The number of Minnesotans facing eviction has spiked in the past month as the state rolled back the renter protections that had kept many people in their homes throughout the pandemic.
The rise in landlords seeking to remove tenants has coincided with the state catching up on many backlogged requests for help through its rent and utilities payment program, giving out more than $101 million in federal aid in October.
From the program's April launch through September, it distributed only $91 million.
Housing officials said the federal dollars and Minnesota's phased-out approach to its pandemic eviction ban have helped temper what could have been an even bigger wave of people who had fallen behind on payments being forced out of their housing.
"Losing a 9-to-5 ... and you got at a family at home and you live check to check, that's a scary situation," said Jimmy Harris, a Minneapolis renter who lost his job at Walmart over the summer.
Harris applied for aid from the RentHelpMN program in September. This month, he received enough to cover three months of back rent, his December payment and water bill.
"It really opened up some doors, and just gave us the opportunity to keep moving forward instead of being evicted."
While other states, from Connecticut to Missouri, have seen evictions climb in recent months, Minnesota stands out for its sharp ascent after keeping eviction filings comparatively low throughout most of the pandemic, data from Princeton University's Eviction Lab show.