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<br /> <br />from the average two weeks prior. In San Leandro, as of February 9, 2023, there have been <br />1,956 probable cases of COVID-19 infection; and <br />WHEREAS, COVID-19 will remain unpredictable, especially as variants emerge, as reported in <br />CNRS News on April 10, 2022, quoting Samuel Alizon, a specialist in the modelling of infectious <br />diseases, “Although some underlying trends are becoming apparent, the progression of variants <br />remains largely unpredictable. The Alpha strain appeared when most epidemiologists thought <br />that the evolution of SARS-CoV-2 was only neutral. At a time when there were fears that <br />mutants of Alpha might surface and escape immunity, Delta emerged and replaced it. And <br />when monitoring focused on Delta clusters carrying worrying mutations, Omicron took over <br />even more rapidly; and <br />WHEREAS, despite widespread availability of vaccines and that 87.7% of individuals in San <br />Leandro have received the primary vaccine series, and 62.7% have received the primary series <br />and both vaccine boosters, only 31.4% of San Leandro residents are estimated to have received <br />the bivalent booster, which may affect infection rates especially if sub-variants are resistant to <br />the primary and secondary dosages; and <br />WHEREAS, this Ordinance is a temporary moratorium intended to promote stability and <br />fairness within the residential rental market in the City as residents continue to recover from <br />and address the effects on daily life as COVID-19 shifts from pandemic to endemic, thereby <br />preserving the public peace, health, safety, and welfare by enabling tenants in the City whose <br />incomes and ability to work are affected by COVID-19 to remain in their homes and to prevent <br />avoidable homelessness; and <br />WHEREAS, according to the City’s consultant, Centro Legal de La Raza (Centro Legal), reports by <br />San Leandro tenants of threats of displacement, which included unlawful detainer, unable to <br />pay rent, notice of termination of tenancy, COVID-19 impacts, landlord harassment, rent <br />increase, repairs necessary for health or safety, and unfair or illegal behavior by the landlord <br />went from 45 in 2019, to 39 in 2020, to 97 in 2021, to 102 in 2022; and <br />WHEREAS, Centro Legal reports that the unplanned strain on household finances due to the <br />necessity of repaying accumulated rent because of COVID-19 can cause stress and anxiety to <br />those impacted, and can cause families to skip meals and basic food purchases, ration <br />medications, and cease purchasing other goods and services that are vital for maintaining their <br />health and safety; and <br />WHEREAS, the City Council desires to extend the eviction moratorium to February 28, 2024, a <br />date certain; and <br />WHEREAS, the additional time provided by this ordinance related to temporary eviction <br />protection and for repayment of accumulated unpaid rent due to the pandemic will most likely <br />allow families to remain in their homes and prevent avoidable homelessness, which would <br />reduce impacts on already strained city and county homeless shelters and social services <br />dedicated to serving the unhoused; and