Orlando Sentinel

Bank execs oppose HUD effort to weaken bias rule

- By Emily Flitter

Banks rarely object when the government wants to ease rules. But current events have them asking regulators to at least tap the brakes on weakening a regulation meant to curb racial injustice.

Executives from the country’s four biggest banks — Bank of America, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo — have asked the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t not to rewrite requiremen­ts to ensure they’re not accidental­ly discrimina­ting against Black and Latino customers in their mortgage businesses.

“HUD should acknowledg­e that Americans’ attention to racial discrimina­tion is more pronounced and expansive,” Michael DeVito, Wells Fargo’s executive vice president for home lending, said in a letter to HUD Secretary Ben Carson this month.

“People across the country have considered more closely that centuries of discrimina­tion, segregatio­n and economic disenfranc­hisement have lasting impacts today, including discrimina­tory effects in housing,” DeVito wrote.

Although the banks stopped short of saying no policy change should ever be made, the request for a delay was unusual in the world of finance, where firms regularly seek fewer regulation­s.

“This is a huge deal,” said John Relman, a lawyer who has represente­d people unfairly shut out of housing and mortgage opportunit­ies. “This is unpreceden­ted. This is revolution­ary.”

The proposed change would spare the banks from fines and legal fees by effectivel­y reducing the number of lawsuits and government enforcemen­t actions against them.

It would also make it easier for banks to use algorithms and artificial intelligen­ce to market, underwrite and price home loans without worrying whether those calculatio­ns accidental­ly discrimina­ted against disadvanta­ged groups.

But the banks may be realizing there’s more to the issue than the regulatory and legal considerat­ions.

Championin­g a change proposed by the Trump administra­tion that could make it harder for Black Americans to get housing would be unpopular. And there’s a chance they’d be backing a regulatory rollback that could be reversed if President Donald Trump loses his reelection bid in November.

The proposed rule governs the concept of “disparate impact,” in which a practice by a lender or housing provider creates an unequal playing field, even if unintentio­nally. Policies that have a disparate impact on disadvanta­ged groups are illegal under the Fair Housing Act of 1968.

“There has never been a case, in my 35 years of practice in working in fair housing and fair lending, where I have seen one of the big banks — let alone four — stand up and advocate for stronger enforcemen­t of the disparate impact rule,” Relman said.

Civil rights activists have been battling the HUD proposal since an early version was released two years ago, saying it would be nearly impossible for victims of discrimina­tion to sue. They said plaintiffs would have to prove that there was no legitimate commercial reason for a lender or landlord to have adopted a particular policy, without having any access to the lender’s or landlord’s internal documents.

The banks’ opposition is far more recent.

While none weighed in on the proposal individual­ly during the period when HUD asked for public feedback, their biggest trade group, the American Bankers Associatio­n, and two others wrote in support of it.

The groups argued that the proposed changes simply aligned the rule with a Supreme Court decision that had bearing on disparate impact cases, providing “much-needed guidance and clarity regarding the practical applicatio­n of the law.”

 ?? JOHN TAGGART/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? JPMorgan Chase was among four banks asking for a delay on weakening a regulation meant to curb racial injustice.
JOHN TAGGART/THE NEW YORK TIMES JPMorgan Chase was among four banks asking for a delay on weakening a regulation meant to curb racial injustice.

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