THE PERPETUATION OF RESIDENTIAL RACIAL SEGREGATION IN AMERICA: HISTORICAL DISCRIMINATION, MODERN FORMS OF EXCLUSION, AND INCLUSIONARY REMEDIES MARC SEITLES[*]

Copyright © 1996 Journal of Land Use & Environmental Law
I. INTRODUCTION
The word “seg­re­ga­tion” is used while describ­ing the con­tentious changes of the 1960s, the Civil Rights move­ment, and the America of the past.[1] It is also a word that is now gone from the American social and polit­i­cal land­scape. In actu­al­i­ty, how­ev­er, the word seg­re­ga­tion con­tin­ues to char­ac­ter­ize the present lives of many minori­ties in America.[2] Segregation is the link to under­stand­ing the per­pet­u­a­tion of urban pover­ty in America and is attrib­ut­able to the present lack of afford­able hous­ing in safe and eco­nom­i­cal­ly pros­per­ous sub­ur­ban com­mu­ni­ties.[3] The exis­tence of iso­lat­ed and racial­ly seg­re­gat­ed hous­ing has pre­served racial mis­trust, fur­ther­ing igno­rant stereo­types that inhib­it our soci­ety from attain­ing true racial equal­i­ty. As Thomas Petigrew stat­ed: “Residential seg­re­ga­tion has proven to be the most resis­tant to change of all realms — per­haps because it is so crit­i­cal to racial change in gen­er­al.”[4]
This com­ment dis­cuss­es the his­to­ry and effects of res­i­den­tial racial seg­re­ga­tion in America and offers spe­cif­ic reme­dies that have already been imple­ment­ed effec­tive­ly in a few U.S. cities. First, the com­ment exam­ines the his­to­ry of res­i­den­tial racial seg­re­ga­tion in America by explor­ing the role of fed­er­al and state gov­ern­ments, exclu­sion­ary zon­ing leg­is­la­tion, and pri­vate dis­crim­i­na­tion in cre­at­ing and per­pet­u­at­ing the prob­lems asso­ci­at­ed with seg­re­gat­ed hous­ing. Next, the com­ment address­es the harm­ful social and eco­nom­ic costs to minori­ties, par­tic­u­lar­ly African Americans, from decades of seg­re­ga­tion­ist and dis­crim­i­na­to­ry hous­ing poli­cies. Additionally, this sec­tion ana­lyzes the prospects of improv­ing race rela­tions giv­en the exis­tence of pre­dom­i­nate­ly homoge­nous white sub­ur­ban com­mu­ni­ties and low-income minor­i­ty inner-city neigh­bor­hoods. The third sec­tion elu­ci­dates pol­i­cy rea­sons to sup­port hous­ing inte­gra­tion, and ana­lyzes the costs of seg­re­ga­tion on white-Americans. Further, the third sec­tion details the eco­nom­ic and social ben­e­fits not only to minori­ties, but also to our entire pop­u­la­tion. Finally, the fourth sec­tion dis­cuss­es reme­dies to elim­i­nate hous­ing seg­re­ga­tion, specif­i­cal­ly by facil­i­tat­ing an increase in afford­able hous­ing prospects in sub­ur­ban com­mu­ni­ties. This first part exam­ines inclu­sion­ary zon­ing tech­niques, includ­ing the use of manda­to­ry set-asides, afford­able hous­ing appeals leg­is­la­tion, and state inclu­sion­ary laws. Concrete exam­ples of suc­cess­ful inclu­sion­ary zon­ing tech­niques are offered from a num­ber of U.S. cities. The sec­ond part then ana­lyzes the impor­tance and effec­tive­ness of mobil­i­ty pro­grams. Additionally, a detailed review is offered, delin­eat­ing the strengths of indi­vid­ual mobil­i­ty pro­grams, exist­ing obsta­cles, and the suc­cess­es of mobil­i­ty pro­grams in cre­at­ing afford­able hous­ing for minori­ties in pre­vi­ous­ly white sub­ur­ban enclaves.

II. HISTORICAL SEGREGATION OF HOUSING IN AMERICA
A. Development of Housing Segregation — The Urban Ghetto
Housing seg­re­ga­tion in the United States devel­oped slow­ly and delib­er­ate­ly. In fact, pri­or to 1900, African Americans were scat­tered wide­ly through­out white neigh­bor­hoods.[5] In south­ern cities in the United States, for exam­ple, African American ser­vants and labor­ers lived side by side with their white employ­ers, and in north­ern urban areas, African Americans were more like­ly to share a neigh­bor­hood with whites than to live in racial­ly seg­re­gat­ed com­mu­ni­ties.[6] Although the evils of dis­crim­i­na­tion con­tin­ued after the Civil War, African Americans were gen­er­al­ly res­i­den­tial­ly inte­grat­ed with whites in the North.[7] The two racial groups reg­u­lar­ly inter­act­ed in a com­mon social world, shar­ing cul­tur­al traits and val­ues through per­son­al and fre­quent inter­ac­tion.[8]

However, as African Americans moved north into indus­tri­al com­mu­ni­ties after World War I and II, the pic­ture of the urban ghet­to began to devel­op. At the turn of the cen­tu­ry, meth­ods such as pub­lic improve­ment projects, rede­vel­op­ment projects, pub­lic hous­ing pro­grams, and urban renew­al poli­cies were uti­lized to accom­plish racial seg­re­ga­tion.[9] Other fac­tors also con­tributed to the for­ma­tion of the urban ghet­to. Manufacturing jobs were lured away from the inner city with cheap land and low tax­es.[10] Industry mov­ing from the city to the sub­urbs result­ed in the cre­ation of all-white sub­ur­ban towns.[11] Segregationist zon­ing ordi­nances, which divid­ed city streets by race, cou­pled with racial­ly restric­tive covenants between pri­vate indi­vid­u­als became the com­mon method of legal­ly enforc­ing racial seg­re­ga­tion.[12]

Racial seg­re­ga­tion soon became the de fac­to pol­i­cy of local gov­ern­ments and stan­dard oper­at­ing pro­ce­dure for indi­vid­ual landown­ers. The emer­gence of the black ghet­to did not hap­pen by chance, but was the result of the delib­er­ate hous­ing poli­cies of the fed­er­al, state, and local gov­ern­ments and the inten­tion­al actions of indi­vid­ual American cit­i­zens.[13] As a result, the cre­ation of the urban ghet­to has had a last­ing impact on America. The con­se­quences include: a lack of cap­i­tal in inner city com­mu­ni­ties, seg­re­gat­ed minor ity neigh­bor­hoods, and minor­i­ty fam­i­lies unable to find afford­able hous­ing in the sub­urbs due to gov­ern­ment spon­sored racism.

B. The Role of Government in Creating Housing Segregation
The role of fed­er­al and state gov­ern­ment in cre­at­ing and main­tain­ing res­i­den­tial racial seg­re­ga­tion must be under­stood, with­out excuse, as a real­i­ty of American his­to­ry. On the fed­er­al lev­el, the United States gov­ern­ment rein­forced dis­crim­i­na­to­ry norms through var­i­ous pub­lic poli­cies. The Federal Housing Administration (FHA) adopt­ed the prac­tice of “red-lin­ing,” a dis­crim­i­na­to­ry rat­ing sys­tem used by FHA to eval­u­ate the risks asso­ci­at­ed with loans made to bor­row­ers in spe­cif­ic urban neigh­bor­hoods.[14] The vast major­i­ty of the loans went to the two top cat­e­gories of the rat­ing sys­tem, the high­est of which includ­ed areas that were “new, homoge­nous, and in demand in good times and bad.”[15] The sec­ond high­est cat­e­go­ry was com­prised of most­ly sta­ble areas that were still desir­able. The third cat­e­go­ry, and the lev­el at which dis­crim­i­na­to­ry “red-lin­ing” began, con­sist­ed of work­ing class neigh­bor­hoods near black res­i­dences that were “with­in such a low price or rent range as to attract an unde­sir­able ele­ment.”[16] Black areas were placed in the fourth cate gory. Mortgage funds were chan­neled away from fourth cat­e­go­ry African American neigh­bor­hoods and were typ­i­cal­ly redi­rect­ed from com­mu­ni­ties that were locat­ed near a black set­tle­ment or an area expect­ed to con­tain black res­i­dences in the future.[17] As a result of these poli­cies, the vast major­i­ty of FHA mort­gage loans went to bor­row­ers in white mid­dle-class neigh­bor­hoods, and very few were award­ed to black neigh­bor­hoods in cen­tral cities.[18] Between 1930 and 1950, three out of five homes pur­chased in the United States were financed by FHA, yet less than two per­cent of the FHA loans were made to non-white home buy­ers.[19] The FHA thus became the first fed­er­al agency to open­ly coun­sel and sup­port seg­re­ga­tion.[20]

The FHA was oper­at­ed in a racial­ly dis­crim­i­na­to­ry man­ner since its incep­tion in 1937 and set itself up as the “pro­tec­tor of all white neigh­bor­hoods,” using its field agents to “keep Negroes and oth­er minori­ties from buy­ing hous­es in white neigh­bor­hoods.”[21] Evidence also indi­cates that the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment used inter­state high­way and urban renew­al pro­grams to seg­re­gate those blacks that had pre­vi­ous­ly lived in more racial­ly diverse com­mu­ni­ties.[22] Conse quent­ly, these schemes increased the con­cen­tra­tion of pover­ty where it has fes­tered ever since and has caused the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment to be labeled as “most influ­en­tial in cre­at­ing and main­tain­ing res­i­den­tial seg­re­ga­tion.”[23]

Examples of dis­crim­i­na­tion in fed­er­al hous­ing pol­i­cy per­sist today, and they are as numer­ous as they are dis­turb­ing. For instance, most minori­ties in pub­lic hous­ing live in com­mu­ni­ties large­ly popu lat­ed by poor minori­ties; in con­trast, pub­lic hous­ing for elder­ly whites is typ­i­cal­ly sit­u­at­ed in areas with large num­bers of whites who are not poor.[24] The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has played a sig­nif­i­cant role in rein­forc­ing the prob­lems of hous­ing seg­re­ga­tion by allow­ing inten­tion­al dis­crim­i­na­tion and courts have found HUD liable on many occa­sions for their overt racist poli­cies in site selec­tion and ten­ant hous­ing pro­ce­dures.[25]

The com­bined efforts of the fed­er­al and state agen­cies have had dis­as­trous effects on the cre­ation and main­te­nance of hous­ing seg­re­ga­tion. The poli­cies and prac­tices of the agen­cies have led to the notable iso­la­tion of minor­i­ty com­mu­ni­ties. On both nation­al and local lev­els, HUD has been found liable for the dis­crim­i­na­to­ry imple­men­ta­tion of the Section Eight[26] Housing Assistance Program.[27] For instance, Section Eight sub­sidy hold­ers liv­ing in Yonkers, New York brought a class action law­suit against a local Section Eight pro­gram and the state and fed­er­al pro­grams.[28] The ten­ants alleged that the Section Eight office had steered minor­i­ty Section Eight hold­ers into apart­ments in seg­re­gat­ed and crum­bling neigh­bor­hoods. The ten­ants also con­tend­ed that they were improp­er­ly informed that they could use their sub­si­dies in oth­er neigh­bor­hoods and nev­er told about the avail­abil­i­ty of rent excep­tions.[29] Consequently, the court held that the plain­tiff-ten­ants were lim­it­ed in their abil­i­ty to move into inte­grat­ed neigh­bor­hoods.[30] Under a con­sent decree issued in 1993, the defen­dants agreed to fund the Enhanced Section Eight Outreach Office to redress the griev­ances of the plain­tiff ten­ants.[31] Unquestionably, the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment, includ­ing HUD, has his­tor­i­cal­ly sup­port­ed and sus­tained hous­ing dis­crim­i­na­tion, a fact acknowl­edged even by the White House.[32] Past and present racial­ly dis­crim­i­na­to­ry poli­cies oblig­ate fed­er­al, state, and local gov­ern­ments to address their prej­u­di­cial tac­tics with mean­ing­ful leg­isla­tive ini­tia­tives to pro­mote racial inte­gra­tion in housing.

C. Exclusionary Zoning and the Perpetuation of Housing Segregation
As African Americans poured into America’s cities, the white com­mu­ni­ty fled to the sub­urbs, using judi­cial means to exclude the “unde­sir­ables.”[33] In 1926, the Supreme Court approved the use of munic­i­pal zon­ing in Village of Euclid v. Ambler Realty Company,[34] and the use of dis­tinct zon­ing dis­tricts in all areas of land use plan­ning — res­i­den­tial, com­mer­cial, and indus­tri­al — and sub­cat­e­go­rizes with­in each.[35] The Court’s hold­ing in Euclid sought to pre­serve the qual­i­ty of res­i­den­tial envi­ron­ments, but in doing so, caused hard­ship to those black or poor fam­i­lies who may have want­ed to live in sub­ur­bia. Although the Supreme Court has since held that race-based zon­ing vio­lates the Equal Protection Clause, non-exclu­sion­ary zon­ing restric­tions still cre­ate de fac­tores­i­den­tial seg­re­ga­tion.[36] Moreover, such facial­ly neu­tral non-exclu­sion­ary zon­ing reg­u­la­tions, based on eco­nom­ic con­sid­er­a­tions of prop­er­ty deval­u­a­tion, have still result­ed in per­pet­u­at­ing the exis­tence of seg­re­gat­ed neigh­bor­hoods. The real­i­ty of such “neu­tral” zon­ing ordi­nances is the exclu­sion of American soci­ety’s most vul­ner­a­ble pop­u­la­tion, poor minori­ties.[37]

Exclusionary zon­ing prac­tices were explained in the famous New Jersey Mount Laurel deci­sion where local zon­ing reg­u­la­tions were used to main­tain “enclaves of afflu­ence or of social homo­gene­ity.”[38] Not sur­pris­ing­ly, exclu­sion­ary zon­ing has been attrac­tive to local gov­ern­ments because a town could zone out what­ev­er hous­ing it did not want with­out hav­ing to pay a price.[39] While no sin­gle fac­tor can ful­ly explain racial seg­re­ga­tion, many legal schol­ars, as well as Justice Hall and Chief Justice Wilentz of the New Jersey Supreme Court, have agreed that exclu­sion­ary zon­ing is the most per­va­sive legal struc­ture per­pet­u­at­ing racial seg­re­ga­tion.[40]

The growth of sub­ur­ban com­mu­ni­ties expand­ed the growth of local gov­ern­ments who used their pow­er to reg­u­late and con­trol neigh­bor­hood land use. Zoning ordi­nances, includ­ing restric­tions for sin­gle fam­i­lies, the exclu­sion of apart­ment build­ings from res­i­den­tial clas­si­fi­ca­tion, min­i­mum lot and floor space require­ments, max­i­mum den­si­ty lim­i­ta­tions, and oth­er land use con­trols have func­tioned as gates of homo­gene­ity.[41] Even con­sid­er­ing pro­po­nents’ con­tentions that zon­ing reg­u­la­tions cre­ate and sus­tain eco­nom­i­cal­ly and social­ly viable com­mu­ni­ties, the fact remains that because of these restric­tions, the poor and minori­ties are de fac­to exclud­ed and their needs sac­ri­ficed to nur­ture the growth of sub­ur­bia.[42] While zon­ing ordi­nances may be facial­ly neu­tral, the effect of many of these reg­u­la­tions is to keep out minori­ties and low-income per­sons even when the intent is obscured.

Zoning reg­u­la­tions have result­ed in the dra­mat­ic increase in hous­ing prices, exac­er­bat­ing the prob­lem of hous­ing seg­re­ga­tion. Land costs rep­re­sent a notable por­tion of hous­ing costs, and zon­ing prac­tices that affect the price of land increase the cost of hous­ing built on that land.[43] The con­struc­tion of afford­able hous­ing there­by becomes cost­ly and more lim­it­ed, effec­tive­ly exclud­ing many low-income minori­ties. These minori­ties, in turn, are exclud­ed from the edu­ca­tion­al and employ­ment oppor­tu­ni­ties of sub­ur­ban areas.[44] Hence, the cycle of oppres­sion is perpetuated.

In May 1991, the Census Bureau report­ed that 57% of American fam­i­lies could not afford a medi­an-priced home in the area in which they lived.[45] This per­cent­age dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly affects both African Americans and Hispanics who make-up 75% of these fam­i­lies.[46] The dis­crim­i­na­to­ry hous­ing prac­tices of fed­er­al and state gov­ern­ments, cou­pled with the tremen­dous rise in hous­ing costs, have result­ed in whites, blacks, Hispanics, and oth­er minori­ties being increas­ing­ly iso­lat­ed from each oth­er.[47] The 1990 cen­sus shows that 30% of African Americans live in neigh­bor­hoods which are 90% or more black, while the remain­ing per­cent­age of African Americans still live in pre­dom­i­nant­ly black areas.[48] In fact, 62% of African Americans live in areas that are at least 60% black. As for the Hispanic pop­u­la­tion, 40% live in com­mu­ni­ties that are 60% or more Hispanic. While 86% of sub­ur­ban whites, on the oth­er hand, live in com­mu­ni­ties that are less than 1% black.[49]

Finally, even though the 1980s wit­nessed an eco­nom­ic gap between the black poor and the black mid­dle-class, the relo­ca­tion of mid­dle-class blacks from the urban ghet­to was not into inte­grat­ed com­mu­ni­ties, but rather into the seg­re­gat­ed areas with­in mid­dle-class neigh­bor­hoods.[50] A study of New York City sub­urbs iden­ti­fies the real­i­ty of American seg­re­ga­tion, con­clud­ing that blacks and Hispanics of the same socioe­co­nom­ic class as whites typ­i­cal­ly live in com­mu­ni­ties with less tax wealth, low­er own­er­ship rates, and high­er pover­ty crime rates.[51] Thus, increased hous­ing costs gen­er­at­ed by the prac­tices of exclu­sion­ary zon­ing dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly affect African Americans and oth­er minori­ties, vir­tu­al­ly ensur­ing the con­tin­ued pat­terns of racial seg­re­ga­tion in American cities and sub­urbs.[52] Despite the legal ban against dis­crim­i­na­tion in hous­ing, an increas­ing black mid­dle-class with the means to inte­grate, and a series of court deci­sions pro­hibit­ing racial­ly moti­vat­ed ordi­nances,[53] our neigh­bor­hoods per­sist in remain­ing racial­ly sep­a­rate and unequal.

D. Private Discrimination
Racially seg­re­gat­ed hous­ing pat­terns in the United States exist to a large degree as a result of inten­tion­al dis­crim­i­na­tion against minori­ties.[54] Opponents argue that pat­terns of hous­ing seg­re­ga­tion exist because of per­son­al choice and eco­nom­ic dis­par­i­ty, yet income dif­fer­ences alone account for only 10% to 35% of the racial seg­re­ga­tion actu­al­ly observed.[55] Moreover, the myth that African Americans want to live amongst oth­er African Americans is unfound­ed. In a soci­o­log­i­cal study of the under­ly­ing atti­tudes of whites and blacks toward inte­grat­ed hous­ing, for exam­ple, blacks over­whelm­ing­ly chose to live in inte­grat­ed neigh­bor­hoods.[56] Among the blacks sur­veyed, only 17% indi­cat­ed that they would like to live in a com­plete ly black com­mu­ni­ty as their first or sec­ond choice.[57] Only a small num­ber of blacks indi­cat­ed that their unwill­ing­ness to move to an all-white neigh­bor­hood was based on a desire to live with oth­er blacks.[58]Approximately 82% of the black respon­dents chose a racial­ly mixed com­mu­ni­ty, described as being com­prised of 45% African Americans.[59]

Of African Americans will­ing to move into pre­dom­i­nant­ly white areas, how­ev­er, about 90% feared that they would be unwel­come by whites.[60] Additionally, 17% of the African American respon­dents were con­cerned about phys­i­cal retal­i­a­tion from white res­i­dents if they moved into a white com­mu­ni­ty.[61] The evi­dence of per­va­sive inten­tion­al hous­ing dis­crim­i­na­tion illus­trates that the fears of African Americans have not been unfounded.

One com­mon method of dis­crim­i­na­tion is “steer­ing,” a prac­tice where­by minor­i­ty home pur­chasers are sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly offered hous­es in dif­fer­ent neigh­bor­hoods than inter­est­ed white home­buy­ers.[62] A 1991 Housing Discrimination Study report­ed that when hous­es are shown or rec­om­mend­ed to black and Hispanic home­buy­ers, the prob­a­bil­i­ty of steer­ing by real­tors is 21%.[63] Typically, land­lords who do not want to rent to minor­i­ty ten­ants may tell prospec­tive minor­i­ty renters that the apart­ment has been tak­en off the mar­ket; demand an unrea­son­ably large deposit; or promise to put their name on a wait­ing list that nev­er ends.[64] Local banks also play a role by refus­ing to approve mort­gages for minori­ties. Un favor­able treat­ment regard­ing cred­it assis­tance mea­sured at 39% for black home­buy­ers and 37% for Hispanics.[65] Thus, pri­vate hous­ing dis­crim­i­na­tion takes var­i­ous forms: from real­tors dis­cour­ag­ing minor­i­ty home buy­ers from seek­ing out white com­mu­ni­ties, to land­lords unfair­ly levy­ing addi­tion­al costs upon minori­ties when rent­ing prop­er­ty, to the absolute denial of hous­ing for racial­ly moti­vat­ed rea­sons in all hous­ing mar­kets.[66]

Discrimination in the pri­vate hous­ing mar­ket is an unfor­tu­nate real­i­ty that con­tin­ues to bur­den soci­ety, and con­tra­dicts the American cul­tur­al ideals of fair­ness and jus­tice for all. An analy­sis of the data from the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (1990) shows that African Americans and Hispanics apply­ing for home mort­gage loans are more like­ly than whites to be denied cred­it.[67] A 1989 Housing Discrimination Study for HUD showed per­va­sive, con­tin­u­al hous­ing dis­crim­i­na­tion based on minor­i­ty sta­tus.[68] This study showed that African Americans and Hispanics who respond­ed to news­pa­per adver­tise­ments to either rent or pur­chase a home expe­ri­enced dis­crim­i­na­tion rough­ly 50% of the time.[69] Consequently, African American and Hispanic house­holds pay what is com­mon­ly referred to as a “dis­crim­i­na­tion tax” of about $3,000 every time they search for a house to buy.[70] The total cost of such prej­u­di­cial tac­tics to these minori­ties totals $4.1 bil­lion per year.[71] The Housing Discrimination Study con­cludes that such dis­crim­i­na­to­ry prac­tices seri­ous­ly lim­it hous­ing choic­es for minor­i­ty home­buy­ers, and con­tin­ue to be a major obsta­cle con­fronting blacks and Hispanics in search of hous­ing.[72]

Regional exam­ples of hous­ing dis­crim­i­na­tion empha­size the scope and sever­i­ty of the prob­lem. In Los Angeles alone, HUD received near­ly 800 com­plaints of hous­ing dis­crim­i­na­tion in 1987.[73] The Fair Housing Congress report­ed an addi­tion­al 700 cas­es of al leg­ed racial dis­crim­i­na­tion.[74] The prob­lem is a per­sis­tent one, as more recent exam­ples indi­cate. In a sub­urb south of Chicago, the own­ers and man­agers of Town and Country Villas Apartments were ordered to pay $308,200 in dam­ages for refus­ing to rent apart­ments to blacks.[75] In Toledo, Ohio a mar­ried cou­ple sought to final­ize a lease arrange­ment when the home­own­ers became flus­tered by the fact the cou­ple was inter­ra­cial. The home­own­ers would not relin­quish the prop­er­ty as agreed and a sub­se­quent Fair Housing com­plaint result­ed in the cou­ple receiv­ing $11,500 in com­pen­sato­ry dam­ages and $23,500 in puni­tive dam­ages.[76] In Georgia, a real estate bro­ker was ordered to pay almost $75,000 in dam­ages and fines for vio­lat­ing the Federal Fair Housing Act because the bro­ker backed out of a prop­er­ty sales con­tract after learn­ing the prospec­tive buy­ers were a black cou­ple.[77] Finally, in New York City, a white cou­ple was denied the oppor­tu­ni­ty to sub­let their apart­ment to an inter­est­ed black cou­ple. The own­ers were required to pay the white renters $35,000 for loss of income when the deposit was returned to the black cou­ple and the orig­i­nal renters were left with­out a sub­lessee.[78]

Non-inten­tion­al or soci­etal dis­crim­i­na­tion is an equal­ly seri­ous prob­lem con­tribut­ing to the racial imbal­ance in hous­ing pat­terns. Even though non-inten­tion­al dis­crim­i­na­tion is not based on evil motives, minori­ties are still harmed, both eco­nom­i­cal­ly and social­ly.[79] A prime exam­ple of soci­etal dis­crim­i­na­tion and its inju­ri­ous effect on minori­ties is the phe­nom­e­non of “white flight.”[80] White flight specif­i­cal­ly refers to the migra­tion of white res­i­dents out of a com­mu­ni­ty in response to blacks mov­ing into the com­mu­ni­ty.[81] Whites will tol­er­ate black entry up to a cer­tain lev­el, known as the “tip­ping point,” at which time whites begin to move out of the neigh­bor­hood, leav­ing an all-black com­mu­ni­ty behind.[82]

In a soci­o­log­i­cal study done in Detroit, Michigan, a large per­cent­age of whites sur­veyed indi­cat­ed they would feel uncom­fort­able liv­ing in com­mu­ni­ties pop­u­lat­ed by equal num­bers of blacks and whites.[83] More specif­i­cal­ly, 84% of white respon­dents stat­ed they would not move into a com­mu­ni­ty com­posed of 60% black res­i­dents, and 64% of whites indi­cat­ed they would def­i­nite­ly move to anoth­er neigh­bor­hood.[84] Perhaps more dis­turb­ing is that greater than 50% of whites said that they would not move into a com­mu­ni­ty con­sist­ing of only 20% black res­i­dents.[85] It is also dis­con­cert­ing that 40% of the whites sur­veyed indi­cat­ed that they would move out of an area that became inte­grat­ed, fear­ing a decline in prop­er­ty val­ue.[86]

Some argue, as many of the respon­dents sug­gest, that res­i­dents who leave inte­grat­ed neigh­bor­hoods do so only for eco­nom­ic con­sid­er­a­tions, such as a decline in prop­er­ty val­ues, as opposed to dis­like of minori­ties.[87] Such non-inten­tion­al dis­crim­i­na­tion still assumes that African Americans are some­how infe­ri­or, as num­bers of whites view inter­ra­cial neigh­bor­hoods as less desir­able com­mu­ni­ties to live in.[88] Property pur­chased by incom­ing blacks even­tu­al­ly decreas­es in val­ue as the whites move out and the tip­ping point is reached, leav­ing dete­ri­o­rat­ing com­mu­ni­ty ser­vices and infe­ri­or schools as the last­ing con­se­quences.[89] Consequently, white flight per­pet­u­ates exist­ing racial stereo­types as whites and blacks become more iso­lat­ed, ren­der­ing the task of erad­i­cat­ing hous­ing seg­re­ga­tion and soci­etal racism near­ly insurmountable.

III. RESIDENTIAL SEGREGATION AND ITS HARMFUL EFFECTS ON MINORITIES
A. Freedom of Choice in Housing — Minorities Need Not Apply
The right to choose where one wants to live is an his­tor­i­cal American con­cept that is entrenched in our his­to­ry of ear­ly west­ward expan­sion and mod­ern sub­ur­ban­iza­tion. Throughout the major part of the twen­ti­eth cen­tu­ry, hun­dreds of thou­sands of white fam­i­lies made the move from city life to sub­ur­ban sprawl­ings.[90] The mass exo­dus to the sub­urbs left minor­i­ty fam­i­lies behind. As dis­cussed ear­li­er, this homo­ge­neous sub­ur­ban pic­ture was not adven­ti­tious but was an out­growth of direct and inten­tion­al gov­ern­ment poli­cies and pri­vate dis­crim­i­na­tion.[91] Moreover, with the assis­tance of exclu­sion­ary zon­ing prac­tices, minori­ties have been pre­vent­ed from mov­ing into sub­ur­ban munic­i­pal­i­ties through the estab­lish­ment of eco­nom­ic and racial bar­ri­ers designed to keep sub­urbs homo­ge­neous and afflu­ent.[92] Therefore, the free­dom to choose where one wish­es to live is not a con­cept which has res­onat­ed for a sig­nif­i­cant por­tion of non-white Americans.

The lack of hous­ing choic­es for minori­ties, par­tic­u­lar­ly African Americans, has meant that the qual­i­ty of sub­ur­ban­iza­tion that they have achieved is dis­tinct­ly dif­fer­ent than that achieved by white Americans.[93] For African Americans, and to a less­er degree for His pan­ics and Asians, the free­dom to choose where they wish to live is sim­ply not a real­i­ty.[94] Typically, black sub­ur­ban­iza­tion is char­ac­ter­ized by expan­sion of the urban ghet­to pop­u­la­tion to areas just out­side city lim­its.[95] African Americans are the most res­i­den­tial­ly seg­re­gat­ed racial or eth­nic group in America.[96] Regardless of their socioe­co­nom­ic sta­tus, they are forced to per­se­vere with­out the same equal hous­ing oppor­tu­ni­ties as white Americans.

The inabil­i­ty of mid­dle-class African Americans to move into sub­ur­ban neigh­bor­hoods has result­ed in a dis­pro­por­tion­ate num­ber of mid­dle-income blacks now liv­ing in poor neigh­bor­hoods.[97]While 23% of black fam­i­lies earn a mid­dle-class income, only 4% of these blacks live in a pre­dom­i­nant­ly white or racial­ly mixed neigh­bor­hood.[98] Hence, these mid­dle income blacks endure liv­ing con­di­tions below those of whites at com­pa­ra­ble income lev­els.[99] Racial prej­u­dice con­tributes to the inabil­i­ty of African Americans to trans­late their eco­nom­ic earn­ings into mid­dle-class hous­ing,[100] par­tic­u­lar­ly con­sid­er­ing that, as dis­cussed in the pre­vi­ous sec­tion, sta­tis­tics show that African Americans pre­fer to live in neigh­bor­hoods that are racial­ly inte­grat­ed.[101] In fact, more than one-third of all blacks live under con­di­tions of pro­found racial seg­re­ga­tion.[102] As two promi­nent soci­ol­o­gists not­ed, African Americans are “unam­bigu­ous­ly among the nation’s most spa­tial­ly iso­lat­ed and geo­graph­i­cal­ly se clud­ed peo­ple, suf­fer­ing extreme seg­re­ga­tion across mul­ti­ple dimen­sions simul­ta­ne­ous­ly.”[103] Consequently, many African Americans live in dense­ly pop­u­lat­ed areas in com­mon urban cen­ters; in plain terms, many African Americans live in ghet­tos.[104]

B. The Economic and Social Costs of Racial Segregation on Minorities
The con­cen­tra­tion of pover­ty in urban ghet­tos is a direct con­se­quence of res­i­den­tial racial seg­re­ga­tion. Problems asso­ci­at­ed with urban pover­ty become exac­er­bat­ed by the iso­lat­ing effect of res­i­den­tial seg­re­ga­tion. Educational and employ­ment dis­ad­van­tages, hous­ing dilap­i­da­tion, loss of com­mer­cial facil­i­ties and busi­ness­es, crime and social dis­or­der, wel­fare depen­den­cy, and unwed par­ent­hood are only some of the social prob­lems found in the urban ghet­to.[105]

Ghetto pover­ty impos­es costs on all res­i­dents of an urban region. The social ills of gang life, drug abuse, teenage preg­nan­cy, and school dropout have left minor­i­ty fam­i­lies with a sense of pow­er­less­ness, as they are strand­ed with­out con­sid­er­able oppor­tu­ni­ty for change. In terms of hous­ing facil­i­ties, low-income blacks face poor or non-exis­tent secu­ri­ty mea­sures, roach and rat infes­ta­tion, high inci­dence of lead-paint poi­son­ing, crum­bling stair­wells and leak­ing ceil­ings, struc­tur­al defi­cien­cies, and no heat or hot water.[106]

The iso­la­tion of the urban ghet­to also inflicts severe hard­ship on poor minor­i­ty chil­dren. Removing young peo­ple from con­cen­trat­ed ghet­tos and its ill social effects has proven ben­e­fi­cial and under­scores the exis­tent inad­e­qua­cies in racial­ly seg­re­gat­ed areas. A research team from Northwestern University, for exam­ple, com­pared low-income black stu­dents from fam­i­lies assigned to live in scat­tered site hous­ing in white sub­urbs with stu­dents from fam­i­lies assigned to pub­lic hous­ing in Chicago’s ghet­to.[107] Although the two groups were ini­tial­ly sta­tis­ti­cal­ly iden­ti­cal, once removed from ghet­to high schools, black stu­dents achieved high­er grades and bet­ter aca­d­e­m­ic prepa­ra­tion, sus­tained low­er dropout rates, and main­tained high­er rates of col­lege atten­dance com­pared with those who remained in ghet­to insti­tu­tions.[108]

Similarly, in a nation­wide study, north­ern blacks who attend­ed racial­ly mixed schools were more like­ly to attend col­lege than those who went to all-black high schools.[109] Another inves­tiga­tive study revealed that black and white stu­dents who went to high schools in afflu­ent neigh­bor­hoods were con­sid­er­ably less like­ly to drop out than those who attend­ed schools in poor neigh­bor­hoods, and that girls in afflu­ent schools were much less like­ly to become teen moth­ers.[110] Notably, the most impor­tant fac­tor bear­ing on stu­dent suc­cess rates was school afflu­ence and not the race of the stu­dent body. On the California Achievement Test, 17% of Philadelphia stu­dents enrolled in racial­ly mixed schools scored above the eighty-fifth per­centile, while only 4% of the stu­dents enrolled in all-black schools achieved such a score.[111] Comparably, while only 19% of the stu­dents enrolled in racial­ly mixed schools scored below the fif­teenth per­centile on that exam, 39% of the stu­dents in all-black schools had such low scores.[112] Finally, the dis­par­i­ties in school qual­i­ty between racial­ly mixed schools and all-black schools were shown to increase at high­er lev­els of edu­ca­tion.[113] Thus, it is argued that with­out the spa­tial iso­la­tion of minori­ties, many of the social ills, char­ac­ter­is­tic of urban pover­ty in America today, would not exist.[114]

Minorities who live in racial­ly seg­re­gat­ed neigh­bor­hoods typ­i­cal­ly are exposed to greater health risks. In a study com­par­ing the health care, mor­tal­i­ty rates, and gen­er­al well-being of peo­ple liv­ing in com­mu­ni­ties of var­i­ous racial com­po­si­tions, African Americans liv­ing in estab­lished black com­mu­ni­ties were found to face a far high­er mor­tal­i­ty rate than those in inte­grat­ed or white areas.[115] Disadvantages in health care were found to increase for African Americans liv­ing in pre­dom­i­nant­ly black neigh­bor­hoods, par­tial­ly attrib­ut­able to unequal access to med­ical care.[116]Moreover, African Americans, with a short­er life expectan­cy, are sta­tis­ti­cal­ly under­rep­re­sent­ed in clin­i­cal tri­als for new drugs in treat­ing dis­eases that dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly afflict them.[117]

Community safe­ty is also a sig­nif­i­cant prob­lem in racial­ly seg­re­gat­ed neigh­bor­hoods. In 1988, the Los Angeles Police Department con­duct­ed a study research­ing 911 response times. The study revealed that police pro­ce­dures appeared biased against minori­ties as response times to emer­gency calls were sub­stan­tial­ly slow­er in pre­dom­i­nant­ly minor­i­ty neigh­bor­hoods.[118] Although the police depart­ment argued that bias was unin­tend­ed, crit­ics accused the police depart­ment of prac­tic­ing “sys­tem­at­ic and uncon­scionable racial dis crim­i­na­tion in the assign­ment of … police offi­cers.”[119] This study, exam­in­ing the prac­tices of a law enforce­ment agency in one of the largest met­ro­pol­i­tan areas in the United States, sug­gests that dis­crim­i­na­to­ry prac­tices exist through­out the coun­try and serve as evi­dence of one of the dele­te­ri­ous con­se­quences of res­i­den­tial segregation.

C. Racial Segregation — Maintaining Racial Divisions
As res­i­den­tial racial seg­re­ga­tion fur­ther per­me­ates our soci­ety, the prospects of improv­ing race rela­tions in America con­tin­ue to dwin­dle, thus pre­serv­ing the exis­tence of neg­a­tive racial stereo­types. It is also log­i­cal to con­clude that phys­i­cal dis­tance between dif­fer­ent racial com­mu­ni­ties per­pet­u­ates social dis­tance.[120] The seg­re­gat­ed ghet­to sus­tains and nour­ish­es the racial iden­ti­fi­ca­tions, fears, and atti­tudes of blacks and whites.[121] As the media per­pet­u­ates stereo­types, whites learn to avoid black neigh­bor­hoods and mid­dle-class blacks learn that they are “safer from white sus­pi­cion and hos­til­i­ty if they stay in black neigh­bor­hoods.”[122] Residential seg­re­ga­tion, in turn, becomes both the point of ori­gin of dis­crim­i­na­tion and the per­pet­u­at­ing cause of racial dis­trust and ignorance.

Integration has proven an effec­tive tool to com­bat his­tor­i­cal racial prej­u­dice. One study found that res­i­dents in a white sub­ur­ban com­mu­ni­ty became more tol­er­ant of black neigh­bors over time, even with­out any sig­nif­i­cant inter­ac­tion with their minor­i­ty neigh­bors.[123] Whites found that their fears about black entry into their com­mu­ni­ty were not real­ized.[124] However, it remains undis­put­ed that the major­i­ty of America still remains phys­i­cal­ly divid­ed along racial lines. Thus, Spike Lee’s clas­sic 1989 film Do The Right Thing, which depict­ed a scene where a num­ber of racial and eth­nic groups flailed deroga­to­ry epi­thets, con­tin­ues to sym­bol­ize the real­i­ty of many res­i­den­tial neigh­bor­hoods in America, belea­guered by false stereo­types and plagued by eth­nic and racial mis­trust.[125] Social con­se­quences of racial iso­la­tion inter­twine with grim eco­nom­ic real­i­ties for minori­ties. Due to the lack of inter­ac­tion between racial groups, African Americans are unpre­pared to work and social­ize in a white major­i­ty soci­ety, while con­verse­ly, whites are not relat­ing to, work­ing with, or liv­ing with blacks.[126] Prospects for African-American chil­dren raised in such com­mu­ni­ties are great­ly dimin­ished because of the lack of inter­ac­tion between blacks and whites. Moreover, minor­i­ty pos­si­bil­i­ties for advance­ment con­se­quent­ly decline from the low­er qual­i­ty of edu­ca­tion afford­ed to them in ghet­to schools, pre­clud­ing them from com­pet­ing for high-income employ­ment.[127] Although these inequal­i­ties are not always direct­ly caused by inten­tion­al dis­crim­i­na­tion, res­i­den­tial racial seg­re­ga­tion per­pet­u­ates these inequal­i­ties.[128] Thus, minori­ties who live in racial­ly homo­ge­neous com­mu­ni­ties are faced with dis­ad­van­tages beyond the present eco­nom­ic and social inequal­i­ties asso­ci­at­ed with minor­i­ty neighborhoods.

IV. POLICY REASONS TO SUPPORT HOUSING INTEGRATION
Undoubtedly, delib­er­ate state and local gov­ern­ment poli­cies helped cre­ate res­i­den­tial racial seg­re­ga­tion. Therefore, munic­i­pal pol­i­cy-mak­ers, politi­cians, and judges should work towards dis­man­tling the still exist­ing bar­ri­ers of hous­ing seg­re­ga­tion through a pol­i­cy of inte­gra­tion. This “inte­gra­tionist” ide­ol­o­gy is not new; it was advo­cat­ed by lead­ers such as W.E.B. Dubois, Paul Robeson, and Martin Luther King Jr., who all sought to inte­grate African Americans into the white socioe­co­nom­ic and polit­i­cal social order to cor­rect the harm­ful effects of dis­crim­i­na­tion.[129]Since the pas­sage of the Fair Housing Act in 1968, hous­ing pro­grams have been devel­oped seek ing to inte­grate afford­able hous­ing projects into sub­ur­ban neigh­bor­hoods. Yet many of these poli­cies to cre­ate inte­grat­ed and low­er-income hous­ing have met resis­tance with the “Not In My Back Yard” (NIMBY) syn­drome.[130]

Today, the strug­gle for fair hous­ing con­tin­ues. However, effec­tive inte­gra­tionist poli­cies being imple­ment­ed nation­wide have begun to help African Americans and oth­er minori­ties obtain more afford­able and qual­i­ty hous­ing char­ac­ter­is­tic of hous­ing tra­di­tion­al­ly found in white com­mu­ni­ties. The prob­lems caused by the per­pet­u­a­tion of res­i­den­tial racial seg­re­ga­tion, and the ben­e­fits achieved by inte­gra­tion rein­force the sig­nif­i­cance of imple­ment­ing and enforc­ing a prac­ti­cal and suc­cess­ful inte­gra­tionist policy.

A. The Benefits of Integration on Minorities
The clas­si­cal advan­tages of inte­gra­tion were illu­mi­nat­ed by soci­ol­o­gist Kenneth Clark who stat­ed: “Housing is no abstract social and polit­i­cal prob­lem, but an exten­sion of man’s per­son­al­i­ty. If the Negro has to iden­ti­fy with a rat-infest­ed ten­e­ment, his sense of per­son­al inad­e­qua­cy and infe­ri­or­i­ty, already aggra­vat­ed by job dis­crim­i­na­tion and oth­er forms of humil­i­a­tions, is rein­forced by the phys­i­cal real­i­ty around him.”[131] It appears that Kenneth Clark’s assess­ment was not an aber­ra­tion, since soci­o­log­i­cal stud­ies have indi­cat­ed that when inte­grat­ed into mid­dle-class sub­ur­ban com muni­ties, poor minor­i­ty fam­i­lies expe­ri­ence a dra­mat­ic improve­ment in their qual­i­ty of life.[132] Accessible afford­able hous­ing in mixed-income com­mu­ni­ties gives low­er eco­nom­ic class­es bet­ter edu­ca­tion­al oppor­tu­ni­ties, dis­cour­ages eco­nom­ic seg­re­ga­tion, and avoids the con­cen­tra­tion of afford­able hous­ing in already dilap­i­dat­ed sec­tions of cities and coun­ties.[133]

In the well-pub­li­cized Gautreaux hous­ing mobil­i­ty exper­i­ment, a few thou­sand low-income, female-head­ed, African-American pub­lic assis­tance fam­i­lies in Chicago moved out of seg­re­gat­ed, finan­cial­ly con­strained neigh­bor­hoods.[134] These fam­i­lies used Section Eight vouch­ers to move into eco­nom­i­cal­ly pros­per­ous set­tings in mid­dle-class white areas, while oth­ers remained in cities.[135] The evi­dence con­clud­ed that the lives of the moth­ers and their chil­dren who moved to the wealth­i­er sub­ur­ban com­mu­ni­ties improved, espe­cial­ly with respect to employ­ment and edu­ca­tion.[136] Among the study’s fam­i­lies, many of the par­tic­i­pat­ing adults had jobs for the first time ever.[137] In con­trast to the study con­trol group who remained in the city, the chil­dren who moved into the sub­urbs were more like­ly to remain in school, take col­lege-track class­es, to attend four-year col­leges, and to work in jobs with high­er pay and ben­e­fits.[138] Although more than half of the study par­tic­i­pants expe­ri­enced some dis­crim­i­na­tion when they first entered the sub­ur­ban neigh­bor­hoods, most adapt­ed well to their new com­mu­ni­ties and expe­ri­enced a desire to nev­er return to the projects.[139] Quite sim­ply, the ben­e­fits afford­ed to low-income minori­ties were both con­sid­er­able and tan­gi­ble, sug­gest­ing that employ­ment and edu­ca­tion­al oppor­tu­ni­ties are deter­mined by a com­mu­ni­ty’s finan­cial health rather than by its racial composition.

A recent study of anoth­er inclu­sion­ary pro­gram in Hartford, Connecticut indi­cates that the evi­dence from the Gautreaux study is con­vinc­ing, as their research found that the “dif­fer­ences are not only sta­tis­ti­cal­ly sig­nif­i­cant but of such mag­ni­tude as to show impor­tant prac­ti­cal effects on youths’ lives.”[140] Other stud­ies have found sim­i­lar advan­tages for African Americans fam­i­lies who moved from impov­er­ished areas into racial­ly inte­grat­ed sub­ur­ban com­mu­ni­ties.[141]

Inclusionary hous­ing increas­es chances for minori­ties to gain and sus­tain employ­ment, in that employ­ment is near­er to hous­ing, decreas­ing trav­el time and trans­porta­tion prob­lems.[142] Without such inclu­sion­ary poli­cies, many sub­ur­ban com­mu­ni­ties would con­tin­ue to offer lit­tle oppor­tu­ni­ty for their low-income employ­ees to find afford­able housing.

Inclusionary tech­niques not only pro­vide hous­ing for employ­ees close to where jobs are locat­ed, but also save employ­ees valu­able time and ener­gy, there­by reduc­ing absen­teeism and trav­el costs.[143] Other ben­e­fits that have been cit­ed include improved air qual­i­ty, less traf­fic con­ges­tion, an increased labor mar­ket, and short­er com­mutes.[144] The sig­nif­i­cant advan­tages of inte­gra­tion for minori­ties from eco­nom­i­cal­ly deprived areas are mean­ing­ful, and attest to the impor­tance of demand­ing fair and prag­mat­ic inclu­sion­ary policies.

B. The Hidden Costs of Segregation
The toll soci­ety has paid for years of res­i­den­tial racial seg­re­ga­tion is less clear, but no less rel­e­vant to why inclu­sion­ary hous­ing is nec­es­sary. The aban­don­ment of the inner city by com­merce and indus­try has dev­as­tat­ed more than the seg­re­gat­ed areas they left behind. Safety and edu­ca­tion­al con­cerns caused white work­ers to move from the city years ago. Consequently, work­ers then had to com­mute dai­ly, pay­ing the high price of increased trans­porta­tion costs (car­fare, tolls and mul­ti­ple car own­er­ship), hous­ing in sub­ur­bia, and restrict­ed access to the cul­tur­al and recre­ation­al oppor­tu­ni­ties in the city.[145] The con­cen­tra­tion of pover­ty in the inner city does not iso­late its resul­tant crime, dis­ease, and gang activ­i­ty there, but increas­es its pres­ence in all com­mu­ni­ties.[146] These prob­lems have become soci­etal, par­tic­u­lar­ly in the past decade, no longer trapped with­in the con­fines of the inner cities.

Inclusionary hous­ing pro­grams are nec­es­sary to rem­e­dy the socioe­co­nom­ic ills that have befall­en soci­ety due to decades of res­i­den­tial racial seg­re­ga­tion. Recently, a study showed unem­ploy­ment prob­lems exist­ed main­ly in cities where a great dis­par­i­ty exist­ed between wages paid to city work­ers as opposed to sub­ur­ban employ­ees.[147] The per capi­ta income ratio between the city and its sur round­ing sub­urbs is the most impor­tant indi­ca­tor of an urban area’s social well being. Research indi­cates that tol­er­at­ing racial dis­crim­i­na­tion has cost Americans a high­er price for their prej­u­dices than ever imag­ined.[148]

C. Advantages of Integration for America
The prin­ci­ple of equal oppor­tu­ni­ty is a sym­bol enshrined in American his­to­ry and in the pol­i­tics of a nation that espous­es its demo­c­ra­t­ic prin­ci­ples through­out the world. As a nation, accept­ing our racial diver­si­ty and embrac­ing cul­tur­al dif­fer­ences is mere­ly an exten­sion of the past oppor­tu­ni­ties that America ulti­mate­ly pro­vid­ed for white minori­ties and European immi­grants. Embracing inclu­sion­ary hous­ing prac­tices expounds the ideals of what America should rep­re­sent to all cit­i­zens — fair­ness, oppor­tu­ni­ty, and justice.

In Gladstone, Realtors v. Village of Bellwood,[149] the Supreme Court artic­u­lat­ed the ben­e­fits of a racial­ly diverse com­mu­ni­ty.[150] Justice Powell rea­soned “[t]here can be no ques­tion about the impor­tance to a com­mu­ni­ty of pro­mot­ing sta­ble, racial­ly inte­grat­ed hous­ing.”[151] The Court’s his­tor­i­cal view under­scored the crit­i­cal mes­sage for the new American cen­tu­ry, the impor­tance of racial diver­si­ty to cre­ate bet­ter com­mu­ni­ties and more tol­er­ant and edu­cat­ed cit­i­zens. Therefore, the ben­e­fits of elim­i­nat­ing res­i­den­tial racial seg­re­ga­tion through inclu­sion­ary mea­sures move beyond only those house­holds liv­ing in eco­nom­i­cal­ly deprived communities.

Increasing racial diver­si­ty is clear­ly not the sole answer to elim­i­nat­ing hous­ing or soci­etal dis­crim­i­na­tion against racial minori­ties. However, when a com­mu­ni­ty is racial­ly diverse, the peo­ple who live there have an oppor­tu­ni­ty to learn tol­er­ance, which in turn may lessen the extent to which minori­ties are sub­ject to all forms of prej­u­dice. Residential seg­re­ga­tion and the result­ing his­tor­i­cal and cul­tur­al igno­rance fos­ter racial stereo­types and myths that minori­ties are less intel­li­gent, lazy, and infe­ri­or.[152] Moreover, such social sep­a­ra­tion rein­forces per­cep­tions among whites asso­ci­at­ing minori­ties with crime, drugs, gangs, and pover­ty.[153] The only way to com­bat these mis­con­cep­tions, fears, and stereo­types is through increased asso­ci­a­tion between blacks, whites, and oth­er minori­ties, lead­ing to a bet­ter under­stand­ing between racial groups and greater racial equality.

In Regents of the University of California v. Bakke,[154] where the court faced the issue of race-con­scious admis­sions poli­cies, Justice Powell remarked that a qual­i­fied, diverse stu­dent pop­u­la­tion may enliv­en the uni­ver­si­ty com­mu­ni­ty by bring­ing to it “expe­ri­ences, out­looks, and ideas that enrich the train­ing of its stu­dent body.”[155] Racial inte­gra­tion is not only a valu­able com­po­nent of a qual­i­ty edu­ca­tion; it is also a price­less com­po­nent of com­mu­ni­ty hous­ing for the same rea­sons Justice Powell described. Just as diver­si­ty in acad­e­mia pro­motes coöper­a­tion, com­mu­ni­ca­tion and under­stand­ing among dif­fer­ent cul­tures, inte­grat­ed res­i­den­tial com­mu­ni­ties like­wise ben­e­fit from greater under­stand­ing among its res­i­dents.[156] The impor­tance of racial inte­gra­tion through inclu­sion­ary hous­ing prac­tices will help fos­ter tol­er­ance and under­stand­ing in our diverse and grow­ing mul­ti­cul­tur­al pop­u­la­tion. Thus, racial inte­gra­tion will ben­e­fit all peo­ple, and if applied demo­c­ra­t­i­cal­ly, will inevitably be embraced by all peo­ple. It is believed that once the fear of the unknown is con­quered and cit­i­zens in recent­ly inte­grat­ed com­mu­ni­ties adjust to the changes in their lives brought on by par­tic­i­pat­ing in inclu­sion­ary hous­ing pro­grams, they will begin to see soci­ety emerge as they have always wished soci­ety to be.[157]

V. INCLUSIONARY REMEDIES TO ELIMINATE HOUSING SEGREGATION
The scope and seri­ous­ness of the prob­lem of res­i­den­tial racial seg­re­ga­tion requires prac­ti­cal and effec­tive inclu­sion­ary tech­niques. Federal pol­i­cy laws and the courts sup­port inte­grat­ed hous­ing, yet the dilem­ma of suc­cess­ful­ly imple­ment­ing inclu­sion­ary hous­ing pro­grams on local lev­els nation­wide remains.[158] Several state and local gov­ern­ments have rec­og­nized that by ensur­ing that all racial and eco­nom­ic groups have ade­quate hous­ing, the entire com­mu­ni­ty will ben­e­fit. These gov­ern­ments have adopt­ed inclu­sion­ary zon­ing tech­niques, which, togeth­er with the appli­ca­tion of land use reg­u­la­tions, secure the devel­op­ment of low and mod­er­ate-income res­i­dences. This sec­tion ana­lyzes var­i­ous inclu­sion­ary meth­ods that have been uti­lized by state and local gov­ern­ments, with an empha­sis on those most effec­tive in pro­mot­ing long-term res­i­den­tial racial inte­gra­tion.[159]

A. Inclusionary Zoning Techniques
1. Montgomery County Initiative — Mandatory Set-Asides

A viable way of achiev­ing racial and eco­nom­ic inte­gra­tion has been pio­neered in Montgomery County, Maryland, one of the nation’s most afflu­ent coun­ties. The County Council enact­ed the Moderately Priced Dwelling Unit (“MPDU”) Ordinance to com­bat the severe hous­ing prob­lem that exist­ed with­in the coun­ty for low and mod­er­ate-income res­i­dents.[160] The basis of the ordi­nance requires that all new hous­ing devel­op­ments of fifty or more units con­sist of 12.5% to 15% MDPUs.[161] The ordi­nance spec­i­fies max­i­mum income lev­els for the occu­pants of MPDUs, which are sub­ject to peri­od­ic adjust­ment. Further, the inclu­sion­ary reg­u­la­tion guar­an­tees afford­abil­i­ty since rent and price con­trols remain in place for ten years.[162] Consistent with the demo­graph­ics of the coun­ty, the major­i­ty of the peo­ple who move into these units are low-income African American fam­i­lies.[163]

The Montgomery County ordi­nance offers devel­op­ers den­si­ty bonus awards to have a rea­son­able prospect of real­iz­ing a prof­it on these units. The ordi­nance also per­mits the devel­op­ers to build an addi­tion­al mar­ket rate unit for every two MPDUs, up to a 20% total increase in den­si­ty.[164] These bonus­es main­tain the eco­nom­ic via­bil­i­ty of the land affect­ed by the ordi­nance, pro­tect­ing these manda­to­ry set-asides from poten­tial tak­ings chal­lenges by dis­grun­tled devel­op­ers.[165] More impor­tant­ly, the con­ces­sions in relaxed zon­ing require­ments encour­age the pro­duc­tion of hous­ing devel­op­ments, which in turn, ben­e­fit low-income res­i­dents who are appor­tioned a per­cent­age of the con­struct­ed units. As of 1992, the Montgomery County MPDU ordi­nance has pro­duced 8,442 MPDUs. As a result, manda­to­ry set-asides have proven to be an effi­cient method of increas­ing the avail­abil­i­ty of afford­able hous­ing, an impor­tant step towards inte­gra­tion.[166]

2. Affordable Housing Appeals Laws

Zoning appeals leg­is­la­tion pro­vides the courts or state agen­cies with the oppor­tu­ni­ty to over­ride the exclu­sion­ary effect of local zon­ing ordi­nances. If afford­able hous­ing is reject­ed or lim­it­ed with vary­ing restric­tions that have a sub­stan­tial adverse impact on its via­bil­i­ty, the tra­di­tion­al def­er­ence giv­en to the local board­’s deci­sion is elim­i­nat­ed.[167] Consequently, the munic­i­pal­i­ty has the bur­den to jus­ti­fy its deci­sion in favor of pub­lic inter­ests in health, safe­ty, and oth­er legal mat­ters. This jus­ti­fi­ca­tion must sub­stan­tial­ly out­weigh the afford­able hous­ing needs of the community.

The Connecticut Affordable Appeals Act cre­at­ed an appeals process to be used when local plan­ning author­i­ties reject afford­able hous­ing projects.[168] In its first appeal, the Connecticut Supreme Court affirmed the tri­al court’s deci­sion, which reversed a denial of an afford­able hous­ing devel­op­ment appli­ca­tion, and con­clud­ed that the law applies to leg­isla­tive zon­ing changes.[169] This judg­ment paved the way for lat­er deci­sions that have held that a court can approve an afford­able hous­ing appli­ca­tion even though it does not com­ply with local zon­ing,[170] and that traf­fic and envi­ron­men­tal prob­lems do not jus­ti­fy denial of an afford­able hous­ing appli­ca­tion.[171]

Massachusetts has sim­i­lar zon­ing appeals leg­is­la­tion, but it is lim­it­ed to fed­er­al or state sub­si­dized low or mod­er­ate-income hous­ing projects. The leg­is­la­tion allows a hous­ing agency or orga­ni­za­tion propos­ing to con­struct afford­able hous­ing to forego the sep­a­rate and ardu­ous appli­ca­tion process and apply for a com­pre­hen­sive zon­ing per­mit.[172] If a local zon­ing board denies a com­pre­hen­sive per­mit or sub­stan­tial­ly restricts a hous­ing project, a state hous­ing appeals com­mit­tee reviews the denial to deter­mine whether it was rea­son­able and “con­sis­tent with local needs.”[173] A bal­anc­ing test weighs the region­al need for low and mod­er­ate-income hous­ing with the muni cipal­i­ties’ need for health, safe­ty, design, and open space reg­u­la­tions. If the com­mit­tee revers­es a denial, it directs the local board to issue a per­mit to the appli­cant.[174]

Although the Massachusetts leg­is­la­tion has been crit­i­cized because it only applies to gov­ern­ment sub­si­dized hous­ing devel­oped by spec­i­fied agen­cies and orga­ni­za­tions,[175] over 20,000 afford­able hous­ing units have been devel­oped under its aus­pices.[176] Therefore, it is clear from these exam­ples that zon­ing appeals leg­is­la­tion on the local lev­el is a crit­i­cal ele­ment towards inte­gra­tion as it seeks to elim­i­nate dis­crim­i­na­to­ry munic­i­pal zon­ing deci­sions and reme­dies the exclu­sion­ary effects of local land use ordinances.

3. State Inclusionary Legislation

Several states have adopt­ed exten­sive leg­is­la­tion to imple­ment inclu­sion­ary hous­ing objec­tives. The typ­i­cal com­pre­hen­sive plan­ning statute requires that local com­mu­ni­ties devel­op poli­cies, stan­dards, or goals that will assist in the devel­op­ment of low and mod­er­ate-income hous­ing.[177] The intent of this type of leg­is­la­tion is to ensure afford­able hous­ing oppor­tu­ni­ties in local­i­ties across the state. The statutes require state agen­cies to review local plans in order to com­ply with statu­to­ry goals, but the effec­tive­ness of these statutes is depen­dent upon the agen­cy’s enforce­ment pow­ers.[178] These statutes on their face, cou­pled with prag­mat­ic local com­pre­hen­sive plans, are effec­tive tools in the devel­op­ment of afford­able housing.

In Oregon, the state hous­ing goals require local plans to encour­age the avail­abil­i­ty of ade­quate hous­ing at afford­able prices and rents. State leg­is­la­tion employs strin­gent enforce­ment mech­a­nisms, which ensures that the Land Conservation and Development Commission (LCDC) reviews all local plan­ning deci­sions to deter­mine if they are con­sis­tent with the state’s hous­ing goals.[179] The LCDC is fur­ther autho­rized to require local gov­ern­ment approval of land use or devel­op­ment appli­ca­tions.[180] The LCDC may force a local board to com­ply with the hous­ing goals of the state, although the deci­sion of the LCDC is sub­ject to judi­cial review.[181] The review of the local board­’s plans must be clear and objec­tive and most impor­tant­ly, it must pre­vent dis­cour­age­ment of nec­es­sary hous­ing through unrea­son­able delay or cost.

In the state of Washington, leg­is­la­tion requires that a local munic­i­pal­i­ty noti­fy the State Department of Community Develop ment when it intends to adopt a com­pre­hen­sive hous­ing plan.[182]Several growth plan­ning boards may hear chal­lenges to the local plan and deter­mine if it is in com­pli­ance with the statu­to­ry require­ments; how­ev­er, the local­i­ty may still adopt its pro­posed plan.[183] The leg­is­la­tion pre­sumes the com­pre­hen­sive plans to be valid and will be accept­ed unless the plan­ning board deter­mines that the action tak­en by the state agency, coun­ty, or city is clear­ly erro­neous.[184] Additionally, the state may with­hold cer­tain local tax rev­enues from the munic­i­pal­i­ty or local­i­ty if the board finds that the local hous­ing strat­e­gy does not com­ply with the statute.[185]

In California, leg­is­la­tion has been enact­ed with the spe­cif­ic goal of devel­op­ing afford­able hous­ing.[186] The goal of the leg­is­la­tion is to reduce the con­cen­tra­tion of low­er-income house­holds in areas where the num­ber of low­er income house­holds are dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly high.[187] Each local­i­ty sub­mits its hous­ing pro­pos­als to the State Department of Housing and Community Development, which deter­mines if the assess­ment of hous­ing needs com­plies with statu­to­ry require­ments.[188] Further, any inter­est­ed par­ty may bring a judi­cial action to review the con­for­mi­ty of the hous­ing ele­ment with the state’s statute.[189] However, the depart­ment is not empow­ered to require a town to incor­po­rate changes, much less con­struct new units.[190]

The depart­men­t’s lack of author­i­ty to com­pel munic­i­pal com­pli­ance with afford­able hous­ing oblig­a­tions has weak­ened the effec­tive­ness of the California leg­is­la­tion. For exam­ple, in the town of San Marino, a wealthy sub­ur­ban com­mu­ni­ty in California, eigh­teen afford­able hous­ing units were to be pro­vid­ed by 1994 pur­suant to the state’s fair hous­ing law.[191] San Marino was to design a plan spec­i­fy­ing how they planned to pro­vide the hous­ing, but did not go so far as to require the town to build the hous­ing.[192] Despite the leg­is­la­tion, San Marino offi­cials indi­cat­ed that they did not plan to per­mit the con­struc­tion of the low-income units.[193] This exam­ple demon­strates that with­out effec­tive meth­ods of enforce­ment, low-income fam­i­lies will con­tin­ue to be closed out of afford­able sub­ur­ban hous­ing oppor­tu­ni­ties, per­pet­u­at­ing the exis­tence of hous­ing seg­re­ga­tion in American cities and suburbs.

Each of the states’ statu­to­ry schemes con­tains spe­cif­ic pro­vi­sions to pro­mote inte­grat­ed and afford­able hous­ing in areas with sparse low and mid­dle-income res­i­dences. These leg­isla­tive ini­tia­tives help pro­vide most­ly minor­i­ty fam­i­lies with an oppor­tu­ni­ty for bet­ter hous­ing and con­se­quent­ly, improved eco­nom­ic oppor­tu­ni­ties. The most crit­i­cal statu­to­ry ele­ments nec­es­sary to encour­age the fruition of afford­able hous­ing in inte­grat­ed neigh­bor­hoods are: the pre­sump tion of valid­i­ty of munic­i­pal low- and mod­er­ate-income hous­ing plans, the estab­lish­ment of non-munic­i­pal over­sight of the allo­ca­tion of afford­able hous­ing, and strict enforce­ment mech­a­nisms to ensure com­pli­ance with the hous­ing goals of the state. Consequently, state reg­u­la­tions that are enforce­able and effi­cient pro­vide a cru­cial step towards break­ing the bar­ri­ers of exclu­sion­ary hous­ing poli­cies and open­ing the doors of afford­able hous­ing in the suburbs.

4. The Effects and Importance of Inclusionary Zoning Ordinances

The var­i­ous inclu­sion­ary meth­ods dis­cussed above rep­re­sent some of the options for state and local gov­ern­ments. The effec­tive use of manda­to­ry set-asides, afford­able hous­ing appeals laws, and inclu­sion­ary leg­is­la­tion are proven mech­a­nisms to com­bat the per­pet­u­a­tion of res­i­den­tial seg­re­ga­tion and to ensure the con­struc­tion of afford­able hous­ing in racial­ly and eco­nom­i­cal­ly diverse com­mu­ni ties. Therefore, each state must fol­low their own con­sti­tu­tion­al frame­work in imple­ment­ing these poli­cies. Some inclu­sion­ary tech­niques may not work with an indi­vid­ual state’s leg­isla­tive agen­da.[194] However, it is the role of state and local gov­ern­ments to cre­ate both incen­tives for res­i­den­tial inte­gra­tion through these or sim­i­lar inclu sion­ary poli­cies, and dis­in­cen­tives for non-com­pli­ance.[195] Exclusionary zon­ing prac­tices have played a sig­nif­i­cant role in caus­ing dele­te­ri­ous effects upon minori­ties. Thus, the involve­ment and par­tic­i­pa­tion of each branch of gov­ern­ment is essen­tial to work towards imple­ment­ing inclu­sion­ary meth­ods to cre­ate afford­able hous­ing opportunities.

Judicial inter­ven­tion in elim­i­nat­ing exclu­sion­ary hous­ing prac­tices and enforc­ing inclu­sion­ary ordi­nances is one of enor­mous impor­tance, par­tic­u­lar­ly giv­en the reluc­tance of many state and local author­i­ties to enact and imple­ment afford­able hous­ing mea­sures. The effect of the “not in my back yard” syn­drome, as expressed by local munic­i­pal boards and com­mu­ni­ty res­i­dents, pos­es the great­est threat to afford­able hous­ing.[196] While courts are regard­ed as a last resort for artic­u­lat­ing pub­lic pol­i­cy, judges must pro­mote the goals of a demo­c­ra­t­ic soci­ety amongst the per­sis­tent dis­crim­i­na­to­ry bound­aries put up by state and local author­i­ties.[197] Beyond this com­men­t’s pro­scribed inclu­sion­ary tac­tics and detailed reme­dies, lies the con­cept of “fun­da­men­tal fair­ness,” where­in the courts must restore the goal of equal­i­ty in deal­ing with the rights of minori­ties to access the American dream of a sub­ur­ban home.[198]

B. Mobility Programs
One of the most impor­tant com­po­nents of a suc­cess­ful inte­gra­tion strat­e­gy is the use of mobil­i­ty pro­grams. Mobility relief refers to pro­grams to pro­vide hous­ing avail­able for minor­i­ty indi­vid­u­als and fam­i­lies who have faced dis­crim­i­na­tion in their search for afford­able hous­ing.[199] Mobility pro­grams have two forms:

(1)interdevelopment orin­ter­pro­ject trans­fers, which­providea ten­ant with the oppor­tu­ni­ty to move into a new or vacant unit in a devel­op­ment, in which the ten­an­t’s race does not pre­dom­i­nate; and(2) pro­vi­sion of Section Eight cer­tifi­cates or vouch­ers, which pro­vide a ten­ant with an oppor­tu­ni­ty to secure fed­er­al­ly assist­ed hous­ing in non­ra­cial­ly impact­ed areas.[200]

Mobility relief serves as a rem­e­dy to his­tor­i­cal and mod­ern hous­ing seg­re­ga­tion, and through the pro­gram’s efforts, seeks to move minor­i­ty vic­tims of dis­crim­i­na­tion clos­er to bet­ter schools, bet­ter jobs, increased eco­nom­ic oppor­tu­ni­ties, and safer neighborhoods.The fol­low­ing sec­tions dis­cuss the most effec­tive mobil­i­ty pro­grams through­out America by exam­in­ing their plans for inte­gra­tion and their suc­cess rate in cre­at­ing afford­able housing.

1. Chicago, Illinois

As a result of the Court’s deci­sion in Hills v. Gautreaux,[201] which ini­ti­at­ed Chicago’s mobil­i­ty pro­gram, approx­i­mate­ly 5,000 fam­i­lies had relo­cat­ed as of 1993, slight­ly more than half to the sub­urbs.[202] HUD sta­tis­tics show that 84% of those who moved to non-con­cen­trat­ed areas felt that their qual­i­ty of life had improved.[203] In terms of lim­i­ta­tions, the mobil­i­ty plan is restrict­ed to plain­tiff class mem­bers and con­tains cer­tain con­straints on hous­ing choic­es. The hous­ing sub­si­dies pro­vid­ed were lim­it­ed to areas of Chicago and the sur­round­ing sub­urbs with an African American pop­u­la­tion of 30 per­cent or less.[204]

In addi­tion, the Chicago Housing Authority is under man­date to con­struct pub­lic hous­ing in pre­dom­i­nant­ly white neigh­bor­hoods. As of 1993, 591 units had been built or reha­bil­i­tat­ed, 357 of which were new units.[205] Half of the fam­i­lies in these new units are minori­ties. The oth­er half are required to come from the neigh­bor­hood in which the build­ings are locat­ed.[206]

However, reluc­tant land­lords, who do not want to par­tic­i­pate in the pro­gram, and the lim­it­ed quan­ti­ty of afford­able hous­ing has curbed the effec­tive­ness of the pro­gram. Despite the fact that 40,000 plain­tiff-class fam­i­lies were enti­tled to relief after Gautreaux, only 4500 were placed in improved afford­able hous­ing.[207] Nevertheless, for the fam­i­lies who have inte­grat­ed into more eco­nom­i­cal­ly viable com­mu­ni­ties, it is abun­dant­ly clear that their qual­i­ty of life is great­ly improved.

2. Cincinnati, Ohio

In 1984, a con­sent decree required the Cincinnati Metropolitan Housing Authority to set aside forty Section eight cer­tifi­cates each year for any fam­i­ly that desired to move to an area where their race was rep­re­sent­ed by less than forty per­cent of the pop­u­la­tion.[208] Housing Opportunities Made Equal, a fair hous­ing orga­ni­za­tion oper­ates the mobil­i­ty pro­gram, and pro­vides trans­porta­tion and coun­sel­ing to ten­ants, mar­ket­ing to prospec­tive ten­ants, and recruit­ment of land­lords.[209] The decree has also cre­at­ed addi­tion­al res­i­den­tial oppor­tu­ni­ties for minori­ties in inte­grat­ed neigh­bor­hoods through scat­tered-site hous­ing.[210]

The suc­cess of the Cincinnati mobil­i­ty pro­gram has been sig­nif­i­cant and a prime exam­ple of an effec­tive inte­gra­tion pro­gram. Between 1984 and 1993, over 600 fam­i­lies used mobil­i­ty vouch­ers.[211] As a result, black sub­ur­ban res­i­dents report­ed a 57% employ­ment rate, com­pared with a 24% rate from those still liv­ing in pub­lic hous­ing. Of the employed res­i­dents, 71% received med­ical ben­e­fits, com­pared with 36% of those in pub­lic hous­ing.[212] The gen­er­al reac­tion of these minor­i­ty fam­i­lies has been over­whelm­ing­ly pos­i­tive. Families report­ed that they did not expe­ri­ence racist behav­ior from their new neigh­bors, liked the schools in their new neigh­bor­hoods bet­ter than those in the city, and worked at more pres­ti­gious jobs with high­er pay and increased ben­e­fits.[213]

3. Milwaukee, Wisconsin

The Milwaukee mobil­i­ty pro­gram, cre­at­ed as a result of a school deseg­re­ga­tion law­suit set­tle­ment in 1987, was fund­ed by the Wisconsin Housing and Economic Development Authority (WHEDA) and oper­at­ed by the Center for Integrated Living (CIL).[214] Between 1989 and 1991, CIL helped clients find apart­ments, cre­at­ed com­mu­ni­ty pro­files, and dis­trib­uted infor­ma­tion to poten­tial res­i­dents regard­ing avail­able sub­ur­ban hous­ing.[215] WHEDA also worked to pro­mote inte­gra­tion by agree­ing to pro­vide $5 mil­lion for home mort­gages, with low inter­est rates and reduced down pay­ments for those fam­i­lies desir­ing to move into inte­grat­ed com­mu­ni­ties.[216]

As a result of these poli­cies, 812 house­holds par­tic­i­pat­ed in the mobil­i­ty pro­gram, of which 91% were minor­i­ty fam­i­lies.[217] Before the mobil­i­ty pro­gram was imple­ment­ed, 67% of all minor­i­ty fam­i­lies lived in areas where the minor­i­ty con­cen­tra­tion was 85% or more.[218] Sixty-one per­cent of the fam­i­lies mov­ing with­in the city under the pro­gram chose hous­ing with­in more racial­ly diverse neigh­bor­hoods.[219] Although a sig­nif­i­cant num­ber of minori­ties have ben­e­fit­ed from this pro­gram, it has unfor­tu­nate­ly been dras­ti­cal­ly lim­it­ed due to fund­ing cuts.[220]

4. Hartford, Connecticut

Contrary to fed­er­al law, Hartford hous­ing author­i­ties were not allow­ing eli­gi­ble fam­i­lies to use their Section Eight cer­tifi­cates out­side city lim­its.[221] The Hartford Section Eight Mobility Program was cre­at­ed after hous­ing advo­cates chal­lenged the city’s admin­is­tra­tion of its Section Eight vouch­er pro­gram.[222] Consequently, the City of Hartford, through its own depart­ment of hous­ing, began assist­ing Section Eight vouch­er hold­ers in mov­ing to the sub­urbs. This pro­gram requires that the city noti­fy Section Eight vouch­er recip­i­ents, par­tic­i­pat­ing land­lords, and area pub­lic hous­ing author­i­ties of the mobil­i­ty pro­gram.[223] Moreover, the Hartford Plan requires its admin­is­tra­tors to con­duct out­reach to encour­age sub­ur­ban land­lords to accept cer­tifi­cate hold­ers as res­i­dents.[224]

Overall, the most sig­nif­i­cant effect on minor­i­ty fam­i­lies who moved to these sub­ur­ban com­mu­ni­ties was their renewed sense of safe­ty.[225] In fact, after employ­ment oppor­tu­ni­ties, safe­ty was the next most moti­vat­ing fac­tor in mak­ing a move away from the city.[226] As such, mobil­i­ty par­tic­i­pants find that sub­ur­ban neigh­bor­hoods improve the qual­i­ty of life for par­ents and their chil­dren. These neigh­bor­hoods are typ­i­cal­ly asso­ci­at­ed with less crime and a greater sense of over­all secu­ri­ty.[227] Thus, it is this core safe­ty ele­ment that is the foun­da­tion of the improve­ment in the lives of minor­i­ty fam­i­lies who choose to move to inte­grat­ed communities.

5. The Effects and Importance of Mobility Programs

The suc­cess of these mobil­i­ty pro­grams rep­re­sents the poten­tial for American com­mu­ni­ties to imple­ment effec­tive inte­grat­ed afford­able hous­ing poli­cies. However, there are sig­nif­i­cant obsta­cles to any suc­cess­ful mobil­i­ty pro­gram. Communication between land­lords, com­mu­ni­ty lead­ers and devel­op­ers may often break down, due to reluc­tance on the part of devel­op­ers to cre­ate low- and mod­er­ate-income res­i­dences.[228] Moreover, the prob­lem is exac­er­bat­ed by the fail­ure of some leg­is­la­tures to out­law spe­cif­ic dis­crim­i­na­to­ry hous­ing prac­tices of land­lords who refuse to rent to Section Eight sub­sidy hold­ers.[229] Also, the num­ber of eli­gi­ble par­tic­i­pants for these pro­grams far out­weigh the per­cent­age of those fam­i­lies actu­al­ly placed in sub­ur­ban inte­grat­ed com­mu­ni­ties.[230] In fact, due to recent bud­get cuts at HUD, the total num­ber of cer­tifi­cates avail­able to eli­gi­ble fam­i­lies may like­ly decline in the near future.[231]

The sig­nif­i­cant resis­tance to the num­bers of black res­i­dents in white neigh­bor­hoods is still wide­spread, ham­per­ing the poten­tial of mobil­i­ty pro­grams. Opposition efforts to inte­gra­tive devel­op­ment plans argue that “[i]ntegration and increased het­ero­gene­ity … would spoil the hard-won ‘sanc­tu­ary’ of the mid­dle class.”[232] Thus, white res­i­dents’ reluc­tance to live with blacks is con­nect­ed with their belief that to do so would endan­ger their lifestyles, com­mu­ni­ties, and stan­dards of liv­ing. Nevertheless, stud­ies sug­gest that there is an increase in white sup­port[233] for res­i­den­tial inte­gra­tion, exem­pli­fy­ing not only a change in racial per­cep­tions, but also the impor­tant role of mobil­i­ty pro­grams in rem­e­dy­ing hous­ing seg­re­ga­tion and dimin­ish­ing racial intol­er­ance. Individual racism and dis­crim­i­na­to­ry rhetoric is entrenched in American his­to­ry, yet that alone should not hin­der America’s progress towards integration.

Mobility pro­grams are prag­mat­ic and fair solu­tions that pro­vide minor­i­ty par­tic­i­pants with bet­ter employ­ment oppor­tu­ni­ties, bet­ter schools, safer neigh­bor­hoods, and increased civ­il ser­vices. Mobility pro­grams should assist clients, work with com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers, and uti­lize mobil­i­ty spe­cial­ists through­out the nation to over­come the obsta­cles to suc­cess­ful imple­men­ta­tion.[234]Therefore, state and local com­mu­ni­ties must take a proac­tive approach sim­i­lar to those cities dis­cussed in this sec­tion, and make inte­grat­ed afford­able hous­ing a real and viable alter­na­tive to impov­er­ished racial­ly seg­re­gat­ed neighborhoods.

VI. CONCLUSION
Residential racial seg­re­ga­tion is an insti­tu­tion that was devel­oped through dis­crim­i­na­to­ry American poli­cies and local acts of racism. Federal and local gov­ern­ment hous­ing dis­crim­i­na­tion, pri­vate dis­crim­i­na­tion, and exclu­sion­ary zon­ing prac­tices have result­ed in the con­tin­u­a­tion of inten­tion­al dis­crim­i­na­tion against minori­ties, many of whom still remain dis­en­fran­chised mem­bers of soci­ety. The dev­as­tat­ing effects of res­i­den­tial racial dis­crim­i­na­tion on the qual­i­ty of life for minor­i­ty fam­i­lies and for our cul­ture at large, rep­re­sent the impor­tance of ini­ti­at­ing poli­cies to inte­grate res­i­den­tial neigh­bor­hoods. Without the efforts of inte­gra­tion, the neg­a­tive effects of decades of big­ot­ed hous­ing poli­cies will be exac­er­bat­ed, there­fore per­pet­u­at­ing the exis­tence of seg­re­ga­tion and racial division.

The dis­man­tling of impov­er­ished minor­i­ty neigh­bor­hoods is an essen­tial pre­req­ui­site to improv­ing hous­ing oppor­tu­ni­ties for all Americans and ame­lio­rat­ing his­tor­i­cal and mod­ern racist poli­cies and stereo­types. Minorities must have an oppor­tu­ni­ty to seek afford­able hous­ing in neigh­bor­hoods whose doors were tra­di­tion­al­ly closed. The inclu­sion­ary zon­ing tech­niques and mobil­i­ty pro­grams out­lined in this com­ment are effec­tive tools to inte­grate com­mu­ni­ties and impor­tant tac­tics to com­bat hous­ing inequal­i­ties. These meth­ods fea­si­bly and effi­cient­ly encour­age the devel­op­ment of afford­able hous­ing. In fact, the enact­ment of any oth­er pro­gres­sive state or local rem­e­dy to elim­i­nate the per­pet­u­a­tion of res­i­den­tial racial seg­re­ga­tion and improve the qual­i­ty of life of dis­crim­i­nat­ed minor­i­ty fam­i­lies serves the American prin­ci­ples of equal­i­ty and justice.

America is a land that was born out of indi­vid­u­al­i­ty and cul­tur­al diver­si­ty. The free­dom asso­ci­at­ed with choos­ing a home should apply to all with­out lim­its based upon skin col­or. As this coun­try moves into the next cen­tu­ry, the dif­fer­ences of peo­ple must be cel­e­brat­ed and respect­ed, and the con­tin­ued efforts toward true inte­gra­tive hous­ing will be a step in the right direc­tion. It is time that America final­ly acknowl­edge and appre­ci­ate its diver­si­ty, rec­og­nize its dis­crim­i­na­to­ry past, and rem­e­dy its ensu­ing seg­re­ga­tion. For as Kenneth Clark said, “Racial seg­re­ga­tion, like all oth­er forms of cru­el­ty and tyran­ny, debas­es all human beings — those who are its vic­tims, those who vic­tim­ize, and in quite sub­tle ways those who are mere acces­sories.”[235]

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