Civil Rights Organizations Add Cities and New Evidence to Housing Discrimination Complaint against Bank of America



Similar documents
Fair Housing Organizations File Discrimination Complaint Against US Bank

Largest Property Preservation Company in Nation Continues to Discriminate in African American and Latino Neighborhoods

Immediate Release September 3, 2014

Fair Housing Agencies File Civil Rights Complaint Against U.S. Bancorp

Fair Housing Agencies File HUD Complaint Against Wells Fargo

A Tale of Two Recoveries

unlawful conduct, and engaging in outreach and education efforts to address Respondents ongoing discrimination.

Fair Housing Organizations Find Bank of America Discriminates in the Midwest

Fannie Mae Fails to Maintain its Foreclosure Inventory in Communities of Color

Fannie Mae Fails to Maintain its Foreclosure Inventory in Communities of Color

Fannie Mae Fails to Maintain its REO Inventory in Communities of Color

DISCRIMINATION IN MORTGAGE LENDING. Webb A. Brewer Brewer Barlow, PLC

Office of the Arizona Attorney General. Civil Rights Consumer Protection and Advocacy

Local chapter Corporate partnership opportunities

HOUSING DISCRIMINATION Get The Facts

Guide to Fair Mortgage Lending and Home Preservation

ATTACHMENT B STATEMENT IN SUPPORT OF COMPLAINT OF THE NATIONAL FAIR HOUSING ALLIANCE AGAINST ALLSTATE CORPORATION

Home Based Business Foreclosures - Overview and Methodology of the Foreclosure Process

Remarks of Bethany Sanchez, Metropolitan Milwaukee Fair Housing Council EGRPRA Panel October 19, Chicago, IL

A CONSUMER GUIDE TO FAIR LENDING

Joint Federal-State Mortgage Servicing Settlement EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

DETAILS REGARDING USE OF MORTGAGE FUNDS

COMMUNITY ACQUISITION REHABILITATION LOAN CARL CARL TERM SHEET AND GUIDELINES

National Mortgage Settlement

ATTORNEYS AND THE FORECLOSURE RESCUE FRAUD EPIDEMIC

The Strategic Assessment of the St. Louis Region

one home makes a difference

PRESS RELEASE WELLS FARGO TEAMS UP WITH FL NON PROFITS TO ADDRESS AFFORDABLE HOUSING

SHORT SALES Frequently Asked Questions

Zillow Negative Equity Report

Additional Requirements for Lenders and Mortgage Servicers

Healthy Homes Department Housing Rehabilitation Program County of Alameda Community Development Agency (CDA)

FREDDIE MAC 2010 INDUSTRY SUPPORT (Paid January December 2010)

GW Law Alumni Elective Courses Survey

WHO RECEIVES A MORTGAGE MODIFICATION? RACE AND INCOME DIFFERENTIALS IN LOAN WORKOUTS

RECONNECTING OPPORTUNITY YOUTH

Logan City. Analysis of Impediments to Fair Housing

Brushless Motor Fundamentals and Why Every Section Needs A Consultants Network

LENDING CHECKLIST. Please contact us if you have any questions or concerns at

The Coordinated Plan. to Address Foreclosures in Minnesota

Information About Filing a Case in the United States Tax Court. Attached are the forms to use in filing your case in the United States Tax Court.

The Scheme of Things: What you Should Know About Mortgage Fraud. Protecting Homeowners Empowering Victims

Loan Modification Scam Prevention Network (LMSPN) Annual Report 2010

protect neighborhoods from becoming blighted due to the increased number of foreclosed

In Texas, we re helping homeowners face to face.

Why Fair Housing, Fair Lending and Equal Opportunity Are Crucial to Solving the Home Opportunity Crisis

2010 Allocations to States of Volume Cap for Qualified School Construction Bonds

Lake County Homebuyer Programs Lender Guidelines as of 1/22/2014

County-to-County Migration Flows

ALLOCATION OF MORTGAGE SERVICING SETTLEMENT FUNDS

The Guide to Single Family Home Mortgage Insurance

City of Casa Grande Housing Rehabilitation Program

9-Jul-08 State Responses to Housing Crisis: Legislative Solutions

District of Columbia State Data Center Quarterly Report Summer 2007


Do Foreclosures Cause Crime?

WOODSTOCK INSTITUTE. Using Research to Limit the Impacts of Foreclosures at the Local Level. Geoff Smith, Vice President Woodstock Institute

Attorney and Director, Fair Housing and Hate Crime Projects

Additional information >>> HERE <<< Getting Free Instant Access freight broker training and job placement - Review

THE ATTORNEY GENERAL S 2006 ANNUAL REPORT TO CONGRESS PURSUANT TO THE EQUAL CREDIT OPPORTUNITY ACT AMENDMENTS OF 1976

Prevent the spread of vegetation not conducive to the public health, safety or welfare;

Common Property Maintenance Code Violations. An illustrated guide

B U S I N E S S C O S T S

Fair Housing Act. Reference Guide to Regulatory Compliance. 42 USC Ch through 3619

Metro Interfaith Housing Counseling. Tell Us About Yourself. General Information Primary

Annual Registration of Vacant or Abandoned Commercial Storefront [San Francisco Ordinance , effective ]

A Better Solution. Multidimensional Services. Seamless Results.

CLIENT AUTHORIZATIONS, DISCLOSURES, RELEASES & PRIVACY STATEMENT 1

The Fair Housing Act: A Latino Perspective

County Code Enforcement and the Foreclosure Crisis

Chapter 20 Questions: Land-Use Controls & Property Development

JANUARY Shopping for a mortgage? What you can expect under federal rules

The Coordinated Plan. to Address Foreclosures in Minnesota

How to Change Your Address with the Immigration Court and Government Attorneys

Construction Initiative: Distribution of $24.8 Billion In Bonding Authority Initial Estimates for H.R. 4094

CONSUMER MORTGAGE PROTECTION ACT Act 660 of The People of the State of Michigan enact:

How To Get A Mortgage Loan Relief In Florida

How To Get A Home Repair Grant From The City Of Venice

Animals & the Fair Housing Act

Acquiring Bank Owned Foreclosures

Florida League of Cities 86 th Annual Conference

ALAN M. WHITE Valparaiso University School of Law 656 S. Greenwich Street Valparaiso IN

National Surety Leader

Report on Nevada s Housing Market

Testimony of. Michael J. Heid Co president Wells Fargo Home Mortgage. Before the

Bank of America~ VIA . October 1, 2013

Racial and Ethnic Disparities in 2011 Ohio Mortgage Lending

Subprime vs. Predatory Lending

The Strategic Assessment of the St. Louis Region

ABANDONED/VACANT REAL PROPERTY REGISTRATION FORM. Type of Registration: New Renewal Date of Initial Inspection:

Urban Schools Announce Unprecedented Commitment to Improve Achievement of Young Men of Color

ORDINANCE NO

Roles of a Housing Counselor

CITY OF NORTHFIELD, NJ ORDINANCE NO

WOODBURY, NEW JERSEY ORDINANCE NO AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF WOODBURY AMENDING THE CODE OF THE CITY OF WOODBURY SECTION VACANT PROPERTIES

Has an Unavoidable Decline in Home Prices Begun?

Case: 4:15-cv Doc. #: 1 Filed: 09/29/15 Page: 1 of 10 PageID #: 1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MISSIOURI EASTERN DIVISION

Foreclosing on Community:

MACOMB COUNTY NEIGHBORHOOD STABILIZATION PROGRAM HOMEBUYER ASSISTANCE FOR VACANT FORECLOSED PROPERTIES

FINAL REPORT 2013 FHIP FHOI Grant No. FH800G13027 I. SUMMARY OF PROGRAM GOALS AND OBJECTIVES

Transcription:

For Immediate Release September 25, 2013 Contact: Naweed Lemar 202-898-1661, ext. 119 nlemar@nationalfairhousing.org Civil Rights Organizations Add Cities and New Evidence to Housing Discrimination Complaint against Bank of America New Cities: Denver, Las Vegas, Memphis, Philadelphia, Tucson New Evidence: Atlanta, Dayton, Miami, Washington, D.C. Area WASHINGTON, DC Today, on the one year anniversary of their initial complaint with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), the National Fair Housing Alliance and four of its member organizations, the Denver Metro Fair Housing Center, Metro Fair Housing Services Inc. (Atlanta), Miami Valley Fair Housing Center (Dayton), and Housing Opportunities Project for Excellence, Inc. (Miami), announced that they have amended their federal housing complaint, alleging that Bank of America continues to maintain and market foreclosed homes in White neighborhoods in a much better manner than in African-American and Latino neighborhoods. Failing to maintain and market homes because of the racial or ethnic composition of the neighborhood can violate the federal Fair Housing Act. The new cities added to the complaint are Memphis, Denver, Las Vegas, Tucson, and Philadelphia. The organizations have also provided HUD with new evidence in Atlanta, Dayton, Miami, and Prince George s County in the Washington, D.C. area supporting their allegations of a continuing violation by Bank of America. The complaint now brings the total to 18 metropolitan areas covering more than 30 municipalities where Bank of America is alleged to have discriminated in its maintenance and marketing of its bank-owned homes, also known as Real Estate Owned (REO) properties. The complaint, which now includes 621 properties, was filed with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The five fair housing organizations evaluated the maintenance and marketing of REO properties for 39 different types of maintenance or marketing deficiencies, including broken windows and doors, water damage, overgrown lawns, no for sale sign, trash on the property, and other problems.

Every day Bank of America continues to neglect homes it owns in communities of color and prices decline, allowing investors to snatch up these foreclosures, turning communities into neighborhoods of absentee landlords, said Shanna L. Smith, President and CEO of the National Fair Housing Alliance. Bank of America is the second largest commercial bank in the United States and it has been on notice of these problems since 2009. And yet, Bank of America chooses to ignore its responsibility to maintain and market foreclosures regardless of the racial or ethnic makeup of the community. In the 18 metropolitan areas where NFHA and its partners investigated Bank of America REOs: REO properties in communities of color were 2 times more likely than REO properties in White communities to have more than 10 maintenance or marketing problems; REO properties in communities of color were 4.5 times more likely than REO properties in White communities to have more than 15 maintenance or marketing problems; and REO properties in White communities were 3 times more likely than REO properties in communities of color to have fewer than 5 maintenance or marketing problems. NFHA and its member agencies are represented by Janell Byrd-Chichester and colleagues at Mehri & Skalet PLLC, a Washington, DC based law firm. It is common practice when selling a home to place a For Sale sign in the front yard. Without a sign on a property, potential homebuyers do not even know the property is available. Also, without a sign, neighbors would not know whom to call to report unauthorized occupants or storm damage. In Memphis, all (100 percent) of Bank of America REO properties in communities of color were missing a for sale sign, as were 93 percent in Tucson, and 78 percent in Philadelphia. Trash on a property is not only an eyesore for neighbors, but it makes a home unappealing to buyers, and can be a potential health and safety hazard. Trash attracts rats, mice, stray animals and tells vandals the home is vacant and neglected. Regular maintenance would correct this problem, but in Las Vegas, 87 percent of Bank of America REO properties in communities of color had substantial amounts of trash; 67 percent in Philadelphia had substantial amounts of trash. Having secure locks and windows on an uninhabited home is essential for community safety. In Denver, 56 percent of properties in communities of color had broken or unsecured doors and 48 percent had broken or boarded windows, while in Las Vegas, 63 percent of properties in communities of color had unsecured windows. These numbers are unbelievable. It is clear that Bank of America does not care about maintaining REO properties, particularly those in communities of color, said Arturo Alvarado, Executive Director of the Denver Metro Fair Housing Center. Bank of America must be held accountable for these actions. Latino and African American homeowners living next to these foreclosures deserve better treatment from Bank of America.

One property in an African American community in Prince George s County in the Washington, D.C. metro area was flagged for major problems on three different visits between 2011 and 2013. On December 29, 2011, investigators found trash, overgrown grass, overgrown shrubbery, no for sale sign, and damaged siding. On August 10, 2012, a basement door was left wide open into the property and a letter posted on the door from Prince George s County Department of Environmental Resources cited Bank of America for "accumulation of litter and rubbish, high grass and weeds (height greater than 1 inch), and/or wrecked, dismantled, unlicensed, abandoned motor vehicles." On September 10, 2013, there was an "Unfit for Human Habitation" sign posted on the door by the Prince George s County Department of Environmental Resources. A property in a community of color in the Dayton area had trash, overgrown shrubbery, dead grass, invasive plants, no for sale sign, peeling/chipped paint, damaged siding, missing gutter downspout, pervasive mold, and a missing A/C unit. This house is just one example of what Bank of America is doing to our communities, said Jim McCarthy, President and CEO of the Miami Valley Fair Housing Center. Mold in a home can make you extremely sick and can be expensive to remediate. Taking care of the home in the first place is the best remedy. Bank of America is treading a dangerous line that can literally threaten the health of our communities with the lack of maintenance of its properties. Poor housing conditions are associated with a range of health issues, including respiratory illness, asthma, lead poisoning, and cancer, continued Shanna Smith. REO homes that are not taken care of can create a severe health hazard for an entire community. We have found dead animals, rats, stray cats, mold and other health hazards on the properties. Who wants to live next door, and what real estate agent wants to show a home in dangerous conditions or with a dead animal in the yard? Also, a property in a Latino community in the Miami area had trash, overgrown grass, overgrown shrubbery, no for sale sign, a damaged roof, wood rot, peeling paint, and mold. It is as if Bank of America is purposefully looking the other way when they see REOs in communities of color, said Keenya Robertson, President and CEO of Housing Opportunities Project for Excellence, Inc. It s incredibly sad to see the value of the homes in the surrounding area of a non-maintained REO plummet. Homeowners have a difficult, if not impossible time trying to refinance when they live next door to a unkempt Bank of America foreclosure. Finally, several properties in an African-American community the Atlanta area had overgrown grass and shrubbery, invasive plants, accumulated mail, no for sale signs, damaged roofs, or missing gutters and downspouts. It is appalling that we have found even more properties in the greater Atlanta area to add to the evidence we have supporting this complaint, said Gail Williams, Executive Director of Metro Fair Housing Services, Inc. We have told representatives of Bank of America over and over again that they are violating the law. It s time for them to change their practices or expect neighbors, neighborhoods and cities to join our complaint and seek damages.

In June 2013, Bank of America announced its second-quarter profits soared to $3.6 billion, up from $2.1 billion a year ago, an increase of 70%, through measures which included cost-cutting. NFHA and its partners have investigated Bank of America REO homes in more than 45 cities. Additional evidence will be released later this year. The other cities named in today s complaint include: Phoenix, Arizona; Concord, California; Oakland, California; Richmond, California; Orlando, Florida; metropolitan Chicago, Illinois; Indianapolis, Indiana; Grand Rapids, Michigan; Dayton, Ohio; Charleston, South Carolina; Dallas, Texas; and Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Additional detailed statistics and photos are available at www.nationalfairhousing.org. The Fair Housing Act makes it illegal to discriminate based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, disability or familial status, as well as the race or national origin of residents of a neighborhood. This law applies to housing and housing-related activities, which include the maintenance, appraisal, listing, marketing and selling of homes. DENVER, CO 100 percent of Bank of America -owned homes in Denver communities of color had more than five maintenance or marketing problems, and 41 percent had more than 10 maintenance or marketing problems. LAS VEGAS, NV 88 percent of Bank of America -owned homes in Las Vegas communities of color had more than five maintenance or marketing problems. MEMPHIS, TN 100 percent Bank of America-owned homes in Memphis communities of color had more than five maintenance or marketing deficiencies, and 40 percent had more than 10 maintenance or marketing deficiencies. PHILADELPHIA, PA 94 percent of Bank of America -owned homes in Philadelphia communities of color had more than five maintenance or marketing deficiencies, and 28 percent had more than 10 maintenance or marketing deficiencies. TUCSON, AZ 73 percent of Bank of America -owned homes in Tucson communities of color had more than five maintenance or marketing problems.

The National Fair Housing Alliance Founded in 1988, the National Fair Housing Alliance is a consortium of more than 220 private, non-profit fair housing organizations, state and local civil rights agencies, and individuals from throughout the United States. Headquartered in Washington, D.C., the National Fair Housing Alliance, through comprehensive education, advocacy and enforcement programs, provides equal access to apartments, houses, mortgage loans and insurance policies for all residents in the nation. Mehri & Skalet, PLLC Mehri & Skalet, PLLC is one of the nation s leading plaintiffs civil rights and consumer protection law firms specializing in a class actions and complex civil litigation. Mehri & Skalet represents employees, consumers, civil rights organizations, small businesses and others in highimpact cases against powerful interests. The firm is based in Washington, D.C. and has a nationwide practice. Denver Metro Fair Housing Center The Denver Metro Fair Housing Center is a private non-profit fair housing enforcement agency serving 6 Denver Metro Counties: Adams, Arapahoe, Broomfield, Denver, Douglas, and Jefferson. DMFHC is dedicated to eliminating housing discrimination and promoting housing choice through education, advocacy, and enforcement of fair housing laws. DMFHC accepts complaints from individuals and families who believe they have been discriminated against in their pursuit of housing. DMFHC investigates the complaints and assists clients in finding the best remedies to their fair housing issues. The Miami Valley Fair Housing Center The Miami Valley Fair Housing Center is a comprehensive full-service fair housing center in Dayton, Ohio, with experience in auditing and testing activities, anti-predatory lending investigation and remedy, mortgage rescue scam intervention, foreclosure prevention counseling, mortgage modifications as well as fair housing and fair lending education and outreach. MVFHC works throughout the Miami Valley to eliminate housing discrimination and ensure equal housing opportunity for all people in its region. Metro Fair Housing Services, Inc. Metro Fair Housing Services, Inc. is a 38-year-old, non-profit civil rights organization whose primary objective is to fight housing discrimination in metropolitan Atlanta and promote equal housing opportunities throughout the state of Georgia. The agency mission is to promote social justice and eliminate housing and lending inequities for all people through leadership, education and outreach, public policy advocacy and enforcement of federal and state Fair Housing laws. In the wake of the foreclosure crisis, Metro expanded its homebuyer education services to include foreclosure prevention counseling. Housing Opportunities Project for Excellence Housing Opportunities Project for Excellence, Inc. (HOPE) was established in 1988 as the first non-profit fair housing agency in the state of Florida. Today, it is the only private, non-profit, full-service fair housing organization in the Miami-Dade and Broward markets. It provides one of-a-kind education services to the community-at-large, housing providers, lenders and advertisers of housing opportunities.

The work that provided the basis for this publication was supported by funding under a grant with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The substance and findings of the work are dedicated to the public. The author and publisher are solely responsible for the accuracy of the statements and interpretations contained in this publication. Such interpretations do not necessarily reflect the views of the Federal Government.