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moving towards working from home, less of the workforce will be patronizing <br />restaurants, hotels and other retail establishments that employ hourly workers, which <br />is expected to lead to hourly cutbacks and employee terminations. <br />I. As a result of the public health emergency and the precautions recommended by <br />health authorities, many tenants in Santa Ana continue to experience or expect soon <br />to experience sudden and unexpected income loss. <br />The Governor of the State of California has stated that individuals exposed to <br />COVID-19 may be temporarily unable to report to work due to illness caused by <br />COVID-19 or quarantines related to COVID-19, and individuals directly affected by <br />COVID-19 may experience potential loss of income, health care and medical <br />coverage, and ability to pay for housing and basic needs, thereby placing increased <br />demands on already strained regional and local health and safety resources, <br />including shelters and food banks. <br />K. Most, if not all, local schools were and remain closed to prevent further spread of <br />COVID-19. These school closures will cause children to have to remain at home, <br />leading to many parents adjusting their work schedules to take time off work, <br />whether paid or unpaid. Hourly wage earners are unlikely to be paid for time off. <br />The inability to work due to school closures will economically strain those families <br />who cannot afford to take off time from work to stay at home <br />L. The situation is unprecedented and evolving rapidly. Further economic impacts are <br />anticipated, leaving tenants vulnerable to eviction. <br />M. On March 19, 2020, consistent with Executive Order N-28-20, the Director of <br />Emergency Services issued an Executive Order enacting and implementing a <br />moratorium on evictions due to non-payment of rent by residential and commercial <br />tenants impacted by COVID-19. This moratorium remains in effect through May <br />31, 2020 and is intended to promote stability and fairness within the residential and <br />commercial rental market in the City during the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak, and <br />to prevent avoidable homelessness, thereby serving the public peace, health, safety, <br />and public welfare and to enable tenants in the City whose income and ability to <br />work is affected due to COVED-19 to remain in their homes. <br />N. In the interest of public health and safety, as affected by the ongoing emergency <br />caused by the spread of COVID-19, it is necessary to extend the eviction moratorium <br />to ensure renters can remain in their homes and prevent proliferation of <br />homelessness and the further spread of COVID-19. Displacement through eviction <br />creates undue hardship for tenants through additional relocation costs, stress and <br />anxiety, the threat of homelessness due to the lack of alternative housing, and lack of <br />moving services and supplies as stores and businesses close. During the COVID-19 <br />pandemic outbreak, affected tenants who have lost income due to impact on the <br />economy or their employment continue to be at risk of homelessness if they are <br />