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Alan Jenkins

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Racial Discrimination by Banks Only Worsens the Foreclosure Crisis

Posted: 04/13/2012 2:26 pm

Is there a house in your neighborhood that everybody hates to walk past? You know, the one with broken and boarded up windows, trash left to gather on the lawn, and grass so overgrown it's becoming a habitat for rodents?

If you have a house like that in your community, you know it's more than just an eyesore. Neglected, vacant houses depress property values throughout the community, and can threaten health and safety. They erode the sense of community and stability that creates vibrant localities, and they hamper economic resiliency. With a national foreclosure crisis still in full swing, such houses are all too common.

You might be surprised to learn, though, that if you have problem properties like that in your neighborhood, there's a good chance your absentee neighbor is a bank. More shocking still, banks are neglecting houses they own in minority communities even more frequently -- much more frequently -- than those they hold in white communities.

A detailed, undercover investigation unveiled last week by the National Fair Housing Alliance and several regional partners shows not only that banks too frequently fail to maintain foreclosed properties that they own, but that they tend to neglect their properties in communities of color at a much higher rate, with devastating consequences.

A large number of the neglected, bank-owned properties have broken or missing doors and windows, inviting vandalism and trespassers. And many have safety hazards that endanger the public. Those and other defects are significantly more prevalent in bank-owned properties located in communities of color.

Another finding is that, on average, the banks are not marketing houses located in communities of color as aggressively to individual homebuyers as they do properties in white neighborhoods. The properties in white neighborhoods are, for example, more likely to have clear and professional "for sale" signs. When banks both poorly maintain and poorly market foreclosed houses, the properties tend to stay vacant longer and to eventually be sold to speculators, rather than to people who would make the houses their home.

The discriminatory differences are stark. In Dayton, Ohio, for example, 60 percent of bank-owned properties in African American neighborhoods had broken or unsecured doors, compared to only 18 percent in white neighborhoods. In Atlanta, properties in African American neighborhoods were almost five times more likely than homes in white neighborhoods to lack a "for sale" sign. And in Dallas, 73 percent of the bank-owned homes in predominantly non-white neighborhoods had trash on their properties, while only 37 percent in white areas did.

Neighbors of all races who live near foreclosed, bank-owned properties, the investigation found, are pulling together to keep them presentable -- doing maintenance the banks should be doing, like mowing lawns and removing trash. But in communities of color, neighbors reported seeing home improvement contractors working on those properties at only half the rate seen by neighbors in predominantly white areas.

The bank behavior identified by this investigation is unethical, unlawful, and harmful to our economy. It breaches our basic national values of equal opportunity and the common good. It violates the Fair Housing Act of 1968, signed 44 years ago this week in the wake of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination. And it is holding back our economic recovery by, among other things, depressing home prices and hampering sales.

It's hard to know all the reasons why banks are discriminating in this way. Bias and unfounded stereotypes about minority communities and homes, however, are a likely root cause. The investigators controlled for 39 race-neutral factors like building structure, water damage, and curb appeal, so the different treatment is indisputably about race, and not class or other home or neighborhood characteristics.

This investigation should be a wake up call for banks, regulators, local governments, and the neighbors of these bank-owned properties. Among the solutions identified by the National Fair Housing Alliance are anti-discrimination investigations by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and other enforcement agencies, making information about bank-owned properties more publicly accessible, and prioritizing buyers who will occupy these properties over speculators who may warehouse them.

As Americans struggle together toward a lasting economic recovery, good neighbors are more important than ever. It's time to remind America's banks that this includes them.

Cross-posted from Race-Talk.

 
Is there a house in your neighborhood that everybody hates to walk past? You know, the one with broken and boarded up windows, trash left to gather on the lawn, and grass so overgrown it's becoming a ...
Is there a house in your neighborhood that everybody hates to walk past? You know, the one with broken and boarded up windows, trash left to gather on the lawn, and grass so overgrown it's becoming a ...
 
 
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akutan
This We'll Defend
07:00 PM on 04/24/2012
Cash is king, debt is dumb.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Alex0393
Are you people for real?
02:17 AM on 04/19/2012
Has it ever even once occurred to you that the banks probably are so over run with these properties that they're getting to them on a complaint basis? Run down neighborhoods as you call them have residents that generally aren't willing to take the time and trouble to make a fuss about it to the bank. They're probably better taken care of in better neighborhoods because the people living there raise hell and get it done in order to keep their neighborhood nice. That's simple common damned sense and has not the first thing to do with racial motives. Calling something racist now is the single most counterproductive thing a person can do. All it does is immediately devalue the argument and divide the ones involved. True racial problems often go overlooked because if you look at this page alone you'll find no less than 20 articles blaming sh*t on racism. You don't need laws to keep your damned neighborhood up.
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cjunkbond
Wearer of Many Hats
10:57 AM on 04/22/2012
Hey Al my first thought were; 1. Cut the grass & send the bank a bill for maintenance & security service, and 2. Research the local abandonment of property laws regarding real estate. ;)
oil patch
if you voted obama, you are to blame
08:10 PM on 04/17/2012
the idea of a racist bank is childish. Banks DO discriminate, it is how they turn a profit. They evaluate a potential customer against desired criteria and past behavior then formulate what they believe future behavior will be. These calculated risks are vital to their profit margins and there is nothing racist about it.
07:59 PM on 04/17/2012
"It's hard to know all the reasons why banks are discriminating in this way. Bias and unfounded stereotypes about minority communities and homes, however, are a likely root cause. The investigators controlled for 39 race-neutral factors like building structure, water damage, and curb appeal, so the different treatment is indisputably about race, and not class or other home or neighborhood characteristics."

After saying "it's hard to know", the author then closes the argument as "indisputably about race" without offering proof.

A banker would invest money in an activity likely to repay the investment with a profit. Fixing properties costs the same, that is, it costs as much to replace a water heater in a mansion as a shack.

If repairing a more expensive property will recoup the expense of repairing it but will not for the less valuable property, prudent people will favor investing in the repairs of the more valuable property. There is no "race" involved in that choice.
09:31 PM on 04/15/2012
I am sure more banks run by anyone whose once been assaulted on the streets of baltimore by criminals who are black are not going to want to do business..

http://www.cnn.com/2012/04/09/us/maryland-beating/index.html?iref=obnetwork
01:43 AM on 04/17/2012
What makes that statement offensive is not that you said it, but that people really do feel that way. Contrary to the sensationalism (and as a Black person, embarrassment) surrounding the coverage of crimes such as the one in Baltimore, these crimes do actually take place in White neighborhoods also, yet no one writes off White neighborhoods because of it. Imagine how ridiculous I'd seem if I were a banker and said, "I can't go inspect our property in that gated community, that's the sort of neighborhood Trayvon Martin was killed in"
10:09 AM on 04/17/2012
What I said was not offensive. It makes you think why the crime that happened in Baltimore is not reported with the adjectives describing the criminals. The video makes it very clear to see but there is no mention as to who was assaulted or who did it (in race terms). Now, I actually do NOT want that description, but then - other crimes in other cities should also NOT be mentioned in racial terms when the victim happens to be black. In Kansas (in March) a young boy was assaulted with gasoline and flame by two other boys. Do you know the race of all involved? Most of the media I read (cnn etc) did not report it. In fact, i found well into the Trayvon Martin story in April. And this is after I had posted on my fb about the Trayvon martin story crying out aloud about the injustice etc..
Later I also hear that the 911 audio tape in the Martin case was edited to make it sound like Zimmerman's utterance of 'he looks black' (paraphrased by me) was voluntary and not a response to a question. All I ask for is FAIRNESS from all sides. Not just when the victim is from a "minority" group.