Impeding and restricting people in various activities based on their race, ethnic reasons, or religion now goes against US laws in effect. In the past, especially in the 1960s, discrimination in real estate often manifested in the form of steering. Housing discrimination or steering is now an illegal practice, and it refers to limiting access, showings, or selling properties to minorities based on the reasons mentioned above.
Secondly, agents may direct an individual belonging to a minority group to specific neighborhoods away from the majority because they believe that buyers don’t belong in that particular area. A real estate broker steers away or discourages an African-American family from moving to a primarily white community. Racial steering is an example of housing injustice that qualifies as blatant racism.
The Fair Housing Act outlawed steering in real estate.
US lawmakers condemned and called the practice of steering unconstitutional in the Fair Housing Act. This essential piece of federal law was created in 1968. It forbids discrimination in purchasing, selling, renting, or financing housing, whether private or public, based on race, skin color, sex, nationality, or religion. At the same time, it sanctioned all US citizens’ right to move wherever they wished. In short, all guns were pointed against racial steering.
Legislators revised the law numerous times, most recently in 1988, including disability and family status. Therefore, the Act protects people with disabilities and single mothers with children against malpractice. Municipal legislation may add provisions to these rights in some states, but they must not lessen or curtail them. In conclusion, the Act terminated many horrendous instances in the housing market.
Examples of steering in real estate
Let’s investigate some housing discrimination instances from the past. Unfortunately, bias and intolerance, especially racial steering, may still occur when one intends to rent a unit, purchase a home, or sell a property.
Landlords steer potential tenants away from an apartment.
Dealing with a landlord can be difficult. Here’s a racial steering example 101. Let’s suppose a landlord offers renting options for a person over the phone. Upon personal meeting, the landlord discovers that the future tenant is of African-American origins. Then, they falsely declare that the rental unit has already been occupied.
Later, the landlord will rent out the same apartment to another individual of a different race. Once you encounter such an instance, turn to authorities, and you can file a complaint. You might also wish to look into landlord-tenant rights.
You can’t buy this! Discrimination at showing properties
A housing agent declines to show a property to certain people of different ethnicity or race at an open house in specific neighborhoods. Then, the homebuyer becomes a victim of racial steering. In other cases, the agent encourages a buyer to move to another community, falsely advertising the new area being more suitable for them and available at the same price range. They will unethically presuppose that, for example, a Latin family will feel more comfortable in a predominantly Latin district.
Mortgage lenders asking a higher interest rate
A mortgage banker or another lending institution imposes a higher interest rate on a loan application to purchase a property. They can steer people to a loan agreement with less advantageous terms and conditions based on their nationality, gender, or race. In addition, the lender can also influence the mortgage borrower to buy a home in a neighborhood other than a predominantly white one. Thus, we have an appalling racial steering case again. This practice is similar to redlining.
Steering based on property limitations
Physically challenged tenants or buyers living with a disability may not access multifamily condos because the building hasn’t met accessibility standards. For instance, a buyer in a wheelchair would be discouraged from such an estate because they won’t have means of entry to their apartment or parking lot.
The most straightforward, ethical, and legal solution is local estate agents listening to their client’s needs and offering them housing options in the neighborhood they prefer.
Popular Real Estate Terms
Opening so that air or gas may enter or leave. For example, an air conditioner has a "vent open" or "vent closed" knob for outside air. The "vent close" switch must be on for air ...
Property highly leveraged. An example is when a landlord buys an apartment house paying minimum cash payment down and the balance on mortgage. ...
Precalculated tables providing the present values of $1 or an annuity of $1 for different time periods and at different discount rates. ...
In taxation, the excess of total long-term gains minus total long-term losses on the sale of real estate. Long-term classification is for real estate held one year or more. This is reported ...
Maximum loan that can be borrowed by a potential debtor. A ceiling loan represents the topmost credit that can be extended. ...
Method of constructing a brick, block, or stone wall using mortar in various overlapping patterns. The brick pattern is extremely important in terms of adding strength and stability to the ...
Not paying taxes legally due the government. Examples are the failure to report rental income received and claiming false deductions on real estate holdings. The penalty for tax fraud is ...
Square footage of space a parcel of land has. ...
maintenance procedures conducted to prevent later repairs and furthering a longer useful life. For example, many boilers and burners are cleaned and serviced each year before the winter ...
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