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John Trasvina

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LGBT Housing Discrimination in 2011: A Time for Pride and Action

Posted: 06/24/11 04:55 PM ET

Last year I visited Spokane, Washington, for a listening session on housing discrimination issues facing lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender (LGBT) individuals and families. After hearing a number of compelling stories, I met Mitch and Michelle, a couple with children, a family like any other. But Mitch had been denied the opportunity to add Michelle to his public housing voucher for the sole reason that he was transgender and therefore Mitch and Michelle did not fit into the public housing authority's definition of family.

Mitch and Michelle are not alone. A recent study demonstrates how severe the problem of housing discrimination is for transgender and gender non-conforming individuals. 19 percent of the 6,450 respondents reported having been refused a home or apartment and 11 percent reported being evicted because of their gender identity/expression. Extraordinarily, 19 percent reported experiencing homelessness as a result of their gender identity/expression with the majority of them reporting either harassment, difficulty in access, or sexual assault when attempting to access homeless shelters. Other numbers show that up to 40 percent of homeless youth identify as LGBT.

Since I visited Spokane, the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development (HUD) and the Obama administration have taken -- and continue to take -- groundbreaking steps to protect LGBT families and individuals from housing discrimination. HUD was founded in 1965 to provide decent housing and suitable living environment for all. HUD now is undertaking an unprecedented national study to determine the level of housing discrimination faced by various sectors of the LGBT population. To design this study, senior HUD officials met with members of the LGBT community in cities across the country.

What we have learned from these listening sessions is fundamentally important to shaping our policies. For example, we know that 20 states and over 200 cities, towns and counties already have laws prohibiting housing discrimination against LGBT people. In this regard, they are ahead of the federal government. While the Obama administration has recommended that Congress expand federal Fair Housing Act protections to include LGBT discrimination, this has not yet occurred. Some LGBT individuals and families hide their identities in order to secure the apartment or house they want. That is not a price that anyone should pay in the United States of America.

HUD is committed to ensuring that all who are otherwise eligible to participate in HUD's programs have equal access to these programs without being subject to arbitrary exclusion. In order to do so, HUD has proposed a rule called Equal Access to Housing in HUD Programs -- Regardless of Sexual Orientation or Gender Identity, which opens HUD housing and programs to all families without regard to sexual orientation, gender identity or marital status.

And last year HUD revised its general funding guidelines to require applicants for HUD's competitive funding to comply with local and state laws that prohibit sexual orientation and/or gender identity in housing discrimination.

The White House recently hosted the first ever forum to discuss issues facing transgender and gender nonconforming populations. HUD followed up with a groundbreaking meeting of its own, to discuss transgender housing issues specifically. Importantly, HUD has reviewed its existing authority to address housing discrimination related to gender identity. In the past year, inquiries from the LGBT community have increased by more than six-fold and HUD is increasingly taking action and is committed to educating all persons about their rights and responsibilities under the Fair Housing Act and the resources and remedies available to them.

This brings us back to Mitch and Michelle. Their family was successfully granted housing with the assistance of two HUD fair housing partners. This LGBT Pride Month, HUD and the Obama administration are indeed proud of important steps taken and ready for the work still in front of us.

 
Last year I visited Spokane, Washington, for a listening session on housing discrimination issues facing lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender (LGBT) individuals and families. After hearing a nu...
Last year I visited Spokane, Washington, for a listening session on housing discrimination issues facing lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender (LGBT) individuals and families. After hearing a nu...
 
 
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Y3rMawm
veni, vidi, bibi.
06:51 PM on 06/26/2011
Why is government involved in housing in the first place?
09:06 PM on 06/24/2011
AS A MANAGER OF A APT COMPLEX AND A BORN AGAIN CHRISTIAN. I HAVE A GAY COUPLE LIVING HERE WHEN THEY APPLIED THEY DIDNT COME OUT AND SAY WHETHER THEY WERE ARE NOT, I DIDNT ASK BUT I COULD TELL. RIGHT NOW THEY ARE GOOD TENANTS AND I WOULD LIKE THEM TO STAY.

THEY PAY THEIR RENT AND THATS ALL I CARE ABOUT.
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
09:40 PM on 06/24/2011
that is smart business, not everyone is smart.
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angelcakesinc
Silence is death
02:52 AM on 06/25/2011
Good for you! But, uhh, turn off the capslock.
08:24 PM on 06/24/2011
This is yet another example of the Obama administrations past, present, and future commitment to lgbt rights. Despite what some may choose to assert or believe, it is actions such as this which the President's administration has engaged in since day one in an effort to secure the basic rights of all Americans. While the President may not have achieved all that he wishes with regard to lgbt rights, the laundry list of accomplishments in this area clearly show his support for lgbt rights and his intention to continue the fight. For this, and many other reasons, he is certainly to be commended for his and his administrations actions.
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
09:53 PM on 06/24/2011
the problem with many of Obama's actions for the LGBT community is they look good on paper but are easy to skirt legally.
I know a few transgendered, and they don't pass background checks for better rentals -- often they can't hold regualar steady jobs that earn good credit ratings. I live where I do because there was no background check, and its no big deal now because I live in the middle of Atlanta. I used to live in Orlando and there its a whole lot harder to find someone that rents on your ability to pay as opposed to credit scores and background checks.
I guess what I am trying to say is the whole system is broken, the banks were given carte blanche to grab everyone by their privates by making an arbitrary "credit score" number a reason for discrimination, and as long as that exists there will continue to be discrimination, and it adversly affects many groups, not just GLBT. Nobody is free until everyone is free.
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Steve Brewer II
Proud LGBT member and Liberal
07:51 PM on 06/24/2011
This is proof that discrimination is not dead in America. I am a Patriotic Gay Liberal, I love America always have and always will. The misconception that discrimination is dead has become far too widespread and I am going to ask that all fellow LGBT members scream bloody murder about being discriminated against, maybe then more people will listen. LGBT Rights are not going to remain off the mainstream radar and I feel each moment that they do is a grave injustice. We need to rise up together, LGBT members and supporters a like, and make it clear that we are not asking to be treated equally, we are going to demand it!
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Seer Clearly
Only truth remains when fear is denied
06:12 PM on 06/24/2011
As a gay man, exposed to the "Pride" idea (and having grown up in a city where "Black Pride" was also a big part of the landscape), I used to see the benefits to a minority of being proud of itself. But as I've spent more time thinking about it, I have realized that Pride has an evil twin, called Shame. And the two always come together. You have to be feeling the sting of shame to cling to pride. And if you're feeling pride, you're avoiding something you're ashamed of. If this seems like a zero-sum game, you're right. Gay people cannot truly be proud because they are having to fight off projected shame, meaning the pride they feel is more on the order of wishing and hoping rather than simply the calm, balanced state of knowing that you are grounded in the perfection of your own god-given creation. Being stuck in the paradigm of pride means you are always fighting those who seek to make you feel shame, and it's a rearguard fight in which you're defending yourself rather than asserting your internal power.

It is that internal power - that whether we're gay, black, hispanic, female, disabled, or whatnot - that we have to wield to fight discrimination. We won't take it anymore, and we're not going to apologize for who we are in order to get a handout of fake "equality."
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Deep Thinking Man
Always Remember, A Wet Bird Never Flies At Night !
02:55 PM on 06/25/2011
Seer Clearly,
you are absolutely correct !!!!!!...i know of what you speak because i am disabled, and i've been there done that !!!!!!

Steve,
you are correct as well !!!!!...you're both fanned !!!!!!
06:00 PM on 06/24/2011
What a load!

LBTG housing discrimination? Are you really serious?

Isnt that just a tad over the top?
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exxman
Visualize Whirled Peas.
07:28 PM on 06/24/2011
What makes you think this article is untrue?
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Steve Brewer II
Proud LGBT member and Liberal
08:05 PM on 06/24/2011
Discrimination still exists and LGBT are often the targets of it today