By Jennifer Lee
Published Friday, October 9, 2020 Eviction moratorium extended statewideQ13's Jennifer Lee reports on the statewide eviction moratorium that will be extended through December 31.
SEATTLE - During the Governor’s press briefing on Thursday, he announced the eviction moratorium will be extended until December 31. The latest moratorium was set to expire on October 15.
Sean Case lives in Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborhood and has been advocating for housing support throughout the pandemic. He works as a cook at Glo's on Capitol Hill and was out of a job during the early months of Covid-19 that shut down the economy. “I’m making less money, therefore my rent is a little harder to pay than it used to be. It’s good that (the eviction moratorium) is there. I don’t think it should be lifted by any means.” Case said he is not at risk of being evicted but wishes more help was available for housing during the pandemic. “Rent and mortgage payments should be canceled on the local, state and federal level,” said Case. While tenants may be protected from getting evicted, unpaid rent will continue to accumulate into debt. The governor’s moratorium advises landlords and tenants to come up with a payment plan that is reasonable. Tenants who are unable to pay residential or commercial rent must also prove their financial hardship. “What’s needed most desperately from a lot of households in the State of Washington is income relief so that they can make rent payments,” said housing advocate Roger Valdez. “It’s a truly bizarre situation that you have a Governor who continues to extend an eviction, ban but he has done nothing, or very little, to solve the problem of unpaid rent.” Valdez is the Director of Seattle for Growth, and ordered a report that collected and analyzed rent roll and survey data. Based on that information, he believes the state could’ve invested millions of dollars in housing payments to help families facing financial hardship. The president of the Washington Landlord Association said landlords are being devastated by this proclamation. The Governor will sign the proclamation to extend the eviction moratorium on Monday. As for Case, his workplace is giving back through a community meal program by providing meals to neighbors who don’t have homes. You can check it out on Glo’s website. By Marc Stiles – Staff Writer, Puget Sound Business Journal Oct 2, 1:44pm EDT With Amazon and other tech companies expected to add tens of thousands of jobs on the Eastside in the coming years, developers of multifamily housing are swarming the area. They may be a little early, however. “I think there’s a lot of excitement in Bellevue, but I think people might be getting a little overly enthusiastic,” said appraiser Brian O’Connor of O’Connor Consulting Group, a Seattle company that advises multifamily developers. Across the Puget Sound region, demand for multifamily housing has dropped significantly due to Covid-19 while supply increases, he said. The Eastside is not immune. The Eastside apartment vacancy rate is 4.6% now, and O’Connor forecasts it could climb to 5.8% by the end of 2021. He thinks it will end up slightly higher in downtown Bellevue. Still, this has not deterred developers. “Demand will probably grow, but the development community — they don’t wait for it to grow, they just charge right in,” O’Connor said. “There’s already an oversupply, especially in the Totem Lake/Redmond area.” The eagerness of developers is not misplaced. O’Connor said if they’re scouting for property now, they probably won’t be able to start building for at least 18 months to two years, with construction taking another 24 months. “That gives time for the market to heal and the tech industry to ramp up,” he said. In Bellevue, clients are looking for development sites in downtown and the Spring District. “Everybody loves the Spring District,” O’Connor said of the 36-acre development where Facebook will have enough space for an estimated 7,000 employees. Nearly 800 apartment units already have been built in the district and there’s capacity for 400 more, according to developer Wright Runstad & Co. It’s not just the Eastside that multifamily developers are circling. Interest is also mounting in Shoreline, where Sound Transit is building two light rail stations that are scheduled to open in 2024. “We’re doing Shoreline job after Shoreline job. The action now tends to be there or on the Eastside and Tacoma,” O’Connor said. On the Eastside, it’s “the Amazon effect,” said O’Connor, who has seen this play before. About 10 years ago, when it became evident how much the company would grow in the city, multifamily developer money was pouring into the region. “All they wanted to hear was the Amazon story. I would tell them, ‘Hey, you should look at Bellevue,’ and they were like ‘meh.’... The money (still) wants to follow the energy that Amazon creates, so I’m pretty bullish on it,” O’Connor said. Apartment development in Bellevue Under construction: 598 units in 4 buildings Proposed: 5,748 units in 23 buildings Vacancy Eastside: 5.1% Bellevue – downtown 6.4% Bellevue – suburban 5.4% Properties offering concessions Eastside: 79% Downtown Bellevue: 45% Suburban Bellevue: 61% |
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