In the coming days, business leaders plan to request clarification from Cuomo to address the “cloud of uncertainty” surrounding the executive order, Winiarsky said.
The governor’s March 20 executive order bars any enforcement of residential or commercial evictions, while the governor’s latest action limits the ban to renters who are “eligible for unemployment insurance or benefits under state or federal law or otherwise facing financial hardship due to the COVID-19 pandemic.” The order doesn’t specify the parameters for qualifying for “financial hardship.”
A spokesperson for the state’s division of Homes and Community Renewal acknowledged that the governor’s latest order changes the terms of the eviction moratorium after June 20.
“The extension of the moratorium from June until August 20th targets anyone experiencing a financial hardship related to COVID 19,” HCR’s Brian Butry said in an email. He dismissed the idea that the order provides less protection for tenants.
“The language does not weaken the moratorium,” he said.
“Landlords will bring tenants to court, who will then have to demonstrate to landlords in court that they were impacted, and the court will either find [tenants] credible or not,” said Ellen Davidson, a staff attorney at Legal Aid Society. “In a city where landlords have called [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] on their tenants, people will have to choose whether or not to tell their landlords about their immigration status.”
https://therealdeal.com/2020/05/09/cuomo-extended-the-states-eviction-order-but-theres-a-big-catch/
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