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Owners of the venue, a beacon for Austin's queer community, had asked the community for support, saying rising costs and a decline in weekday foot traffic had taken a toll.
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Compared to this time last year, eviction filings in the Austin area are up about 16%. That could be happening for a number of reasons, including fewer protections for renters.
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Bills touted as "anti-squatter" reforms were originally written to make it easier to evict renters. But legislators significantly scaled back these provisions in a bill poised to become law.
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Eviction filings were up about 25% in 2024 compared to the year before. An eviction filing does not mean a renter was eventually evicted.
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An ordinance passed during the pandemic gave tenants 90 days to pay overdue rent, fees and any additional charges before a landlord could begin the eviction process. But the ordinance is set to expire Friday, when the COVID disaster declaration ends.
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For some local relief programs, a lack of staffing, political support and effective community outreach got in the way of spending federal funds to prevent evictions, a new report found. More than $30 million went unspent and had to be returned.
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Congress finds four companies appeared to have a strategy to get tenants to leave during the pandemic. Many faced eviction after missing only one payment, and while waiting for emergency rental aid.
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Houston, Dallas, Fort Worth and Austin all ranked among the top 10 cities for new eviction filings in early April, among the 31 cities tracked by Eviction Lab.
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Volunteer Legal Services of Central Texas is running a new program where lawyers show up in most AGÕæÈ˰ټÒÀÖ County eviction courts to offer representation for tenants.
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County staff told commissioners on Tuesday they'd received nearly 3,400 applications for rent and mortgage help in just one week, which is the number of households they expected to be able to help.