HUD is expanding the Fair Housing Act
Trans and other members of the LGBTQ community are now protected under the Fair Housing Act, according to an announcement from the Department of Housing and Urban Development late last week.
The agency will now investigate complaints of housing discrimination relating to sexual orientation and gender identity — two classes not previously protected under the law.
This is a critical change; HUD has recognized the history of housing discrimination against LGBTQ individuals and is offering legal protection to those affected for the first time.
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“Housing discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity demands urgent enforcement action,” said Jeanine M. Worden, the acting assistant secretary of HUD’s Fair Housing office.
“That is why HUD, under the Biden Administration, will fully enforce the Fair Housing Act to prohibit discrimination on the basis of gender identity or sexual orientation.”
Worden continues, “Every person should be able to secure a roof over their head free from discrimination, and the action we are taking today will move us closer to that goal.”
This change is in line with the Biden Administration’s goals to reduce discrimination in housing, and to make renting and home buying more accessible and affordable.
What are Fair Housing protections?
The Fair Housing Act — technically Title VIII of the Civil Rights Act of 1968 — protects Americans from discrimination when:
- Renting or buying a property
- Applying for a mortgage
- Seeking housing assistance
- Participating in any other housing-related activity
Seven classes are explicitly protected in the Act, including race, color, national origin, religion, familial status, disability and sex.
Prior to HUD’s latest announcement, “sex” had meant biological sex.
Now, under the new expansions, the Fair Housing Act also protects against discrimination based on gender identity and sexual orientation as well.
How this change helps LGBTQ renters and homebuyers
Thanks to the changes, LGBTQ Americans can now file complaints with HUD if they feel they’re discriminated against at any point while seeking housing.
This could include discrimination by a real estate agent, mortgage professional, rental property owner, apartment manager, or anyone else involved in the housing process.
HUD offers two examples of what LGBTQ housing discrimination might look like:
- “A transgender woman is asked by the owner of her apartment building not to dress in women’s clothing in the common areas of the property.”
- “A gay man is evicted because his landlord believes he will infect other tenants with HIV/AIDS.”
If you’ve experienced these or any other types of housing discrimination because of your gender identity or sexual orientation, file a complaint at HUD.gov/FairHousing.
Complaints dating back to January 20, 2020, will be investigated.
Why the Fair Housing Act is being expanded
There are three reasons HUD has expanded Fair Housing protections to trans and other LTBTQ Americans.
First, there’s President Biden’s Day 1 executive order, which calls on government agencies to “prevent and combat discrimination on the basis of gender identity or sexual orientation.”
According to agency spokespeople, HUD is the first department to comply with this executive order.
A new interpretation of the law
The recent Supreme Court case Bostock v. Clayton County also plays a role. In the 2019 case, the court found that a transgender worker’s firing was a direct violation of the Title VII of the Civil Rights Act and that “sex” protections did indeed apply.
“Homosexuality and transgender status are inextricably bound up with sex,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote.
“Not because homosexuality or transgender status are related to sex in some vague sense or because discrimination on these bases has some disparate impact on one sex or another, but because to discriminate on these grounds requires an employer to intentionally treat individual employees differently because of their sex.”
According to HUD, the ruling clarified how the Civil Rights Act — including its Fair Housing provisions — should be interpreted moving forward.
“Enforcing the Fair Housing Act to combat housing discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity isn’t just the right thing to do-it’s the correct reading of the law after Bostock,” said Damon Y. Smith, HUD’s principal deputy general counsel.
“We are simply saying that the same discrimination that the Supreme Court has said is illegal in the workplace is also illegal in the housing market.”
A history of housing discrimination
HUD also cited numerous studies surrounding housing discrimination and the LGBTQ community in its decision to expand Fair Housing protections.
One study, for example, found that same-sex male couples were significantly less likely to receive responses when seeking a rental property. Another found discrimination against transgender women in homeless shelters.
With the expansion of the Fair Housing Act, there’s now a legal path to recourse for individuals who have been barred from housing or discriminated against in this manner.