Wednesday, April 9, 2025

HUD Cuts Will Drastically Cut Government and Nonprofit Efforts to Reduce Housing Discrimination

The Trump administration’s cuts to fair housing funding have raised serious concerns about the ability to enforce civil rights laws and help people find affordable housing. It will make it harder for Americans to find safe and affordable places to live and may allow even more housing discrimination to go unchecked, according to current and former government employees, fair housing experts, and local organizations. Advocates say the overhaul will ultimately alienate, discourage, and hurt people seeking help.

Enforcement of the Fair Housing Act and other civil rights laws, which prohibit discrimination in public and private housing, is carried out by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), as well as state, local and nonprofit agencies that receive federal funding. Last year there were more than 34,000 fair housing complaints of all kinds, a record high for the third year in a row. But the enforcement power is rapidly being eroded and under increasing threat, according to fair housing federal employees. Cases dealing with alleged discrimination based on gender identity have stalled, with staffers afraid to keep working on them until they receive clear instructions on how to interpret terms such as “gender ideology,” referenced in an early executive order from the President.

People often call HUD hotlines to ask about their rights, register a complaint or get help in a crisis. But now they can only do so through an online form, with few exceptions for those with disabilities or who have tech or language barriers. Regional phone lines shut down in March, according to a HUD memo to fair housing staff. The changes were meant to “maximize efficiency and maintain responsiveness through staffing reductions,” the March 10th notice said. But staff members raised concerns that the moves make it harder for people to get help when they need it, including people facing eviction or families without a place to sleep.

More destructive changes are coming. The HUD office that enforces the 1968 Fair Housing Act is expected to be cut by more than 75%. Employees say that will further strain an understaffed office with a hefty case backlog. One employee said that while the Fair Housing Act requires investigations to be completed in 100 days, “we’re lucky if we can meet that goal for 30% of cases.”

“The level of cuts we’ve heard are on the table would effectively end enforcement of the Fair Housing Act in any meaningful sense,” said another HUD fair housing staffer. “The fear within the agency is that the administration’s goal is to gut some of the crowning achievements of the civil rights movement by simply ignoring the laws and refusing to spend money Congress has appropriated to enforce them.”

In late February, HUD and the U.S. DOGE Service abruptly canceled 78 fair housing grants to nonprofits, jeopardizing $30 million in congressionally authorized funds. Four organizations later filed a class-action lawsuit against HUD and DOGE, and in late March, a judge reinstated the funds with a temporary injunction. The Government Accountability Office - an independent watchdog based in the legislative branch - is also investigating the cuts to congressionally earmarked funds. Relief came only after the groups - many of which have small offices and depend on federal grants -faced the prospect of laying people off or closing. Private nonprofits processed 75% of complaints in 2024, and they say that being in communities makes their work to fight discrimination more effective. 

“This is evisceration,” said Gail Williams, executive director of Metro Fair Housing Services in Atlanta. “That’s exactly what it is. It’s pretty plain. There’s no cover to it.” When Williams got an email on Feb. 27 saying her organization’s $425,000 enforcement grant was canceled, she knew that would leave 34 pending investigations in limbo. The grant represents 53 percent of the organization’s annual budget. Without it, she could keep the 51-year-old organization open for only three more months. “Most fair housing centers right now are uncertain as to how we will continue,” she said.

Staffers working on fair lending, consumer protection, and other public interest issues at the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) were also put on administrative leave in March. Agency director Bill Pulte rolled out a string of new directives in recent days, including those paring tenant protections and ending programs that help borrowers lacking the traditional 20% cash down payment required to buy a new home.

In the backdrop, a national housing crisis has made it more difficult for people to find affordable places to live. "Record high housing costs are putting the squeeze on families in every part of this country," said former HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan, who heads Enterprise Community Partners. He said arbitrary cuts to staff and funding "will only serve to destabilize our housing system and drive up costs for both renters and owners." Many staffers and housing experts say the cuts will indeed make it more difficult for the agencies to carry out basic duties and that it will keep local groups from on-the-ground work. "The shelters are overwhelmed. There's not enough affordable housing," Zoe Ann Olson of the  Intermountain Fair Housing Council in Boise, Idaho, said. "We're just seeing an extraordinary amount of evictions, like so many that we're getting on a daily basis. It's so disheartening to lose this money."

There are also fears that the lack of guardrails brings broader economic risk. Fair lending experts noted that many of the mortgages that defaulted during the 2008 housing crisis were predatory and disproportionately affected people of color - risks that can be reduced with proper oversight. Minority borrowers are also more likely to be denied home loans and to pay higher interest rates.

Read the April 6, 2024 Washington Post article.

Read the February 14, 2025 NPR article on HUD cuts.

Tuesday, April 8, 2025

Baltimore Fair Housing Month Resource Fair 2025 is April 26th!

 

April is recognized as Fair Housing Month in the United States to commemorate the passage of the Fair Housing Act of 1968. This landmark law prohibits discrimination in housing based on race, color, religion, sex, disability, familial status, and national origin. This month serves as a crucial reminder of the ongoing struggle for equal access to housing and the need to address systemic barriers that perpetuate segregation and inequality. It is a time to reflect on the progress made, educate communities about their rights, and reaffirm commitments to fostering inclusive, diverse neighborhoods where everyone has the opportunity to live free from discrimination.

Join the Office of Equity and Civil Rights and the Community Relations Commission for our upcoming Baltimore City Fair Housing Month Resource Fair! Learn more about your rights as a renter/homeowner in Baltimore City and be connected with resources to help you thrive in your communities.

Lunch will be served, and activities are available for folks to bring their kids!

📅 Date: Saturday, April 26, 2025

⏰ Time: 2:00 PM – 5:00 PM

📍 Location: Baltimore Unity Hall

📍 Address: 1505 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Maryland 21217, United States

Register Here!
Fair Housing Month Resource Fair
OECR Logo
 

7 E. Redwood Street Baltimore, MD 21202
Phone # 410-396-3141

Monday, April 7, 2025

Free Baltimore Workshop On Access and Functional Needs (AFN) in Emergency Preparedness is May 1st


Invitation: Access & Functional Needs Emergency Preparedness Workshop

The Office of Equity and Civil Rights and the Mayor's Commission on Disabilities, in partnership with the Office of Emergency Management, is pleased to invite you to an upcoming workshop focused on Access and Functional Needs (AFN) in Emergency Preparedness.

This workshop will bring together community leaders, emergency planners, disability advocates, mental health professionals, and service providers working with the AFN community. We will discuss strategies for effectively including individuals with access and functional needs in emergency preparedness planning.

Workshop Details:

📅 Date:          Thursday, May 1, 2025

⏰ Time:         4:00 PM – 7:00 PM (Doors open at 3:30 PM)

 📍 Location:   The Arc Baltimore: Seton Day Employment Services, 6151 Metro Drive, Baltimore, Maryland 21215

🔗 Register here: Access & Functional Needs Emergency Preparedness Workshop – Eventbrite

Workshop Objectives:

  • Explore the four key methods of emergency preparedness: getting informed, building a kit, making a plan, and practicing your plan.
  • Learn how to deliver emergency preparedness principles tailored to individuals with access and functional needs.
  • Understand the various types of access and functional needs and disabilities, and how they compare to the six federally defined disability categories under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).
  • Identify common accessibility barriers individuals with disabilities face and discuss solutions to improve emergency preparedness and response plans.

Accessibility & Accommodations: We are committed to hosting an inclusive and accessible event where all individuals can fully participate. ASL interpreters will be available.

If you require accommodations or assistance with registration, please contact Michelle "Shelly" Smith at: 📧 Michelle.Smith@baltimorecity.gov 📞 410-396-6188.

We encourage you to share this invitation with other relevant partners in your network. We look forward to your participation!

Register Here!

OECR Logo
 

7 E. Redwood Street Baltimore, MD 21202
Phone # 410-396-3141

Maryland Fair Housing Month Free Activities & Trainings

 

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Monday, April 7, 2025

Fair Housing Webinars Informational Flyer with QR Codes

FAIR HOUSING MONTH 2025
Webinar Series & Forum

Wednesday, April 2
12:00pm to 1:30pm
"Redlining in Real Estate"​
Webinar Complete!

This event will address the unique challenges that persist due to the lasting effects of redlining practices on historically marginalized communities.

Wednesday, April 9
12:00pm to 1:30pm
"Addressing Appraisal Bias, The Roles of
Law Makers, Industry and Homeowners"
Register Online

This event will address the unique challenges faced by marginalized communities in the appraisal process.

Wednesday, April 16
12:00pm to 1:30pm
"Enforcement"
Register Online

This event will address the unique challenges faced when individuals experience housing discrimination.

Wednesday, April 23
12:00pm to 1:30pm
"Source of Income"
Register Online

This event will address the unique challenges faced by individuals and families whose income sources are often overlooked or undervalued in housing and lending practices.

 

Fair Housing Forum 2025 Event Registration & Informational Flyer

Monday, April 28
10:00am to 3:00pm
Fair Housing Forum​​
Howard County Community College
Smith Theater
10901 Little Patuxent Parkway
Columbia, Maryland 21044
Register Online

Join us for an insightful and interactive forum focused on Maryland's Fair Housing Laws. This event offers a unique opportunity to discuss, share, and address key issues and solutions in our state

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Training & Partnerships

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UPCOMING EVENTS

Thursday, April 17 at 1pm
Civil Rights Coalition of Maryland - Virtual Open House #2
Registration Required: https://bit.ly/3E2lDwy

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Saturday, April 5, 2025

Marian Turski, Holocaust Survivor Who Warned Against Silence, 98

 

Marian Turski was a Polish Jew who survived Auschwitz and two death marches as a teenager and later became a resolute memory-keeper, civil rights advocate. and journalist, gathering testimony from other Holocaust survivors while warning younger generations against silence and indifference. For decades, Turski was among Poland’s most prominent living Holocaust survivors, recounting his story - and those of other Polish Jews he interviewed - while speaking out against hate and reminding the world of the 6 million Jews murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators. He battled against historical amnesia. 

Turski studied history at the University of Wroclaw and later traveled to the U.S. on a scholarship, joining the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights activists in Alabama for the 1965 marches from Selma to Montgomery.

Just before his death, he returned to Auschwitz to address world leaders and European royals and warned in his speech against “a huge rise in antisemitism.” He said he felt a duty to confront neo-Nazis, including some he said he encountered at the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum in the 1960s, and to combat historical lies and revisionism, notably through an open letter he wrote to Mark Zuckerberg in 2020, urging the Facebook chief executive to ban Holocaust denial from his social media platform.

Turski and his parents were incarcerated in the Lodz Ghetto, an open-air prison and forced-labor site that eventually had 210,000 people, before being sent to the camps in 1944. Separated from his family, Turski was selected for forced labor at Auschwitz, the concentration and death camp complex in the south of German-occupied Poland. In January 1945, in what would be the waning months of the war in Europe, he and other prisoners were forcibly evacuated ahead of approaching Soviet forces, ordered on a death march toward the German interior.

Turski went on a second death march, this time to Theresienstadt, also known as Terezín, in German-occupied Czechoslovakia. When liberated by the Allies, he had contracted typhus and was near death, weighing 70 pounds. Unlike other survivors who immigrated to the U.S. or the British Mandate of Palestine, soon to become Israel, Turski stayed in Poland, where an estimated 90% of the country’s Jewish population had perished in the Holocaust. Among the dead were several dozen of his relatives, including his brother and father, who had both been killed in the gas chambers at Auschwitz. “I wanted to build a new society, to rebuild the country,” Turski recalled.

He became a member of the Polish Workers’ Party and served as an organizer, recruiting young people to the communist cause. While working as an editor at Polityka, a popular center-left newsmagazine, he grew disillusioned by the communist regime, accelerated when government officials waged an antisemitic campaign in 1968 and when Polish forces participated in a Soviet-led invasion of Czechoslovakia later.

Turski published testimony from Holocaust survivors and worked with groups including the Jewish Historical Institute in Poland. To fill a “vacuum” of Jewish life in the country, he helped spearhead the creation of the POLIN Museum, showcasing 1,000 years of Jewish history in Poland. 

Into his 90s, Turski served as a member of the International Auschwitz Council, which advises the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, and as president of the International Auschwitz Committee, a survivor-led advocacy and education group that promotes awareness of Auschwitz-Birkenau, where 1.1 million people were murdered, including nearly 1 million Jews.

“Marian dedicated his life to ensuring that the world never forgets the horrors of the past,” Ronald Lauder, the cosmetics heir and president of the World Jewish Congress, said in a tribute. Turski, he added, “was a man who led by example, choosing good over evil, dialogue over conflict, and understanding over hostility.”

At a ceremony commemorating the 75th anniversary of Auschwitz’s liberation, he urged the gathered dignitaries to remember that “Auschwitz did not fall from the sky” but “began with small forms of persecution.” He went on to cite what he called “the 11th Commandment”: “Don’t be indifferent.” “Do not be indifferent when you hear lies, historical lies,” he said. “Do not be indifferent when you see the past is stretched to fit the current political needs. Do not be indifferent when any minority is discriminated against.”

Read the February 20, 2025 Washington Post article.

(Photograph courtesy of the POLIN Museum.)

Friday, April 4, 2025

State Legislature Creates a Maryland Reparations Commission, One of Few States with a Statewide Panel

 

The House of Delegates has given final approval on April 2nd to a bill that would create a Maryland Reparations Commission, sending the measure to the governor for his signature. The 101-36 party-line vote would make Maryland one of the few states in the nation with a statewide body to study the inequality endured by African descendants. California became the first state in 2020 to pass legislation; then Illinois in 2021 and New York in 2023. According to the American Association of Medical Colleges' Center for Health Justice (ACHJ), as of March 6, 2024, 22 localities (including Washington, D.C.) have approved a reparations commission or task force and 11 states have introduced legislation to create one.

If approved, the Maryland commission would assess specific federal, state and local policies from 1877 to 1965, the post-Reconstruction and Jim Crow eras. Those years “have led to economic disparities based on race, including housing segregation and discrimination, redlining, restrictive covenants, and tax policies,” according to the bill. The commission would also examine how public and private institutions may have benefited from those policies, and would recommend appropriate reparations, which could include statements of apology, monetary compensation, social service assistance, business incentives and child care costs. The all-volunteer commission would consist of 23 people, including two employees from the state’s four historically Black colleges and universities with expertise in the history of slavery; a representative from the Maryland Lynching Truth and Reconciliation Commission; and the state archivist or a designee from that office.

A hearing on the Maryland Senate version was first held on February 27th and then approved by the full chamber on March 14th. The bill would go into effect July 1st and remain in effect until June 30, 2028.

You can view a discussion with Dr. Jamal Bryant and the Reverend Dr. Robert Turner, NAARC Commissioner and Pastor of Empowerment Temple, Baltimore, on the “Let’s Be Clear” Podcast. They explore reparations, the intersection of faith and justice, and the significance of the Tulsa race massacre centennial. Dr. Turner recounts his 1,169-mile advocacy journey and highlights the ongoing fight for equity and reparative justice. Source: The Jamal Bryant Podcast “Let’s Be Clear,” YouTube. It was made available by the National African American Reparations Commission (NAARC).

Read the April 3, 2025 Maryland Matters article.

Read the April 2024 ACHJ article about reparations.

Study Finds Meta & Other Social Media Platforms Attract and Spread Anti-Minority Hate Speech in India & Globally

 

A recent report by the Center for the Study of Organized Hate (CSOH) on the role of social media platforms in the dissemination and amplification of verified in-person hate speech events in India in 2024 found that social media platforms - Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, YouTube, Telegram, and X (formerly Twitter) - were key instruments in enabling, amplifying, and mainstreaming hate speech and extremist ideologies in India and globally.

Shortly after a report by CSOH's India Hate Lab (IHL) project was released, Meta removed two Facebook groups and three Instagram accounts linked to BJP MLA T Raja Singh. The IHL report found 32 hate speeches by Singh, with 22 inciting violence, prompting Meta's latest crackdown. Singh had been banned from Meta’s platforms in 2020 under its policy on “dangerous individuals and organizations,” but he and his supporters found ways to go around the ban, continuing to share his speeches and event details through new groups and pages.

This followed when on January 7, 2025, Meta had announced many changes to its existing policies, including changes to fact-checking and its enforcement of policies on harmful content. The Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH) analyzed these changes and found: content enforcement could be halted in 97% of key areas including hate speech, bullying and harassment, and violence or incitement of violence; changes to hate speech policy would be implemented worldwide and immediately; other major policy changes currently impacting only users in the U.S., would eventually be expanded beyond the U.S.; and Meta has failed to adequately explain to its users why or how the changes will be implemented across their platforms.

In India, the CSOH report found that social media platforms were extensively utilized to articulate and spread Hindu nationalist ideology and anti-minority rhetoric. Of the 1,165 in-person hate speech events targeting Muslim and Christian minorities in 2024, 995 videos were traced back to their original sources on social media, where they were first uploaded/streamed. Facebook and YouTube were the major platforms for dissemination, with Facebook accounting for 495 hate speech videos, while 211 videos were exclusively shared on YouTube. 266 anti-minority hate speeches delivered by senior Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leaders - primarily during the April-June 2024 general elections - were simultaneously live streamed across YouTube, Facebook, and X through the official accounts of the party and the leaders.

Given the logic of virality, social media platforms facilitate the rapid and widespread circulation of hateful content while also elevating the most extreme instances of hate speech through algorithmic amplification. Despite their own community standards prohibiting hate speech, social media platforms failed to enforce their guidelines, allowing violative content to spread unchecked in the Indian context in 2024.

In short, hate speech content remains available even after removal due to re-uploading, repackaging into shorter clips, and dissemination across multiple platforms.

Read the February 10, 2025 CSOH report.

Read the February 24, 2025 CCDH report.

Read the February 20, 2025 IHL release.