In the United States, millions of families have been threatened, since Sunday, August 1, of being evicted from their homes at a time when the country is experiencing a resurgence of cases of Covid-19 contamination.

While billions of dollars in public funds meant to help tenants have still not been used, President Joe Biden this week urged Congress to extend a moratorium on evictions for unpaid rents, which expired at midnight on Saturday.

But Republicans have opposed Democrats' efforts to extend the ban on evictions until mid-October.

Blocking this measure is an "act of pure cruelty" "which throws children and families into the streets," said the Democratic Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, on Twitter.

Keeping families from being thrown out on the streets during a pandemic is a moral imperative.



We simply must #StopEvictionsNOW.

https://t.co/OXLE7aNuf7

- Nancy Pelosi (@TeamPelosi) July 30, 2021

Now, the elected representatives of the House of Representatives are on vacation until the end of August, and will be followed by the senators a week later, removing any hope of a quick agreement.

Mary Hunt, a medical vehicle driver in Michigan, struggles to pay the rent of her mobile home, after being ill with Covid-19.

"If I lose this home, then (my five cats and my dog) come to live with me in the car. People may well think I'm crazy, I won't abandon my family," she told NPR radio. 

Some 3.6 million tenants possibly affected

Cori Bush, Democratic representative for the state of Missouri, cannot resign himself to it.

This elected, who was herself homeless, spent the night on Capitol Hill in Washington, joined by other elected officials from the left of the Democratic camp.

"We could have extended the moratorium, but some Democrats have gone on vacation instead. We slept on Capitol Hill last night to ask them to come back and do their jobs," she said on Twitter on Saturday.

It's 2 AM on Sunday.

We haven't slept since Thursday night.

The eviction moratorium expired, so we're now in an eviction emergency.

11 million are now at risk of losing their homes at any moment.



The House needs to reconvene and put an end to this crisis.

- Cori Bush (@CoriBush) August 1, 2021

More than 10 million people in the United States are behind on their rent payments, calculated the CBPP, an independent research institute.

And some 3.6 million tenants estimate that they risk being evicted within two months, according to a study by the statistics office carried out in early July with 51 million tenants.

The suspension of evictions was put in place in September 2020 by the Centers for Disease Prevention and Control (CDC), the main public health agency in the United States, and then extended several times in the name of fighting the spread. of Covid-19.

But the Supreme Court ruled in June that any further extensions had to be decided by Congress.

To add to the absurdity of the situation, the money provided by the federal government to help tenants in difficulty pay their rent barely makes it into their bank accounts, due to complex bureaucratic procedures.

Thus, of the 46 billion dollars planned by the government, including 25 billion disbursed in early February, only 3 billion have reached their destination.

With AFP

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