Law ACLU-Backed Complaint Says Not Renting to People With Past Evictions Is Illegal Race, Sex Discrimination - "A housing provider that enforces a policy that denies the opportunity to rent to anyone who has an eviction filing or judgment is disproportionately denying housing to Black households"

CHRISTIAN BRITSCHGI | 7.28.2023 3:30 PM

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A rental application (Yukchong Kwan/Dreamstime.com)

A taxpayer-funded fair housing nonprofit in Illinois, with the help of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), is demanding a federal crackdown on landlords who don't rent to tenants with eviction records.

In a complaint filed with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) last week, the group HOPE Fair Housing Center argues that such policies amount to illegal discrimination based on race and sex, given the higher likelihood that black people, and particularly black women, will have an eviction record.

"A housing provider that enforces a policy that denies the opportunity to rent to anyone who has an eviction filing or judgment is disproportionately denying housing to Black households and Black women in particular," wrote HOPE Deputy Director Josefina Navar in a blog post published by the ACLU about the complaint.

Attorneys with the ACLU and the National Housing Law Project (NHLP) are assisting HOPE in their complaint.

HOPE's complaint targets the "no-evictions" policy of one specific landlord, Oak Park Apartments, which owns 90 multifamily buildings in the Chicago suburb of Oak Park, Illinois. Both the text of the complaint and the press materials argue this is a nationwide problem.

"Numerous studies, news reports, and advocate and tenant stories document just how typical a no-evictions policy is within the rental property owner community nationally," reads the complaint. "Often referred to as the 'Scarlet "E",' a history of eviction has effectively become a life sentence diminishing housing opportunities."

The federal Fair Housing Act bars housing providers from discriminating "because of" race and sex, along with other protected classifications like disability, national origin, and family status.

Subsequent court decisions and federal regulations established the idea that prohibition can apply to policies that had a "disparate impact" or "discriminatory effect" on protected classes—even if there's no discriminatory intent present.

HUD, for instance, has issued guidance saying that blanket policies that exclude tenants who have a criminal record can violate the Fair Housing Act. But critics argue that broad direction leaves housing providers with little guidance on the kinds of policies they can adopt to screen tenant or mortgage applicants.

"There's no way to really know that you're going to be facing potential liability down the road," says Ethan Blevins, an attorney with the Pacific Legal Foundation. "It does put landlords in a really tough position, and it's tough to know what a court will find legitimate."

In recent years, HOPE has participated in a number of lawsuits that expand the universe of housing industry practices that fall afoul of this disparate impact standard.

Last year, it sued an Illinois property management company's policy of not renting to people with criminal records.

The group was also a co-plaintiff in a 2020 lawsuit alleging real estate listing company Redfin's policy of only listing homes above a minimum value had a discriminatory effect. Redfin settled that lawsuit for $4 million in 2022.

The Biden administration has provided generous support to private groups' efforts to police property owners' allegedly discriminatory housing practices, including HOPE.

In March, HUD announced it was awarding grants worth $54 million to 182 fair housing organizations as part of its "Fair Housing Initiatives Program."
HOPE received a three-year grant of $425,000 to fund its "private enforcement initiatives." The group says its HUD complaint is the first to challenge a landlord's no-eviction policy.

Even under existing fair housing regulations, housing providers can still adopt policies that have a disparate impact on protected classes, but they must show that these policies serve a "substantial, legitimate, nondiscriminatory interest" and that there's not another less discriminatory policy they could adopt to serve that interest.

One can imagine a pretty straightforward, race-neutral reason for not renting to people with eviction records: Someone who failed to pay the rent at their last apartment is more likely to fail to pay their rent at their next one too.

HOPE's complaint disputes this in Oak Park Apartments' case, in part, because the company doesn't distinguish between people who've actually been evicted and those who have merely had their landlord file for eviction.

The complaint suggests landlords could screen for problem tenants just as effectively with a policy that considers both the final result of eviction cases and the individual circumstances of each eviction and ignores old eviction cases.

Obviously engaging in those kinds of individualized investigations of each tenant places more burden on landlords. Blevins argues that landlords can afford to adopt broad policies like no-eviction requirements because housing supply is constrained by other regulations.

"Multifamily housing that's out there, it's a sellers' market. They can pick and choose whoever they want because there's a constriction on supply," says Blevins. "If you were to remove that constriction, all of a sudden there's a lot more competitive market. I think you'd see a lot of these policies go away."

More housing supply in general would also likely mean that fewer people would have eviction records to begin with. The lower rents born of more abundant supply would likely translate into fewer people having problems paying their rent and landlords more willing to work with those that do.

The fall in eviction rates during the pandemic—even in the absence of eviction moratoriums—is evidence that landlords are much less willing to pursue evictions when it's harder to get a replacement tenant.

With the complaint now filed, HUD will investigate Oak Park Apartments' no-eviction policy. HOPE could also file a private lawsuit challenging the policy.

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Are the ACLU renting them rooms in thier houses? If not fuck off.

You could argue there should be some sort of minimum government housing - let's call it a ghetto - that felonious niggers can live in. I'd probably agree. But private property is private property: fuck all the way off telling me what to do with it.
 
Eventually someone will say law and order is a racist construct. Someone probably already has honestly.
Remember when they kept yelling how CRT is just an academic law school thing? That's what that CRT was about. There's whole books about how Black people naturally can't follow or understand the rule of law and should be exempted from it for a race-specific form of law their more simple animal or child (depending on the scholar) like minds can grasp.
 
A taxpayer-funded fair housing nonprofit in Illinois, with the help of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), is demanding a federal crackdown on landlords who don't rent to tenants with eviction records.
This org needs to be burned down and scattered into the four winds (along with all three letter federal organizations). This is what the fucking Civil Rights Act has brought upon us, your freedom of association is so fucking dead; you're gonna be legally required to fucking rent to deadbeats because you risk being racist if you don't.

The federal Fair Housing Act bars housing providers from discriminating "because of" race and sex, along with other protected classifications like disability, national origin, and family status.
Instead of accusing you of being racist for not renting to darkies; we're gonna assume you're racist by not renting to darkies because they have an eviction to their name. Find the gas line in your house, cut it open, close all your ventilation, and fucking go to bed. Get fucked!

In a complaint filed with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) last week, the group HOPE Fair Housing Center argues that such policies amount to illegal discrimination based on race and sex, given the higher likelihood that black people, and particularly black women, will have an eviction record.
Ring! Ring! Ring! It's 2008 calling, and wanting to remind you that the housing crash happened because people who couldn't meet their loan agreements were allowed to get shit they weren't qualified for. Living with dumb and destructive fucking legal decisions is just part and parcel of living in a vibrant and diverse society.

Subsequent court decisions and federal regulations established the idea that prohibition can apply to policies that had a "disparate impact" or "discriminatory effect" on protected classes—even if there's no discriminatory intent present.
Everyone be sure to thank the robe wearing faggots.

Last year, it sued an Illinois property management company's policy of not renting to people with criminal records.
I'm not gonna say everything runs afoul of civil asset forfeiture; but having a house that is known to be a criminal/drug house is one of the worst things that can happen to a landlord. These people would let a bull get with their wife and do it raw.

The group was also a co-plaintiff in a 2020 lawsuit alleging real estate listing company Redfin's policy of only listing homes above a minimum value had a discriminatory effect. Redfin settled that lawsuit for $4 million in 2022.
Unless you're in the middle of the Detroit Ghetto, I don't know what fucking listings are being excluded for being too low. I wouldn't be surprised if this was a fucking shakedown; settling for a few million feels like a "make this go away" and not a real move for justice.

In March, HUD announced it was awarding grants worth $54 million to 182 fair housing organizations as part of its "Fair Housing Initiatives Program."
HOPE received a three-year grant of $425,000 to fund its "private enforcement initiatives." The group says its HUD complaint is the first to challenge a landlord's no-eviction policy.
You see that part? "Private Enforcement Initiatives." Private Enforcement is code for a fucking shakedown.

HOPE's complaint disputes this in Oak Park Apartments' case, in part, because the company doesn't distinguish between people who've actually been evicted and those who have merely had their landlord file for eviction.
Being evicted = You have been thrown out.

Filing for eviction = The process has started, and you will eventually be thrown out.

Sure there is a difference; but it's as nuanced as a child molestor going through their trial. Sure they're not convicted yet, so you should totally let them continue working at the school.

The complaint suggests landlords could screen for problem tenants just as effectively with a policy that considers both the final result of eviction cases and the individual circumstances of each eviction and ignores old eviction cases.
Evictions and criminal charges are the two biggest rental problems and thus the two easiest ways to filter possible renters, but as already shown in the article, you bitch made nigger worshippers want both of those avenues taken away.

The fall in eviction rates during the pandemic—even in the absence of eviction moratoriums—is evidence that landlords are much less willing to pursue evictions when it's harder to get a replacement tenant.
There was a fucking moratorium put in to effect. This wasn't landlords deciding not to do it, it was the government saying it wouldn't honor the process. YOU'RE FUCKING REWRITING HISTORY TO FIT YOUR NIGGER WORSHIPPING NARRATIVE! DO YOU REMEMBER WHEN THE CDC OVERSTEPPED THEIR BOUNDS AND ISSUED A FUCKING NATIONWIDE RENT/EVICTION MORATORIUM THAT TOOK SCOTUS TO FUCKING END?!


FUCKING DO YOU?!
(I'm fucking mad, hit me)
 
They don't even need to tie it to the amount of convictions; a lot of landlords, even in the absolute worst areas, won't let you rent unless you have good credit and/or can pay for the next X amount of months worth of rent before you even sign the lease. Blacks who end up in prison don't typically qualify based on those two tricks.
 
They don't even need to tie it to the amount of convictions; a lot of landlords, even in the absolute worst areas, won't let you rent unless you have good credit and/or can pay for the next X amount of months worth of rent before you even sign the lease. Blacks who end up in prison don't typically qualify based on those two tricks.

The 1%: "Credit scores are used to analyze risk to ensure an optimum return on investment for our shareholders and stakeholders. Not our fault you can't secure a home loan. Just stop being poor."

Also, the 1%: "Wait, WTF? You can't use credit scores to deny housing to our heckin' niggerinos! FICO is OUR racket!"
 
Over and over again they argue, 'Blacks can't meet this criteria so we should lower it until they can, otherwise it's racist'. Yet they hate when we notice that every time a standard is demanded to be lowered, it's to allow more blacks in. That over time, everything involving rules, education, following the law and dealing with the consequences of your actions, all of it is regarded as too difficult for one group of people to manage, and so instead of expecting better from them we need to expect, and enforce, worse on everyone else.

Perhaps, just perhaps, with everything black people in aggregate can't seem to accomplish, the problem isn't that every single white person (and asian, depending on the day) is so racist that they want to stop them from succeeding; it might just be that they are the ones responsible for their inability to meet modern societal standards. The two things I can hope for, because having something like the ACLU acknowledge this is unrealistic in the extreme, is that either the black people causing these problems finally start turning on the people actually in charge, rather than whatever's nearby, and that the black vs. troon issue becomes far more prominent, because they both are being held to lower expectations and therefore get away with murder. Sometimes literally.

It's pretty much the same hope, considering they're both supported and valued by oppression olympics. But I want them fighting for the top of that pile. Send pride marches through the ghetto. Get a troon cop or soldier murdering a black man. If we're going to have two groups devoted to making society worse for their own benefit, pit them against each other and leave us to watch. It would be glorious.
 
Next up credit scores, can't not give mortgages to people who have prior mortgage repossessions and bankruptcies. Watch everything burn.

The hilarious thing is if they stop landlords being able to find if prospective tenants have prior evictions then they will start deciding it on other factors knowing that black women have the highest incidence of not paying their rent.
 
I rented for years when I was a student and young and poor. The best places were the ones rented from someone who had one flat that they needed to rent for some reason and who were worried about who was going to move in. The ones who asked a million questions and wanted good references turned out to be good landlords, and I was a good tenant so it was win win.
The only place I was ever asked to leave was one where the wife of the landlord died and he had to sell the place to pay a tax bill, and even then it wasn’t an eviction, and they gave me plenty of time and helped me find somewhere else.
I would NEVER rent to anyone who had a fault eviction, poor references, was a smoker, had large pets, or looked like they’d be trouble
 
Remember when they kept yelling how CRT is just an academic law school thing? That's what that CRT was about. There's whole books about how Black people naturally can't follow or understand the rule of law and should be exempted from it for a race-specific form of law their more simple animal or child (depending on the scholar) like minds can grasp.
takes me back to my property manager days when I used to have to get rid of blacks out of the apartments you know with my favorite thing would be to do would just post Mass amounts of notices on the front door because they constantly violated the terms of the lease.
Are they talking about "No I can't pay, but what are you going to do about that, SUE ME?" kind of evictions or the "Sorry I do not have the rent money anymore, I will be moving out next week" evictions?

A few landlords I work for had no problem letting someone stay if they missed one month of rent as long as they made it up the next month contrary to popular belief most people like tenants that don't fuck the buildings up or the houses up and generally keep to themselves and don't cause a nuisance
 
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