Rent’s due, again: Monthly anxieties deepen as coronavirus aid falls off

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International Capital Group CEO Adiel Gorel responds to requests to cancel or freeze the country’s rentals.

It’s going on another month. The coronavirus pandemic continues. And Americans suffering the economic consequences will have to worry again once their upcoming hiring checks expire on August 1.

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Many unemployed due to the crisis are already receiving payments. And the arrival of August brings new concerns. An additional $600 in weekly federal unemployment benefits that has helped many others pay for their spending will expire in late July, with Congress meddled in a war of words over a new aid set.

Unless lawmakers also intervene, a federal moratorium on evictions has protected millions of tenants; some Americans remain protected by similar state and local actions.

The Associated Press reconnected with tenants interviewed for the first time before their April payments. Four months later, some returned to work. One of them saw his church interfere to cover his rent. Some have discovered homeowners willing to negotiate, while others are still seeking relief.

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Sakai Harrison moved to New York to try to make it as a personal trainer and designer – but his gym shuttered early in the pandemic, and after weeks of struggling to both pay the rent and put food in his fridge, he knew what he had to do.

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He returned to Georgia for stability.

In May, he left his Brooklyn apartment and his $1,595 monthly rent for Atlanta. When the first of the month arrives, your new seat costs about $400 less, and is larger.

“It’s the greatest ray of hope I’ve ever seen, ” he said.

Sakai Harrison poses for a portrait after guiding his clients through a rigorous education on Wednesday, July 29, 2020 in Atlanta. Harrison moved to New York to consult with a non-public teacher and designer, but his gym closed its doors early in the frying pan

He trains with some individual clients and has an educational camp with a dozen others.

This week he met four of them in a park, where they did squats, dominated and a military-style ramp. Harrison then took them to a gym to work out with dumbbells. They were not dressed in a mask for themselves against viruses; Harrison said they were taking precautions, but under pressure that the state didn’t need to cover his face.

Harrison modeled the proper form and pace, corrected the men when needed, and gently teased when they tired or slowed down. Some shot barbs back, and Harrison smiled.

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It charges its consumers a little less than at Blink Fitness in New York, but this amount is helping them expand a clothing brand. Take a line of shoes, T-shirts and caps.

Unless he stops, Harrison said, “Everything will be fine.”

– Aaron Morrison, New York and Ron Harris, Atlanta

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Demanding financial situations continue to increase for Roushaunda Williams months after wasting her nearly 20-year task at the palmer house Hilton Hotel bar in downtown Chicago.

Possible hotel reopening dates have been delayed, Williams said, and jobs in the hotel sector remain short.” She hopes to be unless she can pay her $1,900 contract through September, especially if Congress reauthorizes $600 in weekly unemployment assistance under a new aid program.

Williams, 52, said he asked the control company that owns his apartment for rent relief or other help. So far, he’s been told his hiring wouldn’t happen if he could pay.

The governor of Illinois recently prolonged a moratorium on deportations until August. However, Williams is concerned about the accumulation of debt while unemployed.

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“I’ve exhausted my savings, ” he said. “So now I don’t have a safety net.”

– Kathleen Foody, Chicago

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Jas Wheeler once hoped to weather the pandemic and repaint in a Vermont bakery. Not anymore.

Wheeler, 30, is immunocompromised and fear of returning to the bakery would increase the threat of infection. The former social worker who works in a small grocery store who will pay less but leaves more room for social estrangement.

Wheeler took the task of anticipating wasting weekly unemployment assistance of $600. This cash allowed Wheeler and his wife, Lucy, to repay their $850 monthly loan.

The couple closed their home in Vergennes the same day Wheeler fired in March. Wheeler’s wife has kept her job, but the money is still tight. They sold a car and grew food.

“Unemployment without staggered benefits is enough to live on,” Wheeler said. “We’re broke.”

– Michael Casey, Boston

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Though the pandemic took away Itza Sanchez’s two incomes, it has strengthened her faith. The mother of two says the generosity of her Richmond, Virginia, church has saved them from hunger and eviction.

Sanchez fell under contract when she stopped promoting homemade tamales and collecting junk for fear of contracting the virus. In mid-July, it owed about $950 in non-paid rent. It was at this point that Sanchez won the account of leaving the cell home where his circle of relatives lives.

She forgave when her church sent $800 directly to the owner.

Now she’s trying to scrape together $460 for August’s rent. She gets food donations from church. The school system delivers lunches for her children, 11 and 7.

An immigrant from Honduras, Sanchez is entitled to unemployment benefits.

“In this crisis we have moments of anguish, and one feels desperate, Sanchez said.

“But I’ve been blessed so far.”

– Regina García Cano, Washington

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For Andrea Larson, life has taken an unforeseen turn.

Andrea Larson poses at her home on Tuesday, July 28, 2020, in Nashville, Tennessee. For Larson, the life of the pandemic took a strangely positive turn. The former sommelier lost her task when Nashville restaurants closed in mid-March. She was just getti

He lost his job as a sommelier in mid-March, when places to eat closed in Nashville, Tennessee. She simply deals with unemployment, but is concerned about wasting her profits or returning to a damaging task in the business of places to eat.

A former boss then presented him with a position in a new position to eat: the White Limozeen, named after a Dolly Parton song and an exaggerated kitsch.

Although Larson is still afraid of the virus, he appreciates that his employer “has spent a lot of cash to make sure other people are incredibly safe.”

In her duplex, a plumbing crisis forced her to live in a structure area for a few months. But he counts it as luck: he didn’t have to pay the rent.

– Travis Loller, Nashville, Tennessee

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Jade Brooks and her circle of relatives have relied on a moratorium on evictions in Massachusetts to help them through the pandemic. Still, 22-year-old Brooks worries: how long will it last?

Brooks’ mother has discovered a full-time task since she wasted her homework at the insurance company. And Brooks is paid enough as a hospital standardist to cover the rent, recently raised at $2,075 a month, for his two-bedroom apartment in Boston.

His circle of relatives had a deportation hearing scheduled for August in court after refusing to pay the $265 increase. The governor then extended the deportation ban until mid-October, offering relief from transitoryness.

“It gave me a little more hope of perceiving things, of throwing myself into the fire,” said Brooks, who lives with his mom and an 8-year-old cousin.

Brooks expects the extra time to give his mother the chance to find work, and they may cancel a new lease instead of going to court.

– Michael Casey, Boston

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After two months of missing bills due to a “rental strike,” Neal Miller and his roommates listened to the landlord.

WHAT HAPPENS TO YOUR UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS IF YOU REFUSE TO RETURN TO WORK?

To their surprise, he agreed to reduce the monthly $1,500 rent for their home on Chicago’s West Side. Miller’s share is now $150, down from $400.

Miller, 38, said the owner had given the impression that he would prefer a source of income for the house to nothing at all.

Miller’s last solid assignment was as an adjunct professor at Loyola University. During the pandemic, he repaired tasks: drafting thesis, accounting for a psychiatrist’s office.

He said the decline in hiring reduces the pressure: “We are in an exclusive scenario because of the reaction we have received.”

– Kathleen Foody, Chicago

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Tnia Morgan’s circle of relatives has grown through a unit since the pandemic turned their lives around. The birth of a grandson, the youngest son of his youngest daughter, on June 25, was a rare and, in a different way, stressful spring and summer.

“I love its smell. I like your smile. I love everything about him,” said Morgan, who sells a house in Baltimore County, Maryland, with his newborn grandson, daughter, and nephew.

I needed something to celebrate. His source of income fell after wasting his homework at a hotel reception in March. Invoices accrue every month.

THESE BENEFITS OF THE CARE ACT EXPIRE WHEN DISCUSSIONS ABOUT VIRUS RELIEF REMAIN AT THE CENTER

Since then, 4 rental checks have been owed. Morgan’s owner pays him what he can. She estimates that this is almost part of what she owes since April.

Food stamps help feed her family. She says she’s tried in vain to sign up for unemployment benefits. Her only income comes from working for a food delivery service.

“It’s not much,” he says, “but it’s bigger than having nothing.”

– Michael Kunzelman, Silver Spring, Maryland

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Ruqayyah Bailey has lost much of her independence and wants to get her life back on track.

Bailey, 31, is autistic. Until March, she lived in her apartment, worked part-time as a cashier at a St. Louis café and attended college.

“I’m absolutely stressed. I don’t know how to pay my bills. I don’t know how I’m going to get into my apartment.”

The coronavirus threw this total design out the window. Bailey may no longer gain advantages from the individual tutoring that helped her thrive in college. The coffee’s closed. Without money, he moved back in with his mother.

The café reopened in June, but Bailey only works four hours a week. You have enrolled in seven hours of college, but are not sure about tutoring. He uses his savings to pay his expenses and fears losing his $600 in an additional week.

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“I’m absolutely stressed, ” said Bailey. “I don’t know how to pay my bills. I don’t know how I’m going to get into my apartment.”

– Jim Salter, St. Louis

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Jason W. Still spent nearly 3 months unpainted before re-cooking at an upscale restaurant in Spokane, Washington.

However, he returned to Clover’s kitchen when he reopened in early June. Previously, his wife’s paintings in the legal marijuana industry in Washington and Still’s unemployment checks helped them never lose a rent payment.

Encore repaints 40 hours a week. But you wonder if this will last, as COVID-19 infections accumulate in the United States.

“It’s scary for me to be in a service that can close at any time,” he said.

– Anita Snow, Phoenix

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Tinisha Dixon raised cash to cover her monthly rent of $1,115 for April and May. Since then, he hasn’t been able to pay.

Dixon, 26, stores an apartment in downtown Atlanta with his wife and five children. Before that, Dixon homeless. Today, he worries each and every day that his circle of relatives is on the streets.

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Dixon’s spouse works as a security guard, but the hour-reduction has reduced his income stream to about $800 a month. Dixon said he ran briefly at a coronavirus control site outside the city, but that relying on his spouse for the rides interfered with his job.

Before the pandemic, Dixon said, their owner had begun to take steps to evict them.

“I’m pretty beat up looking to locate everything, knowing how long I can hang here,” he said.

– Sudhin Thanawala, Atlanta

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DOSSIER – In this April 30, 2020 archive photo, Eli Oderberg, right, sits with Katie Evers and her 4-year-old daughter Everlee outside her home in southeast Denver. Oderberg lost his task in a wave of layoffs in April and remains unemployed while

Eli Oderberg of Denver is still unemployed. He lost his job at a Colorado energy company in a wave of layoffs in mid-April due to the economic consequences of the pandemic.

Oderberg, 36, has worked in the past on programs to track spills and leaks. He now receives unemployment benefits because he sends resumes and interviews for new jobs. He said he was a finalist for several positions but had not been hired.

Oderberg and his wife, Katie, have been making their mortgage payments. She’s on unemployment after losing her retail job. She’s also pregnant, and the couple fears running out of money after the baby arrives. They also have a 5-year-old daughter.

“I’m looking to find a smart balance so I can do my family,” she says. “And I’m reminding myself that there are a lot of other people in a much worse situation.”

– Anita Snow, Phoenix

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These curtains may be published, disseminated, rewritten or distributed. © 2020 FOX News Network, LLC. All rights are reserved. Frequently Asked Questions – Updated Privacy Policy

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