How the Supreme Court could scuttle critical fair housing rule
The Obama administration is preparing to issue a rule setting a single standard for proving violations of the Fair Housing Act â just as the Supreme Court signals it may take up a challenge to the measure.
By Jeff Larson and Nikole Hannah-Jones
From ProPublica Special Report
The U.S. Supreme Court has announced that it will take up a key enforcement tool used to address systemic discrimination under the Fair Housing Act. This is the third time in recent years that the Court has decided to hear a case centered on the so-called disparate impact theory, which allows plaintiffs to prove discrimination by showing actions that disparately harm protected groups, even if plaintiffs cannot prove the actions were taken with the intent to discriminate.
Civil rights groups worked to settle the two other cases before the Court got to hear them, fearing the conservative-leaning court would invalidate the disparate impact standard.
For the past four decades, federal officials and civil rights lawyers have wielded a potent legal weapon in the fight against housing discrimination. Even when they couldnât prove that practices of landlords, lenders or governments were racially motivated, they could win cases by showing minorities had suffered disproportionate harm.
The Obama administration has used the principle of âdisparate impactâ to reach record settlements with banks accused of discriminatory lending and to confront localities whose housing policies limited opportunities for Black and Latino renters. A senior official recently said that the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development is pursuing more than two dozen cases based on the theory.
Officials from the U.S. Department of Justice and HUD, the agency charged with enforcing the housing law, have repeatedly declined ProPublicaâs interview requests. But Sara Pratt, HUDâs chief of enforcement, bluntly told attendees at a recent conference on housing issues that the disparate impact standard is essential for deterring housing bias because the days of âpants-down discriminationâ have ended.
âLandlords, housing professionals, zoning and planning boards, have learned to stop talking about it,â Pratt declared. âWhat they havenât learned is to stop doing it.â
Over the past year, Obama administration officials have become increasingly concerned that the high court is preparing to strike down the use of the disparate impact standard in housing cases. In an attempt to dissuade the justices from intervening, the Obama administration is preparing to release a long-stalled federal rule this month that enshrines âdisparate impactâ in the regulations for enforcing the federal housing law.
The move comes as the Supreme Court, led by its conservative majority, appears set to curtail affirmative action and the Voting Rights Act, two other tent poles of the civil rights movement.
The principle of disparate impact is not directly mentioned in the landmark Fair Housing Act but has been accepted over a period of 40 years by a series of federal judges who have ruled on housing cases.
Housing advocates have been urging HUD to adopt the regulation for years. Because the Supreme Court has long deferred to an agencyâs regulations when interpreting the law, Alan Jenkins, executive director of the nonprofit The Opportunity Agenda in New York City, said it âcould be the deciding factor, not only in what disparate impact means, but whether it exists after going before the Supreme Court.â
In 2011, federal officials persuaded the city of St. Paul, Minn., to withdraw a case accepted for review by the Supreme Court that questioned whether the principle could be applied in housing cases. âWe were afraid we might lose disparate impact in the Supreme Court because there wasnât a regulation,â said Pratt, who also led fair housing enforcement during the Clinton administration.
If the court strikes down disparate impact, it would largely limit civil rights lawsuits against landlords, homeowners or governments to those rare cases in which it could be proven that governments or businesses had an explicit intent to discriminate.
âIf the court overturns disparate impact,â said Florence Roisman, a fair housing scholar at the Indiana University School of Law. âIt is going to gut the statute.â
Release of the regulation will set a tone for President Obamaâs second term and several scholars said it would be among the most important civil rights regulations to come out of HUD in at least a decade. But its release may be too late to influence the high courtâs ruling.
Even without the regulation, the Obama administration has aggressively pursued disparate impact cases.
Under President Obama, the Justice Department created a unit to focus on discriminatory behavior in the banking industry and has used disparate impact to win massive settlements.
In one such case, the Justice Department found that Countrywide â a now-defunct mortgage company purchased by Bank of America â charged Black and Latino borrowers higher rates and fees than White applicants with similar credit histories. It also discovered that Black and Latino borrowers who qualified for prime loans were more than twice as likely to be steered to subprime loans as similar White borrowers.
Countrywide issued no official policy telling loan officers to discriminate. But it did give them discretion to steer well-qualified buyers into less favorable loans. In what Assistant Attorney General Thomas Perez called âdiscrimination with a smile,â that authority was used largely on loan applications from African Americans and Latinos. Bank of America could not produce a legitimate business practice to explain the discriminatory results, a defense against an action brought under the disparate impact standard. The bank settled with the Justice Department for $335 million in 2011 â a record in a residential lending case. It did not acknowledge wrongdoing.
In another major case, a private fair housing group and later the federal government used the disparate impact standard to challenge policies adopted by St. Bernardâs Parish, La., after Hurricane Katrina.
As residents of largely Black New Orleans sought to find housing in St. Bernardâs, a predominantly White enclave just across the border, the parish passed a law that prohibited homeowners from renting to anyone who was not a âblood relativeâ unless they received a permit from local authorities.
Since 93 percent of the homeowners in the parish were White, the government argued that the laws aimed at restricting rental housing would have disproportionately prevented people of color from moving in.
âDo you think St. Bernardâs parish was really trying to keep Black people out?â Pratt asked at the housing issues conference. As heads began to nod, she asked, âDoes anyone have any evidence?â
The administration, which has seen the fight over disparate impact building for several years, promised early in Obamaâs first term that it would issue a regulation.
A group of landlords had sued St. Paul claiming that its stepped up property code enforcement violated the Fair Housing Act because it reduced the availability of low-income rental units and had a disparate impact on black residents.
Since the landlords were essentially arguing that the anti-discrimination laws gave them a right to not maintain apartments in Black areas, the city of St. Paul fought the suit.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit ruled the landlords had made a valid disparate impact claim, prompting St. Paul to appeal, arguing that the Fair Housing Act required proof of discriminatory intent and not simply discriminatory results.
A week after the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case in November 2011, HUD finally released a proposed regulation, which set a single standard for proving violations of the Fair Housing Act. The proposed rule codifies within federal regulations the ban on practices that have discriminatory effects unless they can be shown to serve a legitimate purpose for business or government.
Although all 11 appellate courts that have ruled on the issue have held that the Fair Housing Act allows disparate impact claims, the Justice Department and housing advocates feared the conservative majority on the Supreme Court would not agree.
Minnesota native son former Vice President Walter Mondale, who helped write the 1968 law, urged St. Paulâs mayor to withdraw the case. According to news accounts, Mondale called disparate impact the only means of effectively enforcing laws against housing discrimination and asked the city not to risk a âSupreme Court decision that ruins the act.â
The Justice Department agreed not to intervene in two unrelated lawsuits against the city, a move now under investigation by congressional Republicans who say the administration offered the concession to persuade St. Paul to drop the disparate impact suit.
St. Paul acquiesced, and in February 2012 the parties took the rare step of withdrawing the case from the Supreme Courtâs docket.
Meanwhile, lobbyists for the influential banking, lending, and insurance industries launched a broad campaign against the draft rule.
Robert Detlefsen, vice president of public policy for the National Association of Mutual Insurance Companies, said his organization, which represents home insurers, opposes the regulation because it would place an unfair burden on companies to prove that policies that harm one group more than another are not discriminatory.
Businesses should not be penalized âbecause of a statistical disparity,â Detlefsen said. âAs long as it could be shown that there was no intent to discriminate racially or ethnically, there should be no controversy.â
The American Bankers Association, the National Multi Housing Council and the Mortgage Bankers Association either declined or did not respond to interview requests from ProPublica.
The business communityâs pushback seemed to work.
âThe proposal was on the table last year at this time. As you got into July and August, the White House just let it be known that âWe just canât do it in this political season,’â said Robert Schwemm, a constitutional law and civil rights scholar at the University of Kentucky Law School. âJust to rattle off the groups that have decided to oppose it is to list some of the most powerful groups in Washington, even with a Democratic administration.
âThe Obama administration delayed, delayed, delayed.â
Pratt acknowledged as much during her presentation. âThe industry doesnât like it. They are scared of it,â she said. âDisparate impact is incredibly controversial politically. It is not controversial legally.â
With Obama fighting his final re-election battles in October, the Supreme Court signaled that it might take up the issue again. The Court asked the U.S. Solicitor General to submit the governmentâs stance on disparate impact in a case involving the New Jersey township of Mount Holly. It has not yet decided to hear the case.
At issue is the townâs efforts to redevelop a predominantly black area it considered blighted. The town bought and destroyed most of the homes in the neighborhood but has not built the new housing. Former and current residents sued, saying the townâs actions had a disparate impact on African Americans.
After a court ruled the plaintiffs had a valid disparate impact claim, Mount Holly appealed to the Supreme Court, arguing as St. Paul had that Congress did not write disparate impact into the fair housing statute and therefore did not intend to allow it to be used as a legal standard.
Mount Hollyâs appeal did not shake the regulation loose â to the dismay of some observers. âIt is enormously important that HUD promulgate this statute,â said Roisman. âFrankly, I think it is unconscionable that HUD hasnât done it in the last four years â they should have done it long before that.â Most scholars interviewed for this story believe that Justices John Roberts, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito would strike down disparate impact, but are less sure about the stances of Justices Antonin Scalia and Anthony Kennedy. One of them would have to join the Courtâs liberal block if disparate impact were to survive.
Scalia indicated in a previous case involving employment that he was open to an argument that disparate impact in any arena violated the equal protection clause of the Constitution. However, Scalia, who was an administrative law scholar before becoming a constitutional law scholar, has also said he believes in deference to agency regulations.
But several legal scholars pointed out that the Courtâs track record under Chief Justice Roberts provides little certainty that it will follow that precedent.
John A Â Powell, a civil rights scholar at the University of California, Berkeley Law School, said the Supreme Court would not normally take a case such as this one where the lower courts are unanimous in their interpretation of the law. But Powell, who spells his name without capital letters, said this court has shown an eagerness to dismantle civil rights protections even when case law is well established â one reason for concern that HUDâs new regulations may not stand.
âIf [the Supreme Court] is going to ignore the circuits and decades of precedents from the federal courts, I donât know that it is going to be turned around by the regulation of an agency,â Powell said. âIt is not waiting on controversy in the lower courts, which is the normal case. If it strikes down disparate impact that would be a huge change, but the Court is rewriting issues around civil rights and race.â
The administrationâs 11th-hour release of the regulation may have served mostly to rally the opposition. Detlefsen said his group did not file briefs opposing disparate impact in the St. Paul case, but likely will if the Court takes up the Mount Holly case. âThe regulation has gotten the attention of a lot of people in the insurance industry,â he said. âAbsolutely.â
âThe search for racists is for the most part a foolâs errand. There is no way in a court of law to prove or know what is in someoneâs hearts or minds,â Damon Hewitt, an attorney at the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund, said at the housing conference. âThe preoccupation with disregarding racially disparate impact means people are willing to accept racial disparities and then say there is nothing the law should do about it.â
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