Prepared Remarks of Secretary Shaun Donovan at the Fair Housing Month Kick-Off

Brooke-Mondale Auditorium
Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Thank you for that kind introduction, Bryan. You and the entire FHEO team have put together a great program today.

And while John Trasviña cannot be with us today, when it comes to protecting our most vulnerable populations, there is no more fearless advocate than John -- we're lucky to have him heading up our Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity, so let's give him a hand.

Celebrating Fair Housing Month is always special -- it gives us the chance to reaffirm HUD's commitment to creating fair and decent housing in inclusive, sustainable communities for all as well as an opportunity to reflect on how far we've come and how far we still have to go.

We recognize that the work we do today has an incredible impact on the future of our nation and while remembering that fair housing isn't just "part" of HUD's mission -- but the very core of it.

We all know that this agency was founded at a moment when our country's cities were literally burning.

With the passage of the Fair Housing Act in 1968, we acknowledged that segregation didn't happen in spite of government policy -- it happened in large part because of it.

And we affirmed that government has a role to play in creating integrated, inclusive, diverse communities with access to opportunity for all.

This Administration has made some extraordinary strides fighting housing discrimination and ensuring that everyone knows they have a right to live where they choose, and we will continue that critical work.

Disparate impact analyses have been an important way to examine institutional practices and policies for unintended, but nonetheless discriminatory.

In February 2013, HUD issued a final rule, which formalizes existing national standards for determining whether a housing practice violates the Fair Housing Act because it has a discriminatory effect.

The rule does not increase or create new liability under the Fair Housing Act, it simply formalizes the framework to be applied in administrative and judicial proceedings, and better enables entities subject to the Fair Housing Act to use that framework in complying with the law.

Having the rule in place allows HUD to use every enforcement resource available to fight unlawful housing discrimination under the Fair Housing Act while ensuring that communities understand their obligations and how to effectively partner with us to eliminate discriminatory practices.

Rules and regulations are the only way we support our Fair Housing goals.

We are also harnessing new technology to make it easier than ever for the public to report suspected housing discrimination and learn about their fair housing rights.

In February 2013, HUD launched a fair housing app for iPhone and iPad as an important tool to assist fair housing groups and other civil rights advocacy organizations in their efforts to promote fair housing practices.

Since the app became available, more than 1,000 people have downloaded it.

In conjunction with the fair housing mobile application, FHEO has released adaptive mobile pages, in English and Spanish, which allow web content to display properly regardless of the brand of smartphone or tablet being used.

By strategically using technology we will be able reach an even broader audience and ensure that everyone can have a place to live, free from discrimination.

But the true measure of our success isn't in app downloads, complaints filed, or lawsuits won -- it's whether we are changing the lives of the people and communities we serve.

It's whether we are increasing the number of low-poverty, racially-diverse communities nationwide and whether those communities have access to opportunity -- good schools, safe streets, decent jobs.

And HUD is working hard to ensure that cities, towns, and municipalities that receive HUD funding comply with their obligation to promote equal access to housing.

We are providing technical assistance to communities that have structural fair housing problems, such as the lack of a fair housing presence in the community, historical patterns of segregated communities, and a lack of housing opportunities for minorities in neighborhoods with better housing, schools, transportation, and other amenities.

Just last month the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, National Fair Housing Alliance, and the Poverty and Race Research Action Council jointly issued a report crediting HUD with making significant advancements to enforce the Fair Housing Act's requirement that HUD funding recipients affirmatively further fair housing.

We remain committed to the publication of the Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing rule.

The truth is no one has more expertise on these issues than FHEO. No one understands the barriers to opportunity better -- or how some communities still use taxpayer dollars to create them.

But they aren't alone in this effort -- to build communities that are truly inclusive and sustainable, they can't be.

Fair housing is a priority for all of us here at HUD.

Because whether it is housing-specific resources like counseling and vouchers, new financing tools for transit-oriented development, or incentives that encourage the repurposing of polluted land for affordable housing development, we want to help communities across the country use every available resource to turn segregated neighborhoods of concentrated poverty into the integrated, healthy, sustainable communities that create opportunity for everyone.

And that is why Fair Housing month is so vital: it serves a reminder that the Fair Housing Act is central to all of our work here at HUD and that our work today defines our tomorrow.

Thank you all for your dedication and commitment, and enjoy the rest of the program.

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Content Archived: February 24, 2017