Friday, June 23, 2023

 Update on Previous Whitepaper:

Maryland Needs a State CRA Law to Increase Racial Equity & Reinvestment

The following is a summary of a whitepaper by Josh Silver of the National Community Reinvestment Corporation (NCRC) entitled "A Maryland CRA Law Would Marshall Considerable Resources for Increasing Racial Equity and Reinvestment." In this article, Silver presents reasons why Maryland should adopt its own state Community Reinvestment Act (CRA). This article was referenced in the June 23, 2023 NCRC Just NewsDownload the whitepaper.

Economic Action Maryland has released a Policy Brief that advocated a Maryland CRA Law. Economic Action Maryland, the NCRC, and other housing advocates plan to push for the legislature to pass a bill in the 2024 Session. Del. Melissa Wells (D-Baltimore City) introduced legislation this year to propose a state-level community reinvestment act, but withdrew it.

The Major Points of the Whitepaper & Policy Brief

(1) A Maryland CRA law would apply to banks and credit unions with about $46 billion in assets. It would cover mortgage companies that made more than 68,000 loans in three years. The assets and lending activity are considerable resources that should have a CRA obligation for reinvesting in underserved neighborhoods.

(2) A state CRA law would help narrow racial and equity gaps in lending. In Baltimore, for example, 33% of recent loans went to African Americans whereas they constituted 62% of the population.

(3) State law can plug gaps in the federal law. The federal CRA applies to banks, whereas other state laws in Massachusetts and Illinois also apply to mortgage companies and credit unions.

Impact of a Maryland CRA Law

A state CRA law would apply CRA to institutions with tens of billions of dollars which offer tens of thousands of loans. State-chartered banks have about $38 billion in assets and state-chartered credit unions have nearly $8 billion in assets. The top ten independent mortgage companies issued almost 68,000 home purchase loans in Maryland during 2018-2020.

Applying CRA to institutions with these large resources would channel significant increases in loans and investments to neglected communities in Maryland. A state CRA law is needed to address sizable racial and income disparities in access to loans. In all of Maryland, lenders made 20% of their single-family loans to African Americans in 2018-2020 while 29% of the population was African American. The gap is even wider in Baltimore, which is 62% Black but where only 33% of loans went to African American borrowers.

While some gaps have narrowed slightly, underserved communities continue to suffer. For the whole state, lending institutions made 32% of their loans to low- and moderate-income (LMI) borrowers during 2018-2020 while 31.6% of the population was LMI.  A significant disparity is in Baltimore where LMI borrowers received 58% of the loans but were 73% of the residents.

A state law would complement rather than duplicate federal law, as the experience of other state CRA laws have demonstrated. It can address needs and neighborhoods not explicitly addressed by the federal CRA. A state law could  authorize Maryland’s Commissioner of Financial Regulation to conduct separate exams for individual counties. This would enable examiners to assess performance more rigorously in Baltimore and underserved rural counties. In contrast, federal CRA exams usually rate performance on a metropolitan level that hides poor performance, which most often occurs in the underserved counties. In addition, a CRA law could require the examiners  to assess the sustainability of lending by considering default and delinquency rates. This is very important for underserved communities and is frequently overlooked by federal CRA exams.

A Maryland state law could contain provisions designed to counter CRA ratings inflation and that would motivate improvements in performance to communities of color. On a federal level, the pass rate of banks on their CRA exams is 98%. A state law should counter this inflation by introducing a fifth rating and by requiring examination of performance in underserved neighborhoods, which are disproportionately communities of color. By law, banks that fail their exams cannot receive deposits from a state agency. The Commissioner could also adjust fees based on ratings received.

Studies have shown that the federal CRA has increased lending and banking services in modest income communities. A state CRA law would expand and widen this. The gains in wealth from a rigorously enforced CRA, driven by homeownership and small business ownership, would benefit Maryland through higher gross domestic output, higher tax revenues, and reduced dependence on the state safety net.

Sources:

Read the June 13, 2023 NCRC article.

https://www.marylandmatters.org/2023/06/20/advocates-a-maryland-community-reinvestment-act-needed-to-invest-in-underserved-communities/?eType=EmailBlastContent&eId=4b868637-2282-437b-b614-5da7465c2ad8.


 Calendar: 

Upcoming Fair Housing Events 

 

Fast Track To HUD Housing Counsellor Certification

June 26 – June 30, 9 pm - 6 pm ET

Preparing for the HUD Housing Counseling Exam can be daunting when tackling it on your own. Research shows that working together in a collaborative environment allows individuals to learn the material better than when working alone. Join other housing counselors in this virtual experience where peer discussion, exploration of the six core topics on the exam, and interactive activities will stimulate all learning styles. [Register here]

 

Remaking the Economy: Tenant Organizing In Unexpected Places

July 12, 2 pm - 3:30 pm ET

Spurred in part by COVID and by a growing housing affordability crisis, tenant organizing is picking up in not just expected places like New York, but in mid-sized cities like Austin and Baltimore, and even smaller cities like Louisville, Kentucky, and Portland, Maine. In this 90-minute webinar, cosponsored and co-moderated by NPQ and Shelterforce, tenant activists will share their stories, both in direct organizing and policy advocacy. [Register here]

Thursday, June 22, 2023

 

New American Leadership Institute

MIMA Opportunity: NALI

Leadership Training Opportunity!

New American Leadership Institute Flyer

MIMA returns with our third annual New American Leadership Institute! 

This is a fantastic opportunity for emerging immigrant and refugee leaders to learn more about local governance, develop leadership skills, and create connections with peers. If you are interested in NALI, or know someone who is, please apply here!

All four free sessions will be offered in person and the final session will be include closing remarks from Mayor Brandon Scott. 

Applications are due on WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 2023 at 5:00 p.m.


Want to stay updated with the latest information and resources for our immigrant and refugee communities?

Follow MIMA on Facebook and Instagram!

To sign up to receive our monthly update via email or suggest announcements to include, please contact mima@baltimorecity.gov.


MIMA

Mayor's Office of Immigrant Affairs
100 N. Holliday Street, Room 250
Baltimore, MD 21202
410-396-8056

Wednesday, June 21, 2023

 Economic Action Maryland June 29th Celebration Honors:  

Brian Frosh to Receive Lifetime Achievement Award from Economic Action Maryland

Economic Action Maryland (EAM) has announced that former Attorney General Brian Frosh will receive our Lifetime Achievement Award for his continued commitment to consumer protections and decades of good work on behalf of working families across Maryland. 

EAM will hold a celebration on June 29th  5:30-8:30 p.m. at the BWI Airport Marriott, 1743 W Nursery Road, Linthicum Heights, MD 21090 to celebrate our economic action champions, enjoy good food and good drinks, and renew our commitment to building an economy that works for all.  There is still time to claim your seat at the table and join us at our Awards Ceremony and Night of Celebration. The Keynote address will be by Lisa Snowden, Editor-in-Chief and Cofounder of Baltimore Beat. Read her biography.

Click here to get tickets.

Awardees are:

  • Chris Van Hollen, U.S. Maryland Senator - Federal Champion of the Year Award.
  • Brian Frosh, Maryland Attorney General - Lifetime Achievement Award.
  • Will Smith, State Senator District 20 - Legislative Achievement of the Year Award.
  • David Moon, State Delegate District 20 - Legislative Achievement of the Year Award.
  • Lorig Charkoudian, State Delegate District 20 -Consumer Advocate of the Year Award.
  • Stephanie Smith, State Delegate District 45 - Housing Advocate of the Year Award.
  • Bank Of America & Baybrook Coalition - Community Partnership Award.

Sponsors and individuals who bought tickets for the event in November can use the discount code “RENEW” to redeem your tickets. If you didn’t get a chance to buy a ticket last time, don’t miss out now. Ticket sales will run until June 26th.

For more information about EAM: info@econaction.org.

Economic Action Maryland

2209 Maryland Ave.

Baltimore, MD 21218

(410) 220-0494 / info@econaction.org

 Free Public Celebration: 

June 24th Baltimore Transit Equity Coalition Meeting to Celebrate Red Line Cancellation


The Harbor venue and its bathrooms are wheelchair accessible. Please email btec.moretransitequity@gmail.com for questions.

Tuesday, June 20, 2023

 Housing Discrimination in Georgia: 

Cartersville, Georgia Motel Manager Pleads Guilty to Coercing Labor and Sex Acts by Female Tenant

According to court documents, the 70 year-old manager of the Budgetel Motel hired her as a house cleaner, knowing that she had been homeless, struggled with heroin addiction, and lost child custody. He promised that he would help her regain custody of her child by providing her pay, an apartment, and an attorney. Instead, he monitored her interactions with motel guests and employees, forbade her from speaking to them, and made numerous sexual overtures. He threatened to evict her from the room and threatened to report her drug use to law enforcement or child welfare agencies. He regularly “evicted” her from her motel room, locked her out of her room at night without warning, and required her to perform oral sex on him to stay at the motel. If she did not, Tiwari removed her from the property, causing her to be homeless. 

Sentencing is set for September 6, and the man faces a penalty of up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. As part of his plea agreement, he agreed to pay just over $40,000 in restitution to his victims. 

A federal judge will determine any sentence based on the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors. 

Read the June 1, 2023 USDOJ release.


 Discrimination in Rental Housing

Property Management Company to Pay Nearly $75,000 to Resolve Service Members Civil Relief Act Claims

The U.S. Department of Justice (USDOJ) has announced that FPI Management Inc. (FPI) has agreed to pay $74,087 to resolve allegations that it violated the Service Members Civil Relief Act (SCRA) by imposing unlawful charges on nine service members who were exercising their right to terminate their apartment leases after receiving military orders to relocate. The SCRA extends various protections to service members to allow them to devote their entire energy to the national defense, including protections for service members in areas such as evictions, security deposits, pre-paid rent, civil judicial proceedings, installment contracts, interest rates, foreclosures and automobile leases; and allowance to terminate their residential leases after entering military service or receiving military orders for a permanent change of station, deployment or retirement. Landlords are prohibited from imposing an early termination charge on service members who terminate their leases under the SCRA.

The USDOJ started investigating FPI’s leasing practices after receiving a referral from Coast Guard Legal Assistance about two times where FPI attempted to require service members who were terminating their leases early under the SCRA to repay discounts they had received when they signed the lease in Oakland, California. Under the consent order, FPI has agreed to pay $51,587 to the service members and a $22,500 civil penalty. The order also requires FPI to repair the service members’ tenant database entries, implement new policies and procedures complying with the SCRA, and train employees on the SCRA. 

Service members and their dependents who believe that their rights under the SCRA have been violated should contact the nearest Armed Forces Legal Assistance Program Office. Office locations: legalassistance.law.af.mil

Read the June 13, 2023 USDOJ release.

 Recent Fair Housing News: 

HUD Announces $837.5 Million from President Biden’s Investing in America Agenda to Improve Housing Quality and Reduce Energy Costs for Underserved Communities

The May 11, 2023 NOFA provides new funding from the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 and $4 billion in loan commitment authority will make HUD-assisted multifamily housing more energy efficient, cut greenhouse gas emissions, and improve climate resiliency. The availability of new funding through the Green and Resilient Retrofit Program (GRRP) will reduce greenhouse gas emissions and improve the energy and water efficiency and climate resilience of HUD-assisted multifamily properties serving low-income residents. 

The Act provided HUD with $837.5 million in grant and loan subsidy funding, $4 billion in loan commitment authority for this new program, and $42.5 million for a new HUD initiative launching later this summer to collect and assess energy and water usage data from HUD-assisted multifamily housing properties to better target opportunities to save energy and water, cut costs, and reduce emissions. Building owners will be able to invest in technologies, such as solar panels, heat pumps, wind-resistant roofing, insulation, low embodied carbon materials, and other measures that will reduce greenhouse gas emissions and make properties healthier and safer for residents. 

Read the May 11, 2023 HUD release.

 

HUD Charges New York Corporation and Associated Entities for Targeting Black Caribbean Homeowners in Fraudulent Mortgage Scam

HUD has charged multiple entities and individuals related to the Homeowner Assistance Services of New York (HASNY) with housing discrimination for perpetrating a scheme to deceive distressed homeowners into forfeiting title to their homes. HUD’s charge alleges that HASNY – plus six individuals, Springfield Realty of New York, Inc., Martin Development and Management, LLC, Launch Development, LLC, 272 Milford Street, LLC, Advill Capital, LLC, and Petermark II, LLC - targeted New York City homeowners in violation of the Fair Housing Act. Read the Charge

The Charge, filed on behalf of seven homeowners, alleges that HASNY and its associates targeted the homeowners for fraudulent mortgage and foreclosure prevention assistance by filing illegitimate liens and using telemarketing to convince homeowners to engage with HASNY for refinance assistance. After the homeowners accepted their offer of assistance, they used false promises of legal assistance, reassurances, and outright lies to convince the homeowners to sign documents that unknowingly sold their homes to Martin Development, LLC and Launch Development, LLC, which resulted for most forced them to vacate their homes. HASNY’s actions were disproportionately concentrated in neighborhoods which had a high majority of persons of color, especially Blacks and of Caribbean descent. They also used “affinity marketing” to gain the trust of elderly, vulnerable, and distressed homeowners by having telemarketers use their shared national origin and cultural practices to build trust with the homeowners. 

The U.S. Department of Justice previously criminally charged 3 of the men, as well as several other HASNY employees, with bank and wire fraud crimes from the conduct alleged in the Charge. Two respondents pleaded guilty and one was convicted after a jury trial and later disbarred. 

A U. S. Administrative Law Judge will hear HUD’s Charge unless any party elects to have the case heard in federal district court. If an administrative law judge finds, after a hearing, that discrimination has occurred, the judge may impose civil penalties and/or award damages to the homeowners for their losses as a result of the discrimination, injunctive relief, other equitable relief, as well as payment of attorney fees. In addition, the judge may impose civil penalties to vindicate the public interest. If a federal court hears the case, the judge may also award punitive damages to the homeowners. 

Read the June 13, 2023 HUD press


Affordable Housing News: 

Mortgage Assistance Program Expansion Estimated to Help More Than 1,000 Additional Marylanders Stay in Their Homes

Since the Homeowner Assistance Fund Program Began in 2021, the Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development (MDHCD) has assisted over 11,000 Marylanders residents behind on payments and housing costs, including 6,000 who were facing foreclosure. The Department has expanded the program to add an additional option for mortgage servicers to provide eligible homeowners with relief as interest rates have risen and affected the affordability of some loan modifications. The program now is able to fund up to six months of forward payments for eligible applicants, and is estimated to help more than 1,000 additional Marylanders. 

The Homeowner Assistance Fund offers legal assistance, loan modifications with payment of delinquent mortgages, grants to avoid displacement due to property taxes, association and water and sewer fees, and other housing related costs. So far, the program has provided more than $125 million to eligible homeowners, with an average of $17,100 of assistance for each household. No additional application is required to be considered for the new forward payment option, and the Department is also reviewing past applications to determine if those homeowners would be eligible for the forward payment option and reaching out to them to offer assistance. 

For detailed information on eligibility and to apply for assistance: homeownerassistance.maryland.gov. The HAF program was established by the American Rescue Plan Act enacted in 2021 to help homeowners experiencing financial hardship after January 21, 2020. The Maryland Department of Housing and Community Developm​ent was awarded a total of $248 million to administer through the program. 

Contact Brandi Bottalico, Office of Public Information - brandi.bottalico@maryland.gov.



 June Edition of "Fair Housing E-News"

FAIR HOUSING E-NEWS

June, 2023

Welcome to this edition of Fair Housing E-News! This newsletter is produced by the GBCHRB

as a public service. More info/resources: http://www.gbchrb.org. Just a few of the headlines are:

NLIHC’s Out Of Reach 2023: The High Cost Of Housing Shows Rents are Moving Further out of Reach for Low-Income Renters As Pandemic-Era Benefit Programs Expire.

Read the NLIHC Summary of its 2023 Out of Reach report.

Out of Reach 2023 is available at: https://nlihc.org/oor.

Study Finds Baltimore Children who moved from High-Poverty to Low-Poverty Areas had Improved Asthma. Read the May 16, 2023 Baltimore Sun article.

Maryland Finds Erie Insurance Illegally Rejected Baltimore Auto Customers in Minority Neighborhoods. Read the June 6, 2023 Baltimore Sun article. Read the June 1, 2023 Baltimore Banner article.

Justice Department Secures Over $3 Million Redlining Settlement Involving ESSA Bank & Trust in Philadelphia. www.justice.gov/fairhousing.

Federal Housing Administration Launches 30 New Resources to Remove Language Barriers in Chinese, Korean, Spanish, Tagalog, and Vietnamese for Borrowers.

Read the June 13, 2023 HUD release.

KeyBank & Capital One Lose Their Access To New York City’s Business. "NYC Regulator Halts City Deposits at Key Bank, Capital One," Banking Dive, May 26, 2023. NCRC Just News/ May 25, 2023 Press Release.

To read this issue of Fair Housing E-News: fhnews2023jun.pdf.

Contact the GBCHRB for free Fair Housing training.

GBCHRB

P. O. Box 66180

Baltimore, Maryland 21239-6180

http://www.gbchrb.org

443.347.3701


Monday, June 12, 2023

 Book Review

A Lucky Child by Thomas Buergenthal


Elie Wiesel, fwd. Little, Brown and Company: 2009. Pp xvi, 228. $24.99.

This memoir by the late Thomas Buergenthal (1934-2023), a Judge in the International Court of Justice in The Hague as well as in several other human rights courts, tells how his survival of Auschwitz which he entered at age 10 after surviving two ghettos and a labor camp influenced his long career as a stellar human rights lawyer and advocate. As the Amazon book description concludes: "A Lucky Child is a book that demands to be read by all."

"It was more than luck and the good for­tune of his ​“Aryan” fea­tures that enabled him to sur­vive the war — it was his strength, wis­dom, and enor­mous faith that he would one day sur­vive and be reunit­ed with his parents. Amaz­ing­ly, Thomas was reunit­ed with his moth­er short­ly after the war and then moved to the Unit­ed States and began a career as lawyer and then as a judge. He has ded­i­cat­ed his career to fight­ing against the human rights vio­la­tions that he expe­ri­enced as a child."

*****
Sources:




(4) Photo courtesy of Amazon.com.



 Obituary: 

Thomas Buergenthal, Human Rights Lawyer, 89

Buergenthal was an international law jurist and human rights defender who was as a boy one of the youngest survivors of the Nazi concentration camps of Auschwitz and Birkenau, as well as a three-day Nazi death march to Sachsenhausen, Germany. He had a major role in establishing international jurisprudence's framework, stemming from U.N. declarations since the 1960s often called the “International Bill of Human Rights.” In 1992, the U. S. ratified the core document, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. 

As a justice of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (1979-1991), Buergenthal judged cases about allegations of rights abuses by U.S.-allied governments in El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras against leftist guerrillas and their supporters. One case, the disappearance of suspected government opponents in Honduras, led to new interpretations of the burden of proof. Buergenthal and the other judges decided that it could consider the overall pattern of disappearances, setting a “rebuttable presumption” of government involvement. Authorities would now have to prove they had no role in a specific incident, rather than relying on a lack of evidence to exonerate them. In 1993, Buergenthal was part of a U.N. commission that found Salvadoran military officers responsible for so-called “dirty war” crimes, including the killing of Archbishop Oscar Romero in 1980. 

Buergenthal was vice chairman of the Claims Resolution Tribunal, which examined requests made by the families of Holocaust victims seeking assets deposited in Swiss banks until 1945. Tens of millions of dollars were estimated to be in accounts hidden from heirs by Swiss banking laws. He also wrote a memoir A Lucky Child: A Memoir of Surviving Auschwitz as a Young Boy (See Interesting Books in this issue). He also served as a judge at the International Court of Justice, honorary president of the American Society of International Law (2001-2009), and as a law professor. 

*****
Sources:




Photo courtesy of the Holocaust Encyclopedia of the U. S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.

 Free Immigrant & Refugee Resource Fair

BNAAC Resource Fair Flyer

About the Fair

MIMA and Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service (LIRS) are teaming up to bring you this one-day event bringing together resources targeted for Baltimore City's immigrant and refugee communities. Join us to find resources like healthcare services, immigration legal services, food access, public benefit navigation, health insurance, community organizing, schools, ESOL classes and more. There is limited parking available and bus lines run nearby (see flyer attached for list of bus lines).

WHAT: LIRS and MIMA Immigrant and Refugee Resource Fair

WHEN: Saturday, June 17th from 11am-2pm

WHERE: Christ Lutheran Inner Harbor Church (701 S. Charles Street, Baltimore MD 21230)

Check out our Facebook event for continuing updates and to let us know you're attending!

We need volunteers!

We are also looking for volunteers to provide language support/interpretation at the event. We are particularly looking for volunteers who speak Spanish, French, Swahili, Lingala, Chinese (Mandarin), Korean, Amharic, Tigrinya, Arabic, Dari, Pashto, Nepalese or Ukrainian. Please sign up here if you are interested in volunteering to provide language support for fair attendees 


If you would like access to high-quality copies of these flyers, please check our MIMA Facebook page or check the MIMA website.

French and Korean LIRS + MIMA Fair FlyersSimplified Chinese and Spanish LIRS + MIMA Fair FlyersArabic and Swahili LIRS + MIMA Fair FlyersEnglish LIRS + MIMA Flyer

Did you enjoy reading this message? Follow us to receive more!

To sign up to receive our monthly update via email or suggest announcements to include, please contact mima@baltimorecity.gov.


MIMA

Mayor's Office of Immigrant Affairs
100 N. Holliday Street, Room 250
Baltimore, MD 21202
410-396-8056

Wednesday, June 7, 2023

 Free Maryland Seminar on Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity, & Expression Law

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Sexual Orientation Gender Identity & Expression

To register, click HERE  

For reasonable accommodation requests, please contact: mccr.admin@maryland.gov no later than one week prior to the event.

 

Victim of Discrimination?

File a Complaint3

Training & Partnerships

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