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Minnesota Housing Agency Accused of Making Racial Segregation Worse

The Minneapolis-based Stairstep Foundation works with more than 100 Black churches and argued that the Minnesota Advisory Committee has not encouraged or allocated subsidized housing appropriately.

A Black civil rights organization claims that a Minnesota affordable housing finance agency is worsening racial segregation — and that the group's concerns about it are not addressed in an upcoming report to the U.S. Civil Rights Commission.

The Rev. Alfred Babington-Johnson, CEO of Minneapolis-based Stairstep Foundation, which works with more than 100 Black churches, delivered testimony to the commission's Minnesota Advisory Committee saying that the housing agency has not encouraged or allocated subsidized housing appropriately.

The testimony came a year after he sued Minnesota Housing, the state agency, alleging it was preventing adequate construction of subsidized housing in affluent, predominantly white areas. As a result, the suit says, many low-income, nonwhite residents are barred from accessing economic and educational opportunities in those places. The suit also named the Metropolitan Council as a defendant.

"Contrary to their mandate, these entities have not encouraged or allocated subsidized housing development appropriately, and as a consequence, they have become complicit in advancing racial segregation and causing economic disadvantage to vulnerable segments of our society, particularly the Black community," Babington-Johnson testified.

But mention of the Ramsey County suit and the issues it raised were struck from a draft of an upcoming report to the Civil Rights Commission.

Advisory committee chair Beth Commers told the Star Tribune that the panel started to conduct an analysis of Minnesota Housing's strategic plan. But after listening to testimony from many people on housing issues that went beyond that agency, the panel broadened the report's scope to address civil rights themes in housing affordability and equitable access to housing in Minnesota. One issue, for example, was insufficient money for the repair and upkeep of affordable units, Commers noted.

The panel removed mention of Babington-Johnson's lawsuit in a draft because "it didn't fit, and … we didn't want to take a position on a case that's in front of the court," Commers said. Some of Babington-Johnson's remarks remain.

Commers said the committee's final report of recommendations on affordable housing in Minnesota will be published in about two weeks. One top recommendation is state legislation setting zoning requirements for municipalities across Minnesota to allow for more diverse affordable housing stock – for example, six- to eight-unit buildings, instead of mostly single-family homes.

"Otherwise, communities get to choose … what kind of housing to allow and what kind of housing to not allow," Commers said.

Committee member William Stancil was the sole panelist opposing the changes, questioning why they had repeatedly invited Babington-Johnson to testify and then removed mention of the suit. He voiced concern that the report was siding with industry groups that oppose the ideas Babington-Johnson put forth.

One such group, Equity in Place, told the committee that it sees the "areas of opportunity" framework — the crux of Babington-Johnson's lawsuit and testimony — as a dated one that might appear to serve the interests of people of color, the working class and low-wealth renters but is leading to a pattern of reducing affordable housing investment in communities that are mostly people of color. Equity in Place, a coalition of organizations led by people of color and housing advocacy groups, argued that this policy is often used against communities of color trying to fight against pressures of gentrification and displacement.

Minnesota Housing funds more subsidized units in the Twin Cities than any other entity and allocates Low-Income Housing Tax Credits.

In its lawsuit, Stairstep Foundation said 35 percent of the region's subsidized affordable housing is located in "racially concentrated areas of poverty," and only 1.3 percent of such housing is located in "racially concentrated areas of affluence." In census tracts greater than 30 percent nonwhite in Minneapolis and St. Paul, there is approximately one subsidized housing unit for every four nonsubsidized units, according to the suit. But in tracts less than 30 percent nonwhite, there is about one subsidized housing unit for every 24 nonsubsidized ones.

Minnesota Housing and the Met Council denied the lawsuit allegations in court papers filed last month, though the former admitted that the region's housing is racially segregated by some metrics.

During testimony, Minnesota Housing Commissioner Jennifer Leimaile Ho objected to a statement in the report that most affordable housing in the state has been built in the urban core of Minneapolis and St. Paul. The report, she said, needs to make clear that Minnesota Housing is not "concentrating" or "clustering" affordable housing.

In the last several years, she said, 63 percent of the new rental units in the Twin Cities metro area that have been awarded funds through the agency's Consolidate Request for Proposals have been in the suburbs while 37 percent have been in Minneapolis-St. Paul. Ho added the agency is actually funding housing in a wide range of communities.

Babington-Johnson and University of Minnesota Law School Professor Myron Orfield dispute those numbers. Orfield, who also testified before the committee, said the share of Minnesota Housing funding going to the suburbs is 41 percent over the last five years, though the suburbs are 75 percent of the metro area. Minneapolis and St. Paul have 60 percent of the units even though they have 25 percent of the population, he said.

Babington-Johnson wrote a letter to the committee in June raising objections that the advisory committee had "abruptly stripped" reference to the civil rights issues on which he had testified, but that it incorporated Ho's statistics. He said the committee had fallen short of its obligation to fully incorporate all civil rights concerns.

John Powell, professor of African American studies and ethnic studies at University of California at Berkeley, also wrote to the committee saying he strongly objected to striking references to the "opportunity neighborhood framework" that is embedded in America's fair housing law — a central part of Babington-Johnson's lawsuit. He said the suit against Minnesota Housing is one of the most important fair housing cases before the courts nationwide.



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