The Mercury News

California leads with `crime-free housing' ban

- By Max Griswold Max Griswold is a policy researcher at the Rand Corp. ©2024 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Landlords across the country have been empowered to act as a kind of police force in the name of crime prevention for decades. How? Through local “nuisance property” laws and “crime-free housing” programs that require them to evict tenants for vaguely defined “criminal activities.”

As of Jan. 1, California became the first state in the nation to ban socalled crime-free housing programs. More states should follow suit.

Such laws target low-income and minority renters for eviction and violate their civil rights. That's bad enough. But they also fail to reduce crime.

Cities across the country have been implementi­ng these policies for about 30 years, building on the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988, which stepped up evictions in federally subsidized housing. By 2019, about 2,000 American cities had a crime-free housing program, and 37 of the 40 largest U.S. cities had a nuisance property ordinance.

Even as these policies spread, their efficacy was in doubt. I led a recent analysis of California's crime-free housing policies that found they had no effect on crime. Other researcher­s have found that by driving people into desperatio­n and homelessne­ss, nuisance property ordinances may actually increase property crime.

Crime-free housing policies backfire partly because they treat 911 calls as an indicator of criminal activity. This creates a perverse incentive: For fear of being evicted, tenants don't call authoritie­s when they need them.

This particular­ly harms victims of domestic violence, who may hesitate to seek help from police lest they lose their housing. These policies can also dissuade tenants from seeking medical aid during drug overdoses or mental health crises. Evictions also hamper crime prevention by disrupting community social networks, making it harder for residents to monitor what's going on in their neighborho­ods — a critical element of crime prevention.

More harm than good

My study of California found that city blocks with apartments certified as crime-free saw 21% more evictions than blocks without such housing. Other researcher­s have found that nuisance property ordinances increase eviction filing rates by 16%. In the six months after the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t instituted a “One Strike and You're Out” policy on criminal activity in 1996, reported evictions from public housing surged 40%.

Evictions are deeply harmful in many ways. People who are evicted struggle to find housing again, and tenants removed from public housing are prohibited from receiving housing assistance. That can lead to more homelessne­ss and desperatio­n. Evictions also cause disproport­ionate housing insecurity for children, more unemployme­nt, additional use of emergency room resources, and accidental drug and alcohol deaths.

Legal experts have argued persuasive­ly that punishing people with eviction instead of through criminal justice procedures also denies them due process.

These policies don't require an arrest or conviction or even an indication of crime anywhere near the property. They don't even require a crime.

People have been evicted under crimefree housing policies over kids playing basketball or jumping on a trampoline and because of complaints about barbecues. Tenants can even face severe consequenc­es for the behavior of their guests. One federal court case concerns an Illinois city trying to evict a family because of a burglary committed by a friend of their teenage son who had slept on their couch.

The policies tend to be selectivel­y enforced, with low-income, multifamil­y properties bearing the brunt. This has led the Department of Justice to take action against cities for violations of the Fair Housing Act and other federal laws. In 2022, the San Bernardino County city of Hesperia signed a consent decree with the federal government related to selective applicatio­n of its crime-free housing program. Lawsuits have been filed on similar grounds against cities in Washington, Illinois, Pennsylvan­ia and Minnesota.

The real goal

What is the point of these harmful policies if they aren't reducing crime? Public officials have suggested their real goal is segregatio­n.

A Hesperia official acknowledg­ed that the purpose of the city's crimefree housing program was to remove what he described as “those kind of people” and “improve our demographi­c.” The mayor of Bedford, Ohio, said the city's nuisance property ordinance was about taking “pride in middleclas­s values” and curtailing “urban immigratio­n.” The analysis I led found that cities with crimefree housing programs had larger Black population­s and that the affected apartments were on lowerincom­e blocks with larger Black and Latino population­s.

HUD has issued guidance to cities on how these policies may violate the Fair Housing Act by disproport­ionately evicting women, victims of crime and people with disabiliti­es. But more needs to be done.

Following California's lead, other states should limit evictions under these policies without an arrest or conviction or based on the behavior of nonresiden­ts. Cities should also be required to report the number of evictions resulting from crime-free housing policies and nuisance ordinances. Similar federal policies also need reconsider­ation, including the one-strike policy for public housing and the rules that prevent evicted tenants from obtaining future housing assistance.

These policies and the evictions they cause are at best an ineffectiv­e means of preventing crime. At worst, they're a harmful form of discrimina­tion that leads to more crime and homelessne­ss. Ending them could make all our communitie­s safer.

Harsh policies often backfire, hiking eviction rates and punishing tenants for calling 911 while failing to reduce crime.

 ?? IRFAN KHAN — LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS ?? Los Angeles sheriff's deputies enforce a downtown eviction request on March 29.
IRFAN KHAN — LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS Los Angeles sheriff's deputies enforce a downtown eviction request on March 29.

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