Chicago housing discrimination




















The City of Chicago has enacted two powerful anti-discrimination ordinances. The Chicago Human Rights Ordinance prohibits discrimination in employment, public accommodations, credit transactions, and bonding, as well as retaliation. The Chicago Fair Housing Ordinance prohibits housing discrimination. Both ordinances prohibit discrimination based on race, color, national origin, ancestry, religion, disability, age over 40 , sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, parental status, marital status, military discharge status, and source of income.

Commission staff can answer questions about filing a discrimination complaint and can help with drafting a complaint. After a complaint is filed, the Commission notifies each business or individual accused of discrimination by mail, with a deadline to submit a written response.

Board rulings can be reviewed and enforced through the state courts. Parties may settle a case at any time during the complaint adjudication process. File a Discrimination Complaint. Most Recent News Discrimination Cases. Feb 24, Fair Housing Testing Project.

Supporting Information. Send Close. In America, household wealth is largely concentrated in our houses themselves, so homeownership becomes a means of advancing homeownership in the next generation. The less one pays for a better house, particularly one that's more likely to appreciate, the more one can pass on to the next generation, Shapiro wrote in Part of this is due to the greater ability of white families to provide larger down payments and even to pay higher service fees for lowered interest rates.

From interviews, discussions with bankers, and other data, it appears that many young white families can rely on significant family financial assistance with down payments and other costs. Nearly one-half of all white homeowners report that they received significant financial assistance from their families. In sharp contrast, seven out of eight African-American homeowners purchased homes on their own.

This inheritance results from the discriminatory housing markets of a previous era, marked by exclusion and residential segregation and backed by government support. For those who amassed immense wealth in the post-war housing market, like Sterling, that money could buy much more.

Bill Simmons, a Clippers season-ticket holder with many well-placed sources in the NBA, writes : "David Stern looked the other way for decades, waiting for a smoking gun that never came. He knew Sterling, who started out as an attorney and eventually made his billions in real estate, loved courtrooms more than he loved anything else. Coates calls the form of racism exemplified by housing discrimination "elegant racism"; I like Carl Nightingale's formulation, camouflaged segregation. Not long ago I talked to Nightingale about why Chicago is inescapable on the issue of housing discrimination and segregation.

Often it lies in patterns of data, codes of law, and bonds of history, sometimes not even requiring an active touch to advance it, but simply continuing under its own force. Donald Sterling's camouflage was never very good, but the blinds still had to briefly slip for him to be revealed. Subscribe to one or more of our free e-mail newsletters to get instant updates on local news, events, and opportunities in Chicago.

Subscribe Newsletters. Search for:. Below is a list of Cook County subdivisions with racial restrictive covenants. Education Social History. Blietz' Williamsburg Village Unit no. Butterfield Hills. Clem B. Deer Park. Dun-lo Highlands. Dunas' Forest. First addition to Northbrook Park. Forest Farms Fourth Addition. Hikes and Huizenga Oak Lawn. Hilltop Estates no. Homewood Gardens.

La Grange Terrace. National Home Developers. Palos Woods. School Trustee's. Town and Country Homes. Town Improvement.

Fifth Addition to Ivanhoe. Kedzie Avenue Gardens.



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