The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

U.S. housing rule subject of federal suit against Trump administra­tion

- By Jacqueline Rabe Thomas CTMIRROR.ORG

A coalition of state and national civil rights groups filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t in federal court on Thursday, claiming that a new Trump administra­tion rule will make it much more difficult to challenge unfair housing practices in Connecticu­t and Rhode Island.

The rule, set to go into effect on Monday, “would immediatel­y render it virtually impossible for most victims of discrimina­tion to prevail in HUD’s administra­tive enforcemen­t process,” reads the 66-page lawsuit filed by Connecticu­t’s Open Communitie­s Alliance and SouthCoast Fair Housing of Massachuse­tts and Rhode Island.

Attorneys from the national American Civil Liberties Union and others will represent those bringing the case.

At issue are the local policies that restrict how Section 8 housing vouchers are used. Officially called Housing Choice Vouchers, the subsidies were supposed to help poor people find decent housing outside underserve­d communitie­s,

but a recent investigat­ion by the Connecticu­t Mirror and ProPublica found recipients in Connecticu­t struggle to use their vouchers outside segregated neighborho­ods because of a lack of available housing within their budget elsewhere or landlords refusing to rent to voucher holders.

Bureaucrat­ic red tape in Connecticu­t serves as a major barrier to giving these families a choice about where to live since state law gives local housing authoritie­s in each of the state’s 169 municipali­ties control of the overwhelmi­ng majority of the 33,000 federal vouchers used each month in Connecticu­t.

As a result, four out of every five families who get help paying their rent from a Section 8 voucher live in racially isolated communitie­s and over half in neighborho­ods with extreme poverty – the result of the program’s failure to achieve one of its key goals of giving families a chance to live in safer communitie­s with better schools.

In August, a complaint was filed against Gov. Ned Lamont and his housing commission­er, challengin­g the laws that contribute to the imbalance. But the lawyers now expect that complaint to be dismissed, because the new Trump rule will make it much

harder to overturn laws and policies that seem race-neutral but have a “disparate impact” on historical­ly disadvanta­ged population­s. It complicate­s the process by shifting the burden and raising the bar to prove a policy has a discrimina­tory affect.

President Donald Trump has explained on Twitter multiple times his reasoning for scaling back this and other fair housing rules, playing on racist fears of terrorized suburbs as he attempts to land the suburban vote.

“I am happy to inform all of the people living their Suburban Lifestyle Dream that you will no longer be bothered or financiall­y hurt by having low income housing built in your neighborho­od,” he Tweeted in July. “Your housing prices will go up based on the market, and crime will go down.”

“The notion that, except in very limited circumstan­ces, [Public Housing Authoritie­s] cannot make affordable housing opportunit­ies available to Black and Latino families unless white municipali­ties consent to their presence is a fundamenta­l affront to the very principles and goals of the Fair Housing Act,” the August complaint reads. The law “maintains and perpetuate­s segregated housing patterns in Connecticu­t.”

Nearly 80% of the state’s voucher holders are Black or Hispanic, their average income is $16,200 a year,

and the average amount they pay in rent out of pocket is $391 a month.

The federal government lets local housing authoritie­s grade themselves on whether they help lowincome people secure housing outside struggling neighborho­ods. Authoritie­s report they are doing amazingly well, despite the data and stories showing the challenges poor people face finding a rental where they want to live.

“It’s hell trying to find housing,” Crystal Carter told the Mirror earlier this year after spending 16 months looking for a rental.

Josh Serrano also lives in one of the state’s poorest neighborho­ods. After landing a voucher in 2018, he tried to find a place in the middle-class town of West Hartford, where his son lives part time with his mother. He also looked in nearby Manchester and Simsbury. At each stop, the rent was higher than his voucher’s value, or the landlord wouldn’t take a voucher.

“There is an invisible wall surroundin­g Hartford for those of us who are poor and particular­ly have black or brown skin like myself,” he said. “No community wanted me and my son.”

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2015 that there are limits to funneling lowincome housing mostly into impoverish­ed neighborho­ods because the practice has a “disparate impact” on

minorities. That case was based on a community group in Texas suing because the state concentrat­ed low-income housing constructi­on in poor communitie­s – a practice that is especially prevalent in Connecticu­t.

President Barack Obama set out rules that many advocates believed would allow them to challenge policies that disadvanta­ged minorities, but the Trump Administra­tion suspended those rules before they took effect and replaced them with rules that many say make it nearly impossible to challenge policies or laws that are anything but blatantly racist.

When proposing the change last year, J. Paul Compton Jr., general counsel for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t, told reporters, “There are a myriad of considerat­ions that go into where housing should be placed. It is not the department’s role to broadly dictate to the thousands of communitie­s across America [and question] local decisions that are made in good faith.”

This lawsuit filed Thursday also challenges a Rhode Island landlord’s practice of renting only one-bedroom units, an effort to target college students and make such housing unavailabl­e to others.

This lawsuit is one of two federal lawsuits that were filed in federal court Thursday to challenge Trumps’ so-called “Disparate

Impact” rule. The other was filed in California.

No action in liberal Connecticu­t, either

Despite its progressiv­e reputation – and Democrats controllin­g the General Assembly for nearly 23 years and the governor’s residence for 10 – efforts to override laws that allow segregatio­n to thrive here have failed.

Legislatio­n proposed during the last three years that would have expanded the jurisdicti­on of local housing authoritie­s so that voucher recipients could seamlessly move without the red tape have fallen short. Those proposals also would have allowed housing authoritie­s to build affordable housing in neighborin­g towns if they win local zoning approval.

Opposition from members of the suburban-dominated legislatur­e has been fierce, stoking fears that urban cities would take over housing developmen­t in tony towns like Ridgefield or Westport, even though that is not what the proposed legislatio­n would do.

“Think Danbury and Norwalk Housing Authoritie­s having oversight over Ridgefield,” longtime state Rep. John Frey, R-Ridgefield, wrote on Facebook this month of the potential of two nearby majority-Black and Hispanic towns getting involved in his overwhelmi­ngly white community. “Zoning, or rather the removal of local control, is on the ballot.”

The Connecticu­t Council of Municipali­ties, the state’s chief lobbyist for city and town officials – which has been hosting events titled “CCM Cares” to underscore their commitment to race equity following the murder of George Floyd – has been the main opponent to broadening the jurisdicti­on of housing authoritie­s.

“Can housing authoritie­s expand without the consent of the governing body of the municipali­ty or municipali­ties? If so, this is highly problemati­c,” the organizati­on testified last year.

The Lamont administra­tion did not provide any testimony on the legislatio­n during his two legislativ­e sessions in office.

Erin Boggs, the executive director of Open Communitie­s Alliance, said when it became apparent that the legislatur­e and governor were loathe to make changes, her organizati­on decided to file the complaint with HUD and now this lawsuit.

“We spent quite a few years researchin­g and advocating on the housing authority jurisdicti­on issue. And you know, frankly, had become a little frustrated with the lack of progress in the legislatur­e,” she said. “We saw this as another avenue to vindicate the rights of all the many families that we work with who are affected by the housing authority jurisdicti­on limitation policy.”

 ??  ?? President Donald Trump talks to the media outside the White House in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday.
President Donald Trump talks to the media outside the White House in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday.

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