The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) recently kicked off Fair Housing Month 2021.This year’s Fair Housing Month theme, “Fair Housing: More Than Just Words,” reflects the Biden-Harris administration’s commitment to advancing equity in housing and the importance of increasing public awareness of everyone’s right to fair housing.
“Fair Housing Month is a time to recommit to our nation’s obligation to ensure that everyone has equal access to safe, affordable housing,” HUD Secretary Marcia L. Fudge said in a release. “Unfortunately, housing discrimination still exists, from individuals and families being denied a place to call home because of the color of their skin or where they come from, to landlords refusing to allow persons with disabilities to keep assistance animals, to individuals being denied a place to live because of who they love.
“In this moment of unprecedented crisis, fair housing is more important than ever. Fifty-three years after the Fair Housing Act was signed, our journey to justice in housing continues,” Fudge added.
Each April, HUD, local communities, fair housing advocates, and fair housing organizations across the country commemorate Fair Housing Month by hosting activities that highlight HUD’s fair housing enforcement efforts, enhance Americans’ awareness of their fair housing rights, and emphasize the importance of ending housing discrimination.
HUD commemorated Fair Housing Month with a virtual celebration on April 7 that featured the Justice Department’s Principal Deputy/ Assistant Attorney General, Pamela Karlan, HUD’s Acting Assistant Secretary for Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity Jeanine Worden and HUD Senior Advisor Alanna McCargo.
In addition to highlighting HUD’s enforcement activities, another focus was the Biden-Harris administration’s pledge to end housing discrimination, provide redress to those who have experienced housing discrimination, to eliminate racial bias and other forms of discrimination in all stages of home-buying and renting, and to secure equal access to housing opportunity for all.
Last year, HUD and its Fair Housing Assistance Program partner agencies received more than 7,700 complaints alleging discrimination based on one or more of the Fair Housing Act’s seven protected classes: race, color, national origin, religion, sex, family status, and disability. During that period, the categories with the highest number of complaints were disability and race, respectively. HUD also received complaints that alleged lending discrimination as well as numerous complaints from women who faced unfair treatment, including sexual harassment, the release stated.
“Although the Fair Housing Act became law in 1968, we still have major challenges ahead of us,” Worden said. “This April, on the 53rd anniversary of the Fair Housing Act, HUD is renewing its commitment to level the playing field, so every person has the same opportunity to live where they choose and benefit from all of the opportunities this nation offers.”