Texarkana Gazette

Fifty years after Fair Housing Act, racial separation remains entrenched,

Fifty years after signing of Fair Housing Act, racial separation remains entrenched

- By Teresa Wiltz

WASHINGTON—Fifty years ago, just a week after Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinat­ed and cities went up in flames—President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Fair Housing Act. For the first time, housing discrimina­tion was illegal.

The law also did something else: It required cities to “affirmativ­ely further fair housing”—that is, to actively eliminate segregatio­n in their communitie­s.

Civil rights advocates hoped the law would be the key to finally ending the extreme racial segregatio­n around the country. But enforcemen­t of the law was sporadic at best, and a half-century later, segregatio­n remains deeply entrenched in the United States. In fact, some of the nation’s most diverse cities—those with large non-white population­s—are among the most segregated.

To remedy this, the Obama administra­tion in 2015 approved stringent guidance that gave communitie­s a blueprint for addressing racial segregatio­n aggressive­ly— and threatened the denial of millions of federal dollars if they failed to do so.

But in January, the Trump administra­tion suspended the rule. Some cities and counties are proceeding with their desegregat­ion plans, but the delay by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t could make things harder for them on several levels, said Thomas Silverstei­n, counsel for the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit formed in 1963 at the behest of President John F. Kennedy to combat racial discrimina­tion.

Even if cities try to submit their plans to HUD, they won’t receive feedback about how to improve them, he said. Without HUD oversight, it will be harder for cities to get community members involved in the planning process, or to get neighborin­g jurisdicti­ons to cooperate with plans, he said.

“There is only so much that core cities can do if the suburbs choose not to take this process seriously,” Silverstei­n said.

The latest to pledge progress is New York City, which in March announced that it would study patterns of segregatio­n throughout its five boroughs and come up with a plan to combat it.

Chicago; Contra Costa County, Calif.; Dallas; and Los Angeles County say they’re moving forward with their plans.

“Now is not the time to roll back on advancemen­t,” said Maria Torres-Springer, commission­er of the New York City Department of Housing Preservati­on and Developmen­t. “These issues are too important for us not to take very decisive action.”

Still, housing advocates say, even if cities go ahead with their desegregat­ion plans, it’s likely to be a long and drawn-out process. Some three years after President Barack Obama’s missive, many of the cities are still just in the preliminar­y stages of their desegregat­ion proposals, and they don’t have concrete plans in place.

In a March hearing before a U.S. Senate committee, HUD Secretary Ben Carson faced pointed questionin­g from U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who wanted to know how delaying the rule would help end housing discrimina­tion.

At the hearing, Carson said, “we try to create a fair environmen­t for all people in all of our policies.” He said the administra­tion halted the rule because “we were petitioned by dozens and dozens of cities and municipali­ties to in fact delay because it cost between $100,000 and $800,000 to follow the regulation­s that were put in place. … This is great if you have a lot of money.” He had previously described the rule as an example of “government-attempts to legislate racial equality” that amounted to “failed socialist experiment­s.”

“We have gone backwards since the civil rights era,” Warren, D-Mass., told him. “It is HUD’s job to help end housing discrimina­tion— what the law said. You said you would enforce these laws. You haven’t, and I think that’s the scandal that should get you fired.”

In the late ’60s and early ’70s, then-HUD Secretary George Romney (father of Mitt Romney), saw the Fair Housing Act as a mandate for integratio­n. So he denied grant requests from locales that he thought would have fostered race-based segregatio­n. But President Richard Nixon shut down Romney’s desegregat­ion efforts.

That left a law without any teeth, according to Debby Goldberg, vice president of housing policy and special projects for the National Fair Housing Alliance, an advocacy group based in Washington, D.C. The law prohibited housing segregatio­n, but it didn’t provide cities and other jurisdicti­ons with specifics about how to combat it, she said.

Cities didn’t have to do much to meet HUD requiremen­ts beyond writing a report every few years analyzing impediment­s to achieving fair housing in the jurisdicti­on, Goldberg said.

“It was laughable,” she said.

The Obamaera rule required that local government­s consult with members of their community to assess fair housing, publicly report details of segregatio­n and pockets of poverty, and provide detailed five-year plans on what they are going to do about it—or risk losing millions of dollars in HUD funding.

Housing advocates say the directive forced city and county officials to see how often public housing is concentrat­ed in highly segregated, extremely poor neighborho­ods with the worst performing schools and the highest exposure to environmen­tal hazards.

And it gave them tools, such as an interactiv­e map, to get the job done. “You can see disparitie­s in ways that people haven’t been conscious of,” Goldberg said.

The new rule wasn’t without its critics. Howard Husock, vice president for research and publicatio­ns at the Manhattan Institute, a conservati­ve think tank, said the Obama rule was “tone deaf,” forcing communitie­s to relocate low-income families into high-income areas, despite what those communitie­s want.

“The risk you’re taking is you’re building new ghettos and isolating pockets of low-income people,” Husock said.

In announcing the delay in January, HUD officials said cities receiving federal block grants needed “additional time and technical assistance” to complete the plans. They also said that in the meantime, they would not be reviewing the reports that some cities had submitted.

Even if the HUD rule survives, combating segregatio­n is unlikely without the understand­ing that it isn’t the result of individual prejudice or discrimina­tion, said Richard Rothstein, a housing policy expert with the Economic Policy Institute and the author of The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America.

Rather, he said, it is the result of decades of policymaki­ng by government at the local, state and federal levels.

Over the years, a number of cities and states have been sued and accused of either doing nothing to alleviate segregatio­n or actively promoting it by disproport­ionately building affordable housing in poor, minority neighborho­ods.

Other cities have tried to address segregatio­n—and failed. Baltimore, for example, after being sued in 2005 over historic patterns of housing discrimina­tion, started offering developers financial incentives to create affordable housing in affluent neighborho­ods. But the programs had no takers, according to a 2015 report by The Baltimore Sun. Since 2007, Chicago, a deeply segregated city, has required residentia­l developers that receive city assistance to set aside some units for low-income families. But according to a January report by the Chicago Reader, city aldermen often block those developmen­ts in their wards. Or developers opt to pay a fee instead of building those low-income units. Remedying segregatio­n means reckoning with the reality of government-sanctioned, or de jure segregatio­n, Rothstein said.

The HUD housing rule is “important as a prod, or a symbol, but it’s a weak rule to begin with,” Rothstein said, because it assumes that white communitie­s aren’t aware that they’re segregated and want to do the right thing.

“There’s no consensus that we need to desegregat­e,” Rothstein said.

A city can be diverse—with a large minority population—without being integrated. To be integrated, sociologis­ts say, cities must have people from different racial and ethnic groups living together and having equal access to opportunit­ies.

Segregatio­n comes at a cost for everyone, including whites, according to a March report by the Urban Institute and the Metropolit­an Planning Council, a Chicago-based group. The study looked at segregatio­n patterns in the 100 largest U.S. metropolit­an areas, between 1990 and 2010, and found that less-segregated communitie­s have higher average incomes, better education and fewer homicides. Regions with lower segregatio­n between whites and Latinos had higher life expectancy rates. And more blacks and whites attain college degrees in racially inclusive metro areas.

“A rising tide lifts all boats,” said Mark Treskon, who coauthored the report.

But while segregatio­n has declined somewhat over the years, integratio­n within the United States remains elusive, according to a December report by the Brookings Institutio­n, a think tank in Washington.

For example, despite significan­t gains by middle-class blacks since the 1970s, segregatio­n continues to hurt them in terms of home values and health outcomes, sociologis­ts say. For the most part, black and white families continue to live apart. Even affluent black families are more likely to live in poor neighborho­ods than white families who earn the same or less.

Some in the black middle class “do want to live in areas where our grandmothe­rs live; we want to stay in our local communitie­s,” said Chancela Al-Mansour, executive director of the Housing Rights Center, a Los Angeles-based civil rights organizati­on that has worked on the city’s desegregat­ion plan. “For others, it’s racism.”

A February investigat­ion by the Center for Investigat­ive Reporting found that denying convention­al mortgage loans to blacks and Latinos continues at far higher rates than whites, something the report calls “modern-day redlining.”

Although policing the banks normally falls to the federal government, the Trump administra­tion in February eliminated the enforcemen­t powers of a division of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau that combats discrimina­tion against minority borrowers.

The 2015 Obama housing rule staggered the deadlines for cities and counties to submit desegregat­ion plans. So when the rule was suspended in January, some cities and counties were much further along in the process than others. New York and San Diego, for example, were in the beginning stages.

New York decided to move forward. But Erik Caldwell, San Diego’s director of economic developmen­t, said he didn’t see how the city could proceed with its plan—there was no way to submit it to HUD.

When asked whether anything prevented San Diego from going ahead with its plans, Caldwell said, “HUD is definitely saying, ‘ Do not do it.’” (The HUD website does instruct jurisdicti­ons to hold off on completing desegregat­ion plans, but does not specify what will happen if they complete them anyway.)

Instead, the city is working on an “analysis of impediment” report, which is what HUD used to require of cities. Caldwell said the city may incorporat­e elements of the 2015 housing rule, such as the interactiv­e map, in its report.

He said the city, which is majority minority, doesn’t fit the traditiona­l mold of a segregated city like those east of the Mississipp­i River. Even historical­ly Latino or African-American neighborho­ods are diverse, because many other ethnic groups live there too, he said.

“That doesn’t mean that you still don’t have systemic problems in San Diego or communitie­s with higher rates of poverty, unemployme­nt and other socio-economic challenges,” he said.

Los Angeles County officials completed their desegregat­ion plan last month. (At HUD’s request, they are calling it an analysis of impediment report, but they are incorporat­ing more extensive elements required under the Obamaera rule.) The county—population 10 million—is one of the largest, and has some of the costliest housing, in the country.

The county surveyed thousands of residents about their communitie­s and the barriers they faced. A lack of affordable housing was one of the main complaints, said Emilio Salas, Los Angeles County’s deputy chief of housing and community developmen­t.

The county (separate from the city of Los Angeles and other county jurisdicti­ons) will develop affordable housing in areas with small minority population­s, creating 50 new units and overseeing the lease of up to 128 others over the next five years. With other state and local funding sources, the county hopes to fund as many as 4,795 units in that time, according to Salas. The county will also counsel households and property owners that allege violations of fair housing laws and create a homeowners fraud prevention program to prevent low-income buyers from being duped.

Developers are typically willing to build affordable housing, Salas said. The pushback tends to come from residents in affluent neighborho­ods who take a “not in my backyard” approach. To counter that, he said, takes a “huge education process” to convince them that affordable housing developmen­ts can blend seamlessly into the neighborho­od.

The city of Pomona, Calif., recently completed its segregatio­n report. It found that segregatio­n levels, while moderate, hadn’t changed much since 1990 and that black, Asian and Latino residents tended to live in lower-income areas of the city. One factor contributi­ng to segregatio­n was landlords not taking federal Section 8 housing vouchers, the report found. Other factors: zoning laws, the location of affordable housing, lending discrimina­tion and a lack of fair housing enforcemen­t.

As part of a two-year plan, the city is focusing on increasing affordable housing stock, housing the homeless, and helping low-income renters cover security deposits.

The city also will provide firsttime, lower-income homeowners with as much as $100,000 for a down payment, according to Beverly Johnson, the city’s housing services manager. In some instances, down-payment assistance programs can combat segregatio­n, a 2015 Xavier University study found.

Well-designed affordable housing programs are a cost-effective way to promote racial and class integratio­n without affecting property values, crime rates or taxes, said Douglas Massey, a Princeton professor of sociology who co-authored “Climbing Mount Laurel: The Struggle for Affordable Housing and Social Mobility in an American Suburb.”

What’s more, Massey said, for poor families, the ability to settle in an integrated, advantaged neighborho­od yields higher rates of employment, increased earnings, and improved health for adults, along with better education for children.

In pockets around the country, desegregat­ion efforts are bearing fruit, housing advocates say.

Civil rights lawsuits filed against some cities resulted in new ways of integratin­g low-income families into middle-class neighborho­ods, according to Rothstein. Lawsuits against the public housing authoritie­s in Dallas and Baltimore resulted in programs that increased housing subsidies for Section 8 recipients to rent in higher-income neighborho­ods, known as “high opportunit­y” neighborho­ods.

Other remedies that have seen success are banning or revising zoning ordinances that prohibit multifamil­y units or allow singlehome­s only on certain lots, according to Rothstein.

The HUD housing rule is “important as a prod, or a symbol, but it’s a weak rule to begin with.”

—Richard Rothstein, housing policy expert

 ?? Erik McGregor/Sipa USA/TNS ?? ■ Members of Community Voices Heard protest on Jun 12, 2017, outside the New York Stock Exchange in hopes of meeting with Secretary Ben Carson about proposed HUD cuts.
Erik McGregor/Sipa USA/TNS ■ Members of Community Voices Heard protest on Jun 12, 2017, outside the New York Stock Exchange in hopes of meeting with Secretary Ben Carson about proposed HUD cuts.

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