HUD’s Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing

26 Feb HUD’s Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing

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Property Value Defense is a nationwide network that informs community officials and legal experts of current news and activities involving HUD’s new rule, Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing.

From time to time, I will call on individual members, only with their permission, to contact other communities to provide their officials with the benefit of your insights.

For a brief overview of the ruling, I suggest this analysis by Allen, Relman, Dane and Colfax.

ARDC, is one of the nation’s top civil rights law firms and has been at the forefront of many high profile HUD lawsuits.  I suggest getting to know them. Defy HUD’s rule and you may find your community facing them in court.

In addition to sharing information among members and other communities I will answer your most frequent questions.

In various forms officials continue to ask why they should worry about AFFH.

Our HUD CDBG grant reads the same as it always has and our county has been getting HUD grants for years with no lawsuits; why should we worry now?

It is generally true that HUD grants have not changed.  However, AFFH creates an additional layer of updated procedures and terms that sharply govern what you can and cannot do with the grant money. The term AFFH has been used for decades, but do not mistake that for the new rule, nor think that when acccepting grant money, it will be “business as usual.”

Grants such as, HUD’s Community Development Block Grant, contain many strict requirements that HUD has been lax about enforcing in prior years.   That is all changing.

  • For instance, HUD is now looking more closely at what constitutes a civil rights violation.
  • According to HUD, it is “no longer sufficent to use grant money to combat discrimination.” Recipients must now provide proof they are working “proactively” to eliminate it.
  • The agency’s new Assessment of Fair Housing lists 40 “Contributing Factors” that might create fair housing issues in your community.  HUD expects you to find more.  A contributing factor might be as commonplace as “The opposition of community members to proposed or existing developments.”  Your community must create a plan that removes the contributing factors or face penalties.
  • Because HUD requires applicants to involve civil rights groups, developers and other community members in defining potential “contributing factors,” their “meaningful participation” creates a legal liability for your community simply by completing the AFH, even if you are not appproved for the grant.

In a July 16, 2013 speech for the NAACP, HUD Sec. Shaun Donovan made it clear; HUD will be “stepping up fair housing enforcement.”

  • “There are no stones we won’t turn.  There are no places we won’t go.  And there are no complaints we won’t explore in order to eliminate housing discrimination.” – S Donovan

And according to Law 360, HUD is setting the stage for False Claims lawsuits against jurisdictions that fail to comply with the agency’s requirements.  HUD charged more cases of all legal violations in 2011 than in the preceding decade and the number is increasing.

The false claims liability stems from a certification recipients must sign toreceive the funds.  The recipient certifies they shall take “no action that is materially inconsistent with its obligation to affirmatively further fair housing.”

  • “AFFH certifications are material preconditions to the receipt of HUD funds and courts are likely to see claims for payment as implicit AFFH certifications.” – Allen, Relman, Dane & Colfax

HUD’s goal is to assure that communities develop “integrated and balanced living patterns”, equal access to community resources, and eliminate “racially and ethnically concentrated areas of poverty,” as a means to end “patterns of segregation.”

However, to receive the funds, applicants must develop a plan that addresses each of the potential areas of discrimination to HUD’s satisfaction, not necessarily that of the community.

Once a jurisdiction or public housing authority accepts a new grant that effects fair housing or urban development, the agency uses the threat of lawsuits and forfeiture of the grant money to gain control of local zoning laws. HUD can then direct local officials’ decisions, and coerce the community to join a region.

Communities such as Rockford, IL, Dubuque, IA, and Westchester County, NYhave already felt HUD’s legal authority.

If you have any other questions about the elevated community risks or HUD’s stepped-up enforcement practices, please reply back and I will respond.  As attorney’s Allen, Relman, Dane & Colfax said, “Recipients ignore HUD’s…AFFH regulations at their peril.”

In our next edition we will answer the question, “If our community did not apply for HUD money, can we still be subject to AFFH?”

(PVD is here for you and always trying to expand our network to help more communities.  If you know of any community members, officials or municipal attorneys interested in joining our group, please feel free to forward this article.)

Thank you,

John Anthony, Founder
Property Value Defense

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1Comment
  • DH Andrew
    Posted at 23:46h, 08 July Reply

    This article is an eye opener. Clearly the game changed in July of 2015. To borrow an automobile commercial’s expression; Today’s HUD with AFFH is not what our communities dealt with only 2 years ago..

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