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Evictions in North Carolina have returned to pre-pandemic levels. But have tenants learned how to protect themselves?

Photo courtesy - Shutterstock
Photo courtesy - Shutterstock
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According to data available from the  North Carolina Judicial branch, landlords have filed nearly as many evictions in the last fiscal year as they did before the pandemic in 2018 and 2019. There hasn’t been a post-Covid bump the way some advocates feared.

But one statistic has gone up - 1.9% of North Carolinians facing eviction appealed last year compared to 5.3% appealing this year. .

This story was reported and written by WHQR

North Carolina Legal Aid attorney Bradley Setzer says those numbers might be an indication of the hot housing market, because landlords are evicting tenants in order to sell a property.

“So you may be seeing more evictions of people who have the wherewithal and the financial means to file an appeal, pay their rent bond, maybe hire an attorney," he said.

That would mean that a tenant, by appealing, gets more wiggle room in their move-out date. And if they’re out before their court date, they may not even get an eviction on their record.

But the appeals may also indicate that tenants learned more about their rights during the eviction moratorium.

“What we're seeing now is that those tools can be used in limited function, and not have a terrible effect after the fact if everything goes back to the way it was," he said. "That's kind of what you would want, I'd expect from the tools that were used on the eviction moratorium.”

Setzer says any tenants facing eviction can seek pro bono legal help at legalaidnc.org.