HUD alleges racial discrimination in Minneapolis housing programs

The Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity office, gutted by federal workforce reductions, is spearheading the effort

HUD alleges racial discrimination in Minneapolis housing programs

The Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity office, gutted by federal workforce reductions, is spearheading the effort
HUD alleges racial discrimination in Minneapolis housing programs.

Amid President Donald Trump’s threats to invoke the Insurrection Act in Minneapolis to quell rising protests following the recent shooting death of Renee Good by federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has announced it is launching a fair housing investigation into the city.

Craig Trainor, assistant secretary of the Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity office at HUD that has been gutted by the Trump administration’s federal workforce reductions, alleges that “racial favoritism” in Minneapolis rental and housing policies violates the Fair Housing Act, a 1968 civil rights law that prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, national origin, religion, gender and other characteristics.

“As a result of Minneapolis’s racialized housing policy, I have directed the Office of Special Investigations to investigate Minneapolis for potential fair housing violations and its compliance with Title VI,” wrote Trainor in a letter addressed to Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey dated Jan. 15.

Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits discrimination on the basis of racial or national origin for programs and activities that receive federal funding. Minneapolis city departments that HUD said it will be investigating include the Community Planning and Economic Development and the Racial Equity, Inclusion and Belonging departments.

More specifically, the letter cites the “Minneapolis 2040” plan and the Strategic and Racial Equity Action Plan as programs HUD says prioritize housing resources based on race and national origin rather than need.

“For example, your Community Planning and Economic Development department will prioritize ‘rental housing for Black, Indigenous, People of Color and Immigrant communities’ by ‘leveraging [its] rental licensing authority,’” wrote Trainor. “That is not going to fly.”

In a press release announcing the investigation on Friday, HUD Secretary Scott Turner called Minnesota “ground zero for fraud and corruption because they have chosen to ignore the law to serve a cynical political agenda.”

“HUD will not stand for illegal racial and ethnic preferences that deny Americans their right to equal protection under the law,” Turner added.

An email to the city’s Community Planning and Economic Development Department was acknowledged as received, but no response to Scotsman Guide’s questions was returned by the time of publication.

After this article’s publication, a spokesperson for Mayor Frey’s office shared the following statement with Scotsman Guide: “Minneapolis is proud of its record on housing – to build a city that is vibrant, safe and inclusive for all. In fact, we have award-winning affordable housing programs, and our work is a model for cities around the country. This investigation appears to be about politics not affordable housing.”

Author

More Headlines

Top Dollar Volume

Top FHA Volume

Top HELOC Volume

Most Loans Closed

Top Mortgage Brokers

Top Non-QM Volume

Top Purchase Volume

Top Refinance Volume

Top USDA Volume

Top VA Volume

Top Veteran Originators

Top Jumbo Originators

Top Women Originators

Top Overall

Top Wholesale

Top Retail

Top Non-QM

Top FHA

Top VA

Top Correspondent

Top Bank Statement

Top DSCR

Sign in to Scotsman Guide PRO

error: Content is protected !!

We found an account with this email.
Please log in or reset your password to continue.