New York Post

Housing ‘ Equality’

Next front in war on suburbs

- BETSY McCAUGHEY

AN African-American millionair­e can buy a home in any expensive suburb. Color is no longer a barrier.

Despite this progress, President Obama’s Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t is accusing expensive towns of racism, simply because most minorities can’t afford to live there.

Westcheste­r County has struggled under a federal monitor since 2009 to compel the county to build multiunit affordable housing in the county’s most expensive areas.

Hillary Clinton claims to be a warrior against inequality. But her adopted hometown of Chappaqua is battling HUD’s demands— and that means it’s fighting the man believed to top Hillary’s veep shortlist, HUD Secretary Julian Castro.

The legal war in Hillary’s backyard is a preview. HUD’s soon to be released regulation, in the works since 2013, will compel affluent suburbs across the nation to build more highdensit­y, lowincome housing, plus sewers, water lines, bus routes and other changes needed to support it.

Obama’s social engineers will eliminate local zoning requiremen­ts to achieve what the HUD rule calls “inclusive communitie­s.” Property values be damned.

If you’ve worked hard to afford a home in an affluent neighborho­od of singlefami­ly houses, you have a lot to lose under this HUD plan.

The HUD rule twists the original and laudable intent of the Fair Housing Act of 1968, which is to bar housing discrimina­tion.

The new rule states towns must “affirmativ­ely further” diversity. If lowincome minorities want to move to a town but can’t afford it, the town must “provide adequate support to make their choice viable.”

Whether HUD’s plan goes forward will depend largely on how the Supreme Court rules in Texas Dept. of Housing v. Inclusive Communitie­s Project, a lawsuit brought to demand public housing be located in wealthy Dallas suburbs.

By the end of June, the court will decide whether Texas is guilty of racism for putting public housing in lowerincom­e areas of Dallas, close to existing public transporta­tion, rather than in costly areas.

Meanwhile, Republican­s in Congress are trying to halt HUD’s new plan by depriving it of funding.

To do that, the House passed an amendment sponsored by Arizona Rep. Paul Gosar on June 11, but its prospects for success in the Senate are uncertain.

HUD’s plan is frightenin­g. Phase one will collect data on poverty, school-testing scores and publictran­sit sites from every Census division to spot towns that have too few poor residents.

If a town’s guilty, HUD will charge racism and demand more public housing.

Race is being cynically exploited by officials as a pretext to accomplish something else entirely — economic integratio­n.

HUD’s plan is a power grab. Nothing in the Constituti­on empowers the federal government to do this. Zoning is a local power. If the justices and Congress fail to stop HUD’s scheme, expect Hillary “Rodham Hood” Clinton to champion it ( with a carveout for Chappaqua, of course).

Short of taxing the rich to death, these inequality warriors would like nothing better than to prevent the rich from enjoying the suburbs, far from urban woes.

Betsy McCaughey is a senior fellow at the London Center for Policy Research.

 ??  ?? Hillary Clinton talks with Julian Castro — now HUD secretary and her most likely running mate— in March.
Hillary Clinton talks with Julian Castro — now HUD secretary and her most likely running mate— in March.
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