This from Richard Rothstein at
EPI:
In Baltimore in 1910, a black Yale law school graduate purchased a
home in a previously all-white neighborhood. The Baltimore city
government reacted by adopting a residential segregation ordinance,
restricting African Americans to designated blocks. Explaining the
policy, Baltimore’s mayor proclaimed, “Blacks should be quarantined in
isolated slums in order to reduce the incidence of civil disturbance, to
prevent the spread of communicable disease into the nearby White
neighborhoods, and to protect property values among the White majority.”
Thus began a century of federal, state, and local policies to
quarantine Baltimore’s black population in isolated slums—policies that
continue to the present day, as federal housing subsidy policies still disproportionately direct low-income black families to segregated neighborhoods and away from middle class suburbs.
Whenever young black men riot in response to police brutality or
murder, as they have done in Baltimore this week, we’re tempted to think
we can address the problem by improving police quality—training
officers not to use excessive force, implementing community policing,
encouraging police to be more sensitive, prohibiting racial profiling,
and so on. These are all good, necessary, and important things to do.
But such proposals ignore the obvious reality that the protests are not
really (or primarily) about policing.
In 1968, following hundreds of similar riots nationwide, a commission
appointed by President Lyndon Johnson concluded that “[o]ur nation is
moving toward two societies, one black, one white—separate and unequal”
and that “[s]egregation and poverty have created in the racial ghetto a
destructive environment totally unknown to most white Americans.” The
Kerner Commission (headed by Illinois Governor Otto Kerner) added that
“[w]hat white Americans have never fully understood—but what the Negro
can never forget—is that white society is deeply implicated in the
ghetto. White institutions created it, white institutions maintain it,
and white society condones it.”
In the last 50 years, the two societies have become even more unequal.
Although a relatively small black middle class has been permitted to
integrate itself into mainstream America, those left behind are more segregated now than they were in 1968.
When the Kerner Commission blamed “white society” and “white
institutions,” it employed euphemisms to avoid naming the culprits
everyone knew at the time. It was not a vague white society that created
ghettos but government—federal, state, and local—that employed
explicitly racial laws, policies, and regulations
to ensure that black Americans would live impoverished, and separately
from whites. Baltimore’s ghetto was not created by private
discrimination, income differences, personal preferences, or demographic
trends, but by purposeful action of government in violation of the
Fifth, Thirteenth, and Fourteenth Amendments. These constitutional
violations have never been remedied, and we are paying the price in the
violence we saw this week.
Following the police killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, last August, I wrote The Making of Ferguson,
a history of the state-sponsored segregation in St. Louis County that
set the stage for police-community hostility there. Virtually every one
of the racially explicit federal, state, and local policies of
segregation pursued in St. Louis has a parallel in policies pursued by
government in Baltimore.
In 1917, the U.S. Supreme Court found ordinances like Baltimore’s
1910 segregation rule unconstitutional, not because they abridged
African Americans’ rights to live where they could afford, but because
they restricted the property rights of (white) homeowners to sell to
whomever they wished. Baltimore’s mayor responded by instructing city
building inspectors and health department investigators to cite for code
violations anyone who rented or sold to blacks in predominantly white
neighborhoods. Five years later, the next Baltimore mayor formalized
this approach by forming an official Committee on Segregation
and appointing the City Solicitor to lead it. The committee coordinated
the efforts of the building and health departments with those of the
real estate industry and white community organizations to apply pressure
to any whites tempted to sell or rent to blacks. Members of the city’s
real estate board, for example, accompanied building and health
inspectors to warn property owners not to violate the city’s color line.
In 1925, 18 Baltimore neighborhood associations came together to form
the “Allied Civic and Protective Association” for the purpose of urging
both new and existing property owners to sign restrictive covenants,
which committed owners never to sell to an African American. Where
neighbors jointly signed a covenant, any one of them could enforce it by
asking a court to evict an African American family who purchased
property in violation. Restrictive covenants were not merely private
agreements between homeowners; they frequently had government sanction.
In Baltimore, the city-sponsored Committee on Segregation organized
neighborhood associations throughout the city that could circulate and
enforce such covenants.
Supplementing the covenants, African Americans were prevented from moving to white neighborhoods by explicit policy of the Federal Housing Administration (FHA),
which barred suburban subdivision developers from qualifying for
federally subsidized construction loans unless the developers committed
to exclude African Americans from the community. The FHA also barred
African Americans themselves from obtaining bank mortgages for house
purchases even in suburban subdivisions which were privately financed
without federal construction loan guarantees. The FHA not only refused
to insure mortgages for black families in white neighborhoods, it also
refused to insure mortgages in black neighborhoods—a policy that came to
be known as “redlining,” because neighborhoods were colored red on
government maps to indicate that these neighborhoods should be
considered poor credit risks as a consequence of African Americans
living in (or even near) them.
Unable to get mortgages, and restricted to overcrowded neighborhoods
where housing was in short supply, African Americans either rented
apartments at rents considerably higher than those for similar dwellings
in white neighborhoods, or bought homes on installment plans. These
arrangements, known as contract sales, differed from mortgages because
monthly payments were not amortized, so a single missed payment meant
loss of a home, with no accumulated equity. In the Atlantic last year, Ta-Nehisi Coates described how this system worked in Chicago. In summarizing her book, Family Properties, Rutgers University historian Beryl Satter described it this way:
Because black contract buyers knew how easily they could
lose their homes, they struggled to make their inflated monthly
payments. Husbands and wives both worked double shifts. They neglected
basic maintenance. They subdivided their apartments, crammed in extra
tenants and, when possible, charged their tenants hefty rents. …
White people observed that their new black neighbors overcrowded and
neglected their properties. Overcrowded neighborhoods meant overcrowded
schools; in Chicago, officials responded by “double-shifting” the
students (half attending in the morning, half in the afternoon).
Children were deprived of a full day of schooling and left to fend for
themselves in the after-school hours. These conditions helped fuel the
rise of gangs, which in turn terrorized shop owners and residents alike.
In the end, whites fled these neighborhoods, not only because of the
influx of black families, but also because they were upset about
overcrowding, decaying schools and crime. They also understood that the
longer they stayed, the less their property would be worth. But black
contract buyers did not have the option of leaving a declining
neighborhood before their properties were paid for in full—if they did,
they would lose everything they’d invested in that property to date.
Whites could leave—blacks had to stay.
The contract buying system was commonplace in Baltimore. Its
existence was solely due to the federal government’s policy of denying
mortgages to African Americans, in either black or white neighborhoods.
Nationwide, black family incomes are now about 60 percent of white
family incomes, but black household wealth is only about 5 percent of
white household wealth. In Baltimore and elsewhere, the distressed
condition of African American working- and lower-middle-class families
is almost entirely attributable to federal policy that prohibited black
families from accumulating housing equity during the suburban boom that
moved white families into single-family homes from the mid-1930s to the
mid-1960s—and thus from bequeathing that wealth to their children and
grandchildren, as white suburbanites have done.
As I described in the Making of Ferguson, the federal government maintained a policy of segregation in public housing
nationwide for decades. This was as true in northeastern cities like
New York as it was in border cities like Baltimore and St. Louis. In
1994, civil rights groups sued the Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD), alleging that HUD had segregated its public housing in Baltimore
and then, after it had concentrated the poorest African American
families in projects in the poorest neighborhoods, HUD and the city of
Baltimore demolished the projects, and purposely relocated the former
residents into other segregated black neighborhoods. An eventual
settlement required the government to provide vouchers to former public
housing residents for apartments in integrated neighborhoods, and
supported this provision with counseling and social services to ensure
that families’ moves to integrated neighborhoods would have a high
likelihood of success. Although the program is generally considered a
model, it affects only a small number of families, and has not
substantially dismantled Baltimore’s black ghetto.
In 1970, declaring that the federal government had established a “white noose” around ghettos in Baltimore and other cities, HUD Secretary George Romney proposed denying federal funds for sewers,
water projects, parkland, or redevelopment to all-white suburbs that
resisted integration by maintaining exclusionary zoning ordinances (that
prohibited multi-unit construction) or by refusing to accept subsidized
moderate-income or public low-income housing. In the case of Baltimore
County, he withheld a sewer grant that had previously been committed,
because of the county’s policies of residential segregation. It was a
very controversial move, but Romney got support from Vice President
Spiro Agnew, who had been frustrated by unreasonable suburban resistance
to integration and mixed income developments when he had been the
Baltimore County Executive and governor of Maryland. In a 1970 speech to
the National Alliance of Businessmen, Agnew attacked attempts to solve
the country’s racial problems by pouring money into the inner city as
had been done in the Johnson administration. Agnew said that he flatly
rejected the assumption that “because the primary problems of race and
poverty are found in the ghettos of urban America, the solutions to
these problems must also be found there… Resources needed to solve the
urban poverty problem—land, money, and jobs—exist in substantial supply
in suburban areas, but are not being sufficiently utilized in solving
inner-city problems.”
President Richard Nixon eventually restrained Romney, HUD’s
integration programs were abandoned, Romney himself was forced out as
HUD Secretary, and little has been done since to solve the urban poverty
problem with the substantial resources that exist in the suburbs.
Ten years ago, during the subprime lending boom, banks and other
financial institutions targeted African Americans for the marketing of
subprime loans. The loans had exploding interest rates and prohibitive
prepayment penalties, leading to a wave of foreclosures that forced
black homeowners back into ghetto apartments and devastated the middle
class neighborhoods to which these families had moved. The City of
Baltimore sued Wells Fargo Bank, presenting
evidence that the bank had established a special unit staffed
exclusively by African American bank employees who were instructed to
visit black churches to market subprime loans. The bank had no
similar practice of marketing such loans through white institutions.
These policies were commonplace nationwide, but federal bank examiners
responsible for supervising lending practices made no attempt to
intervene. When a similar suit was filed in Cleveland, a federal judge
observed that because mortgage lending is so heavily regulated by the
federal and state governments, “there is no question that the subprime
lending that occurred in Cleveland was conduct which ‘the law
sanctions’.”
Baltimore, not at all uniquely,
has experienced a century of public policy designed, consciously so, to
segregate and impoverish its black population. A legacy of these
policies is the rioting we have seen in Baltimore. Whether after the
1967 wave of riots that led to the Kerner Commission report, after the
1992 Los Angeles riot that followed the acquittal of police officers who
beat Rodney King, or after the recent wave of confrontations and
vandalism following police killings of black men, community leaders
typically say, properly, that violence isn’t the answer and that after
peace is restored, we can deal with the underlying problems. We never do
so.
Certainly, African American citizens of Baltimore were provoked by
aggressive, hostile, even murderous policing, but Spiro Agnew had it
right. Without suburban integration, something barely on today’s public
policy agenda, ghetto conditions will persist, giving rise to aggressive
policing and the riots that inevitably ensue. Like Ferguson before it,
Baltimore will not be the last such conflagration the nation needlessly
experiences.
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