Settlement proposed in Dalas Public housing segregation suit
Thursday, December 9, 2004 at 10:00PM
TheSpook
Thousands of poor black people were forced to live in subsidized,
segregated slums.
A settlement has been proposed in the nearly 20-year-old
class-action lawsuit against the Dallas Housing Authority over racial
segregation in public housing. The proposed agreement states the
housing authority has taken the necessary steps to end segregation by
giving people a choice of where to live, revitalizing neighborhoods and
upgrading rundown facilities. "They [housing officials] have done what
they can to eradicate the facts of the past segregation and other forms
of discrimination," said attorney Mike Daniel, who represents the
plaintiffs in the case. U.S. District Judge Jerry Buchmeyer has set a
Dec. 21 hearing to consider the proposal. Seven women sued the housing
authority, the city of Dallas and the U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development in June 1985, contending that public housing
conditions were separate and unequal. Judge Buchmeyer agreed that
thousands of poor black people were forced to live in subsidized,
segregated slums. He ordered the housing authority to provide 3,205
homes in predominantly white areas. He said 474 of the homes must be
new. An appeals court later ruled that the housing authority could not
use race as a factor in selecting the housing sites. The city of Dallas
and HUD have since reached agreements with plaintiffs and have been
released from the case. The housing authority has fulfilled most of the
judge's order to provide housing. The settlement proposal outlines
other steps the housing authority must take to remedy the past
discrimination, including monitoring criminal activity at all apartment
projects in which 10 or more of its Section 8 recipients live. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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