Posted on March 15, 2018

Bill Targets Milwaukee’s Segregation

Graham Kilmer, Urban Milwaukee, March 13, 2018

Legislation that aims to curb discrimination against housing applicants using federal rental assistance was introduced at yesterday’s meeting of the Milwaukee County Board’s committee on Economic and Community Development.

The proposal caused concern among some landlords in the county who fear it would force them to accept housing applicants with the section eight housing vouchers. The legislation would confer “protected status” upon applicants using section eight housing vouchers.

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The impetus for this bill, Dimitrijevic said, is the problem of segregation in Milwaukee County. Milwaukee has often been rated among the most segregated metropolitan areas in the country. And a history of discrimination in housing policy is a key reason. Dimitrijevic and several supporters of the legislation mentioned Matthew Desmond’s book, Evicted, which found that found that in Milwaukee’s majority-black neighborhoods, one in 14 renting households is evicted each year.

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What’s at stake, many supporters of the bill said, was the ability of residents on rental assistance to move from a neighborhood with low economic opportunity to one with high economic opportunity.

It’s illegal for landlords to discriminate against applicants for an apartment because of race under both federal and state law. But these laws don’t have language protecting individuals from potential discrimination because they are on housing assistance.

Daun told the committee the majority of Milwaukee County residents on housing vouchers are people of color, and that landlords use section eight housing as a “proxy to racially discriminate.”

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Daun said her office is interested in working with the county audit department to undertake the enforcement end of the legislation. But she noted that investigating and bringing cases of discrimination based upon this proposed law would not be simple. It would require considerable time and effort and probably additional resources from the county.

Ron Hegwood, president of the Apartment Association of Southeastern Wisconsin, and Heiner Geise, an attorney for the association, spoke against the proposed rule. {snip}

A major opposition point, both Hegwood and Geise touched on, was that section eight housing agreements require the landlord to use a year long lease, and some landlords like to rent month to month.

They also said that section eight housing places, in their opinion, a significant burden on landlords. Geise mentioned that there is no recourse, like assessing late fees, for section eight landlords when rent is not paid on time, or at all. And Hegwood said that landlords are not allowed to hold section eight tenants responsible for damage done to the property. If a property is damaged by the tenant, he said, it comes out of the landlord’s pocket.

Other landlords that spoke at the meeting echoed Geise and Hegwood. And a few said they simply had no interest in learning all the regulations entailed in renting a property to those on rental assistance. {snip}

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