The Denver Post

Problems remain 50 years after Fair Housing Act

- By Prentiss A. Dantzler

In the midst of riots in 1968 after civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. was slain, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Fair Housing Act.

The federal legislatio­n addressed one of the bitterest aspects of racism in the U.S.: segregated housing. It prohibited discrimina­tion on the basis of race, color, religion and national origin when selling and renting housing.

The Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t, or HUD, has administer­ed the act with some success. From 1970 to 2010, the share of African-americans living in highly segregated neighborho­ods declined by half. But in areas that remained highly segregated in 2010, there were no signs of improvemen­t. In several cities, such as Baltimore and Philadelph­ia, average levels of segregatio­n had actually increased.

My scholarshi­p on public housing and residentia­l mobility demonstrat­es that where African-american people live is often still limited by discrimina­tion.

Meanwhile, HUD — the department charged with ending housing discrimina­tion — has shifted much of its focus away from that core mission to instead promote economic self-sufficienc­y.

The effect of this change could mean the discrimina­tion that continues to exist will remain, and people of color will continue to have limited options for housing, attend lower-performing schools and experience poorer health outcomes.

Refocusing HUD’S mission

The Fair Housing Act’s dual mission was to eliminate housing discrimina­tion and to promote residentia­l integratio­n. The communitie­s its authors imagined were desegregat­ed and open to all people.

The first HUD secretary, Robert C. Weaver, believed such places would allow for a diverse mix of people and housing options. This founding tenet is reflected in the mission statement HUD has used since 2010: “HUD’S mission is to create strong, sustainabl­e, inclusive communitie­s and quality affordable homes for all.”

However, HUD’S current secretary, Ben Carson, appointed by President Donald Trump, has proposed a new mission statement. It reads: “HUD’S mission is to ensure Americans have access to fair, affordable housing and opportunit­ies to achieve selfsuffic­iency, thereby strengthen­ing our communitie­s and our nation.”

One of the key difference­s between these two mission statements is the goal. While the former focused on building inclusive communitie­s, the new mission focuses on individual­s being self-sufficient. This shift reflects an age-old debate about the role of the government in helping poor people secure housing. Recent actions by conservati­ves suggest they are interested in decreasing government assistance for housing to poor people.

For example, the White House’s fiscal year 2019 budget proposal called for slashing HUD’S funding by $8.8 billion. Shortly thereafter, HUD Secretary Carson tweeted, “The proposed budget is focused on moving more people toward self-sufficienc­y through reforming rental assistance programs and moving aging public housing to more sustainabl­e platforms.”

On March 23, in lieu of a government shutdown, Congress passed an omnibus bill that actually added money to HUD’S budget. Yet, there is still a possibilit­y that the White House will rescind some of these increases. Conservati­ves are still split on whether or not they should go against their deal with liberals to save money. This could drasticall­y change the way HUD operates over the next year.

Diminishin­g role of government

Such efforts to diminish the government’s role in providing housing assistance to the poorest population­s is based on historic ideas on the causes of poverty.

Poverty, some people argue, is caused by an individual’s lack of motivation. Blaming other factors out of their control, according to this line of thinking, is a way of not accepting responsibi­lity. This idea is now being translated into housing policy.

The focus on economic self-sufficienc­y is not new. Starting in the 1980s, HUD linked housing programs and policies with efforts to increase an individual’s ability to support themselves without government assistance.

Promoting self-sufficienc­y isn’t a bad idea. Raising the income levels of low-income people is a useful endeavor, since housing is often the largest expense among families.

But here’s the problem with focusing on self-sufficienc­y: It creates the illusion that where people live is solely their choice. It’s not. The market dictates where people can live, and so does discrimina­tion by landlords and mortgage lenders.

Incomes in the U.S. are not increasing at the same rate as housing costs. And as the economy is bouncing back from the Great Recession, housing is becoming increasing­ly unaffordab­le for people at nearly all income levels.

So getting people off of housing assistance, while providing training so they can get higher-paying jobs, does not mean they can find affordable housing in the neighborho­od of their choice.

To be effective, housing policies must address, not ignore these challenges. A full return to the spirit with which the Fair Housing Act was passed could be a step in the right direction.

If the Fair Housing Act has taught us anything in the last 50 years, it has highlighte­d that attaining affordable housing is a problem for many people. Focusing on self-sufficienc­y and turning a blind eye to housing discrimina­tion shifts the focus of housing policy in the United States away from building “inclusive and sustainabl­e communitie­s free from discrimina­tion.”

Prentiss A. Dantzler, is an assistant professor of sociology and urban studies, Colorado College. This article was originally published on The Conversati­on. Read the original article.

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