#165 Spring 2011 — Fair Housing

A HOME of a Different Name

In December, the Housing Opportunities Made Equal Act was introduced with moderate fanfare in an unusually active lame duck session of Congress. Unfortunately, HOME, which would amend the Fair Housing […]

In December, the Housing Opportunities Made Equal Act was introduced with moderate fanfare in an unusually active lame duck session of Congress. Unfortunately, HOME, which would amend the Fair Housing Act to prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, gender identity, source of income, or marital status in the sale, rental, or financing of housing or in brokerage services, stalled as the 112th Congress took hold.

In January, however, HUD did propose new regulations that would ban discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation in its core housing programs. The regs would clarify, for example, that families otherwise qualified for HUD programs cannot be excluded on that basis and would prevent FHA lenders from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity.

Rep. Jerry Nadler, a primary sponsor of HOME, says his office will reintroduce the bill this session. In the meantime, it’s good to see the administration moving forward on at least one of the issues it was trying to address. (See our interview with Asst. Sec. for Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity John Trasviña for more.)

OTHER ARTICLES IN THIS ISSUE

  • A Windfall for Los Angeles Landlords “Burdened” with Rent Control

    March 30, 2011

    A Los Angeles councilman says rent control places undue burdens on landlords and proposes a plan to reduce their tax burden.

  • The Rising Tide of Bank Protests

    March 30, 2011

    Despite Dodd-Frank and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, distrust for the banking industry in the United States remains palpable, and now we’re beginning to see a sustained, organized counterattack. Bank […]

  • Integrating Schools Is a Matter of Housing Policy

    March 30, 2011

    Inclusionary zoning and economic integration in suburban neighborhoods not only reduces concentration of poverty, it directly improves low-income children’s academic achievement.