Document Type

Report

Publication Date

2-9-2021

Subjects

Eviction -- Oregon -- Economic aspects, Housing -- Law and legislation -- Oregon, Eviction -- Oregon -- Statistics

Abstract

A new report from Portland State University’s Homelessness Research & Action Collaborative (HRAC) estimates that evictions could cost Oregon as much as $3.3 billion after the statewide eviction ban expires in June.

The center worked with community partners to gather data from emergency shelters, inpatient and emergency medical services, child welfare, and juvenile justice services to estimate the downstream costs of evictions using the Cost of Eviction Calculator developed by the University of Arizona College of Law.

The center’s cost calculation is an estimate of the scale of the crisis that Oregon could face without additional eviction interventions. It does not cover loss of income, increase in public assistance, gaps in education, or the long term impact to health, education and earnings. Neither does it capture the costs of building new shelters and creating new emergency support as a result of exceeding the current system capacity. The estimate also does not include costs associated with likely increased COVID-19 transmission due to evictions.

The current rental support programs are not enough to meet the scale of the need, said Associate Professor and HRAC Researcher Lisa K. Bates. Oregon renters owe as much as $378 million in back rent, according to a study by Stout advisory firm. Those costs will continue to rise, but will likely be a fraction of the cost of evictions.

“The programs being implemented will support a substantial number of renters; they will also leave an unconscionable number of people, families and communities behind,” Bates said.

Approximately 89,000 Oregon households owe back rent, according to the center’s analysis of Census data. A disproportionate number of these households are households of color. The center’s survey this fall showed that 35% of renters were behind on rent, a figure that jumps to 56% for people of color. The report includes recommended actions such as fully funded rent support and renter protections to avoid mass evictions.

“Unprecedented times isn’t just the first line of every email,” Bates said, “it’s a real experience for those living with fear, hunger and harm in almost unfathomable numbers with no real hope of a safety net to catch them.”

Rights

© 2021 Portland State University Homelessness Research & Action Collaborative

Description

A product of the Homelessness Research & Action Collaborative at Portland State University. An updated version of this research is available:

Cost of Oregon Evictions Report (June, 2021)

Persistent Identifier

https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/34920

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