美国国家公共电台 NPR A New Trump Rule Could Weaken A Civil Rights Era Housing Discrimination Law(在线收听

 

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The Trump administration is moving to weaken the civil rights-era Fair Housing Act. That's according to housing advocates, who say a proposed rule by the administration would make it much harder to bring lawsuits alleging discrimination in housing. Conservative groups applaud the move and say it would stop frivolous lawsuits. NPR's Chris Arnold has obtained a draft of the rule, which is not yet public. And he has this report.

CHRIS ARNOLD, BYLINE: The rule targets a powerful weapon that's used in discrimination cases. It's called disparate impact. And that means, basically, to show discrimination in a lawsuit, you don't have to prove that there's some guy working at, say, a bank who refuses to make loans to people of color. You just have to show that a company has a business practice that, on its face, may not purposefully discriminate, but it has that effect.

NIKITRA BAILEY: It's important because it allows us to really get at discrimination that's not intentional.

ARNOLD: That's Nikitra Bailey. She's a lawyer with the nonprofit Center for Responsible Lending. And she says the Trump administration's new rule would severely restrict this very important tool for fighting discrimination in housing.

BAILEY: It's huge because it allows us to have remedies for a large set of communities without having to demonstrate each individual action of discrimination.

ARNOLD: OK. Here's how this works. A fair housing group is, right now, in the midst of suing Bank of America. It's alleging that when the bank foreclosed on houses, in recent years, it treated the vacant houses very differently in white versus minority neighborhoods. Wanda Onafuwa lives next to one of those houses in Baltimore. She works in accounting, owns her own house and raised her kids there. She says it's a nice, quiet street. But after Bank of America foreclosed on the house next door...

WANDA ONAFUWA: The grass wasn't being mowed. There were no windows upstairs. So you have a bad rainstorm - and I don't know what was going on with the roof. Water would get in. There were rats running around.

ARNOLD: Onafuwa says she called the city and the bank repeatedly. Not much changed. Then some guy started living in the house.

ONAFUWA: It was a squatter living in that house. It was a guy that was going in and out of that house. It was no electricity or anything on it 'cause you never - it was - it looked just pitch black.

ARNOLD: Lisa Rice is the president of the National Fair Housing Alliance, which is bringing the lawsuit. She says her group looked at foreclosed houses in more than 70 different communities across the country with comparable homeownership rates and other similarities. And...

LISA RICE: You know, white communities that we looked at - the story was completely different. The grass is mowed. The doors were secure. The windows were not broken. We didn't see trash and debris.

ARNOLD: Bank of America said in a statement that it denies the claims in the lawsuit and that it's committed to, quote, "sustainable home ownership for multicultural clients and communities." But remember. A key point of disparate impact lawsuits is that companies might be discriminating even if they don't intend to. The Supreme Court, in 2015, upheld disparate impact while also imposing some limitations. Still, many corporations and conservatives do not like it.

ROGER CLEGG: There are always going to be racially disproportionate results for any policy.

ARNOLD: Roger Clegg is president of the Center for Equal Opportunity. It's a conservative think tank that focuses on civil rights issues. And he says these disparate impact cases are often unfair to defendants because they find discrimination where it's not actually happening.

CLEGG: If you have a landlord who says, you know, I'm not going to rent people with a history of violent crime, the fact that that has a racially disproportionate result does not make it discrimination.

ARNOLD: So Clegg says this legal approach results in a lot of unfair lawsuits. And he says the Trump administration's new rule will provide clarity about the limits of its use. Nikitra Bailey says, though, the rule goes way beyond that.

BAILEY: It really makes it more difficult to bring disparate impact cases. And then it limits the damages for discrimination.

ARNOLD: Bailey says with African American homeownership rates at their lowest level in more than 50 years, this could set up more roadblocks. For its part, the Housing and Urban Development Department says it can't comment yet. But in an earlier statement, HUD Secretary Ben Carson said, quote, "HUD remains committed to making sure that housing-related policies and practices treat people fairly."

Chris Arnold, NPR News.

  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/npr2019/8/481799.html