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In weeks ahead, HUD will introduce rulemaking, establish a process for individualized assessments, and outline guidelines for public housing authorities. HUD Secretary challenges public housing authorities to review current processes.

WASHINGTON – In the weeks ahead, HUD will issue a Notice of Proposed Rule Making in which it proposes to change its regulations governing public housing agencies and HUD-subsidized housing providers to prevent unnecessary denials of housing assistance to people with criminal history records.

HUD will issue new guidance and technical assistance to assist PHAs and HUD-affiliated owners determine what convictions are relevant to health and safety and how to conduct an individualized assessment when reviewing criminal history records. HUD will also provide technical assistance to encourage grantees, PHAs, and housing owners to use HUD programs to provide housing and services that support people’s successful reentry from prisons and jails to the community, which enhances public safety.

The announcement follows a comprehensive review of HUD regulations, policies, and guidance geared toward increasing opportunities for qualified individuals and families to receive housing assistance from HUD. That review found that many of HUD’s regulations and sub-regulatory provisions could be improved and clarified to ensure that PHAs and HUD-affiliated owners are following recognized best practices, including:

· Not automatically denying an applicant housing assistance based on the presence of a criminal conviction, other than where explicitly prohibited by federal law.

· Disregarding criminal history that is unlikely to bear on fitness for tenancy, such as arrest records, sealed or expunged records, older convictions, and convictions not involving violence or harm to persons or property.

· Using individualized assessments to determine whether applicants truly pose a future risk to persons or property, considering other factors such as the applicant’s employment, engagement in alcohol or drug treatment, and constructive community involvement.

· Providing applicants with criminal history records with reasonable time and opportunity to provide supporting information regarding mitigating factors before making an admission decision.

Many of these principles have already been implemented by many housing providers and public housing agencies who, in doing so, have preserved or improved the public safety of their communities. HUD’s forthcoming notice of proposed rulemaking will propose to require other housing providers and PHAs to do the same.

New guidance and technical assistance issued by HUD will assist PHAs and HUD-affiliated owners in applying these principles.

HUD’s forthcoming actions also will help PHAs and HUD-affiliated owners comply with the Fair Housing Act. Black and Brown people, other people of color, and people with disabilities are disproportionately involved in the criminal justice system. As a result, policies that unnecessarily deny housing because of a criminal history record can violate the Fair Housing Act of 1968, according to the discriminatory effects rule that HUD recently reinstated. HUD is also stepping up Fair Housing investigations and enforcement to ensure these reforms are successfully implemented. Fair Housing staff and grantees receive numerous complaints where exclusions based on criminal history records discriminate based on race, disability, or other protected classes.

In addition to addressing barriers to HUD housing assistance, HUD will also provide new tools and technical assistance on ways that HUD programs can support the successful reentry to the community from prisons and jails. For example, HUD will highlight communities using Community Development Block Grants to provide reentry services and programs, including counseling and legal assistance, and PHAs partnering to provide housing assistance to people reentering the community. HUD will also highlight ways that Emergency Solutions Grants and Continuum of Care Program grants can create models of housing to address homelessness among formerly incarcerated people. Taken together, these approaches make our communities stronger and safer.

(source: HUD Press office)

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