COVID-19 Emergency Rental Assistance Program (CERAP) Fact Sheet
COVID-19 Emergency Rental Assistance Program (CERAP) Fact Sheet
COVID-19 Emergency Rental Assistance Program (CERAP) Fact Sheet
Program (CERAP)
What is it?
The COVID-19 Emergency Rental Assistance Program (CERAP) was enacted in the SFY 2021-2022 Enacted
Budget and will provide up to 12 months of rental and/or utility arrears assistance and up to three months of
prospective rent assistance to eligible tenants affected by the pandemic. Rental assistance may be provided
for arrears accrued from March 13, 2020.
$2.35 billion in federal funds will be appropriated to support the core provisions of this program. The agreed-
upon language also establishes a $100 million state-funded hardship fund for tenants with incomes above
80% AMI; for eligible arrears for tenants that have already moved; and for tenants who may otherwise not be
eligible for federal funds.
When will the application portal be open? When will OTDA begin accepting applications?
OTDA is actively working on getting the portal up and running. Early estimates project that OTDA will begin
accepting applications in May, but details are still forthcoming.
• includes an individual who has qualified for unemployment or experienced a reduction in household
income, incurred significant costs, or experienced other financial hardship due – directly or indirectly – to
the COVID-19 outbreak;
• has a household income at or below 80% of the area median income, adjusted for household size.
Households whose incomes exceed 80% AMI; landlords whose tenants have vacated the unit, and/
or landlords whose tenants refuse to apply for CERAP will be eligible to apply to a hardship fund, which
provides $100 million in state funds for hardship emergency relief.
Tenants on public assistance can apply for assistance under this program.
If a tenant is approved for assistance, does the money go to the tenant or the landlord?
If a tenant is approved for rental assistance under CERAP, the money will go directly to the landlord
and/or property owner. If the tenant is approved for utility assistance, payment will be made directly
to the utility company.
Landlords Who Accept Payment through CERAP Cannot Evict the Tenant for One Year
• Landlords who accept payment through CERAP must agree to: waive late fees due on arrears paid; not
increase rent for a year; and not evict the tenant for a year unless it is a building with 4 or fewer units
and the landlord intends to use that unit as their primary residence or rent the unit to family.
How can landlords with uncooperative tenants or tenants with arrears who vacated the
premises apply to access the $100 million in state hardship relief funds?
The details about this process are still being discussed at the agency level, and are forthcoming through
regulations.
What recourse is available to the landlord if they have an uncooperative tenant who
refuses to apply for assistance?
A landlord may evict a tenant who:
• Does not file a hardship declaration
• Filed a hardship declaration but is engaging in nuisance-like behavior that interferes with the safety, use,
and enjoyment of other tenants or occupants
• Filed a hardship declaration after the eviction moratorium expires on August 31, 2021, except for rents that
accrued during COVID if the tenant had a recognized hardship during COVID. The tenant will be liable for
their rental arrears/rent owed and can be sued.
A landlord may apply to the $100 million state hardship relief fund without their tenant’s approval if the
tenant is uncooperative. The details of this process are still being developed in regulation.
What happened to the funds left over from the $100 million CARES Act rental assistance
program administered by Homes and Community Renewal (HCR)?
The law governing the administration and implementation of the program provided that HCR must use up
to $100 million for rental assistance from the CARES Act relief funds; approximately $50 million was used for
rental assistance. The remaining unspent funds have been used for other eligible purposes.