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Fortune

May 3, 2026

Matthew Haines, owner of the Oakwood Apartments, poses for a photo at the comminty housing location in Arlington, Texas, Tuesday, March 17, 2026.
Fortuneby The Associated Press·May 3, 2026

Landlords who were barred from evicting tenants during COVID are in settlement talks with DOJ to recoup as much as $1.5 billion | Fortune

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Political leancenter
Source quality77/100
Factual ratio85/100
Framing0/100

Just months into the pandemic, Matthew Haines, like landlords across the country, learned he was barred from evicting tenants who didn’t pay their rent under a federal eviction moratoriumthat lasted almost a year — costing him and his investors over $1 million. Now, the 57-year-old Texan is hoping to get some relief. Haines is among more than 1,500 property owners who filed a federal lawsuit arguing the moratorium enacted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention violated the Fifth Amendment by unlawfully denying them compensation. Plaintiffs range from those who lost thousands of dollars to one who lost over $14.5 million. After initially losing in the Court of Federal Claims in 2022, the plaintiffs won on appeal and are now in settlement discussions with the Justice Department. Landlords are hoping to recoup as much as $1.5 billion — a fraction of what the industry lost. “It’s important for us to stand up when a group like the CDC unilaterally, functionally, decides that they have a right to oversee our business,” said Haines, who owns three rental communities with 240 units in Arlington and Irving, Texas. “What I hope that we will accomplish and, to some extent, we already have,

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Lean: 0.000 · Source quality 77/100 · Factual vs opinion 85/100.

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Political lean

Political leancenterSource quality77/100Factual ratio85/100Framing0/100

Methodology

v2-canonical
100
Source diversity
across 1 outlet
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