Gov. JB Pritzker To Extend Illinois Eviction Moratorium For Another 30 Days – CBS2 (Chicago)

According to a survey by Chicago’s Neighborhood Building Owners Alliance, 71% of landlords surveyed in September said they had tenants behind on rent. That number rose to 79% just three months later. “Many of them are struggling, many of them will face foreclosure, even property tax sales over the coming years,” said attorney Michael Zink.
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Governor of Alderaan
5 years ago

More Neanderthal thinking from the Dictator

debtsor
5 years ago

Calling JB a neanderthal is an insult to neanderthals. Our ancestors were tall, strong warriors who fought and killed big game like mammoths and saber tooth tigers. JB is a morbidly obese weakling who inherited his money, flies on private jets, and can never admit he’s a loser.

Last edited 5 years ago by debtsor
JimBob
5 years ago

The moratorium is too heavy handed because it prohibits landlords from evicting tenants who are perfectly able to pay. There should always have been a requirement that the tenant make a showing of financial hardship. This requirement would result in a need for fact-finding by the court and create added legal cost. The added costs might prompt those with assets to negotiate settlements (pay something and exit the premises). Those who fail to settle could be faced with money judgments which landlords could pursue as collection matters and there would be collection agencies and contingent fee lawyers eager to go… Read more »

Susan
5 years ago

Cram down property values by inflicting punitive conditions, forced sales at cheap prices then can be gobbled up using highly leveraged borrowings from politically friendly banks.
When ownership changes hands punitive conditions may be modified.

Dr Nemo
5 years ago
Reply to  Susan

Some ancient history: During the depression many people were out of work and without income, and many others who were working were paid with scrip rather than actual money. Many properties became available to those with cash at tax sales, as scrip was not legal tender for property taxes and landlords could not collect rent from people without cash. Politicians and insiders were paid in cash and were able to buy up property for pennies on the dollar at tax sales. They were able to buy properties from the county before they went up for public sales back in the… Read more »

Susan
5 years ago
Reply to  Dr Nemo

Good point. I think 2008+ was more sophisticated, same church different pew.

In the immortal words of Burr in ‘Hamilton’ and (paraphrased) Jessie Pinkman:
“No one else was in the room where it happened, the room where it happened…”
and,
“Yeah, History, b****!”.

Eugene from a pay phone
5 years ago
Reply to  Dr Nemo

There were also “favored citizens” who were allowed to buy up scrip for cash from desperate teachers at 10 cents to 50 cents on the dollar,

debtsor
5 years ago

““Many of them are struggling, many of them will face foreclosure, even property tax sales over the coming years,”

I believe this is the goal.

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Chicago’s political leadership is floating a pension buyout program as evidence it is seriously addressing the city’s thirty-six-billion-dollar unfunded pension liability, but Mark Glennon, founder of the Illinois policy research organization Wirepoints, said that the proposal moves debt from one column to another rather than reducing it, and that the broader fiscal picture facing the city continues to deteriorate across every measurable dimension. Audio here.

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