Rural, white Americans are more likely to benefit from an emergency rent assistance program passed in the December stimulus package, according to a USA Today analysis.
Part of the problem: the federal government calculated aid for the most-populated states according to total population but gave less-populated states a set amount. That means renters in more rural states like Vermont and Wyoming end up getting more aid per person, Ruiz-Goiriena and Bajak report.
That amount won't cover the huge amounts of arrears many renters owe, most of whom are aged 40-54 and live in the South, the Northeast, or California, according to a Moody's Analytics report. The average renter is almost four months behind on rent and owes $5,600 on rent and utilities, plus another $50 per month for late penalties. "In all, Americans need $57 billion to pay off their back rent, about $32 billion short of the aid deployed to states," Ruiz-Goiriena and Bajak report. "The package Congress passed, according to Moody's analysis, will only be able to help some 3.5 million renters pay back rent and utilities."
from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/3pcZDS8 Rural whites more likely to get emergency rent relief through December stimulus package - Entrepreneur Generations
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