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cal04

(41,505 posts)
Sat Jul 11, 2015, 07:45 AM Jul 2015

Weekly Address: Making Our Communities Stronger Through Fair Housing

Source: White House

In this week's address, the President discussed a new rule announced by his Administration earlier this week to make it easier for communities to implement the Fair Housing Act.

For nearly 50 years, the Fair Housing Act has prohibited landlords from turning away tenants because of race, religion, sex, national origin, or disability, and has made a big difference in this country. This week, the Administration announced new steps to provide communities with the tools they need to ensure that housing is fair, and that no American’s destiny is determined by a zip code.




Read more: https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2015/07/11/weekly-address-making-our-communities-stronger-through-fair-housing



It’s our job as citizens to make sure we keep pushing this country we love toward our most cherished ideals – that all of us are created equal, and all of us deserve an equal shot. This week, my Administration took new steps to bring us closer to that goal.

Almost 50 years ago, Republicans and Democrats in Congress came together to pass the Fair Housing Act. It’s a law that says landlords can’t turn away tenants solely because of their race, religion, sex, national origin, or disability. And it made a difference in this country.

Still, the work of the Fair Housing Act remains unfinished. Just a few weeks ago, the Supreme Court ruled that policies segregating minorities in poor neighborhoods, even unintentionally, are against the law. The Court recognized what many people know to be true from their own lives: that too often, where people live determines what opportunities they have in life.

In some cities, kids living just blocks apart lead incredibly different lives. They go to different schools, play in different parks, shop in different stores, and walk down different streets. And often, the quality of those schools and the safety of those parks and streets are far from equal – which means those kids aren’t getting an equal shot in life.

That runs against the values we hold dear as Americans. In this country, of all countries, a person’s zip code shouldn’t decide their destiny. We don’t guarantee equal outcomes, but we do strive to guarantee an equal shot at opportunity – in every neighborhood, for every American.

Now, the Fair Housing Act also says that this isn’t the responsibility of a landlord alone – local governments have a role to play, too. That’s why, this week, my Administration announced that we’ll make it easier for communities to implement this law. We’re using data on housing and neighborhood conditions to help cities identify the areas that need the most help. We’re doing more to help communities meet their own goals. Plus, by opening this data to everybody, everyone in a community – not just elected officials – can weigh in. If you want a bus stop added near your home, or more affordable housing nearby, now you’ll have the data you need to make your case.

These actions won’t make every community perfect. That’s something we all have to strive for in our own lives. But they will help make our communities stronger and more vibrant. And they’ll help keep this a country where kids from every background can grow up knowing that no matter who you are, what you look like, or where you live, you can write your own story.

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Weekly Address: Making Our Communities Stronger Through Fair Housing (Original Post) cal04 Jul 2015 OP
Anyone can apply is not the same as anyone can live here. yallerdawg Jul 2015 #1
The only fair housing plan is one that guarantees everyone access to decent housing. Cheese Sandwich Jul 2015 #2
Thanks for posting! BumRushDaShow Jul 2015 #3

yallerdawg

(16,104 posts)
1. Anyone can apply is not the same as anyone can live here.
Sat Jul 11, 2015, 08:28 AM
Jul 2015

Advocates and activists point out our neighborhoods remain segregated because we didn't utilize the Fair Housing Act as written.

See how our neighborhoods are doing:

http://demographics.coopercenter.org/DotMap/index.html

Click on "Add Map Labels" to look at your community.

BumRushDaShow

(129,165 posts)
3. Thanks for posting!
Sat Jul 11, 2015, 10:53 AM
Jul 2015


One of my issues about the FHA and the remark -

Now, the Fair Housing Act also says that this isn’t the responsibility of a landlord alone – local governments have a role to play, too. That’s why, this week, my Administration announced that we’ll make it easier for communities to implement this law. We’re using data on housing and neighborhood conditions to help cities identify the areas that need the most help. We’re doing more to help communities meet their own goals. Plus, by opening this data to everybody, everyone in a community – not just elected officials – can weigh in. If you want a bus stop added near your home, or more affordable housing nearby, now you’ll have the data you need to make your case.


is that every municipality and the people who live in that municipality, knows the areas that have the most need. The elected officials don't need a fancy chart to show them that and the residents of those communities don't need one either. The problem is that the elected officials are often bought and paid for, and even when community activists challenge their elected officials to fulfill their needs, the discussions often go on deaf ears... Which obviously suggests voting for better leaders...

But then the distaff side has, over the past 20 or so years, lead to gentrification as the means to "improve" the neighborhoods and housing, with less focus on moderate or "mixed-price" dwellings. E.g., here in Philly, a 2-story, 3 bedroom "rowhouse" built in the '30s, that was the average working class stock of house, has suddenly been re-branded as a "townhouse", and often goes for 10x the price that it had been years before. And to get the upscale construction companies to come in to build, you end up with your elected officials enacting ridiculous strategies (again like here in Philly), of "10-year tax abatements". I.e., where the taxes of the higher end homes that meet the criteria (either brand new or gutted and renovated existing stock), are reduced or eliminated over that 10-year period. When year 10 comes, away the last owner goes, and the house sits on the market for years. Meanwhile, the neighborhood housing prices/value begin to skyrocket thanks to that strategy, and vulture capitalists come in to flip the lower-priced houses, not to build a community, but to milk for money (there are even commercials on the radio here promoting flipping). Basically, houses never end up with long-term families in them, or any at all, except for occasional renters. And to top it off, the strategy in turn means major increases in the property taxes on the current residents - the ones who can't move and can least afford the tax increase. So then they end up with a Sheriff sale due to missed payment of taxes (another Philly thing), where the vultures are there to snap the houses up.

So there needs to be some other way to get from point A to point B.
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