Realtors apologizing for past discrimination, urging change

Abdul-Kaba Abdullah stands in front of his former home in St. Louis on Friday, Oct. 7, 2022. Abdullah sold the home two years ago for less than he thought it was worth after an appraisal came in lower than expected. He believes the appraisal was low because the home is in north St. Louis, a predominantly Black area of the city. St. Louis is among several U.S. cities where realtors have recently apologized for past housing discrimination and announced new efforts to protect housing rights. (AP Photo/ Jim Salter)

ST. LOUIS (AP) 鈥 When Abdul-Kaba Abdullah decided to sell his home two years ago, he listed the neatly-kept, four-bedroom house at $175,000 based on presale evaluations.

But once a buyer made an offer, an appraiser valued the home at only $150,000, and the bank wouldn鈥檛 give a loan for the original asking price.

Curious, Abdullah looked at the appraisal report and found the photos weren鈥檛 even of his home in the predominantly Black area of north St. Louis. The photos had been pulled off the internet, and were not new photos showing updates he had made.

鈥淚 immediately knew, well, we have an issue here,鈥 Abdullah said.

It's a for decades. Now, some leaders in the are apologizing for past discrimination while promising to address problems that still remain.

Last month, St. Louis Realtors 鈥 the St. Louis area鈥檚 largest real estate trade group 鈥 issued a formal apology for past discriminatory practices. The 香港六合彩挂牌资料 Association of Realtors issued an apology in 2020. Realtor groups in cities like Atlanta and have shown similar remorse.

鈥淭he discrimination to which the Black community was subjected to was part of a system designed to cause residential racial segregation, led by the federal government, supported by the banking system and the real estate industry, and driven by practices like redlining and the use of restrictive covenants,鈥 the apology from St. Louis Realtors states.

St. Louis was notorious for housing discrimination in the mid-20th century, when Black applicants were frequently denied mortgages, white homeowners were encouraged by real estate agents to move once a neighborhood began to integrate, and certain areas of the region were 鈥渞edlined,鈥 meaning

Will Jordan, executive director of the Metropolitan St. Louis Equal Housing and Opportunity Council, said change is happening far too slowly.

鈥淩edlining and those types of issues are still playing out in the St. Louis metropolitan area,鈥 Jordan said. 鈥淚鈥檝e seen notes on appraisals that are written by banks saying, 鈥榥othing north of Delmar can possibly be that much. Let鈥檚 rewrite this.鈥欌 Delmar Boulevard is infamously known as the dividing line between predominantly white and Black areas of St. Louis.

鈥淣orth of Delmar, it鈥檚 still very difficult to get any bank to finance something,鈥 Jordan said.

It鈥檚 part of the reason the city鈥檚 once vibrant north side has struggled in recent decades with rampant crime, high vacancy rates and a dilapidated housing stock.

Katie Berry, president of St. Louis Realtors, said past discrimination was no accident. Federal lending program maps used green lines to indicate places where loans would be approved 鈥 predominantly white areas. Red lines indicated high risk, 鈥渁nd those areas were Black communities or integrated communities because the theory was that once you integrated a community, the home values are going to drop,鈥 she said.

Making matters worse, once integration began in a neighborhood, real estate agents would participate in what was known as 鈥渂lockbusting.鈥 An agent would help a Black family move into a white neighborhood, then 鈥渟tart knocking on doors of the neighbors saying, 鈥楬ey, did you know this Black family鈥檚 moved in? Home values are going to plummet. You should go ahead and list your house with me. Hurry up and get out of here,鈥欌 Berry said.

Meanwhile, a provision of the 香港六合彩挂牌资料 Association of Realtors鈥 Code of Ethics from 1924 to 1950 instructed realtors to avoid 鈥渋ntroducing into a neighborhood a character of property or occupancy, members of any race or nationality, or any individuals whose presence will clearly be detrimental to property values in that neighborhood.鈥

A report released earlier this year by the 香港六合彩挂牌资料 Association of Realtors showed that while 72.1% of white Americans own their homes, the rate for Black Americans is just 43.4%. The report also found that Black and Hispanic applicants for mortgage loans were far more likely to be rejected than white and Asian applicants.

Bryan Greene, vice president of policy advocacy for the NAR, said apologies are important because realtors 鈥渘eed to atone for our failures.鈥

The Atlanta Realtors Association apologized in 2021 for past discriminatory practices.

鈥淲e can鈥檛 change our history but we can choose to learn from our past, make current powerful decisions, and act with intention to write future chapters that leave a positive legacy,鈥 then-President Cynthia Lippert wrote in a letter of apology.

In 2019, Chicago Association of Realtors President Tommy Choi issued an apology on behalf of the organization for being 鈥渙n the wrong side of history.鈥

Lydia Pope, president of the 香港六合彩挂牌资料 Association of Real Estate Brokers, which promotes Black homeownership, said the apologies are good starting points.

鈥淣ow show us that you want to do better, that you are willing to do more to help create an environment where everyone is treated equally,鈥 Pope said in a statement.

Greene said the NAR has taken several steps, including creation of a Fair Housing Policy Committee. The national group also adopted an action plan in 2020 that emphasizes accountability, culture change and training local realtors in fair housing practices.

As part of the effort to change, realtors in Atlanta have undergone unconscious bias training and are seeking relationships with diverse real estate associations such as the 香港六合彩挂牌资料 Association of Hispanic Real Estate Professionals and the LGBTQ+ Real Estate Alliance, the group said.

In St. Louis, the realtors鈥 association hired a director of diversity, equity and inclusion, is working with lawmakers to reduce barriers to homeownership for minorities, is seeking to address housing vacancies, and is pushing to bring in more Black real estate agents.

Berry knows change won't happen quickly.

鈥淧eople have been harmed for generations,鈥 she said.

Abdullah, 44, is executive director of Park Central Development, a company that works to attract investment and keep people in their homes in St. Louis. So he鈥檚 familiar with fair housing laws. From the outset, he questioned the appraisal of his home by an appraiser from a mostly-white neighboring county.

When Abdullah filed a complaint with Jordan's office, the bank eventually agreed to increase the loan value to $160,000, and Abdullah sold. Still, he asked the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to investigate. The case remains unresolved.

鈥淛ust because I鈥檓 in this line of work, I didn鈥檛 think I was exempt from these things happening to me,鈥 Abdullah said. 鈥淧eople have a right to the American dream.鈥

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