Network Magazine Fall 2021 | Issue 24

Page 8

THE SEESAW OF THE CDC EVICTION MORATORIUM ATTORNEY KELLIE RAHL-HEFFNER, PARTNER, GROSS MCGINLEY, LLP

As we sit here today in the fall of 2021, COVID-19 has been a part of our daily lives for nearly 1.5 years. During that time, we have seen changes to business operations, restaurants, and schools. One significant change during the course of the pandemic has been the landlord-relationship and the ability of a landlord to evict a tenant for non-payment of rent. The Landlord-Tenant Act of 1951 (68 Pa. C.S. §250.101 et seq.) governs the Landlord-Tenant relationship between parties to a residential lease in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Under the Act, a tenant is provided with certain rights and obligations, and so is the landlord. The most basic principle of the landlord-tenant relationship is that the landlord will provide housing, and the tenant will pay monthly rent for that housing. The Center for Disease Control (CDC) turned this principle on its head. Throughout the pandemic, both landlords and tenants paid close attention to the Pennsylvania Governor Orders and Orders from the CDC. Rights on both sides were impacted, most notably by a series of eviction moratoriums. To prevent the further spread of COVID-19 in the Delta variant's wake, the CDC recently extended its moratorium (set to expire on two previous occasions) until October 3, 2021. This moratorium has since been ruled unconstitutional by the United States Supreme Court on August 26, 2021. 1 What did the latest moratorium provide for? The biggest change in the extended CDC moratorium was applicability. The order was limited to counties with "substantial and high levels of community transmission." Across the United States, the CDC Data Tracker provides an integrated view for every county in the country, classifying each as low, medium, substantial, or high.

6

NETWORK MAGAZINE™

At the time this article was written, two-thirds of Pennsylvania's 67 counties were listed at substantial or high levels of transmission. The CDC order noted that if a county crosses the transmission threshold, it is then subject to the order effective on that date. Additionally, if a county that was covered by the order no longer experiences substantial or high transmission levels for fourteen (14) consecutive days, the order no longer applies unless the criteria are met at a later date. What options did the moratorium provide for tenants? If a tenant wished to remain in their rental despite nonpayment of rent, they were directed to complete a declaration stating, inter alia, that they were unable to pay rent, attempted to obtain government assistance for rent or housing, met certain income requirements, has a substantial loss of household income and have made their best efforts to pay. In practice, the Courts halted nearly all evictions for non-payment of rent without a completed declaration. What options did the moratorium provide for landlords? Landlords were precluded from evicting tenants for nonpayment of rent. If a tenant violated the lease with a nonmonetary breach, the Court would allow the eviction hearing to proceed. Landlords were also directed to work with the tenant to make applications under the CARES Act for funds to cover missed rental payments. Some landlords received no rental payments during the course of moratoriums. It is important to note that while tenants could not be evicted during the moratorium, rental payments remained due and owing. Landlords may now seek full repayment of all missed rental payments.

MyNetworkMag.com


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

The Best of Both Worlds Hybrid Events

6min
pages 50-51

The Wooden Match

1min
page 53

The Root of Cyber Breaches

1min
page 52

John Brown & The Hatchets

1min
page 49

To All Inclusive or Not to All Inclusive, That is the Question!

1min
page 42

BMI Mergers & Acquisitions

2min
page 43

Heavenly Hurawalhi Resort Maldives

2min
pages 46-47

Small Mistakes Big Consequences: Generations in the Workplace

2min
page 38

The Verdict

3min
page 44

The Barristers Club

1min
page 41

Morganelli Properties

1min
page 37

Bring your Rolodex into the 21st century!

1min
page 40

Medicare AEP – what you need to know about it

2min
page 28

Olde Homestead Golf Club

2min
page 33

Turning thoughts into ideas that have value.

3min
page 34

Addressing Today’s Leadership Skill Gaps

2min
page 32

Your Secret Weapon

1min
page 36

Huber, Waldron & Williams

2min
page 27

Investors Should Concentrate on Investment Concentration

3min
page 30

Bridgeman Strategic Concepts

1min
page 29

Lehigh Valley Real Estate in 2021 a Rainmaker Personified

2min
page 24

Vacation Home Sales Surges During Pandemic

2min
page 20

Mortgage America

1min
page 25

MC IT - Technology Managed

1min
page 21

Lehigh Valley Housing Market: A Decade of Growth

2min
page 26

Telemedicine: The Evolution of the Once Taboo Practice

3min
page 18

Tri Outdoor

1min
page 17

Managing Diabetes Care

1min
page 16

Network Magazine

1min
page 4

Fitzpatrick Lentz & Bubba

1min
page 15

Qualifying to Be a Small Diverse Business

2min
page 14

In Workers’ Comp – Injuries Don’t Discriminate

3min
page 12

Navigating the post-Obergefell world: Marriage Equality did not fix all of the legal challenges facing LGBT people

2min
page 10

American Financial Network

1min
page 3

Herbein + Company, Inc

1min
page 9

The Seesaw of the CDC Eviction Moratorium

2min
page 8
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Network Magazine Fall 2021 | Issue 24 by Network Magazine - Issuu