Joe Biden extends foreclosure moratorium for homeowners
Image via AP.

Joe Biden
Nothing yet on expiring federal evictions moratorium.

President Joe Biden is extending a ban on housing foreclosures to June 30 to help homeowners struggling during the coronavirus pandemic.

The moratorium on foreclosures of federally guaranteed mortgages had been set to expire on March 31. On his first day in office, Biden had extended the moratorium from Jan. 31.

Census Bureau figures show that almost 12% of homeowners with mortgages were late on their payments.

The White House says the coordinated actions announced Tuesday by the Departments of Housing and Urban Development, Veterans Affairs and Agriculture also will extend to June 30 the enrollment window for borrowers who want to request mortgage payment forbearance — a pause or reduction in payments — and will provide up to six additional months of forbearance for borrowers who entered forbearance on or before June 30 of last year.

The White House says more than 10 million homeowners are behind on mortgage payments and Biden’s actions are to help keep people in their homes amid “a housing affordability crisis” triggered by the pandemic. It says “homeowners will receive urgently needed relief as we face this unprecedented national emergency.”

Biden’s administration says extending forbearance policies “will provide critical support to homeowners of color, who make up a disproportionate share of borrowers” having trouble paying their loans because of hardships related to the pandemic.

The actions announced Tuesday don’t address a federal moratorium through March 31 on evictions of tenants who’ve fallen behind on rent.

Florida let its eviction moratorium expire in September. In response, several Democratic lawmakers, notably Sens. Darryl Rouson and Shevrin Jones and Reps. Fentrice Driskell and DianneHart have filed various bills seeking to provide protection and relief to Florida’s renters who’ve struggled through the coronavirus crisis.

A National Low Income Housing Coalition report found that Florida has the second highest eviction risk rate across the country. The report found that 15.6% of Florida renters were at risk of eviction in the two months following December, compared to a national risk of eviction rate of 8.4%.

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Republished with permission from The Associated Press.

Associated Press


One comment

  • Sonja Fitch

    February 17, 2021 at 4:16 am

    It is incumbent upon home buyers to do the damn paperwork. If procedure not followed house gone. But any Federal or State assistance approved specifically attached to this moratorium for homes shall be paid to mortgage company based on the paperwork of the home buyer. Vote Democrat up and down ballot for the elections in 2022!

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