The Sonoma County Board of Supervisors today passed the COVID-19 Eviction Defense Ordinance to for suspend evictions for non-payment of rent for reasons associated with the coronavirus. Effective immediately, the law will be in effect for at least 60 days.
“This is an important step in protecting public health and the well-being of community members who may be experiencing a loss of income or increased medical costs associated with the coronavirus,” said Board of Supervisors Chair Susan Gorin.
Gorin said thordinance, to be reviewed in June, “is designed to help our community comply with local and statewide directives to shelter in place while preventing evictions and utility shut-offs associated with financial and medical losses due to the coronavirus.”
The ruling creates a legal defense for all renters who can demonstrate that their failure to pay rent is due to the coronavirus pandemic. Tenants who use this defense are required to share that information with their landlord to support claims for any prospective mortgage relief.
The ordinance prevents evictions for the duration of the locally-declared emergency and for 60 days after it ends to allow tenants time to make up unpaid rent. The ordinance also directs the Sonoma County Housing Authority to extend deadlines for housing assistance recipients and applicants to provide stability for community members housed with a critical subsidy. The ordinance is considered urgent based on the closure or extreme restrictions on local businesses, severe loss of income for many residents who depend on wages or business income to pay rent, and substantial medical expenses for some community members.
The ordinance highlights the suspension of in-person classes across all Sonoma County School Districts as an additional hardship for working parents who must adjust work schedules and take time off, whether paid or unpaid.
“This ordinance is a critical part of maintaining economic stability for renters and protecting everyone in our County during this global crisis,” said Barbie Robinson, co-director of the County’s Emergency Operations Center, and Interim Executive Director of the Community Development Commission, said. “The County recognizes that without local protection, eviction notices for failure to pay rent are likely to surge. We need to protect families living paycheck to paycheck who are unable to work during school and business closures, and who are doing their part to follow the shelter-in-place health order.”
Read the full Ordinance here.
For the latest information about the coronavirus in Sonoma County and advice from health experts on prevention and care, call 2-1-1, text your zip code to 898-211 or visit socoemergency.org. Updates and videos are also on the County of Sonoma Facebook page and twitter feed @countyofsonoma.
Be First to Comment