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Leadership

Civil Rights Groups Are Suing Ben Carson and HUD Over Fair Housing Rule

By
Emily Price
Emily Price
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By
Emily Price
Emily Price
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May 8, 2018, 3:11 PM ET
Housing And Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson Testifies To House Committee On Department's Budget
WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 20: Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Ben Carson arrives to testify before the Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies on Capitol Hill March 20, 2018 in Washington, DC. Secretary Carson has drawn fire from lawmakers for purchasing furniture for his office suite despite agency cutbacks. (Photo by Aaron P. Bernstein/Getty Images)Aaron P. Bernstein Getty Images

Civil rights groups are suing the Trump Administration over its failure to enforce the 50-year-old Fair Housing Act.

The suit filed Tuesday morning by the National Fair Housing Alliance, along with the Texas Low Income Housing Information Service and Texas Appleseed, names the Department of Housing and Urban Development and HUD Secretary Ben Carson. The lawsuit aims to prevent discrimination in the allocation of funds pertaining to housing and infrastructure concerns after natural disasters, such as Hurricane Harvey. The organizations want an Obama-era rule reinstated that would require local governments receiving federal funds to create and submit plans to distribute those funds in a way that works toward ending segregation based on ethnicity, income, race, or physical disability, The New York Times reports.

Carson suspended the rule earlier this year because he felt it put an unnecessary burden on local governments. The suit claims that in doing so Carson violated the 1968 Housing Act, which was put in place to protect vulnerable communities after national disasters.

The concern is that going forward, HUD will distribute funds after natural disasters in a way that will prevent less affluent communities traditionally filled with minority residents from rebuilding as quickly as their majority counterparts.

The Times notes that housing segregation has been an ongoing issue for HUD, even long before this administration and that segregation concerns have “landed previous secretaries in the cross hairs.”

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By Emily Price
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