Strengthening U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development's civil rights enforcement could send a powerful signal to communities resistant to changing discriminatory housing rules.

A quick glance at current statistics shows the stark and continuing legacy of housing discrimination policies in American cities, writes Jerusalem Demsas for Vox. Studies show that "moving to a wealthier neighborhood not only increased the likelihood that kids would go to college, but also increased earnings by roughly 31 percent by the time they’d reached their mid-20s." Yet neighborhoods remain largely segregated, with many areas inaccessible to the average family.
Exclusionary policies like single-family zoning play a major role in keeping lower-income families from moving into suburbs and certain neighborhoods, and a recent reckoning with the discriminatory origins and harmful effects of these policies has led many cities to revise single-family zoning laws. In the Nashville suburb of Franklin, single-family zoning and a minimum lot size of (in some areas) two acres has kept the neighborhood overwhelmingly white and wealthy. Local officials recognize the problem, and have shifted their focus to approving more multi-family developments. According to the city, "in 2020 they approved only 4.9 percent of proposed single family home developments but 69 percent of proposed apartments." While some communities are already taking similar steps, others have expressed resistance to changing zoning codes in favor of more density.
Demsas provides a number of recommendations that can shift housing policy in more cities toward achieving the goals of the Fair Housing Act. If all else fails, Demsas writes, "sue the suburbs." The Biden administration should "open up the floodgates for civil rights organizations, developers, and its own Justice Department to begin suing the worst offenders of exclusionary zoning." The first step in this process is staffing up the Department of Housing and Urban Development's (HUD) Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity, which is currently "lacking the kind of expertise that will be needed to in order to dig into civil rights enforcement and compliance," according to Sara Pratt, former deputy assistant secretary for fair housing enforcement and programs and senior adviser to the assistant secretary at HUD during the Obama administration.
While lawsuits are "a last resort," setting up the infrastructure for them can send a signal that the administration is serious about enforcement and could "deter other localities against exclusionary zoning practices and encourage them to work with HUD to develop a plan that fits their localities’ needs."
FULL STORY: America’s racist housing rules really can be fixed

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