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8/3/2022

Remarks by Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Wally Adeyemo at the White House Summit on Building Lasting Eviction …

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Remarks by Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Wally Adeyemo at
the White House Summit on Building Lasting Eviction
Prevention Reform
August 2, 2022

As prepared for delivery
Gene, thank you for the introduction and for all the work that you and many others on the line
have done to help coordinate the implementation of the American Rescue Plan – and in
particular the Emergency Rental Assistance Program – and your close work with Treasury.
When President Biden signed the American Rescue Plan into law in March 2021, this country
faced the prospect of a nationwide eviction crisis that was poised to disproportionately a ect
our nationʼs most vulnerable communities.
To alleviate this crisis, the Biden-Harris Administration expanded the Emergency Rental
Assistance Program to help struggling renters and landlords. At the time, there had never
before been a playbook or the infrastructure for distributing this kind of assistance at a
national scale.
Through our implementation of this program, we made a series of decisions designed to
direct this assistance to renters in need as e iciently as possible with an eye towards building
long-term eviction prevention infrastructure that you have heard about today.
Sixteen months later, the program has served millions of renters in need, with a meaningful
portion of funds being used to champion new and innovative approaches to eviction
prevention—some of which you have just heard in the last panel.
Not only did this essential relief get out to people in time to prevent the eviction tsunami
many feared would occur a er the federal moratorium li ed, data shows these funds reached
the lowest income renters and renters of color.
In 2021, 80% of funding reached very low-income households, and 40% of all primary
applicants receiving assistance self-identified as Black and more than 20% self-identified as
Latino. And Princeton Universityʼs Eviction Lab found that millions of renters avoided the
threat of eviction last year and that at the same time, low-income and majority-Black
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Remarks by Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Wally Adeyemo at the White House Summit on Building Lasting Eviction …

neighborhoods that typically see a disproportionate share of eviction cases experienced the
largest absolute reduction in filings.
This outcome was not an accident. It came as a result of measures that we took together –
Treasury, the White House, and grantees and advocates from across the country – to make
sure that rental assistance got into the hands of those who needed it, and those who might
otherwise have faced the devastating consequences of eviction.
Treasury has heard countless stories of programs going the extra mile to both proactively
reach households most at risk of housing stability and avoid administrative pitfalls that might
otherwise push them out of the process. In March, I was in Memphis, meeting the folks who
took an innovative approach to community engagement in their ERA program, including
working with a local nonprofit organization to provide legal services to tenants facing
evictions and enlisting law school faculty and student volunteers.
These examples of infrastructure development are not limited to urban areas. Many ERA
programs that also serve rural areas have developed new infrastructure to reach tenants and
landlords in more remote communities. For example, states like North Dakota and Wyoming
have taken more “hands on” approaches reaching and supporting “mom and pop” landlords
within rural communities. Grantees have reported that these extra e orts have helped build
trust in harder to reach areas and supported broader success of the programs.
With the remainder of ERA funds, Treasury encourages communities to consider continued
investment in eviction prevention systems that can result in long-term change. Many
communities can, for instance, take advantage of the recently announced flexibility to use the
last 25% of ERA2 funds to further enrich eviction prevention and housing stability services
a er October 1, 2022. We have also encouraged grantees to use a portion of their American
Rescue Plan State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds to further these e orts—and we have seen
this infrastructure continue to grow. As of March 31, we have seen in Treasury data $12.9
billion dedicated to meet housing needs, including many communities using funds to support
housing stability and eviction prevention services.
Now is the time to build on the legacy of the Emergency Rental Assistance Program through
long-term changes in eviction prevention and housing stability programs. I have appreciated
hearing about the innovative work being undertaken by today's panelists and look forward to
hearing about these developments in the future.

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