90 likes | 220 Views
Delivering Fair Housing Rights to Latino Families. 2010 National Fair Housing Policy Conference Janis Bowdler Deputy Director, Wealth-Building Policy Project Jbowdler@nclr.org. National Council of La Raza.
E N D
Delivering Fair Housing Rights to Latino Families 2010 National Fair Housing Policy Conference Janis Bowdler Deputy Director, Wealth-Building Policy Project Jbowdler@nclr.org
National Council of La Raza NCLR is the largest national Hispanic civil rights and advocacy organization in the U.S., established to reduce poverty and discrimination and improve opportunities for Hispanic Americans. NCLR has been promoting fair housing practices for Latinos for more than two decades.
Background The Hispanic community is a driving force behind our national population growth. Despite evidence of discrimination, Latino families are among the least likely to file a complaint. Families are facing new challenges such as anti-immigrant laws and post-foreclosure segregation.
Background FAST FACT Immigrants and their children will account for 82% of household growth between 2005 and 2050.
New Challenges Anti-immigrant sentiments, laws, and restrictive ordinances create hostile housing environments and new challenges for Latino families and fair housing advocates. Hazelton, Pennsylvania “Do not rent” law Manassas, Virginia Changed the definition of “family” Farmers Branch, Texas “Do not rent” and English-only laws Arizona Requires police officers to make arrests on suspicion of immigration status
New Challenges Record-high foreclosure rate among Latino families raises a number of fair housing concerns.
Resources • National Council of La Raza • www.nclr.org • jbowdler@nclr.org • Fragile Rights Within Cities, edited by John Goering • See Chapter 10: “Creating a Fair Housing System That Works for Latinos” • Join the Wave of Hope campaign • www.WeCanStopTheHate.org