The Treasury Department recently released updated Emergency Rental Assistance (ERA) spending data through July 31. So far, state and local programs have spent more than $5.1 billion to support the housing stability of vulnerable renters out of the $25 billion allocated under the first round of ERA. In July alone, $1.68 billion in ERA funding was spent.
The good news is that the assistance in July helped more than 340,000 households. This was a roughly 15 percent increase in households served compared to June, and more than double the number of households served in May. And the latest data also demonstrates that ERA funds reached the lowest income tenants, with more than 60 percent of households served falling at or below 30 percent of area median income.
However, the data shows that 16 states have spent less than 5 percent of their allocation by the end of July, and fewer than half of the households who have applied for ERA have been served through the program. By June 30, 2.3 million households had applied for ERA, but by the end of the month, only 984,352 had received assistance.
The Treasury Department has acknowledged that the biggest challenges many state and local government programs continue to face in getting assistance to renters and landlords is application processing delays. As a result, the Treasury Department has announced seven additional policies meant to accelerate assistance to those in the pipeline in addition to those who have yet to apply.