Info about Fair Housing in Maryland - including housing discrimination, hate crimes, affordable housing, disabilities, segregation, mortgage lending, & others. http://www.gbchrb.org. 443.347.3701.
Monday, January 10, 2022
Thursday, December 16, 2021
Study of the SNO Mass Housing Mobility Program in Massachusetts
The Century Foundation has recently released its report The Walls of Exclusion in Massachusetts: How Three Mothers Had to Overcome Discriminatory Zoning Laws to Improve the Lives of Their Children” which highlights the ongoing Supporting Neighborhood Opportunity in Massachusetts (SNO Mass) housing mobility program. supports Housing Choice Voucher families with school-aged children making moves to communities with high quality schools, parks and open space, and healthy, safe environments. SNO Mass helps families take advantage of the “choice” aspect of the Housing Choice Voucher Program.
This voluntary program provides a wide-range of supports to help participating families to access and attain residential stability in higher opportunity neighborhoods; locations with high-performing schools, low poverty rates, and environments that have demonstrated positive health and well-being outcomes for children and adults. Click to view the SNO Mass brochure in English.
According to the City of Worcester's Recap Solutions, to be eligible for the SNO Mass program a household must: (1) be a RCAP Solutions Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher participant in good standing; (2) have at least one child in the household under the age of 18; and (3) currently live in a non-SNO Mass Opportunity Area. The program then provides dedicated counselors that give helpful information to consider the family’s needs and preferences, pre-move counseling connecting to available landlords and units, financial assistance to help with moving costs, security deposits, and other fees, post-move counseling to support the household in its new neighborhood; and potentially higher voucher value to pay any higher rent for apartments in high-opportunity areas.
SNO Mass high opportunity areas are neighborhoods that have educational and health benefits for the participating family, such as high-quality public schools, parks and green spaces, supermarkets with healthy food options, low poverty rates, and high employment rates. The SNO Mass team will provide custom housing search and support to help determine which opportunity areas are best for the family.
SNO Mass provides Special Supports to families who choose to move to a high opportunity area, namely, help with housing search, apartment listings in opportunity areas, potentially higher voucher value, transportation to view apartments, information on schools and assistance with transfers, and financial assistance with moving costs, security deposit and other fees before and after the move, and assistance in locating resources and services in the new community.
Property Owners who rent a unit in RCAP Solutions’ designated SNO Mass Opportunity Areas to a SNO Mass Participant are eligible for several supports and incentives. Click here to see if the unit is located in a designated SNO Mass Opportunity Area.
Mobility Works helped to begin the mobility program in 2019.
SnoMass, now extended statewide, is funded and overseen by the Massachusetts Department of Housing and Community Development.
Click here to see Mobility Works and the Poverty & Race Research Action Council's listing of all current mobility programs in the US.
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Tuesday, December 14, 2021
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Friday, December 3, 2021
NCRC TO HOLD DECEMBER 15 WEBINAR ON REDLINING AND THE CRA
The National Community Reinvestment Coalition (NCRC) with the civil rights firm Relman Colfax PLLC will hold a free webinar entitled "CRA and Race: How can the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) be updated to directly examine race and better combat redlining?"
The webinar will be held on Wednesday, December 15 at 1:00 pm ET. Register now.
The Community Reinvestment Act was enacted to ensure much-needed investment and capital makes it to low- and moderate-income communities. But NCRC's research has shown that the majority of communities that were redlined in the 20th Century are still lower-income and also predominantly communities of color. Redlining was a practice rooted in racism, and the only way to combat and reverse the impact of redlining is to address race directly.
Recently, NCRC and Relman Colfax PLLC have released a report calling on federal regulators to add race to the scope of CRA and finally hold banks accountable to the communities they serve.
NCRC and Relman Colfax are teaming up again to host the upcoming webinar, CRA and Race: How can the Community Reinvestment Act be updated to directly examine race and better combat redlining?
Speakers include: (1) Dedrick Asante Muhammad, Chief of Membership, Policy & Equity, NCRC; (2) Brad Blower, General Counsel, NCRC; and (3) Glenn Schlactus, Partner, Relman Colfax PLLC.
Register now to make sure you don’t miss this important discussion with NCRC leadership and the authors of the report.
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Source: NCRC release, December 3, 2021.
Thursday, December 2, 2021
The Legacy Of Redlining On Black Maternal Health
The discriminatory practice of redlining first targeted neighborhoods with immigrants and people of color. These were labeled “red” and designated “hazardous” by the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, and banks, realtors and public officials used those maps to deny loans and other investments in those neighborhoods.
Despite being outlawed more than fifty years ago, redlining policies continue to affect these communities today, especially Black populations living in inner-city communities. Over time, this disinvestment has led to housing instability and poor health rates in these communities, which, in turn, led to adverse effects on Black maternal health and birthing outcomes, which persist today.
Neighborhoods that were once redlined continue to show increased risk of preterm birth rates in Black mothers. Historic and continued housing instability there have been linked to maternal health complications, including hypertension and other neonatal risks. The JAMA Open Network found that preterm births in once redlined zip codes occurred at a rate 1.5 times greater than elsewhere. The legacy of redlining has contributed to racial health inequality and increased risk of preterm births and other complications for Black mothers.
Redlining’s contribution to housing instability has also led to overrepresentation of Black people among the homeless population, thus significantly increasing the risks for Black maternal health and birthing outcomes.
Housing instability can also precede gentrification, where rising housing and rent prices force residents to vacate their homes to be replaced by wealthier and usually Whiter residents. The attendant tensions may lead to high-stress environments that also increases the chances of a premature birth, among other negative effects.
Premature births are associated with numerous negative health conditions including both short- and long-term cardiovascular issues and social and behavioral issues. Because the US healthcare system continues to not serve Black communities well, health inequities persist over time.
There has been some progress in improving Black maternal health. In 1977, the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) was designed to combat the effects of redlining by encouraging investments in underserved communities. The reality is that the subsequent funded projects have not appreciably improved Black maternal health, or health equity in general.
To counter the decades of disinvestment and address Black maternal health outcomes, hospitals and health systems should continue to partner with banks under the Community Reinvestment Act to foster low-income and minority group health equity. The increased investment in maternal healthcare centers, neonatal care units, and other vital health services, would hopefully improve health outcomes while also combatting the legacy of redlining. Additionally, modernizing the Community Reinvestment Act to increase support for inclusionary zoning and other affordable housing efforts could potentially promote the reduction of poverty in redlined communities, therefore creating an upstream effect for Black maternal health outcomes.
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Wednesday, December 1, 2021
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