Rochelle Walensky |
WASHINGTON, DC, Aug. 3, 2021 --- Just minutes ago, CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) Director (Rochelle) Walensky officially extended the eviction moratorium, through Oct. 3. In a press release, the agency said the new order applies in "areas of high transmission" of Covid-19.
In multiple lawsuits across the country, NCLA (New Civil Liberties Alliance) is arguing that the eviction moratorium far exceeds the constitutional and statutory limits of CDC’s authority.
The agency’s radical and unprecedented
interference with access to state courts has deprived Americans across the
country of their constitutional right to resolve their legal disputes in court.
Caleb Kruckenberg |
NCLA released the
following statements:
“After five members of the Supreme Court
concluded that the existing eviction moratorium had no legal foundation, and
Congress refused to grant the agency authority to impose a new order, the CDC
has now claimed to discover new authority to act.
This is not how government should work,
much less how 'laws' are written. If the CDC pushes forward the courts must
swiftly shut down the agency’s lawless actions.”
— Caleb Kruckenberg, Litigation Counsel,
NCLA
Mark Chenoweth |
"NCLA will not stand for this. CDC
never had legal authority to issue a nationwide eviction moratorium to. Nothing
has changed. This is your unlawful administrative state hard at work.”
— Mark Chenoweth, Executive Director and
General Counsel, NCLA
Last month, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit rejected
the request of Rick Brown of Virginia and other hard-hit housing providers
across the country to put an end to the eviction moratorium issued by CDC.
Judy Pino |
In a 2-1 decision in Brown, et al. v. CDC, et al., the panel affirmed the lower court’s refusal to enjoin CDC’s unlawful eviction moratorium.
NCLA is carefully considering whether to
appeal this adverse ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court or return to district
court for trial.
NCLA also filed a
class-action lawsuit, Mossman v. CDC, in the U.S. District
Court for the Northern District of Iowa.
For
more information, please visit the case pages for Brown v. CDC and Mossman v. CDC.
CONTACT:
Judy Pino
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