The
Fair Housing Act was passed a week after Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
was assassinated. President Lyndon Johnson encouraged Congress to
pass the legislation as a tribute to the slain civil rights ladder,
who, along with several civil rights organizations (including the
NAACP), strongly supported the act. African American veteran’s
organizations (including the American GI Forum) were especially
passionate about the legislation, especially since Vietnam veterans
were among those experiencing severe housing discrimination. Senator
Ed Brooke (R-MA), the only African American in the Senate at the
time, along with his Massachusetts colleague, Senator Ted Kennedy
(D-MA) was especially focused on the legislation.
The
Fair Housing Act is also known as Title VII of the Civil Rights Act
of 1968 (which was later amended in 1988) prevents discrimination in
the sale, rental, financing, and advertising of housing because of
race, color, religion, disability, family status, and national
origin. But with the severe wealth inequality in our nation, there
are still major gaps between homeownership by race, and African
American households were more heavily impacted by the Great Recession
than any other race group. Between 2004 and 2016, every group
experienced a decline in homeownership, but while whites experienced
a 4.1 percent decline, African American households experienced a 7
percent decline, dropping from nearly half (49 percent) of Black
households owning homes to just 41.9 percent. Meanwhile, white
homeownership remained over 70 percent. As much as a third of
African American wealth was wiped out by the Great Recession, and
this is partly due to discrimination in banking, including the ways
that some banks aggressively pushed subprime loans on African
Americans, even those who qualified for traditional loans.
HUD
is the federal agency that is responsible for enforcing the Fair
Housing Act, as well as providing rental assistance, public housing,
and housing vouchers for those who cannot afford housing on their
incomes. Our 45th President had proposed deep cuts in the HUD
budget, but the budget that was passed on March 23, 2018, just hours
before the government was scheduled to shut down, actually adds money
to the HUD budget, especially in the rental assistance and public
housing capital funds program. Still, cuts are scheduled for the next fiscal year, and the issue of
non-discriminatory and affordable housing remains a pressing one.
But
will HUD Secretary Ben Carson enforce the Fair Housing Act and
effectively administer an agency that can make a difference in the
quality of life for low-income people? One has to raise the
question, especially as Dr. Carson seems to want to spend more time
looking for a $30,000 dining table than administering his agency.
45’s pick of Carson to administer the agency was a strange one,
given that Carson’s only qualification for running one of the
government’s largest agencies seems to be that his mom avoided
public housing because of its “dangers”. 45 does not
seem to be high on finding qualified people to run HUD. The New York
HUD administrator, Lynn Patton, was Eric Trump’s wedding
planner!
It
may seem snarky to point out things that some would call “minor”,
and both Patton and Carson will, perhaps, grow into their roles. But
the work to do (or not do) make a difference in the quality of life,
and the quality of housing, for millions of Americans. And, there is
no evidence that Carson has spearheaded innovative programs (wait –
did I write Carson and “innovative programs” in the same
sentence?) to close the homeownership gap or to help African American
families recover from the ravages of the Great Recession.
Furthermore,
while this has little to do with Carson, the effort to roll back
Dodd-Frank reforms and the evisceration of the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau disempowers consumers, especially those of low and
moderate incomes. By making it more difficult to file class action
lawsuits, individuals who experience banking discrimination are
handicapped in their ability to fight back. Carson, singing from the
45 playbook, when he opens up his mouth at all, is not likely to be
an effective advocate for the people he has frequently disdained.
Indeed,
though he has thrown his wife, Candy, under the bus on the matter of
the dining table, he is no different from other Cabinet officials who
have a “let them eat cake” attitude toward those they
serve. First class travel, high-end furniture, and chicanery are the
name of the 45 Cabinet game. Fifty years after the passage of the
Fair Housing Act as a tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., it is
not clear that the current HUD Secretary will be a warrior in the
fight against housing discrimination.
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