The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Proposed HUD statement lacks anti-discrimina­tion language

Secretary Carson pushes emphasis on ‘self-sufficienc­y.’

- By Tracy Jan

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t, an agency charged with ensuring equal access to housing following generation­s of government-endorsed racial segregatio­n, is considerin­g removing the words “free from discrimina­tion” from its mission statement.

The potential change, which caught the agency’s career staff by surprise, is part of “an effort to align HUD’s mission with the Secretary’s priorities and that of the Administra­tion,” according to a March 5 memo sent to political staff obtained by The Huffington Post.

The proposed statement chops the current 63-word mission on HUD’s website down to 23 words — and puts an emphasis on “self-sufficienc­y,” a mantra that HUD Secretary Ben Carson has been touting in public appearance­s. The agency has confirmed the memo’s authentici­ty and said the new statement has not been finalized.

It reads: “HUD’s mission is to ensure Americans have access to fair, affordable housing and opportunit­ies to achieve self-sufficienc­y, thereby strengthen­ing our communitie­s and nation.”

Also gone are references to “inclusive communitie­s,” consumer protection­s, and “quality” homes for all.

“It’s a significan­t symbolic shift,” said one longtime HUD employee who asked not to be identified out of fear of retaliatio­n. “It’s the tip of the iceberg in terms of the kinds of changes they are making.

This administra­tion has not included career people in these decisions.”

Amy Thompson, HUD’s assistant secretary for public affairs, said in her memo that the working statement had been developed with input from Carson and others. She also asked political staff for feedback.

Lynne Patton, who Trump has charged with running one of the agency’s largest regional offices, overseeing New York and New Jersey, said that changes to the mission statement has been in the works for a couple of months. Patton said she personally solicited ideas from both career and political appointees in her region and submitted draft versions to the agency’s headquarte­rs, and considers it to be a work in progress.

“It’s no secret that empowering people with the tools to ascend the economic ladder to self-sufficienc­y is one of the main missions of both

this administra­tion and Secretary Carson,” Patton said. “Leadership simply wanted a motto that better reflects that goal too.”

Carson launched a new initiative in December to put so-called EnVision Centers near public housing developmen­ts to foster self-sufficienc­y among the poor. The centers were to focus on character and leadership, educationa­l advancemen­t, economic empowermen­t and health and wellness. The New York Times reported this week that potential donors were skeptical that Carson, a retired neurosurge­on with no profession­al experience in housing, could pull it off.

Carson in the past has criticized federal efforts to desegregat­e America’s neighborho­ods as “social engineerin­g.” He has delayed implementi­ng an Obama-era rule requiring communitie­s seeking HUD funding to study the impediment­s to fair housing

in their areas, and compared such attempts to integrate neighborho­ods to the “failed social experiment” of mandated school busing.

Carson also tried to delay implementi­ng an Obama-era rule that would give low-income families in two dozen metro regions greater access to housing in more affluent neighborho­ods, where they would benefit from better schools, lower crime rates and more job opportunit­ies. But a federal judge ordered HUD to comply starting January.

Raffi Williams, an agency spokesman, characteri­zed the proposed changes to HUD’s mission statement as “modest” in an effort to articulate the agency’s work in a “clear and concise” way.

HUD’s mission revamp follows a similar effort at the U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, which last month removed “nation of immigrants” from its mission statement.

 ?? NEW YORK TIMES 2017 ?? HUD Secretary Ben Carson (center) tours the Columbus Choice Neighborho­ods in April. A proposed mission statement for his department reads: “HUD’s mission is to ensure Americans have access to fair, affordable housing and opportunit­ies to achieve...
NEW YORK TIMES 2017 HUD Secretary Ben Carson (center) tours the Columbus Choice Neighborho­ods in April. A proposed mission statement for his department reads: “HUD’s mission is to ensure Americans have access to fair, affordable housing and opportunit­ies to achieve...

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