A Hennepin County court referee listened for hours Wednesday as renter after renter agreed to pay the hundreds or thousands of dollars they owe, or leave their homes.
It was just another hectic day in housing court, where the number of eviction cases has climbed — a trend some fear is about to get worse.
More than two years after DFL Gov. Tim Walz halted evictions to prevent homelessness amid surging COVID-19 cases and the resulting economic downturn, the state has phased out its final pandemic-era renter protection. The last remaining cushion allowed renters who would otherwise have been evicted for failing to pay rent to keep their housing as long as they had a pending application for emergency rental assistance. As of Wednesday, evictions in those cases could resume.
"The shelter need is going to just skyrocket this month, as well as homelessness," predicted attorney Rachael Sterling, COVID-19 eviction response coordinator for the tenant advocacy organization HOME Line. "These protections have been critical in keeping people housed. And those protections are just gone. And the safety net that we had in place for almost two years is just ripped out from underneath people."
Evictions in Minnesota have spiked in recent months as renter protections and financial assistance have run out. Landlords filed for nearly 1,800 evictions in May — about 500 more than in May 2019, before the pandemic.
The Minnesota Multi Housing Association, which advocates for landlords, said renters and property managers have faced serious public safety and financial challenges over the past couple years. The group decried the state's "inept" distribution of federal rent assistance as well as Walz's eviction moratorium, which legislators replaced last summer with a timeline to slowly end housing protections.
"As we protested during the moratorium, and now supported by court decisions, the state overreached and politicized the pandemic to earn points with far-left activists," association members said in a statement, referring to a lawsuit over the constitutionality of Walz's eviction pause. "In spite of all this adversity, a resilient rental housing market is returning to normal, especially as people have gone back to work and job opportunities abound."
Minnesota is in a different economic situation than it was in early in the pandemic, when there were mass layoffs and families struggled to juggle jobs and caring for their children who were learning from home. Minnesota's unemployment rate dropped to 2.2% in April, the lowest level since the state began tracking the metric 46 years ago.