WashingtonBy TOM LITTLEWOOD |
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Court ordered federal housing includes suburbs: A breach in the great white wall?
GEORGE W. ROMNEY, the former
governor of Michigan who served as
secretary of the Department of Housing
and Urban Development (HUD) in the
first Nixon Cabinet, had many traits
that annoyed fellow politicians. One of
these was his disinclination to treat
complex problems with deceptively
simplistic rhetoric. In and out of office,
for example, he persisted in speaking of
the needs of the "real city," a term he
used to encompass the entire metropolitan area. Race relations can never be
successfully managed, he said over and
over again, as long as the metropolis is
partitioned into dozens of separate and
autonomous governmental units all
acting independently in their own
interest. This multiplicity of independent political units is a segregating
mechanism that makes it easy for
suburbanites to divorce themselves
from the problems of the central city.
So many social ills are related to this
political partitioning of the suburbs that
Romney's theme seems obvious. Yet the
mere suggestion of metropolitan integration remains so slippery, politically,
that most elected officials don't want to
take a chance on falling through the ice.
Social change of that magnitude is left
for federal judges who are protected by
their political life preservers — lifetime tenure.
In its last term, the U.S. Supreme
Court in Hills v. Gautreaux (96 S. Ct. 1538, 1976) held that the "real city" is, in
fact, the "real housing market." Where
HUD, as in this case in Chicago, stood
by and permitted unconstitutionally
discriminatory central city public housing policies, the federal courts can seek
to correct the effects of that segregation
by ordering some federally assisted
housing in surrounding suburban communities. Besides housing opportunities
for minorities, the decision contained
important federal-state-local implications in the civil rights law.
Previously, in the case of Milliken v.
Bradley (418 U.S. 717), the court ruled
that 54 suburban school districts could
not be ordered consolidated and joined
with the Detroit schools in a pupil
transfer arrangement that would reduce
racial separation. That finding was
based on "fundamental limitations on
the remedial powers of the federal
courts to restructure the operation of
local and state governmental entities." It
would not be equitable, the court said,
to involve the independent outlying
districts in the remedy when only the
central city had discriminated in pupil
assignments — even though the outlying
districts may have had no minority
students against whom to discriminate.
Insofar as schools are concerned, that
precedent appeared to insulate suburban districts, if they are set up independently, from whatever happened or did
not happen in the city.
The housing case was found to be
different though because HUD, which
administers federal housing assistance
all over, had been guilty of unconstitutional conduct for supporting Chicago's
segregated housing. In the Milliken case
in Detroit there was no evidence of
unconstitutional behavior by suburban
school officials, and no demonstration
that Detroit's discrimination had any
"segregative effects" on suburban
schools, two standards that Justice
Potter Stewart said may not be satisfied
in the Chicago metropolitan housing
market. The lower appellate court had
mentioned the likelihood of impact
outside the city caused by HUD's
"intracity discrimination" in Chicago.
Although the cases are similar, Stewart said the Milliken precedent did not
mean that "parties found to have
violated the Constitution" cannot be
made to "undertake remedial efforts"
beyond the city boundaries. Political boundaries drawn outside the city do
not alter the "real city" housing market,
which is the entire metropolitan area.
But would a metropolitan-wide order
against HUD interfere improperly with
suburban governments not implicated
in HUD's unconstitutional conduct?
Would the sanctity of local political
autonomy that was spelled out in
Milliken be violated? Not, Stewart
explained, if HUD is careful to honor
local housing assistance plans and
zoning restrictions. As a practical
matter, as long as exclusionary zoning is
held to be constitutional, determined
suburbanites are still free to screen out
housing for low-income residents.
Anything smacking of metro consolidation is still thin ice for most legislators. When the federal revenue-sharing
extension bill was before the House in
June, Rep. Benjamin Rosenthal, Democrat of Long Island, N.Y., nailed on an
amendment in committee requiring
state master plans and timetables for
"modernizing" and "revitalizing" state
and local government. Before a state
could cash its revenue sharing check it
would report annually to the Treasury
Department on the steps it was taking to
reach the goals. It was suggested in the
legislation that the states would want to
reduce the number of limited-function
general governments. Rosenthal pleaded that all he was trying to do was help
the states and localities become more
efficient in their use of shared funds.
Republicans raised such a howl about
"federally dictated centralized planning
and control" that the amendment was
decisively stripped away when the bill reached the floor.
Metro government is unpopular; unless, as is sometimes true in the South,
consolidation is a vehicle for the white
suburbs to retain or regain political
control of a city with a new black voting majority.
September 1976 / Illinois Issues / 31