Title: Communities of Opportunity: Thompson v' HUD and beyond
1Communities of Opportunity Thompson v. HUD and
beyond
- Housing Justice Network Conference
- Washington, D.C.
- October 22, 2006
- john a. powell
- Williams Chair in Civil Rights Civil Liberties,
- Moritz College of Law
- Director, Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race
and Ethnicity
2Place and Life Outcomes
- Where you live is more important than what you
live in - Housing -- in particular its location -- is the
primary mechanism for accessing opportunity in
our society - Housing location determines the quality of
schools children attend, the quality of public
services they receive, access to employment and
transportation, exposure to health risks, access
to health care, etc. - For those living in high poverty neighborhoods,
these factors can significantly inhibit life
outcomes
3Housing and Opportunity
- Housing is Critical in Determining Access to
Opportunity
4The Web of Opportunity
- Opportunities in our society are geographically
distributed and often clustered throughout
metropolitan areas - This creates winner and loser communities or
high and low opportunity communities - Your location within this web of opportunity
plays a decisive role in your life potential and
outcomes - Individual characteristics still matter
- but so does access to opportunity
- Often impacting individual decision making
5The Cumulative Impacts of Racial and Opportunity
Segregation
Segregation impacts a number of life-opportunities
Impacts on Health
School Segregation
Impacts on Educational Achievement
Exposure to crime arrest
Transportation limitations and other inequitable
public services
Job segregation
Neighborhood Segregation
Racial stigma, other psychological impacts
Impacts on community power and individual assets
Adapted from figure by Barbara Reskin at
http//faculty.washington.edu/reskin/
6Ex Influence of Neighborhoods on Health
- Research suggests that living in disadvantaged
neighborhoods increases the risk of mortality and
disease - Possible mechanisms
- direct physical influences (i.e. exposure to
toxic waste) - cumulative stress associated with living in
unsafe neighborhoods with limited resources - harder to sustain healthy behaviors (i.e. less
good grocery stores) - more likely to be targeted by companies promoting
unhealthy lifestyles (tobacco, alcohol, fast
food)
7Conditions in High and Low Opportunity Areas
Economic Opportunities
High Opportunity
Low Opportunity
8Children and Schools
High Opportunity
Low Opportunity
9The Impact of Place Qualitative Research from
the MTO Program
- Reflections on living in a low opportunity
community - "It was like being in a war zone. It was really
bad...A lot of drug dealings. Shoot-outs. Girls
getting beat up by their boyfriends. Young
girlsEverybody has such low self-esteem and no
regard for each other. Nobody looked out for
each other. It was horrible. - Impact of moving to opportunity
- "I just got promoted to a higher
position...Moving has done wonderful things for
me and my family. It has given me an outlook on
things that I'm surrounded by. Better
neighborhood, better schools for my kids, a
better job, great things for me." - "It gave me a better outlook on life, that there
is a life outside of that housing."
10Racial Segregation, Opportunity Segregation and
Racial Disparities
- Housing policies, land use patterns and patterns
of regional investment and disinvestment converge
to produce continued racial segregation in our
society - Often this racial segregation coexists with
segregation into high poverty neighborhoods and
separation from many of the opportunities in our
metropolitan regions - Producing a racial isolation in neighborhoods
that are lacking the essential opportunities to
advance in our society, and fueling racial
disparities
11Opportunity Segregation
- This segregation from opportunity can be
quantified, as illustrated in these examples - Milwaukee
- Chicago
- Cleveland
- New Orleans
- In all examples, African Americans are
disproportionately segregated into neighborhoods
of low opportunity
12The Dynamics of Opportunity in the Milwaukee
Region(Light Colors Lowest Opportunity
Neighborhoods Dark Colors Highest Opportunity
Neighborhoods)
- Low opportunity communities are clustered in the
inner city, high opportunity areas are found in
the suburbs - Based on an analysis of multiple indicators of
neighborhood opportunity including Poverty
rates, vacancy rates, population change,
unemployment rates, home values
13The Dynamics of Opportunity in Milwaukee
Population by Race by Neighborhood Opportunity
Level
- Who is living in low opportunity communities in
Milwaukee? - Nearly 85 of the Milwaukee regions African
Americans live in low and very low
opportunity neighborhoods - 2/3s of the regions Latinos can be found in
these communities - Approximately 200,000 Whites are found in low
and very low opportunity communities - 225,000 African Americans and 70,000 Latinos live
in these communities as well
14ChicagosCommunities of Opportunity
- Neighborhood opportunity is a measurable concept
- Requires looking a large number of indicators
related to opportunity - This example is a 6 county communities of
opportunity map for the Chicago region - Red Lowest Opportunity
- Blue Highest Opportunity
Source Report published by the Leadership
Council for Metropolitan Open Communities 2005
15Opportunity Segregation in the Chicago Region
- In Chicago, African Americans and Latinos are
segregated into low opportunity communities
16(No Transcript)
17Comprehensive Opportunity Map and the African
American Population
Light Purple Low Opportunity Areas (also
contain the largest number of African Americans)
18Two Complementary Paths to Opportunity
- Affirmatively connect people to opportunity in
the region (move people TO opportunity, not just
AWAY from poverty) - Housing mobility programs (Gautreaux, Hollman,
Walker, Thompson, etc.) - School mobility programs (The Choice is Yours
in Minneapolis) - Bring opportunities to opportunity deprived
neighborhoods and communities - Portlands UGB
- Marylands Priority Funding Areas
- Michigans Fix-It-First program
19Litigation Walker v. Dallas
- Two homeowners lawsuits filed to block
replacement housing in white communities, one of
which was upheld in Fifth Circuit court - Highlands of McKamy et. al. v. the DHA
- Fifth Circuit ruling vacates district court
ruling and upholds homeowners argument that the
DHA Remedial Orders provision requiring the
location of 474 units of new public housing in
predominantly white areas is an unconstitutional
violation of the rights of the homeowners under
the Equal Protection Clause of the Constitution - The Court argues that the Section 8 program is a
more appropriate remedy
20Litigation Walker v. Dallas
- Given the Fifth Circuits preference for a
race-neutral remedy - vs. research showing that unrestricted vouchers
dont effectively de-segregate - Example MTO vs. Gautreaux outcomes
- Unlike Gautreaux, the MTO program was poverty,
not race-based, and this affected the project
design and its outcome - In short, people moved to neighborhoods with
increasing poverty and not as far away from the
city as they did in Gautreaux - What are options for remedy?
21Thompson v. HUD
- Lawsuit filed on behalf of 14,000 African
American public housing residents in the City of
Baltimore - Plaintiffs representatives include the Maryland
ACLU and NAACP Legal Defense Fund - In January 2005, US District Court Judge Garbis
found HUD liable for violating the federal Fair
Housing Act, for not providing fair housing
opportunities to Baltimores African American
public housing residents - The current remedial phase involves designing a
court ordered remedy to address HUDs fair
housing violation
22Thompson v. HUD
- Submitted expert reports in both the liability
and the remedy phases of the litigation, on
behalf of plaintiffs - Used GIS to analyze current conditions of
segregated public housing (liability phase) and
frame solutions for desegregation (remedy phase)
23Conditions in Baltimore
- Subsidized housing opportunities in Baltimore are
generally clustered in the regions predominately
African American neighborhoods
24Thompson v. HUD Liability ruling
- HUD failed to affirmatively promote fair housing
by failing to consider a regional approach to
desegregating public housing - The failure adequately to take a regional
approach to the desegregation of public housing
in the region that included Baltimore City
violated the Fair Housing Act and requires
consideration of appropriate remedial action by
the Court.
25Ruling remedy must be regional
- Geographic considerations, economic limitations,
population shifts, etc. have rendered it
impossible to effect a meaningful degree of
desegregation of public housing by redistributing
the public housing population of Baltimore City
within the City limits. Baltimore City should
not be viewed as an island reservation for use as
a container for all of the poor of a contiguous
region. - The Court finds an approach of regionalization
to be integral to desegregation in the Baltimore
Regionby the term regionalization the Court
refers to policies whereby the effects of past
segregation in Baltimore City public housing may
be ameliorated by the provision of public housing
opportunities beyond the boundaries of Baltimore
City
26Proposed Remedy Principles
- The remedy should connect subsidized housing
residents to communities of opportunity - The remedy must be sensitive to opportunity
- The remedy must be metropolitan-wide
- The remedy must be race-conscious
- The remedy must not force dispersal of public
housing residents - The remedy must be goal-driven
- The remedy should make use of a variety of tools
available to HUD
27Proposed Remedy Opportunity Analysis
- Use of 14 indicators of neighborhood opportunity
to designate high and low opportunity
neighborhoods in the Baltimore region - Indicators of Opportunity (General)
- Neighborhood Quality/Health
- Poverty, Crime, Vacancy, Property Values,
Population Trends - Economic Opportunity
- Proximity to Jobs and Job Changes, Public Transit
- Educational Opportunity
- School Poverty, School Test Scores, Teacher
Qualifications
28Lessons for implementation
- Connecting to opportunity means leveraging
housing opportunities to connect to decent
employment, health care, child care, and
transportation. - Qualitative research identified two main barriers
to adult employment for MTO participants - Health problems
- Lack of available or affordable child care
- People need transportation to reach
- Family members who need care
- Jobs, day care, and health care
- Gender matters in related-service provisions
(child family care responsibilities) and in
outcome (i.e. differences in school adjustment
for African-American teenage girls vs. boys)
29Lessons for implementation
- Difficulties with voucher use
- Rising rent, utility costs
- Tight rental markets
- Problematic relationships with landlords
- Landlords selling the building
- Unit quality
- Lack of available units for families (3 br)
- Points to the need to construct new units not
just depend on markets, landlords
30Lessons for implementation
- Scale, context, and density matter. Research
found that - if only a few Section 8 sites were located w/in
500 feet of existing homes - in areas of high opportunity
- there was if anything, a strong positive impact
on home values - However,
- if the census tract was low- or moderately-valued
- Section 8 sites and units in high densities
- had a strong adverse impact within 2,000 feet
31LIHTC and Segregated Schools
- Currently, LIHTC development is conflicting with
efforts to desegregate schools. - Nearly ¾s of African American and Hispanic LIHTC
residents are located in segregated schools.
32Linked fatestransformative change
- Realize that our fates are linked, yet our fates
have been socially constructed as disconnected
(especially through the categories of class,
race, gender, nationality, region) - We need socially constructed bridges to
transform our society - Conceive of an individuality as connected
toinstead of isolated fromthy neighbor - Be advocates for Communities of Opportunity as
transformative change - Transformative An intervention that works to
permanently transform structural arrangements
which produce inequity and disparity
33Agents of transformative change
- Recognize that housing advocacy is a leverage
point for connecting clients to other critical
opportunity structures - Education
- Jobs
- Child care
- Health care
- Transportation
- All of these are related and affect each other
all show effects of cumulative disparity all are
ripe for transformative change!
34www.kirwaninstitute.org