How the Trump Administration Is Weakening the Enforcement of Fair Housing Laws
https://www.propublica.org/article/trump-hud-weakening-enforcement-fair-housing-laws
Kennell Staten saw Walker Courts as his best path out of homelessness, he said. The complex had some of the only subsidized apartments he knew of in his adopted hometown of Jonesboro, Arkansas, so he applied to live there again and again. But while other people seemed to sail through the leasing process, his applications went nowhere. Staten thought he knew why: He is gay. The property manager had made her feelings about that clear to him, he said. She said I was too flamboyant, he remembered, that its a whole bunch of older people staying there and they would feel uncomfortable seeing me coming outside with a dress or skirt on.
So Staten filed a complaint with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development in February. It was the type of complaint that HUD used to take seriously. The agency has devoted itself to rooting out prejudice in the housing market since the Fair Housing Act was signed into law in 1968, one week after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. And, following a 2020 Supreme Court ruling that declared that civil rights protections bar unequal treatment because of someones sexual orientation or gender identity, HUD considered it illegal to discriminate in housing on those grounds.
Then Donald Trump became president once more. Two days after filing his complaint, Staten received a letter informing him that HUD did not view allegations like his as subject to federal law a stark departure from its position just a month prior. The news gutted him. I went through pure hell just to get turned away, Staten said. (The property manager disputed Statens account and said he was rejected for fighting on the property, which Staten denied. The property owner declined to comment.)
Statens complaint is one of hundreds impacted by a major retreat in the federal governments decadeslong fight against housing discrimination and segregation, according to interviews with 10 HUD officials. Those federal staffers, along with state officials, attorneys and advocates across the country, described a dismantling of federal fair housing enforcement, which has been slowed, constrained or halted at every step. The investigative process has been hobbled. The agency is withholding discrimination charges that HUD officials say should already have been issued. Those accused of housing discrimination appear newly emboldened not to cooperate with the agency. And at least 115 federal fair housing cases have been halted or closed entirely since Trump took office, with hundreds more cases in jeopardy, HUD officials estimate.