由买买提看人间百态

boards

本页内容为未名空间相应帖子的节选和存档,一周内的贴子最多显示50字,超过一周显示500字 访问原贴
USANews版 - With rent due, millions of Americans can't -- or won't -- pay
相关主题
这个比同性恋蛋糕店的case严重多了吧interesting read
Dem候选人辩论失言, 媒体帮忙复原从死者名单上看,死的基本都是西裔gay啊
贝鲁斯科尼真有想象力 (转载)RNC大会发言人名单来了
NJ Senators Caught on Tape: "Confiscate, Confiscate, Confiscate"灌水是违法的了
Cincinnati IRS Goons ‘Simply Did What Their Bosses Ordered’Hicks跟Lewandowski也搞过
底特律警察局长:枪威慑、阻止了犯罪祖国的召唤?新加坡警惕中国向华人施加影响力 (转载)
黑人打死白人大学生,媒体噤声不提种族 (转载)这美国官场基本上也是family business
美国军人离开西非,马上被意大利隔离起来请帮助否决PIPA 和SOPA 议案!
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: rent话题: abc话题: may话题: los话题: angeles
进入USANews版参与讨论
1 (共1页)
L******6
发帖数: 1
1
Thirty million Americans have filed for unemployment since mid-March.
By
Will Carr
,
Alyssa Pone
and
Ellie Smith
2 May 2020, 07:29
8 min read
Coronavirus daily update: May 01, 2020
Copy and paste to share this video
Copy and paste to embed this video
2:02
Coronavirus daily update: May 01, 2020
ABC News’ Will Carr reports on renters across the U.S. hitting the streets
protesting rent payments during the pandemic, as millions are struggling
financially.
It's the first of the month -- the time when so many start counting their
dollars, making sure they have enough to pay rent.
"I'll be able to make rent next month, but then after that, if unemployment
doesn't kick in, I'm definitely in trouble," Gabby Namm, an unemployed cook
in New York, told ABC News.
More than 30 million Americans have filed for unemployment since mid-March
as the novel coronavirus hit the U.S., leaving many filled with anxiety, not
knowing when they'll get another paycheck. That's sparking rent strikes
across the country from New York to Philadelphia to Chicago to Los Angeles.
MORE: 3.8 million people filed for unemployment last week, putting total
number at more than 30 million
"The choices that we have right now is we pay rent, and we're left without
any money for food," Manuel Antonio Rodrigues told ABC News.
Rodrigues lost his job in March. He joined a socially distanced protest in
Los Angeles this week, asking the mayor to cancel rent for May.
Will Carr/ABC NewsAn L.A. Tenants Union rent strike in front of City
Hall in Los Angeles, April 30, 2020.An L.A. Tenants Union rent strike
in front of City Hall in Los Angeles, April 30, 2020.
Will Carr/ABC News
"So many of us here have had to make that decision whether we're going to
use up a little bit of money that we have on rent or whether we should save
it for medicine for food and other essential needs right now," he said.
Tune into ABC at 1 p.m. ET and ABC News Live at 4 p.m. ET every weekday for
special coverage of the novel coronavirus with the full ABC News team,
including the latest news, context and analysis.
Others, like Alex Mercier, who also lost his job in March, have teamed up
with the tenants in their buildings to forgo their rent payments together.
"There are people I've been talking to who are sick and need their medicine
and putting them in a situation where it's pay rent or medicine, that's just
ridiculous," Mercier, who lives in Los Angeles, said.
Toby Scott/SOPA Images via Sipa USA via NewscomA utility box in Seattle's
Capitol Hill neighborhood is shown covered in graffiti and posters calling
for a rent strike, on May 1, 2020.A utility box in Seattle's Capitol Hill
neighborhood is shown covered in graffiti and posters calling for a rent
strike, on May 1, 2020.
Toby Scott/SOPA Images via Sipa USA via Newscom
But renters aren't the only ones struggling. Landlords have bills to pay too.
"These are my children," Darryl Marshak, a landlord in Los Angeles, said,
talking about his tenants. "I'm still shy on April's rent on some of them,
but I understand, they're usually great."
MORE: Small business owners file suit against Gov. Newsom, other CA
officials over coronavirus closures
Marshak is a mom-and-pop building owner with six tenants.
"Maybe I got two months total of my mortgage if I have to come up with it
myself," he told ABC News. "Not to mention water, power, sewage, gardener."
"It's not a fight with the landlords, it's a fight with the banks who need
to understand that they were bailed out about ten years ago, and now we need
a bailout for the working people," Rodrigues was quick to point out while
protesting on the steps of Los Angeles' City Hall.
Etienne Laurent/EPA via ShutterstockProtesters hold a banner reading 'Food
Not Rent' during a rent strike demonstration in front of the Downtown City
Hall amid the coronavirus pandemic in Los Angeles, April 30, 2020.Protesters
hold a banner reading 'Food Not Rent' during a rent strike demonstration in
front of the Downtown City Hall amid the coronavirus pandemic in Los
Angeles, April 30, 2020.
Etienne Laurent/EPA via Shutterstock
Across the country, there are patchwork policies for housing protection,
creating widespread confusion. Eight states -- Georgia, Arkansas, Idaho,
Missouri, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming and Oklahoma -- currently have
not implemented any statewide orders to suspend evictions and foreclosures
during the pandemic, according to an analysis by Princeton.
MORE: Estimated 57 million Americans job vulnerable under COVID-19: Report
"Lost jobs and lost wages -- combined with rents that were unaffordable even
before coronavirus -- leaves millions of people struggling to figure out
how to make rent and scared of being evicted during a public health
emergency," Diane Yentel, the President of the National Low Income Housing
Coalition, told ABC News.
"In this moment when our collective health depends on our ability to stay
home, it's never been more obvious that housing is health care. Congress
should be doing everything they can to keep people stably housed during and
after this public health emergency by implementing a national moratorium on
evictions and providing at least $100 billion in rental assistance," she
said.
Justin Lane/EPA via ShutterstockSigns hang on an apartment building calling
on New York Governor Andrew Cuomo to cancel the rent as part of an organized
rent strike in conjunction with May Day in Brooklyn, New York, May 1, 2020.
Signs hang on an apartment building calling on New York Governor Andrew
Cuomo to cancel the rent as part of an organized rent strike in conjunction
with May Day in Brooklyn, New York, May 1, 2020.
Justin Lane/EPA via Shutterstock
For many home owners under financial stress, the federal rescue package
signed in March, known as the CARES Act, allows up to a year to skip or
delay mortgage loan payments. According to Black Knight, a data and
analytics firm, 3.4 million homeowners will do just that, skipping payments
for the immediate future. But others without mortgages backed by the federal
government are left uncovered.
So, what can you do?
For starters, talk to your landlord or lender. Times are hard right now, and
many may be willing to negotiate or workout a payment plan.
MORE: Coronavirus pandemic: What to do if you can't pay rent, want to buy a
home
Also, make sure you know your rights. Eviction laws are different across the
country. Make sure you're familiar with yours. Remember, what you're told
by a landlord or lender is not always what's factually accurate.
1 (共1页)
进入USANews版参与讨论
相关主题
不明白为什么民主党支持sopo的那么多?穷人不喜欢piracy?Cincinnati IRS Goons ‘Simply Did What Their Bosses Ordered’
哪位说说信用卡公司为什么要支持SOPA?底特律警察局长:枪威慑、阻止了犯罪
法国将临时关闭驻多国大使馆以防意外黑人打死白人大学生,媒体噤声不提种族 (转载)
对PCC的问题,说个真实的故事吧美国军人离开西非,马上被意大利隔离起来
这个比同性恋蛋糕店的case严重多了吧interesting read
Dem候选人辩论失言, 媒体帮忙复原从死者名单上看,死的基本都是西裔gay啊
贝鲁斯科尼真有想象力 (转载)RNC大会发言人名单来了
NJ Senators Caught on Tape: "Confiscate, Confiscate, Confiscate"灌水是违法的了
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: rent话题: abc话题: may话题: los话题: angeles