The National Fair Housing Alliance, a national organization dedicated to ending discrimination in housing, recently released its 2018 fair housing trends report, Making Every Neighborhood a Place of Opportunity, which outlines key obstacles to achieving the goals of the Fair Housing Act. The 2018 report assesses some of the progress that has been made, lays out the ways in which the Fair Housing Act has been undermined in recent years, and outlines some of the newer and emerging issues to be addressed. Here are some report highlights:
According to the organization, the biggest obstacle to fair housing rights is the federal government’s failure to enforce the law vigorously. The 28,843 reported housing discrimination complaints in 2017 was a slight increase from the 28,181 complaints reported in 2016. However, most of these complaints, about 71.3 percent, were handled by private, nonprofit fair housing organizations.
HUD, on the other hand, processed just 1,311 complaints, less than 5 percent of the total, according to the report. State and local governmental Fair Housing Assistance Program (FHAP) agencies processed 6,896 complaints, and the Department of Justice brought 41 cases.
While the total number of fair housing complaints increased in 2017, HUD and the FHAP processed fewer complaints than the 1,371 and 7,030 complaints reported in 2016, respectively. The number of complaints processed by the Justice Department increased by just one, up from 40 cases in 2016.