population. [10]The over-representation of people of color among New York households that are currently behind on rent, almost half their share of the general population, is staggering.

New York’s Pandemic Rent Crisis (2)

4. Mission-driven Housing Providers Face Revenue Gaps That Endanger Their Ability To House The Lowest-income New Yorkers.

A survey of ANHD’s membership revealed that nonprofit, mission-driven housing providers continue to have severe gaps in rental income that hinder their ability to safely house New York’s lowest-income tenants. Surveyed nonprofit housing providers submitted between 15 and 340 ERAP applications ranging from $96,154 to $2,289, 428 in back rent. On the whole, those housing providers have been approved for less than half of their applications, leaving them with a gap of between $62,558 to $810,123 in unfunded relief. On average, surveyed organizations had unapproved applications totalling $339,374, or $5,078 per unapproved application.

A revenue gap of hundreds of thousands of dollars is staggering for a community-based housing provider with extremely limited resources. Not only is rental income needed for nonprofits to maintain their buildings and pay staff, it also supports the provision of essential social services in the community.

Furthermore, this data only represents applications for rental arrears from March 2020 to November 2021. ANHD’s nonprofit housing provider members have echoed that the unemployment crisis is ongoing, tenants are still falling behind in rent, and the first round of ERAP funding was inadequate. One ANHD member said, “there is still a tremendous balance of folks in need who we did not submit for various reasons and would have if there was additional funding and an extension of time.” Nonprofit housing providers also faced significant challenges in submitting applications due to limited staff capacity, which put them at a disadvantage compared to large and corporate landlords. As one member said, “by the time we finally had a good system going, the program was over.”

Nonprofit landlords face similar challenges as small landlords, who lack the cash flow to cover large revenue gaps during the pandemic. They continue to need urgent assistance; rent relief so far has been simply inadequate to meet the need. There is a need for longer term solutions to address rental arrears for low-income households and to keep the mission driven organizations serving these households afloat.

[3] NYS Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance (OTDA), New York State Emergency Rental Assistance Program Rent Arrears and Prospective Rent Payments by Jurisdiction Through August 23, 2021. Note: reports and summary figures are regularly updated and no longer visible on the OTDA website for earlier dates. ANHD downloaded and tracked ERAP reporting data on a regular basis throughout program implementation.

[4] NYS OTDA ERAP Reports, Summary through November 19, 2021.

[5] Ibid, Summary through January 18, 2022.

[6] Census Household Pulse Survey Week 41 Household Table 1b, New York State; Census American Community Survey (ACS) 2019 5-Year Estimates, B25003 (Tenure). 17.2% of respondents reported being behind on rent. That figure multiplied by the total universe of renter households in NYS, 3,461,296, equals an estimate of households behind on rent of 596,813.

[7] Data from the New York State Office of Court Administration (OCA) via the Housing Data Coalition in collaboration with the Right to Counsel Coalition. This figure includes New York State cities and does not include towns and villages that do not report case data to OCA, so it is an underestimate. Total number of non-payment and holdover eviction filings and total filings with an active status in New York State between March 23, 2020 and January 24, 2022. Based on available property type data, ANHD estimates that approximately 5.13% of statewide eviction cases are commercial rather than residential, which is accounted for in these estimates: 116,794 total cases adjusted to 110,802 estimated residential cases and 79,587 active cases adjusted to 75,504 estimated active residential cases.

[8] Ibid; ACS 2019 5-Year Estimates, B25003 (Tenure) and B02001 (Race). Non-payment and holdover eviction filings March 23, 2020 through January 7, 2022 divided by number of renter households in majority-people of color zip codes versus majority-white zip codes.

[9] https://anhd.org/blog/220000-tenants-brink-and-counting, https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/17/realestate/new-york-city-renters-evictions.html

[10] Census Household Pulse Survey Week 41 Household Table 1b, New York State, Census American Community Survey (ACS) 2019 5-Year Estimates, A03001 (Race), A04001 (Hispanic or Latino by Race).

The complexities of housing, rent relief programs, eviction laws, and their impact on communities are vast and deeply intertwined. Here's a breakdown of the concepts addressed in the article:

  1. Emergency Rental Assistance Program (ERAP):

    • Funding and Implementation: Launched in June 2021 in New York, ERAP aimed to provide relief to households struggling with rent payments.
    • Funds Exhaustion and Additional Requests: Initially funded with over $2 billion, by November 2021, $1.05 billion had been paid out, with an additional $1.03 billion approved, depleting program funds. The state requested an extra $1.6 billion in funding.
    • Application Status: By January 18, 2022, 296,511 applications were submitted, 108,242 payments were made, and 52,889 applications were approved pending landlord verification, totaling 161,131 applications paid or approved.
  2. Eviction Cases and Protections:

    • Eviction Numbers: Landlords filed over 110,000 eviction cases during the pandemic, with 75,500 active cases.
    • Protection Mechanisms: Various acts (Tenant Safe Harbor Act, CEEFPA, ERAP) provided temporary protection against evictions, subject to expiration and legal actions.
  3. Disparities and Racial Impact:

    • Eviction Rates: Majority-POC zip codes had eviction rates over twice that of majority-white zip codes, reflecting a trend of higher eviction rates in communities of color.
    • Rent Debt Demographics: People of color are disproportionately represented among those behind on rent compared to their population share, with Black and Hispanic/Latinx communities significantly affected.
  4. Nonprofit Housing Providers' Struggles:

    • Funding Gaps: Mission-driven housing providers faced significant gaps in relief funds, impacting their ability to support low-income tenants.
    • Challenges in Relief Programs: Limited resources, staff capacity issues, and program limitations affected these providers' ability to address ongoing needs.

The evidence provided in this article stems from diverse sources, including official reports from the New York State Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance, Census Household Pulse Surveys, American Community Survey data, and insights from the Association for Neighborhood & Housing Development (ANHD) surveys and members' experiences.

This multifaceted issue involves not just financial aspects but also legal intricacies, community disparities, and the interconnected challenges faced by both renters and housing providers, creating a complex web of issues that demand comprehensive solutions.

New York’s Pandemic Rent Crisis (2024)
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