IV
118TH CONGRESS
1ST SESSION
H. RES. 337
Promoting and supporting the goals and ideals of the Fair Housing Act
and recognizing April 2023 as ‘‘Fair Housing Month’’, which includes
bringing attention to the discrimination faced by everyday Americans
in the United States in housing and housing-related transactions on
the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, gender
identity, familial status, disability, and religion.
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
APRIL 28, 2023
Mr. GREEN of Texas (for himself, Ms. WATERS, Ms. MOORE of Wisconsin,
Ms. NORTON, Ms. VELA´ZQUEZ, Mrs. WATSON COLEMAN, Mrs. BEATTY,
Ms. BONAMICI, Mr. KHANNA, Ms. SCANLON, Mr. THOMPSON of Mis-
sissippi, Mr. TRONE, Mrs. RAMIREZ, Ms. BROWN, Mr. POCAN, Ms.
CROCKETT, Mr. CARSON, Ms. DEAN of Pennsylvania, Ms. GARCIA of
Texas, Ms. LEE of California, Ms. SA´NCHEZ, Mrs. HAYES, Mr. BLU-
MENAUER, Ms. WILLIAMS of Georgia, and Mr. EVANS) submitted the fol-
lowing resolution; which was referred to the Committee on the Judiciary
RESOLUTION
Promoting and supporting the goals and ideals of the Fair
Housing Act and recognizing April 2023 as ‘‘Fair Hous-
ing Month’’, which includes bringing attention to the
discrimination faced by everyday Americans in the
United States in housing and housing-related trans-
actions on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex,
sexual orientation, gender identity, familial status, dis-
ability, and religion.
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•HRES 337 IH
Whereas April 11, 2023, marks the 55th anniversary of the
date of enactment of the Civil Rights Act of 1968, title
VIII of which (42 U.S.C. 3601 et seq.) is commonly
known as the Fair Housing Act;
Whereas the Chicago Freedom Movement, led by the Rev-
erend Doctor Martin Luther King, Jr., expanded the
fight for civil rights from the South to the North, raised
the national consciousness about housing discrimination,
and shaped the debate that led to the landmark Fair
Housing Act;
Whereas the National Advisory Commission on Civil Dis-
orders, appointed by President Lyndon B. Johnson and
commonly known as the Kerner Commission, found on
February 29, 1968, that ‘‘our nation is moving toward
two societies, one black and one white—separate and un-
equal’’;
Whereas Congress passed the Fair Housing Act as part of
the Civil Rights Act of 1968, and President Lyndon B.
Johnson signed the Act into law on April 11, 1968, one
week after the assassination of the Reverend Doctor Mar-
tin Luther King, Jr.;
Whereas the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the
International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cul-
tural Rights recognize adequate housing as a human
right;
Whereas the original Fair Housing Act prohibited discrimina-
tion in housing and housing-related transactions on the
basis of race, color, national origin, and religion;
Whereas the mission statement of the Department of Hous-
ing and Urban Development (HUD) reflects a commit-
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•HRES 337 IH
ment to ‘‘build inclusive and sustainable communities free
from discrimination’’;
Whereas, in section 808 of the Housing and Community De-
velopment Act of 1974 (Public Law 93–383), Congress
amended the Fair Housing Act to include protection on
the basis of sex, including gender identity and sexual ori-
entation;
Whereas September 13, 2023, will mark the 35th anniversary
of the congressional passage of the Fair Housing Amend-
ments Act of 1988;
Whereas the Fair Housing Amendments Act of 1988, passed
by overwhelming margins in Congress, included protec-
tion on the basis of familial status and disability, created
an important enforcement mechanism, and expanded the
definition of ‘‘discriminatory housing practices’’ to in-
clude interference and intimidation, requiring HUD to
issue regulations to implement and interpret the Fair
Housing Act and report annually to Congress on the na-
ture and extent of housing discrimination;
Whereas the intent of Congress in passing the Fair Housing
Act was broad and inclusive, to advance equal oppor-
tunity in housing and achieve racial integration for the
benefit of all people in the United States;
Whereas the intent of Congress in passing the Fair Housing
Act was to prohibit discrimination in all housing and
housing-related transactions, including policies or prac-
tices that appear superficially neutral, but have a dis-
criminatory effect on protected classes;
Whereas the Supreme Court has reaffirmed the use of the
disparate impact doctrine to challenge policies or prac-
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tices that have a discriminatory effect on protected class-
es;
Whereas the majority of large metropolitan areas in the
United States are more racially segregated today than in
1990;
Whereas research shows that, in some cases, the placement
of housing funded through the Low-Income Housing Tax
Credit program, which is the single largest source of Fed-
eral funding for the creation of affordable housing in the
United States, further entrenches racial residential seg-
regation, despite the Fair Housing Act requiring that
Federal housing funds be used to affirmatively undo pat-
terns of residential segregation;
Whereas fair housing testing has revealed that discrimination
on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity ex-
ists and that fair housing protections must be extended
to the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer
(LGBTQ+) community;
Whereas same-sex couples are 73 percent more likely to be
denied a home mortgage compared to heterosexual cou-
ples, and when same-sex couples are approved, they pay
an average of $86,000,000 more in combined annual in-
terest and fees;
Whereas fair housing testing has revealed that discrimination
exists against people who use public housing assistance,
including support from the Housing Choice Voucher and
Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing programs and other
sources of income, and that fair housing protections
against source-of-income discrimination must be provided
to all people;
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•HRES 337 IH
Whereas the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit program and
Housing Trust Fund already prohibit the refusal of hous-
ing funded through such programs to Housing Choice
Voucher holders or individuals receiving rental assistance
through the HOME Investment Partnerships Program;
Whereas there continues to be widespread discrimination in
the housing industry against Black, Latinx, and Asian-
American home buyers by real estate agents;
Whereas owner-occupied homes located in majority-Black
neighborhoods
are
undervalued
by
approximately
$162,000,000,000 when compared to owner-occupied
homes in similarly situated communities that have very
few or no Black residents;
Whereas the average home in a White neighborhood is valued
2 times higher than comparable homes in Black and
Latinx neighborhoods, even after controlling for neigh-
borhood characteristics;
Whereas 92.4 percent of appraisers identify as White and
54.5 percent identify as male, compared to the total
United States population that identifies as 59.3 percent
White and 49.5 percent male;
Whereas more than 71 percent of people experiencing home-
lessness in the United States are Black, Latinx, Asian
American, Indigenous, or otherwise non-White despite
making up just over 43 percent of the total population
of the United States;
Whereas an individual’s housing conditions impacts their
health, educational attainment level, employment oppor-
tunities, exposure to the adverse effects of climate
change, and personal wealth;
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Whereas borrowers of color lack equal access to quality and
affordable credit compared to similarly situated White
borrowers;
Whereas research shows that Black and Latinx borrowers
pay $765,000,000 more in combined mortgage interest
each year compared to similarly situated White borrowers
due to discriminatory factors in mortgage lending by the
government-sponsored housing finance enterprises;
Whereas the 2020 Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data show
that the majority of loans purchased by the government-
sponsored housing finance enterprises primarily served
higher income, White borrowers in wealthier, majority-
White neighborhoods;
Whereas Black and Latinx borrowers are more likely to re-
ceive mortgage loans through the Federal Housing Ad-
ministration, even when they qualify for conventional
lending options that may offer more affordable terms;
Whereas research shows that algorithmic bias and discrimina-
tion exist in online housing platforms, automated valu-
ation models, and lending that use artificial intelligence
for advertising and decisionmaking purposes, and there is
an urgent need to eliminate individual bias that enters
into the development of artificial intelligence systems and
systemic bias through the use of inappropriate or histori-
cally biased data;
Whereas the majority of Americans support neighborhood in-
tegration and numerous studies have shown the universal
benefits of residential integration;
Whereas reports indicate there are more than 4,000,000 vio-
lations of fair housing laws each year against people of
all protected classes, and fair housing testing continues
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to uncover a high rate of discrimination in the rental,
sales, mortgage lending, and insurance markets;
Whereas 68,000,000 adults in the United States believe they
have experienced unequal treatment in their housing
search due to their status as a member of a protected
class under the Fair Housing Act;
Whereas less than 1 percent of fair housing violations are re-
ported each year;
Whereas private nonprofit fair housing organizations funded
by the Fair Housing Initiatives Program (FHIP) serve
as the front line in the effort to resolve housing discrimi-
nation and train local housing providers on how to com-
ply with the Fair Housing Act;
Whereas, in 2021, there were a total of 31,216 housing dis-
crimination complaints reported nationwide, an 8.7-per-
cent increase over the number of complaints filed in
2020, despite there being less FHIP organizations avail-
able to process such complaints;
Whereas the Fair Housing Assistance Program funds State
as well as local civil and human rights enforcement agen-
cies to investigate and process housing discrimination
complaints, conduct special enforcement projects, and
take part in training and other projects designed to en-
hance the agency’s administration and enforcement of
fair housing laws;
Whereas while our Nation has made great strides in elimi-
nating housing discrimination, families with children,
women, people with disabilities, people of color, religious
minorities, immigrants, LGBTQ+ individuals, and low-
income people receiving public assistance, among others,
still face discriminatory barriers to housing;
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Whereas fair housing education and enforcement play a piv-
otal role in increasing housing choice and homeownership
opportunities for members of protected classes and com-
bating predatory lending;
Whereas, amid a global health and economic crisis, housing
discrimination against health care workers and people
who have been infected by the coronavirus, or are per-
ceived as having been infected, is contributing to in-
creased evictions and hate crimes;
Whereas systemic health and economic disparities have been
exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic, disproportion-
ately infecting communities of color, destabilizing their
employment opportunities, and resulting in higher levels
of evictions and foreclosures;
Whereas, during the coronavirus pandemic, as mortgage in-
terest rates reached historic lows, Black borrowers were
disproportionately denied mortgage loans to purchase and
refinance homes due to biased and potentially discrimina-
tory appraisal and lending policies and practices, exclud-
ing them from wealth-building opportunities and lower
housing costs;
Whereas, during the coronavirus pandemic, harmful senti-
ments toward Asian American and Pacific Islander com-
munities incited increases in racialized and gendered vio-
lence across the Nation;
Whereas reports of sexual harassment increased by 300 per-
cent during the coronavirus pandemic, with women of
color and transgender women disproportionately report-
ing such incidents;
Whereas immigrant and limited-English proficient commu-
nities must have in-language access to online, telephone,
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print, and all other mediums of housing information, no-
tices, and resources during the coronavirus pandemic to
prevent predatory and discriminatory housing and lend-
ing practices;
Whereas persons with disabilities must have equal access to
online, telephone, print, and all other mediums of housing
information,
notices,
and
resources
during
the
coronavirus pandemic to prevent predatory and discrimi-
natory housing and lending practices;
Whereas persons with disabilities, including seniors and chil-
dren with disabilities, have experienced unlawful denials
of their reasonable accommodation requests to insulate
them from exposure to the coronavirus and its associated
life-threatening complications;
Whereas there is a chronic undersupply of accessible housing
and an underenforcement of housing accessibility stand-
ards, which denies many people with disabilities their
right to fair and accessible housing that is integrated into
community settings; and
Whereas the Fair Housing Act is an essential component of
our Nation’s civil rights legislation: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved,
1
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
2
This resolution may be cited as the ‘‘Original Fair
3
Housing Resolution of 2023’’.
4
SEC. 2. SUPPORT FOR FAIR HOUSING ACT.
5
The House of Representatives—
6
(1) supports the goals and values of the 55th
[Text truncated for display. Full text available on Congress.gov.]