Monday, December 30, 2019

Attorney General Frosh Joins Twenty-State Coalition Opposing Federal Efforts to Put Haitian-Born Residents at Risk of Deportation

Attorneys General Argue that Termination of Temporary Protected Status
for Haiti is Illegal


Maryland Attorney General Brian E. Frosh joined on December 30, 2019 a group of state attorneys general in challenging the Trump administration’s effort to revoke Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haitian nationals.  If the administration is allowed to move forward, Haitian TPS holders in Maryland, other states, and the District of Columbia would lose their legal status, leaving them vulnerable to deportation. 

In an amicus brief filed in support of the plaintiffs in Saget v. Trump before the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, the coalition argue that the administration did not have a reasonable reason for the move, which they hold violates the Administrative Procedure Act (APA).  The brief urges the Court of Appeals to affirm the lower court’s ruling and uphold a nationwide injunction against the termination to prevent widespread harm -  deportation - in the amici states.

In the brief, the attorneys general argue that the District Court’s rejection of the administration’s decision should be upheld because:
  • The administration did not justify its decision to revoke TPS for Haiti.
  • Ending TPS for Haiti would harm tens of thousands of American families.
  • Separating families creates a significant economic burden for states.
  • State economies and critical industries would suffer if Haitian residents lose TPS.
  • Public safety would be harmed if these residents are worried about deportation.
In addition to Maryland, the brief was joined by the attorneys general of California, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, and Washington.

(From a press release by the Attorney General, December 30, 2019.)


Monday, December 23, 2019

HISTORY OF EFFORTS TO END SOURCE OF INCOME DISCRIMINATION

The December 20, 2019 American Bar Association Human Rights Magazine published "Your Money's No Good Here: Combating Source of Income Discrimination in Housing" written by Homeless Persons Representation Project (HPRP) Executive Director Antonia Fasanelli and Poverty Race and Research Action Council Executive Director Phil Tegeler, with a contribution by HPRP Board Member Jill Williams.  

As of the end of 2019, four Maryland jurisdictions - Anne Arundel County, Baltimore City, Baltimore County, and Prince George's County passed laws this year banning housing discrimination based on source of income. These are great steps forward, but the question is: Why haven't Carroll County, Harford County, and many others taken this fair and equitable step?

To read more and follow HPRP's work ending source of income discrimination go here and to support these efforts go here.

ANTI-REDLINE EXHIBIT AT THE PRATT LIBRARY



As noted by the Archdiocese of Baltimore's Beyond the Boundaries project, there currently is a very interesting exhibit at the Pratt called "UNDESIGN THE REDLINE." 

The Pratt describes it as "a framework for unearthing our most deep, systemic and entangled crises. This interactive exhibit, workshop series and curriculum explores the history of structural racism and classism, how these designs compounded each other from 1938 Redlining maps until today, and how WE can come together to undesign these systems with intentionality." 

The exhibit is located in the central hall of the main Pratt 1t 400 Cathedral Street in Baltimore. Public tours of the exhibit are led by Pratt-trained staff and volunteers. The Library stresses that space is limited and registration required. For a private tour for your students, community organizations, or social groups (minimum 5, maximum 20) outside of these hours, please email pao@prattlibrary.org or call 410-396-5494.

Beyond the Boundaries plans to set up a private, guided tour in January, 2020.

For more information on the exhibit, as well as the Library's location and hours, please visit the Enoch Pratt website here.

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ADVOCATES CRITICIZE PROPOSED CRA CHANGES AS wORSENING LENDING DISCRIMINATION




The organizations hold that the proposed notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) for changes to the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) will make lending discrimination worse. In the statement by Jesse Van Tol, CEO of NCRC, he says:

“The ratio would measure the overall value of a bank’s CRA activities against the value of its deposits. This will encourage banks to seek the largest CRA financing deals, regardless of whether the deals make the most sense for local community needs. That’s why many banks as well as community-based organizations oppose the ratio being the primary determining factor on CRA exams. While the proposal looks at assessment area performance, it sets up a scenario where a bank could run up the dollar volume in 50% of its assessment areas, and still pass. The FDIC seems to have gotten a carve-out for community banks. In other words, many FDIC-regulated banks will be able to opt out of the new evaluation system and keep their CRA exams the way they are now. This  further confuses the regulatory landscape, the exact opposite outcome of what new rules were supposed to achieve.
“Discrimination in lending is still widespread and devastating for families and their communities. And yet 98% of banks pass their CRA exams. Taking steps to weaken the rules makes no sense. New rules should add clarity to the compliance process for banks, as well as reflect changes in how people interact with banks and how banks do business. But most critically, new rules should help low- and moderate-income borrowers in the communities that are most in need of CRA-based lending.”





Monday, December 9, 2019

IF YOU ARE A HOMEOWNER IN MARYLAND, YOU BETTER HAVE A DEED! HERE'S WHERE TO CHECK FOR FREE, AND POSSIBLY GET TAX CREDITS, TOO




Too many Marylanders think they own their home, but actually do not have a legal deed to the property. You need a deed or you cannot put it in your will, cannot leave the home to family, cannot quality for rehab grants, etc. Here is a link to a site for checking if you have a deed: http://www.myhomemydeed.org/. On the bottom of the page, you can check to see if you might qualify for a homeowners' tax credit. The page in Spanish is: http://www.myhomemydeed.org/my-deed-en-espanol/.

My Home, My Deed, My Legacy is a project of Maryland Volunteer Lawyers Service (MVLS) and Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development

Renters also are possible eligible for a tax credit. You might get a check for hundreds! To see if you qualify, go to: https://dat.maryland.gov/realproperty/Pages/Renters'-Tax-Credits.aspx.

EDNA SMITH PRIMUS, PIONEERING CIVIL RIGHTS LAWYER, 75


Primus was the first black women to practice law in South Carolina, and is probably best known for her work as a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in the 1970s. She won the US Supreme Court case that widened free speech rights for attorneys at nonprofit organizations.

In 1978, she was publicly reprimanded by the South Carolina Supreme Court for simply suggesting to a group of women who had received involuntary sterilizations that the ACLU could sue for them. At the time, South Carolina and some other states required poor women to be sterilized in order to receive public assistance through Medicaid. Because these forced sterilizations in the South were mostly performed on black women, many African Americans considered this genocide. 

Later that year, the US Supreme Court overturned the state court’s reprimand, finding in their ruling that she was protected by the First Amendment guaranteeing freedom of speech and expression. The court declared a lawyer could recruit clients when this concerned political expression and advocating for public rights. This ruling helped lead to current rules that attorneys working with nonprofits have wider constitutional protections than those motivated primarily by financial gain. 

Up until the 1980’s, South Carolina kept its sterilization laws. In 2003, South Carolina Governor Jim Hodges (b.1956) made a public apology for the forced sterilizations that had occurred in the state, and for the people who had their rights to have children violated. 

After the case, Primus continued to work for several decades in civil rights and social justice law.

Primus was praised by Wilbur Johnson, who worked for her at Palmetto Legal Services (Spartanburg, South Carolina): "Edna always demonstrated a quiet but serious commitment to the agency’s central mission; that is, delivering quality legal services to those citizens who otherwise could not afford them.” 

Thursday, December 5, 2019


New Website Tool Shows the Impacts of School Segregation by School District




The Educational Opportunity Project at Stanford University has released an excellent new interactive website describing access to educational opportunity for every school district in the U.S., which includes a series of tables explaining the persistent effects of racial and economic segregation on student achievement. 

The research papers underlying the new website are also collected here.

The Project utilizes the Stanford Education Data Archive (SEDA), an initiative directed at providing data to assist scholars, policymakers, educators, and parents learn how to improve educational opportunity for all children. It includes various detailed data on educational conditions, contexts, and outcomes in US school districts and counties. Specifically, SEDA has measures of academic achievement and achievement gaps for school districts and counties, as well as district-level measures of racial and socioeconomic composition, racial and socioeconomic segregation patterns, and other measures. 

Research papers include "Is Separate Still Unequal? New Evidence on School Segregation and Racial Academic Achievement Gaps" by Sean F. Reardon, Ericka S. Weathers, Erin M. Fahle, Heewon Jang, Demetra Kalogrides. September, 2019.


The website and SEDA are supported by the Russell Sage Foundation, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and several others.

NEW MTO STUDY FINDS YOUNG CHILDREN'S HEALTH BENEFITS FROM HOUSING VOUCHER PROGRAM 



In a just-released analysis, a team at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health found evidence of moderately reduced hospital costs for children whose families had received housing vouchers in the Moving to Opportunity for Fair Housing Demonstration Program (MTO), with additional cost savings associated with moves to lower poverty neighborhoods. Read a summary of the research here and the abstract here. The MTO Program was begun in 1994 by the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), with the objective of determining the benefits of offering housing and neighborhood mobility opportunities to low-income families.

The analysis was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) on December 3, 2019. It was written by Alexandra Yurkovic, Michael Silverstein, and Alastair Bell.

This research builds on prior research on the health benefits of housing mobility, and work by the Poverty & Race Research Action Council's own estimates of long term health system cost savings.

Wednesday, November 27, 2019


Released by the League of Women Voters of Maryland on November 24, 2019

League of Women Voters of Maryland logo with MD flag

RSVP for the BIG climate summit in Maryland

On December 14, at the University of Maryland College Park campus, a coalition of advocacy groups large and small — faith leaders, labor activists, environmental groups, and others — will be hosting an exciting one-day conference called Rebuild Maryland: Climate Action Summit.
Please click here to register for the event. The conference will be co-sponsored by a growing list of organizations including: The League of Women Voters of Maryland, Maryland Climate Coalition, Chesapeake Climate Action Network, Maryland League of Conservation Voters, Maryland Chapter of the Sierra Club, Interfaith Power & Light, Maryland Legislative Coalition, 350 dot org, Howard County Sunrise, HoCo Climate Action, MoCo Students for Climate, Climate Law & Policy Project, ClimateXChange,  Takoma Park Mobilization Environment Committee, Climate Reality Montgomery County, Elders Climate Action, DoTheMostGood and Eastern Panhandle Green Coalition. There will be inspiring speakers and you will be given the opportunity to discuss what climate solutions inspire you the most.
You don’t want to miss this day-long conference.
Register here for the Rebuild Maryland: Climate Action Summit
The conference is free to attend, and includes bagels, coffee, and lunch. BUT A SUGGESTED DONATION OF $25 WILL HELP COVER THE COSTS of the food and the space rental.
Time: 9:00am - 4:30pm
Date: Saturday, December 14, 2019
Location: University of Maryland in College Park, Colony Ballroom in the Stamp Student Union
Suggested donation: $25
Nancy Soreng, http://www.lwvmd.org/
P.S.
You might also want to consider attending THE MARYLAND LEGISLATIVE SUMMIT sponsored by the Maryland Legislative Coalition at the campus of the University of Maryland Baltimore County this event will showcase a presentation of top 2020 environmental bills as well as legislation designed to fund our schools, lower health care prices, and more. Tickets are available here.  
League of Women Voters of Maryland · 121 Cathedral St, Ste. 2B, Annapolis, MD 21401, United States
This email was sent to kladky7@gmail.com. To stop receiving emails, click here.





Released by the Community Development Network of Maryland on November 27, 2019

Community Development Network of MD logo

HUD CERTIFICATION COACHING 

 This is it!  August 2020 will be here before you know it!
It's time to stop procrastinating and start studying.
Come to this session and make a written plan for 
studying and time and space to carry out
We will give counselors with different learning styles 
tools to help them successfully pass the test.

Also, if you have taken the test before, let's dust
yourself off and try again. You CAN do it!

Baltimore
DECEMBER 5, 2019
12:00 PM - 3:00 PM
Druid Heights CDC


 Visit CDN's brand new website
for more information and
how to become a member today.
Released by the PRRAC on November 27, 2019


Poverty & Race Research Action Council logo


Title I "segregation incentives" 

One of our perennial education policy concerns has been the continuing "penalty" built into the Title I school funding formula for districts that take steps to reduce school poverty concentration. Along with calls for a dramatic expansion of Title I funding for high poverty schools, we were pleased to see the issue called out in the education platforms of two Democratic presidential candidates (Warren and Sanders) - so we prepared a short policy brief for the National Coalition on School Diversity explaining the issue and proposing reforms.  We've also updated our survey of the Democratic candidates' positions on school integration to include several new developments.

More progress on source of income discrimination:  

In 2018, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities released a report using the data from PRRAC's "Appendix B" survey of laws protecting Housing Choice Voucher families from discrimination.  The report, Prohibiting Discrimination Against Renters Using Housing Vouchers Improves Results, by Alison Bell, Barbara Sard, and Becky Koepnick (December 2018), included a chronology of adoption of the statutes and an interactive map illustrating the geographic scope of SOI laws.  According to the Center's calculations, at the time the report was released, source of income discrimination laws protected 34% of voucher holders in the U.S.   With the addition of two states since December 2018 (New York and California) and eight new municipalities, we estimate that approximately 50% of voucher holders in the U.S. are now covered by these laws!  See our updated survey here.
RAD Choice-Mobility:  One of the most innovative aspects of the Rental Assistance Demonstration is the "Choice-Mobility" requirement that permits families affected by a RAD public housing redevelopment, after the redevelopment is completed, to trade their public housing unit for a portable Housing Choice Voucher (which then opens up their unit for another family on the waitlist).  But HUD's recently released report on the initial phase of RAD developments confirms our own research in progress - that many tenants in RAD properties are not being given notice of their rights to obtain a choice-mobility voucher.  See the report here.
Follow Mobility Works on Twitter!  Our housing mobility group is new to Twitter, so please follow us at @Mobility Works for news and updates on our work. Mobility Works is a group comprised of PRRAC, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, the Baltimore Regional Housing Partnership, Housing Choice Partners (Chicago), and the Inclusive Communities Project (Dallas), which works to help low-income families move into diverse, well-resourced communities with high-performing schools, by teaming up with housing authorities and other nonprofits to develop regional housing mobility programs. Learn more about our work here.
Other Resources
The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights has just released a report on federal government civil rights enforcement efforts in Fiscal Years 2016 through 2018: Are Rights a Reality? Evaluating Federal Civil Rights Enforcement.
Segregation in preschool: Penn State's Center for Education and Civil Rights has released a new report, Segregation at an Early Age - 2019 Update which examines trends in pre-K racial and economic segregation, and its long term impacts.
Health and housing: The Temple University Center for Public Health Law Research is releasing a foundation-funded report series, "Legal Levers for Health Equity in Housing" - the first three reports are available here.