Since the beginning of the pandemic, property owner Matthew Haines said he has lost a quarter of a million dollars in rental income from tenants who did not pay him rent.
I’ve never woken up having panic attacks before this year,” said Haines, 53, who owns and manages 253 rental units in the Dallas area through his firm Tangent Group. “All of this is because we can’t control and run our business.”
I’m thoroughly disgusted with it,” he said of the new moratorium, which is in place until October 3. “It is an infringement on my rights as a property owner.”
But every time we think maybe we can get to the other side, they move the goal posts and change the rules,” he said. “I want to run my business. I want to feed my family. I can only do that for so long under these conditions before we end up in a situation where we are failing financially.”
Whiplash for landlords
I didn’t buy stocks and I don’t have a lot of retirement saved,” said Pfaff, who also works as a real estate agent and runs other property-related businesses. “Our whole plan is to get our mortgages paid off and live off rentals as our retirement income.”
“There are so many people like me who have tenants that can’t pay,” Pfaff said. “And their hands are tied.”
“We were disappointed to see we were going back to it after we had agreed that it was ending,” he said. “Now we have a whole new metric and landlords are asking how they follow this and trying to figure out how to comply.”
They are figuring out how to cover 60 more days,” he said. “What is the new math for how much they can recoup from rental assistance?”
Unable to pay vs. refusing to pay
She’s behind about $6,800,” he said. “But I’m not kicking her out over that. We’ll get through it with her.”
We have not filed for eviction on anyone who is working with us,” he said. But he has evicted residents who violated the terms of the lease.
I will not boot people who are trying to do the right thing,” he said of his residents. “We can sustain it for a couple more months, but we shouldn’t have to.”