By PAUL SPERRY, FOR INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY
Posted 12/30/2013 07:25 PM ET
U.S. mayors have asked HUD to scrap a proposed housing
regulation requiring them to "reduce segregation and promote
integration" in their cities, arguing the agency is overstepping its legal
authority under the Fair Housing Act.
Individuals also have flooded the agency with comments
objecting to the plan, which is expected to be finalized early in 2014.
The 1968 Fair Housing Act prohibits racial bias in the sale,
rental and financing of housing. HUD, the Department of Housing and Urban
Development, which enforces the civil rights law, appears to be expanding it to
include policing neighborhoods for racial diversity.
The agency has proposed to add a 33-page rule titled
"Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing," which would give it a blunt
instrument for social change in cities it identifies as "segregated."
Metropolitan areas that show the worst segregation — such as Dallas; Los
Angeles; Chicago; Cleveland; Houston; Atlanta; Memphis; Charlotte and Raleigh,
N.C.; Indianapolis; and Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio — will be aggressively
"targeted" for enforcement action.
Specifically, it blames "exclusionary zoning,"
which it defines as any local zoning code that limits development of affordable
housing. The proposal says such laws erect geographic barriers to success for
urban minorities.
But critics claim HUD fails to recognize people may choose
to live in a homogeneous community without any action or intent to exclude
others. In comments submitted to HUD, groups representing cities and counties
argue that racial clustering often occurs naturally, such as in Los Angeles and
other cities with majority-minority populations.
'Exercise Of Choice'
"The term segregation is a politically and emotionally
loaded term," the National Association for County Community and Economic
Development and the National Community Development Association jointly wrote in
a 17-page letter. "HUD needs to recognize that some clustering of
racial/ethnic groups has been a result of exercise of choice by a household,
not because of (zoning laws)." The U.S. Conference of Mayors and the
National Association of Counties endorsed their comments.
HUD plans to map every U.S. neighborhood by four groups —
white, Asian, black or African-American, and Hispanic/Latino — and publish
"geospatial data" pinpointing racial imbalances. The agency proposes
using nonwhite populations of 50% or higher as the threshold for classifying
segregated areas.
Cities deemed overly segregated will be forced to change
their zoning laws to allow construction of multifamily and other affordable
housing to bring more low-income minorities into suburban and predominantly
white areas. HUD's maps, which use dots to show the distribution or density of
races, will be used to select affordable housing sites.
Chicago is one of several cities named by HUD as "segregated."
HUD's goal is to "reduce disparities in access to key community
assets," such as quality schools, jobs, transportation, parks and
recreation, and even fresh air and groceries.
Its new rule would require cities to conduct a
"disparities analysis" that would include "comparing the
employment numbers for African-American and white households." Lower
employment for blacks, it says, suggests "this population might be
hampered by a lack of access to important job centers."
To overcome such disparities, the agency explicitly advises
"modifying local regulations and codes, constructing new developments,
creating new amenities and facilitating the movement of people."
U.S. cities taking HUD housing development grants would be
required every five years to submit plans detailing steps they'll take to
integrate suburban or predominantly white neighborhoods and increase minority
access to "vital amenities."
HUD would have 60 days to review the plans and decide
whether to renew federal funding. City officials complain the rule goes beyond
the requirements set by Congress.
"We do not agree that requiring grantees to examine
data surrounding access to education, employment, transportation and
environmental health are required as part of the Fair Housing Act," Tommy
Battle, mayor of Huntsville, Ala., wrote.
"The FHA is an inappropriate vehicle for pursuing these
policy goals," Houston Housing Authority President Tory Gunsolley said.
These complaints were among 884 comments HUD has posted on
its website since opening the rule up to public comment last summer. A solid
majority — 57% — of comments opposed the sweeping new rule, according to a
study conducted this month by the American Enterprise Institute in Washington.
Fair-housing compliance lawyers agree that HUD is
essentially rewriting the 1968 law. "Including access to community
resources and addressing concentrations of poverty is beyond the scope of the
FHA's protections," Sharon Wilson Geno of Ballard Spahr LLP, a Washington
law firm, wrote in a two-page letter to HUD.
But many housing and civil-rights activists argued that
"re-engineering" neighborhoods is necessary to remedy lingering
effects of decades of overt, legalized discrimination.
"Patterns of segregation do not automatically disappear
in the absence of the most brutal and overt manifestations of intentional
discrimination," wrote Craig Gurian of the Anti-Discrimination Center of
New York, which with HUD's help successfully sued Westchester County,
N.Y., for housing discrimination. The county settled the 2009 case by agreeing
to build 750 affordable-housing units in mostly white areas.
Entrenched Advantage?
"African-American households have fewer means than whites
to purchase property today," Gurian continued. "Over the decades,
those who were permitted to own property in what were racially restrictive
suburbs (whites) were given a spectacular advantage over those who were kept
out (African-Americans, and later Latinos): the amassing of capital via
property appreciation."
He also claimed that "neighborhoods that are
ultra-white continue to impose an 'inhibition effect' on African-Americans who
would otherwise elect to live there if they did not perceive that they would
not be welcome.
"Finally," Gurian said, "there is a powerful
piece of segregation-perpetuating engineering that remains in place throughout
much of the country today: exclusionary zoning," which is a term HUD uses
repeatedly in its proposed regulation.
"Excessive limitations on density and the prohibition
or discouragement of context-appropriate multiple-family dwellings make the
development of affordable housing in many areas difficult or impossible,"
he explained. "That lack of affordable housing bears more heavily on
African-American and Latino households."
Deputy Westchester County Executive Kevin Plunkett said HUD
ignored several independent studies that concluded zoning in his suburban
county is not exclusionary, as HUD insists. Experts analyzed all 853 local
zoning district provisions in Westchester's 43 municipalities for
"restrictive practices" and found every one complied with the Fair
Housing Act, as well as New York state law.
Even so, HUD will not release $17 million in housing grants until
Westchester accepts its finding that zoning in seven of its municipalities is
exclusionary. It wants the county to sue those cities and towns to end
"restrictive practices," including limits on size, type, height and
density of buildings. Meanwhile, the Obama administration also is withholding
Superstorm Sandy disaster relief from the county.
"HUD's decisions will be predetermined by their
statistical data," Plunkett warned in a 12-page comment on the rule.
"And grantees will find it difficult to have their (new Assessment of Fair
Housing plans) approved if they disagree with HUD's numbers, interpret them
differently, or fail to tailor their proposed actions to HUD's predetermined
solutions."
He complained the HUD secretary will be "the final
arbiter" of local housing decisions. "HUD's view completely oversteps
constitutional boundaries for federal intrusion into local affairs," he
said.
Others agree. "We feel these decisions are best left to
local communities," the NACCED and NCDA said in their comment.
The groups noted that the mandate to close racial
disparities in access to community assets could force localities to create new
parks, schools and public transit lines that would have a "significant
impact on local taxpayers."
Plunkett warned that even if HUD accepts local governments'
Assessment of Fair Housing plans, it won't protect them from litigation, since
it "does not mean that HUD has determined that the jurisdiction has
complied with its obligation to affirmatively further fair housing."
He added: "The county's experience with HUD
demonstrates that this could prove problematic."
The National Affordable Housing Management Association,
which represents apartment owners and managers, urged HUD to add a provision
that would "recognize grantees' efforts and hold them harmless for factors
outside of their control."
Others said the rule is built on shaky legal ground.
HUD's definition of "segregation" rests on a civil
rights theory known as "disparate impact," which relies only on statistics
to indicate racism and does not require any intent to discriminate.
Roger Clegg of the Center for Equal Opportunity asserted
that HUD's proposal violates federal law by discriminating in favor of certain
racial groups. Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits
discrimination on the basis of race, color or national origin in programs and
activities receiving federal financial assistance.
"The government should not be requiring, encouraging,
or permitting the use of racial and ethnic classifications and race- and
ethnicity-based decision-making in order to achieve a particular racial and
ethnic mix," Clegg wrote in a comment submitted to HUD.
Agreed the NACCED and NCDA: "HUD should be looking at
poverty through a color-blind lens."
The National Affordable Housing Management Association
complained to HUD that its focus on suburban housing development threatens
billions of dollars of investment in urban areas.
The rule could "inadvertently discourage preservation,
rehabilitation or recapitalization of properties in distressed areas," the
trade group said. "Under this standard, a (public housing authority) may
be hard-pressed to justify capital improvements on a property that exists in a
neighborhood lacking community assets."
Source: Investor's
Business
Daily: http://news.investors.com/123013-684627-hud-proposal-called-fair-housing-overreach.htm#ixzz2p3WIhfmt
HUD Zoning Rule Mostly Opposed In Public Comments
By Paul Sperry, FOR INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY
Posted 12/30/2013 07:25 PM ET
While nonprofit affordable-housing advocates overwhelmingly
favor the Department of Housing and Urban Development's controversial
desegregation proposal, most of the public comments submitted to HUD oppose it.
A whopping 91% of the opposing comments were filed by
individuals, who mostly opposed new low-cost housing in their neighborhoods.
A common complaint concerned the higher crime rates and
lower property values that might accompany subsidized housing. HUD recommends
expanding the use of Section 8 housing vouchers in the suburbs "to reduce
segregation."
"This is a bad idea," Thomas Ulrich said.
"How is it fair for people like myself that worked hard
all their lives to finally get into a neighborhood that they're proud of only
to have someone else get a government subsidy that will allow them to buy into
a more affluent neighborhood?"
Property Value Impact Feared Continued Ulrich: "I came
from a lower-income area in St. Louis, put myself through college, worked a
full-time job and saved my money to buy a nice house in a neighborhood where
there are good schools and I feel safe to let my kids run around. Now the
government wants to subsidize housing in order to make my neighborhood more
diverse in the name of fairness? What about fairness for me and my
family?"
Echoed LaWanda Williams: "Don't bring that into my
neighborhood! You will ruin the property values!"
An anonymous Virginia commenter suggested that federal
housing officials target upscale liberal enclaves for integration, starting
with their own.
"I have worked too hard to see Section 8 housing move
in and drive my property values down (while) increasing crime in my
neighborhood," the unnamed individual said. "Here's an idea — start
diversifying Martha's Vineyard and Malibu, and the gated neighborhoods where
our spineless congressmen, senators and other elitists/statists live, and then
come to middle-class America to implement such nonsense."
Others protested that Washington bureaucrats don't know
what's best for local communities.
"So you bureaucrats in D.C. know what the zoning laws
should be in communities hundreds/thousands of miles away?" Michael Hoff
wrote in a comment submitted to HUD.
"It's either hubris or a coordinated effort to stoke
racial violence, given that you leftists have been lying to minorities for
years about why they find themselves in poverty," he said. "You've
been blaming white racism for years. Meanwhile you did it yourselves to get
votes."
Others cited past government failures at forced integration.
"How well did forced busing work?" Elizabeth Clark
asked. "This is a revolting idea."
Dolores Yvars added: "We are still reeling from the HUD
affirmative-action mortgage debacle. This latest attempt at social engineering
will fail as well." The few nonprofits opposing the rule complained it
didn't go far enough.
They want to force cities and other HUD grantees to comply
with tougher performance benchmarks and timetables for integrating suburbs.
The seven-page comment submitted by the National Community
Reinvestment Coalition was typical. It recommends the agency enforce
"specific action steps" including the outright repeal of
"discriminatory ordinances."
State and local housing authorities, in their comments,
mainly worried about higher compliance costs from the additional red tape.
With opposition running so high against the proposed
mandate, will HUD shelve it, or at least amend it to address concerns? Not likely.
'Quality' Comments Count. Quantity of opinion doesn't matter
in the rules-making process. Only "high-quality comments" count, and
professional advocacy groups have the edge over individuals in that contest.
The National Community Reinvestment Coalition and the National Fair Housing
Alliance, for example, wrote highly technical letters drafted by lawyers in
support of the rule, and shared templates with their members and affiliated
groups.
HUD may already favor their comments because it funds them
and certifies them as "stakeholders" or "partners." Last
year, for instance, HUD and the National Fair Housing Alliance launched a media
campaign to "fight housing discrimination."
If anything, housing analysts say, the final HUD rule
regulating suburban housing will be strengthened, not weakened.
Source: Investor's Business Daily,
http://news.investors.com/123013-684626-most-public-comments-oppose-hud-proposal.htm#ixzz2p3XYTmkv
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