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Home / Top Posts / LA County extends eviction moratorium until end of January

LA County extends eviction moratorium until end of January

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Los Angeles County will extend its eviction moratorium and tenant protections until at least Jan. 31, with the possibility of stretching them through June and creating a financial relief program for small landlords, under a measure approved by the Board of Supervisors Tuesday.

“The purpose of my motion today is to align with the city of L.A.,” said Supervisor Holly Mitchell said, who authored the motion calling for the extension of county protections — which were set to expire at the end of the year — until Jan. 31.

The Los Angeles City Council has already voted to end the city’s eviction moratorium and tenant protections on Jan. 31.

Mitchell’s motion also cited the surge of the “respiratory illness trifecta” of COVID-19, the flu and respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, that could create further burdens for renters during the winter. Tenant protections were enacted by the county and many other jurisdictions at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and its public-health lockdowns that forced many people out of work.

While the motion only extended the renter protections through January, the board also backed an amendment by Supervisor Hilda Solis asking county staff to study the possibility of extending the protections even further, through June 30. She said such a move would help prevent tens of thousands of renters from being evicted, while also providing more time to inform both landlords and renters about when the definite end of the eviction moratorium would be.

Solis’ motion asked for a report back in 30 days on such an extension, along with the proposed creation of a $5 million relief program for “mom- and-pop” landlords who have been unable to collect rent during the tenant protections.

Supervisor Janice Hahn said assistance for small landlords must be included in any possible future extension of the tenant protections.

“I do hear a lot from our mom-and-pop landlords who are struggling to pay their mortgages,” she said. “… I don’t think our programs so far have been very helpful to landlords. They’re not getting the money.”

The Board voted 4-0 to approve the motion, and the amendment, with Supervisor Kathryn Barger abstaining.

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