- House and Senate
Democrats are scrambling to renew a federaleviction ban after Biden urged them at the last-minute. - In a statement to Insider, a spokesperson for Sen.
Sherrod Brown said he was working with Schumer on legislation. - Nearly six million people are at risk of eviction starting in two days.
Congressional Democrats are rushing to assemble legislation to renew a federal eviction ban before it expires
Democrats in both chambers are trying to draft a bill and put it to a rapid vote sometime in the next two days. The moratorium expires on July 31. After that, around 6 million people are at risk of getting evicted in the coming months, or 16% of all renters, per Census Pulse Survey Data.
The Biden administration on Thursday said it would not renew a federal eviction ban and the matter was ultimately left up to
Banking and Housing Committee chair Sherrod Brown initially held off pushing for an extension, saying it should be left up to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention. The agency intervened and put the moratorium in place last year under President Donald Trump, citing the urgency of preventing the spread of COVID-19.
Now Brown is playing a key role assembling a bill to renew it past July 31.
In a statement to Insider, a spokesperson for Brown's office said he "supports an extension of the
It was unclear what date House and Senate Democrats would ultimately agree on. A person familiar with the talks in the House said their version would attempt to extend it sometime until the end of the year.
Democrats in recent days had stepped up their calls for the administration to renew the ban. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez and Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the second-ranked Senate Democrat, were among them.