April 27th Virtual Fair Housing Summit
Human Rights |
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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.
April 27th Virtual Fair Housing Summit
Human Rights |
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Hate Crimes
A Maryland man has been charged by federal authorities with making threats of violence to the D.C.-based LGBTQ organization Human Rights Campaign (HRC) in a March 28th voice mail, a day after the killing of six persons at a school in Nashville. Nashville police initially said the shooter, Audrey Hale, was a 28-year-old woman, and later said Hale was transgender, according to Hale's social media profile where he used masculine pronouns. It has not yet been confirmed how Hale identified.
The HRC is an American LGBTQ advocacy group. It is the largest LGBTQ political lobbying organization in the U. S. It "envisions a world where every member of the LGBTQ+ family has the freedom to live their truth without fear, and with equality under the law. We empower our 3 million members and supporters to mobilize against attacks on the most marginalized people in our community."
Since the shooting, some conservative commentators and Republican politicians have cited reports about the shooter’s gender identity in voicing anti-trans sentiments. The voice mail left for the HRC, which federal authorities said was traced to 34-year-old Adam Michael Nettina, of West Friendship, Maryland, used anti-trans rhetoric. Most criminal justice experts report that transgender people are rarely the shooters in mass killings, which are overwhelmingly carried out by men. Multiple studies have shown that trans people are more likely to be victims of violence than others.
In the threatening message to the HRC, the caller said many things that federal authorities said they believed were referring to the Nashville shooting and the shooter’s gender identity, according to court documents. Some threats, laden with profanity, made reference to specific acts of violence. Federal authorities filed a criminal complaint against Nettina on March 31st, and he was arrested later that evening, according to a news release from the U.S. attorney’s office for the District of Maryland. A detention hearing was held on on April 7th. If convicted, Nettina could face up to five years in federal prison.
A HRC spokesperson's statement said that the organization got two threatening voice mails late in March, and that it is “grateful to law enforcement for acting so quickly to keep our community safe.”
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Community Event
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Economic Justice Summit March 30-31, 2023
Georgetown University Law Center, The Sarah and Bernard Gewirz Student Center
120 F Street NW, Floor 12, Washington, DC 20001
Free. Register. by March 29, 2023, 8:00 p.m.
For more information, contact: ABA Service Center (800) 285-2221 / service@americanbar.org
The theme for the American Bar Association's Civil Rights and Social Justice Section (CRSJ) 22-23 Bar Year is economic justice, fundamental to civil rights and social justice. This two-day Summit will cover issues such as guaranteed income, taxes and debt, housing, and the racial wealth gap. During the Summit, lawyers, activists, policymakers, and key stakeholders will formulate policy solutions to the nation's most critical economic disparities and devise strategies to implement such policy solutions.
As the American Bar Association (ABA)’s only membership entity exclusively dedicated to the advancement of human rights, civil liberties, and social justice, we seek to understand the role that lawyers can play in the pursuit of economic justice. A detailed agenda with program descriptions and speakers is available here.
The Economic Justice Summit is open to both in-person and virtual attendees, so please choose accordingly during the registration process. This event is complimentary and open to the public. Please share word of this event widely with your colleagues and networks.
Summit Supporters: Truist, Georgetown University Law Center, D.C. Bar, American Tax Policy Institute, ABA Section of Taxation, Francine J. Lipman & James E. Williamson.
Summit Co-Sponsors: ABA Business Law Section, ABA Center for Public Interest Law, ABA Commission on Homelessness and Poverty, ABA Criminal Justice Section, ABA Forum on Affordable Housing and Community Development Law, ABA Section of State and Local Government Law, ABA Young Lawyers Division.
Read the ABA's article about the Summit.
Read the Wealth Disparities and Civil Rights issue of CRSJ's Human Rights Magazine.
HUD Housing Summit 2023
May 1, 2023
11am - 4pm ET,
Robert C. Weaver Federal Building, 451 7th Street, SW, Washington, D.C. 20410
In person / Virtual option available
In addition to housing, asset building and financial empowerment are key components of HUD’s efforts to support those who have been historically underserved. During this hybrid convening, attendees will hear from HUD leadership and peers about the importance of leveraging housing as a platform to build assets and work towards economic justice. Participants will engage with community leaders, staff from across the federal government, policy experts, affordable housing practitioners, and other stakeholders in the field.
Housing, asset building, and financial empowerment are key components of HUD’s efforts to support those who have been historically underserved.
Learn about the importance of housing as a platform for asset building and economic justice. Engage with community leaders, staff from across the federal government, policy experts, affordable housing practitioners, and other stakeholders.
Housing Segregation
The planned communities of Columbia and Reston, Virginia, were case studies in a new era of housing desegregation in the 1960s. The planned community of Columbia was built by James Rouse, who stated that “Like any real city of 100,000, Columbia will be economically diverse, poly-cultural, multi-faith, and inter-racial.” Columbia had no racial covenants and there was no racial steering of buyers. The city developed affordable housing for a mix of incomes.
The Black population of Howard County increased rapidly from 1970 to 1980, with much of this in Columbia. In 1980, Columbia had low levels of segregation and an evenly distributed Black/White population on a neighborhood level. These measures gradually worsened. Three common measures of segregation at the community level all showed that the evenness of distribution of the Black population and the exposure of Black and White groups to one another both declined, while Black isolation from Whites increased.
By 2020, Howard County was 21.4% Black and Columbia 28.1% Black. While there has been an increase in diversity in the County and Columbia, there has also been increasing segregation. White population has declined in Columbia similar to Maryland. In all, there has been a decline of nearly 15,000 White residents in Columbia over two decades. Currently, 76.5% of White residents own a home compared with 52% of Blacks. Blacks therefore are more likely to live in multi-family rental buildings, which cluster their population in areas with higher proportions of apartments.
The newer villages in Columbia have not been developed in the original spirit of economic and racial integration. The older Columbia villages of Harper’s Choice, Owen Brown, Wilde Lake, Oakland Mills, and Long Reach were developed with greater concentrations of affordable housing. Dorsey Search and River Hill were not developed until the 1990s and have few multifamily units, almost no affordable housing, and its schools are less than 10% Black.
The newish Dorsey Search and River Hill have only 22% and 9% renter households respectively, have much higher household incomes, and are relatively poor in Black/White integration and economic equity. Dorseys Search and River Hill have Black populations below 10% compared to the 20% to 35% African American population in most other villages. The older Town Center and Wilde Lake have 76% and 57% renter households.
Only a small percentage of Columbia's housing stock is affordable when compared to the overall Baltimore metro. While the first villages built in Columbia broke barriers, those in recent decades have failed to sustain the mix of rentals, townhomes, and single-family homes that made Columbia a pocket of remarkable integration in a society still deeply struggling with racial inequality.
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Read the February 1, 2023 NCRC article.
Mortgage Lending Discrimination
A large number of Black property owners hold that white appraisers are using their race to determine the worth of their homes. About 97% of appraisers in the U. S. are white, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The National Community Reinvestment Coalition (NCRC) and other advocates report the result is widespread appraisal discrimination. In 2022, the NCRC released a report finding that the average appraiser gave a value that was $7,000 higher to the same home owned by a white rather than a Black.
In one high-profile case, the Baltimore-area home of Dr. Nathan Connolly and Dr. Shani Mott was valued at nearly $300,000 more when they performed a “whitewashing experiment” in 2021, removing family photos and asking a white colleague to stand in for them. The couple has filed a lawsuit in Maryland, and the U. S. Department of Justice unusually issued a statement of interest in their case, just as they did last year with the case of Mr. Austin and Ms. Tate-Austin.
Redlining, a Depression-era practice that denied mortgages to people of color in certain neighborhoods, continues to drive down home values in Black neighborhoods, and today, racism and discrimination are still inextricably entwined in housing values.
A recent possibly discriminatory example is the case of Terry Horton who has been a Cincinnati landlord for over 10 years. He has rented to single mothers who rely on Section 8 housing assistance to pay their rent, and he and all of his tenants are Black. To free up cash for buying a new apartment building, he wanted to refinance his three-unit rental property in Cincinnati's North Avondale neighborhood, near Xavier University and with a roughly $39,000 median family income. His lender estimated the property’s value at around $500,000. But an appraiser declared his property worth only $359,000.
Horton believes that the first appraiser, who is white, discriminated against both him and his tenants because of their race - all were whom met the appraiser. Two more appraisals of Horton’s property had higher values, though by the time Horton reapplied for a loan based on the later values, interest rates had climbed so that it was not advisable to refinance his mortgage. “It was completely devastating,” Horton said. “It rips the whole bottom out when you come to the realization that because of the color of your skin, they’re devaluing your property.”
He recently filed a complaint to HUD with the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, which works for increased wealth in low-income communities. The complaint cites multiple methodological and factual errors in the first appraisal done by Brent Martin of Martin Appraisal Company. Martin Appraisal Company was subcontracted by Appraisal Nation, an appraisal management company used by Horton’s lender, Stratton Equities.
According to the complaint, Martin underreported the size the property by over 500 square feet, selected nearby properties of comparable size and quality within a smaller size bracket than Horton’s property, underreported the number of bedrooms, and underestimated Horton’s monthly rental income by over $450. After Horton disputed, Appraisal Nation refused to change its $359,000 valuation.
HUD confirmed receipt of the complaint and has begun processing it. Should HUD determine that there is cause to suspect discrimination, the case could be moved to a HUD administrative or to a federal judge.
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Read the March 18, 2023 New York Times article.
Read the February 27, 2023 NCRC article.