Columbia Residential ranked in the 98th percentile of corporate evictors in 2021

Washington, D.C. – Raphael Warnock has been trying to sidestep blame for the evictions that happened in a low-income housing unit owned by Ebenezer Baptist Church.  His go-to excuse is that he did not oversee the day-to-day management of the building. 

This is true. Raphael Warnock hired one of the nation’s top eviction filers to do his dirty work for him:

Warnock’s Church Tapped One of the Nation’s Leading Eviction Filers To Manage Low-Income Apartment

By: Andrew Kerr

Washington Free Beacon

Few corporate landlords sought to evict more residents in 2021 than the company Sen. Raphael Warnock’s (D., Ga.) church partnered with to manage its low-income apartment building.

Columbia Residential manages 49 apartments in the Atlanta area, including Columbia Tower at MLK Village, a low-income apartment building owned by Ebenezer Baptist Church, where Warnock serves as senior pastor. Out of 1,587 corporate landlords across the country, only 30 filed more eviction lawsuits in 2021 than Columbia Residential, records show. The property management company filed 605 eviction actions against its residents in 2021, according to a dataset cited by House Select Committee on the Coronavirus Crisis chairman Rep. James Clyburn (D., Ga.).

As Warnock’s opponent in the upcoming Senate race, Herschel Walker, has seized on the storyline, highlighting the evictions and squalid conditions at the building, Warnock has sought to distance himself from Columbia’s aggressive eviction practices. He told reporters on Tuesday he has no involvement in day-to-day matters and said—despite evidence to the contrary—that no evictions have been carried out at the apartment building. In fact, 15 eviction lawsuits have been filed against residents of the building since the start of the pandemic, one for just $28.55 in past-due rent. Fulton County marshals have carried out two court-ordered writs of possession at the property since 2020, and one resident accused the building in September of changing his locks and temporarily evicting him without notice.

Some dispossessory notices filed against residents of the building during the pandemic were ultimately dropped, but only after residents paid penalties far greater than their monthly rent. Columbia Tower resident Phillip White, for example, told the Free Beacon he had to pay $325 in fees before Columbia Residential dropped its attempt to evict him in September 2021 for $179 in past-due rent.

Columbia Residential has accelerated its rate of filing dispossessory notices in 2022. The company has filed 613 eviction actions in court against residents in 39 of its Atlanta-based properties so far this year, 318 of which remain open as of Sunday. Ebenezer tapped Columbia Residential to manage Columbia Tower “on its behalf,” the property management company told the Washington Free Beacon.

Read More at The Washington Free Beacon

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