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  • Axios Twin Cities

    How some Minnesota cities are slowing evictions

    By Kyle Stokes,

    2024-09-16

    Officials in several Minnesota cities want to give tenants even more time to catch up on rent before their landlord can file an eviction case .

    Why it matters: New state and local laws are designed to slow down an eviction process that, until recently, was one of the fastest in the nation .


    • Once an eviction hits Minnesota's court system, the case often moves faster than county programs can send emergency funds to help tenants cover the rent.

    Catch up quick: Since January, a new state law has slowed this process, requiring landlords to give 14 days' notice before taking the case to court.

    Driving the news: This week, the Minneapolis City Council will vote on a proposal that would go further, requiring landlords to give 30 days' notice.

    • Proponents say that timeline is more realistic since Hennepin County rental assistance funds often take more than two weeks to arrive.

    Context: The move would follow St. Louis Park , where council members approved a 30-day notice requirement last week.

    What they're saying: "The idea is to prevent evictions from ever being filed, because that's good policy for landlords and tenants," Daniel Suitor, housing attorney and tenant advocate for HOME Line, told Axios.

    • Evicted tenants rarely pay back landlords unless they settle out of court. A longer timeline incentivizes both parties to agree on a repayment plan, Suitor argued.
    • When tenants don't have the money to settle, they can move out before a case is filed — which lets them avoid the blot on their rental record and allows landlords to re-rent the unit, Suitor said.

    The other side: The longer timelines are already squeezing landlords, who now risk losing up to three months' rent, Cecil Smith of the Minnesota Multi Housing Association said.

    • "It is infeasible for renters to stay in a unit for free," Smith told the Minneapolis council , "while property owners have financial responsibilities such as mortgage payments, utilities and other financial obligations."
    • "Not all landlords are liquid enough to weather periods of non-payment," Lynette Dumalag, the lone St. Louis Park council member to vote against the city's new ordinance, said last week .

    By the numbers: Statewide filings through August were down nearly 18% from the same period in 2023, according to Eviction Lab data — a dip that Suitor believes shows the new law is working as intended.

    Stunning stat: Evictions often lead directly to homelessness.

    • Researchers found that an evicted resident of Hennepin County was 55% more likely to enter a shelter.
    Comments / 1
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    James Roettger
    30d ago
    Higher rents will result from this government intrusion
    View all comments
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