Eviction Moratorium Ends Aug. 14 As COVID-19 Cases And Hospitalizations Rise

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By Erica Irish 
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS — A statewide moratorium on evictions and utility shutoffs for those who can’t pay will soon expire as Indiana continues to face the COVID-19 pandemic.

But Gov. Eric Holcomb said at a weekly virtual update Wednesday there will be other support available to renters as the moratorium ends. For one, the state plans to spend an additional $15 million on a rental assistance program offering grants to renters in most Indiana counties. The state will also extend a mediation practice—typically used to help homeowners avoid foreclosure—to renters and their landlords before a dispute ends up in eviction court.

The rental assistance program started accepting applications on July 13. Jacob Sipe, executive director of the Indiana Housing and Community Development Authority, said there have been 24,000 applicants so far. Many renters applied on the first day when the program received around 8,000 applications.

The program is not available in Marion County, which is offering its own assistance to area renters. But of the 91 counties that are eligible for the state program, just five make up almost 45% of the applications received so far, Sipe said.

Around 18% of the applications came from Lake County, for example, and another 10.5% came from St. Joseph County. Applications from Allen County made up almost 8.5% of those received, while Tippecanoe and Vanderburgh’s counties contributed around 4% each.

In addition to the expanded rental assistance program, the state is working to expand a free substitute to court for tenants at risk of eviction. The tenant and landlord would meet with a neutral person instead of a judge in what is called a settlement facilitation program. If the parties reach an agreement, that can end the dispute without having to go before a judge.

Jacob Sipe, executive director of the Indiana Housing and Community Development Authority, described how the state is providing resources to out-of-work Hoosiers to meet rent payments at the governor’s weekly COVID-19 press briefing. TheStatehouseFile.com

This alternative closely resembles a mediation practice already used for homeowners at risk of foreclosure and is welcoming support from Indiana Supreme Court Chief Justice Loretta Rush, who did not appear at the press conference but did give a written statement on the new program.

“Since 2009, the Indiana Supreme Court’s Mortgage Foreclosure Trial Court Assistance Project has helped avert foreclosures by facilitating settlement conferences between homeowners and lenders,” Rush said. “We are expanding this vital program given the pandemic.”

State officials addressed other issues at Wednesday’s press conference, where health leaders revealed the number of COVID-19 cases in Indiana continues to rise. The state health department recorded 740 additional cases Wednesday, bringing the total to 69,975.

In addition to the case increase, the number of patients hospitalized because of the virus also continues to rise, said Indiana State Health Commissioner Dr. Kristina Box.

Education

School is now in session in Indiana, and many districts opted to offer some form of in-person instruction to students while introducing new restrictions to keep students safe, including physical distancing in classrooms and mandatory masks.

But the outcomes haven’t been perfect. Last week, several school districts reported students and staff members who had contracted COVID-19 came to school, potentially exposing other students and educators.

This prompted one of the state’s largest teachers’ unions, the American Federation of Teachers, to demand Tuesday the state do more to protect students and educators, noting their members would support safety strikes if necessary to send a message.

State leaders are choosing to encourage school districts to work with their local health departments to determine what’s best for them, leaving most decisions about how to educate students this school year up to their discretion. Box and Holcomb said it wouldn’t make sense for the state to give uniform requirements to all Indiana schools as they have different needs and face different challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“There is simply no single benchmark that accurately represents the level of community spread for every community in our state,” Box said as one example.

Voting 

Indiana voters have several months until the Nov. 3 general election, and there are no plans yet to extend no-excuse absentee voting as state election leaders allowed during the delayed primary earlier this summer.

At Wednesday’s briefing, Holcomb said that in-person voting needs to be an option if the state is to have a fair and effective election. He pointed to several opportunities voters have to cast their ballots without going to a poll site on Election Day, including early voting 28 days before the election and a list of excuses that would permit them to vote absentee.

Holcomb also said claims that he is not changing the election at the direction of President Donald Trump, who has voiced sharp opposition to mail-in and absentee voting on platforms like Twitter, are “inaccurate.” Holcomb also said he’s heard no reports of voters contracting COVID-19 from the polls after asking election administrators about the June 2 primary.

“Folks need to understand that it is safe to vote,” Holcomb said. “There are a lot of people out and about, whether it’s working or going to the grocery or doing their life, and their doing it safely. And we can vote safely in person as well.”

Holcomb’s opponent in the general election, Democrat Dr. Woody Myers, criticized Holcomb’s stance on voting. Myers is a former state health commissioner and said in a statement it would be irresponsible to not guarantee no-fault absentee voting during a pandemic.

“Denying Hoosiers the right to vote in a safe manner is simply without moral or scientific compass,” Myers said. “Voting is the hallmark of our society and we should be able to vote safely with no excuse absentee voting, just as we did in June.”

Common Cause Indiana and the state conference of the NAACP filed a lawsuit last week to force Indiana Secretary of State Connie Lawson and members of the state election commission to extend the deadline to receive absentee ballots past the current noon deadline on Election Day. If the lawsuit succeeds, absentee ballots could be counted up to 10 days past the election, as long as they were postmarked by Nov. 3.

The lawsuit is currently before a federal judge, and Holcomb said the state is awaiting more details from an opinion before making any changes to the election.

FOOTNOTE: Erica Irish is the 2020 Russell Pulliam editor for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students. 

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1 COMMENT

  1. God help us. Schools and Businesses closed. Record Unemployment. 33% Drops in GDP.

    Consumers losing their homes in foreclosure and evictions at record levels.

    Its the 4th year of Trump’s term!

    What did we do to deserve this?

    God save the United States of America.

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