Wednesday, January 18, 2023

 Maryland Equity & Inclusion Program Starts

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MEILP

New MEILP Sessions Beginning!!!!

The Maryland Equity and Inclusion Leadership Program (MEILP) is offered jointly by the Schaefer Center for Public Policy at The University of Baltimore and the Maryland Commission on Civil Rights. MEILP It is ideal for experienced and developing professionals from public, nonprofit, and private organizations who want to design, lead, and promote diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives in their organizations.

The program is:

  • committed to helping participants and their organizations become more diverse, equitable, and inclusive

  • combines asynchronous and live online instruction, with peer group interaction

  • comprehensive and academically grounded

  • job relevant and requires participants to complete a  project focused on diversity, equity, and inclusion

  • 8 weeks in length

Learn More and Apply Online
Applications are accepted online until January 20, 2023 at
http://meilp.ubalt.edu

 

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Saturday, January 14, 2023

 Human Rights Day in Annapolis

Human Rights

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Human Rights day

The Maryland Association of Human Rights Agencies (MAHRA) and the Maryland Commission on Civil Rights will host its annual Human Rights Day in Annapolis on Friday, February 17, from 8:30am to 12:30pm.  This year, we will be meeting in the Historic Inns of Annapolis, Governor Calvert House.

Human Rights Day in Annapolis brings together a diverse group of civil and human rights leaders and advocates to discuss legislation of interest and importance pending before the Maryland General Assembly, as well as to engage one another on pressing issues facing our community and how we can work cooperatively together to positively impact civil and human rights in our state. 

 

To register, click on the link HERE.  

 

This is a FREE event but space is limited!!!!!!!!!

 

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Saturday, January 7, 2023

 Book Review

The Sum of Us: What Racism Costs Everyone and How We Can Prosper Together 

by Heather McGhee 
One World, 2021
448 pages. Hardcover, $28.00

This book is by the former president of the progressive think tank Demos, and current chair of the board of Color of Change, a nationwide online racial justice organization. Read a February 17, 202 NPR interview with the author. McGhee examines both the macro and micro sides of inequality and who is damaged by racism and possible ways to lessen the problems. In addition to the most current statistics and information about racism and its damages, the book has a series of interviews all over the U.S. with those people affected by and those denying racism and its consequences.

Her book has been popular and widely praised because it challenges the actions and opinions of both advocates for dismantling racism as well as those denying problems exist. It was a New York Times bestseller, was longlisted for the National Book Award; won the Porchlight Business Book award; cited as one of the best books of the years by Time, the Washington Post, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Ms. magazine, BookRiot, Library Journal, etc. Ibram X. Kendi, #1 New York Times bestselling author of How to Be an Antiracist, said “This is the book I’ve been waiting for.”

“[McGhee] takes readers on an intimate odyssey across our country’s racial divide to explore why some believe that progress for some comes at the expense of others. Along the way, McGhee speaks with white people who confide in her about losing jobs, homes, and hope, and considers white supremacy’s collateral victims. Ultimately, McGhee—a Black woman viewing multiracial America with startling empathy—finds proof of what she terms the Solidarity Dividend: the momentous benefits that derive when people come together across race. A powerful, singular, and prescriptive blend of the macro and the intimate.” O: The Oprah Magazine.

Friday, January 6, 2023

 Obituary

William Gorham, founder of Urban Institute think tank, 91


An economist and apprentice of Robert S. McNamara, the defense secretary under Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, Gorham held high-level positions at the Department of Defense and the old Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW) - now the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. In 1962, Gorham was employed by McNamara’s Department, improving troop effectiveness, compensation, and the military draft. From 1965 to 1968, he was a high assistant to HEW Secretary John Gardner.

In the late 1960s, Johnson and his top domestic adviser, Joseph A. Califano Jr., began the Urban Institute - as an independent, nonpartisan organization with Gorham its president - to evaluate the ongoing success of the administration’s newly-hatched Great Society programs. The Institute received its early funding from foundations and from HUD. It was not the first public policy think tank in Washington - the Brookings Institution began in 1916 - but the analysis of social programs, poverty, and urban problems was still an emerging field in 1968. The Institute has helped shape debate on countless issues, from poverty and housing to health care, racial inequity, taxation, the environment, employment, aging, and infrastructure. Gorham as president retired in 2000.

Early in Barack Obama's Presidency, the Institute’s analysis of a Massachusetts health-care law championed by then-Gov. Mitt Romney (now a Utah Republican senator), helped provide the basis for projections of how Obama’s Affordable Care Act would take shape. More recently, the Urban Institute has studied social ramifications of the coronavirus pandemic, racial disparities in corporate America, the changing workforce, and many other topics.






 Research Reports

New Study Discovers Actions to Improve Life for Residents with Disabilities in Federally-Assisted Housing

It is certain that disabled individuals and families, including those in federally assisted housing, face multiple challenges in gaining access to housing units and services that meet their needs—despite legal  frameworks meant to help them (Levy et al. 2015; Dawkins and Miller 2015). Disability is very  common, with an estimated 25% adults living with a disability, or around 61 million adults (Zhao et al.  2019). Some populations experience higher rates of disability, including women, older adults, adults  who identify as American Indian/Alaska Native, adults with lower incomes, adults living in the South,  and adults living in rural areas (Okoro et al. 2018; Zhao et al. 2019). 

Recent research has highlighted the significant number of disabled residents living in some federally  assisted housing programs (Dawkins and Miller 2015; Docter and Galvez 2019). Some 23% of  residents in housing funded through the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD),  including 24% of public housing residents and 19% those in project-based Section 8 rental units. For  LIHTC properties, 12.4% of households reported at least one member as disabled in 2019 (HUD 2021).

A recent report by the Urban Institute, Improving Experiences for Residents with Disabilities in Federally Assisted Family Housing (October, 2022), examines challenges to reasonable accommodation  processes and to service access. The research focused on three federal housing  programs providing affordable rental housing to eligible households with low incomes: public housing,  project-based rental assistance through the Section 8 program, and the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Program (LIHTC). The first two have a large percentage of housing built before 1980; the latter  program, while it has only funded units since the 1990s, is often used to refinance and renovate older  housing.

The report found that boosting funding, clarifying definitions and processes, and ensuring adequate  training for housing providers can increase equity in outcomes for federally assisted residents with  disabilities. Specific recommendations were:

(1) Provide more federal funding for reasonable accommodations in federally assisted housing to allow housing providers to meet legal requirements. Significant one-time outlays and/or an ongoing dedicated annual funding stream for housing providers to pay for accommodations would show the federal commitment to funding and enforcement of the law.

(2) Establish a better standard for “reasonableness” to promote access to accommodations across diverse federally assisted housing programs and providers. The law would be most effective if all residents were treated equally and could access the same accommodations from all housing providers receiving federal financial assistance. A clearer standard on financial and administrative burden would help. 

(3) Increase uniformity in reasonable accommodation request processes to ensure equitable treatment and outcomes for residents with disabilities. There is no federally prescribed process for reasonable accommodations requests. The lack of uniformity puts the burden of knowing the many rights and processes on residents with disabilities. For housing providers, the desire to avoid discrimination and legal challenge is high, but clear procedural guidance on how to protect against such challenge is low. In addition to the lack of clarity on what is “reasonable," the process has uncertainties.

(4) Train and involve more than one person per housing provider and property in reasonable accommodation request decisions to create a more transparent and fair process.

(5) Improve training, technical assistance, and learning opportunities for housing providers to strengthen reasonable accommodation request processes. Providers noted a lack of resources available  for troubleshooting challenges and workshopping solutions. They noted a need for clearer examples of  standards and processes, as well as access to targeted technical assistance on reasonable accommodations and fair housing practices.

(6) Improve relations between housing managers and tenants with disabilities.

(7) Congress and HUD should provide housing providers with sufficient funding to help support service-related needs. They should also explore funding collaborations with other federal agencies that serve residents living in public housing and that receive mutual benefit from residents receiving on-site services. 


 Reimbursement to Renters

Maryland OAG and Westminster Management Settlement Agreement

The Maryland Attorney General (Maryland OAG) and Westminster Management have reached a settlement agreement that requires Westminster to return excessive application fees; improper agent fees, writ fees, and court costs charged in summary ejectment actions; small credit balances that were improperly retained by the company; and security deposit interest that was not paid to vacating tenants.

The settlement addresses charges that Westminster and the property owners violated the Consumer Protection Act by charging tenants illegal fees and by failing to maintain the properties. The properties in question contained more than 9,000 rental units across Baltimore City, Baltimore County, and Prince George’s County. The properties covered by this settlement are:

  • Carriage Hill Apartments
  • Carroll Park Apartments
  • Charlesmont Apartment Homes
  • The Commons at White Marsh Apartments
  • Cove Village Apartments
  • Dutch Village Apartments
  • Essex Park Apartments and Townhomes
  • Fontana Village Apartments
  • Gwynn Oaks Landing Apartments
  • Hamilton Manor Apartments
  • Harbor Point Estates
  • Highland Village Townhomes
  • Morningside Park Townhomes
  • Pleasantview Apartments
  • Princeton Estates Apartment Homes
  • Riverview Townhomes
  • Whispering Woods Apartments

As soon as the settlement claim form and process information are available from the Maryland Attorney General, we will be sending emails to all clients who live or lived in a Westminster Management property, to make sure everyone knows how and where to file a claim.

You can read the full text of the Maryland Attorney General’s press release here.

If you are experiencing a landlord-tenant issue related to improper fees or lease clauses that may not be allowed in Maryland, contact the Fair Housing Action Center please fill out our landlord-tenant intake form for assistance.

Thursday, January 5, 2023

 Native American Heritage Month

National Expert Available to Discuss How Mortgage Lending Limits Housing in Native American Communities

November is Native American Heritage Month. NeighborWorks America’s expert is available to comment on issues locking Native American people out of homeownership, such as mortgage lending, credit issues and the short supply of housing industry professionals. With more than 25 years of history in mortgage lending on Tribal Trust and Restricted Lands, NeighborWorks America (NWA) offers a unique perspective and lessons learned that can be applied now to help this population own homes and build wealth.

The available expert is Mel Willie, director of Native Partnerships and Strategy for NWA. He leads NWA's programming to expand its investment in Native communities. Willie is a national leader in Indian Country with more than 23 years of experience in nonprofit management, government, political, public and intergovernmental affairs and has represented tribal interests at the local, tribal, state and national level. He is a member of the Navajo Nation, born and raised on the reservation in northeast Arizona. Having served as past executive director of the National American Indian Housing Council (NAIHC) and as special advisor to one of the nation’s largest public housing authorities, Willie is intimately familiar with providing affordable housing through highly regulated federal programs.

He can discuss how mortgage lending in Indian Country can be complicated given the various land types; programs and practices that can help create more Native homeowners; and how NeighborWorks helps Native American people get into and keep homes.

If interested or for more information, contact NeighborWorks America Media at 202-760-4097 / media@nw.org. 

About NeighborWorks America  

For over 40 years, Neighborhood Reinvestment Corp., a national, nonpartisan nonprofit known as NeighborWorks America, has strived to make every community a place of opportunity. Our network of excellence includes nearly 250 members in every state, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. NeighborWorks America offers grant funding, peer exchange, technical assistance, evaluation tools, and access to training as the nation's leading trainer of housing and community development professionals. NeighborWorks network organizations provide residents in their communities with affordable homes, owned and rented; financial counseling and coaching; community building through resident engagement; and collaboration in the areas of health, employment and education. 

Source: https://www.neighborworks.org/Media-Center/Press-Releases/2022-Archive/Expert-available-to-discuss-how-mortgage-lending-hinders-housing-in-Native-communities.