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Morning Briefing

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Wednesday, Jun 30 2021

Full Issue

Supreme Court Leaves CDC's Eviction Ban In Place For Final Month

In a divided 5-4 ruling, the Supreme Court justices rejected an emergency request from landlords and realtors to lift the federal eviction moratorium. Other developments related to the pandemic's economic toll is also in the day's news.

A divided Supreme Court on Tuesday declined to lift a national moratorium on the eviction of tenants who have fallen behind on their rent during the Covid-19 pandemic. The court rejected an emergency request by landlords and real-estate companies to clear the way for evictions after a federal judge in Washington ruled last month that the moratorium was legally unsupportable. The judge who issued that ruling stayed the effect of the decision, while litigation continues. (Kendall and Ackerman, 6/29)

U.S. Judge Dabney Friedrich in Washington had struck down the moratorium as exceeding the CDC鈥檚 authority, but put her ruling on hold. The high court voted 5-4 to keep the ban in place until the end of July. In a brief opinion, Justice Brett Kavanaugh said he agreed with Friedrich鈥檚 ruling, but voted to leave the ban on evictions in place because it鈥檚 due to end in a month and 鈥渂ecause those few weeks will allow for additional and more orderly distribution of the congressionally appropriated rental assistance funds.鈥 (6/29)

In related news about covid's economic toll 鈥

The extra federal unemployment aid offered amid the COVID-19 pandemic will end in Tennessee on Saturday, including the end of $300 weekly additional payments. Tennessee is among dozens of states that have stopped accepting the $300 benefit. Republican leaders say it鈥檚 necessary because job openings are going unfilled, and are pointing people to job-finding resources offered throughout the state. (6/30)

An Indiana judge said the state must continue paying enhanced unemployment benefits until a lawsuit on the issue is decided, ruling that ending the payments could cause "irreparable harm" if out-of-work residents can't pay for housing or food.聽The preliminary injunction comes as 26 states 鈥 with all but one, Louisiana, run by a Republican governor 鈥 are in the process of ending pandemic-related unemployment benefits聽for millions of people. On June 19, Indiana ended the supplementary federal unemployment aid, which included an extra $300 a week in payments, rather than allowing them to expire in early September.聽(Picchi, 6/29)

Gov. Laura Kelly and her top welfare official moved Tuesday to keep thousands of families from losing extra food aid because Kansas is no longer under a state of emergency for the coronavirus pandemic. The announcement that Kelly plans to continue the extra $14.5 million a month in aid came two weeks after top Republicans in the GOP-controlled Legislature ended the state of emergency. (6/29)

While life has returned to normal for many people as 70% of King County鈥檚 population has been vaccinated against COVID-19, food insecurity 鈥斅燿efined as limited or uncertain access to adequate food 鈥 was exacerbated by the pandemic and remains a reality for low-income residents. Hunger before and during the pandemic was most prevalent in South Seattle and South King County, where the greatest concentration of low-income, Black, Indigenous and people of color reside, according to a recent Washington state food survey by the University of Washington and Washington State University.聽The data shows a spike in the need for food assistance. (Hellmann, 6/27)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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