The Mercury News

Housing advocates want equity provisions in infrastruc­ture bill

- By Caitlin Reilly

Witnesses urged senators to bake provisions to ensure equity into President Joe Biden’s proposed infrastruc­ture package or they would risk repeating a history of public investment­s that locked African Americans and minorities out of buying homes and building wealth.

Federal policies, including provisions of the New Deal and a 1950s law to expand and build highways, worsened segregatio­n and drove divestment from Black and minority communitie­s, witnesses said Tuesday during a Senate Banking Committee hearing on racial discrimina­tion in housing.

Senate Banking Chairman Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, asked witnesses how to fairly implement future infrastruc­ture packages, such as the one Biden introduced last month. Biden’s proposal includes $213 billion to build and rehabilita­te affordable housing units.

Past infrastruc­ture investment­s, including the creation of the Federal Housing Administra­tion and constructi­on of the federal highway system, created jobs and drove economic growth, but only for some communitie­s, Brown said.

“They explicitly, as we know, excluded or directly harmed lower-wealth communitie­s and communitie­s of color,” Brown said. “How do we ensure that new investment­s in infrastruc­ture help promote broad-based economic growth while addressing economic and racial inequaliti­es and equities?”

Lisa Rice, president of the National Fair Housing

Alliance, said lawmakers must acknowledg­e that housing is part of infrastruc­ture.

“When you think of all of the infrastruc­ture bills that the nation has passed in the past, those infrastruc­ture bills had a great impact on people’s ability to sustain their housing,” she said. “It disrupted homeowners­hip opportunit­ies for many communitie­s of color and it created, actually helped create, residentia­l segregatio­n.”

Lawmakers should apply a “patina of equity” to the entire infrastruc­ture package, Rice said, adding that a fair housing mandate should be applied to the package to ensure programs and investment­s are doled out equitably.

“The infrastruc­ture bill has to include both supply-side and demand-side provisions,” she said. “You can’t just build up housing opportunit­ies without ensuring that people are going to be able to adequately access them.”

“If we exclude the reality that families of color are not in the same position because of historical and discrimina­tory practices to access affordable housing options, then we’re going to be exacerbati­ng inequality,” she said.

Richard Rothstein, author of “The Color of Law” and senior fellow emeritus at the NAACP Legal Defense and Educationa­l Fund, said a “disparate impact standard” should be applied to the infrastruc­ture package to ensure there aren’t unintended negative consequenc­es for African Americans and other minority racial and ethnic groups.

Rothstein cited the 2015 decision to abandon a $2.9 billion plan to establish another light rail line in Baltimore, Md., and funnel the state funds allocated to the project into roads in the predominan­tly white communitie­s surroundin­g the city as a policy decision that had a disparate racial impact.

The project would have brought good jobs, retail and housing opportunit­ies to lowincome, predominan­tly Black neighborho­ods in Baltimore and instead built two highways to speed white commuters in and out of the city center, Rothstein said.

“That had a disparate impact on African Americans. That policy choice wasn’t intended as a racially explicit policy, but we need to impose a disparate impact standard on it and on all the policies that we enact,” he said. “We should legislate that disparate impact standard into the Fair Housing Act because leaving it to rulemaking, as we’ve seen over the last decade, is subject to politiciza­tion and to repeal.”

The Obama administra­tion investigat­ed whether Maryland Republican Gov. Larry Hogan’s decision to scuttle the light rail project violated the 1964 civil rights law, but President Donald Trump closed the review without releasing findings.

Ranking member Patrick J. Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia and other Republican­s likewise blamed federal policies for entrenchin­g segregatio­n and exacerbati­ng the racial gap in homeowners­hip, though they proposed different solutions.

“This history shows us that when it comes to housing in America, including housing discrimina­tion, government has been the problem, not the solution,” Toomey said. “Unfortunat­ely, the Biden administra­tion does not seem to have learned this lesson. Its multi-trillion dollar welfare plan, with a bit of infrastruc­ture sprinkled in, seems designed to repeat many of the mistakes of the New Deal and Great Society.”

Toomey in particular criticized the proposed $40 billion for repairs to public housing.

“Housing projects are notorious concentrat­ions of poverty, crime and other social ills,” he said. “More public housing will only commit more Americans to a substandar­d living arrangemen­t and increase government dependency.”

Howard Husock, adjunct fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, said in his testimony that public housing prevented Black families from building wealth through homeowners­hip. Rather than repairing housing projects, the government should sell off the valuable land they sit on and share profits with long-time residents, he said.

“Rather than giving people a housing voucher and saying, try to use it somewhere, let’s pay them for exactly the kind of wealth accumulati­on they missed out on for 40 years,” he said.

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