HomeMy WebLinkAboutMontana Fair HousingMONTANA FAIR HOUSING
MONTANA FEDERAL COURT ENTERS
CONSENT DECREE IN
MAJOR HOUSING ACCESSIBILITY
CASE
SEATTLE DEVELOPERS ORDERED TO
RETROTROFIT COVERED UNITS AT THREE
HOUSING PROJECTS AND PAY $350000
TO INDIVIDUAL PLAINTIFFS AND ADVOCACY
GROUPS
The federal district court in
Montana entered a consent order in June
against a major Seattle-based housing
developer. The company, which has
designed and constructed a number of
housing projects in Montana, was found
to be in violation of the accessibility
provisions of the Fair Housing Act, the
federal Rehabilitation Act, and state fair
housing laws. Representatives from
Summit Independent Living Center of
Missoula, the Montana Advocacy
Program and Montana Fair Housing, as
well as the individual plaintiffs in the
case, Betty Sept and Bill Chatterton,
reported that federal Judge Donald
Molloy signed a consent decree in June
ordering American Capital Development,
Inc., and its owners and affiliates to
correct the inaccessible conditions at
Wildflower and Creekside Apartments in
Missoula, and at Shiloh Glen Apartments
in Billings. The defendants also agreed
to pay $350,000 in damages and legal
costs to the plaintiffs, with more than
one-third of that amount going to a "fair
housing modification fund" to help
Avenue, Missoula, MT 59801 (406) 542-261 I/e-mails MlhznB(aDmonuma.cum
persons with disabilities in Missoula and
Billings to modify homes that are not
covered by the fair housing laws.
Plaintiffs estimate that the total value of
the settlement, including the corrective
work to be done over the next four
years, may exceed $1 million.
Mike Mayer, Executive Director for
Summit, explained that two major goals
had been achieved, "the consent decree
requires the developers to take action
over the next three years that will insure
that all common areas and ground floor
units will now be accessible. The
modification fund means we will not
have lost the amount of accessible
housing in Missoula and Billings that
should have been in place if the
defendants had followed the law from
the beginning." According to Mayer,
there is a continuing shortage of
accessible housing in all state housing
markets which is expected to get worse
as the population ages. "Sooner or later,
everyone of us or a member of our
families will need to live somewhere that
does not have the kinds of barriers
people with disabilities face everyday in
getting into and around their own
homes," Mayer said.
The fair housing laws, which apply
to all multifamily housing built after
March 1991, were intended to start
solving that problem by increasing the
number of housing units with
standardized accessibility features.
Volume: 1124 NovemtxT 2000 Montana Pair Housing 904-A Kensingtor
"Unfortunately," Mayer explained, "this
lawsuit, filed only after every reasonable
effort was made to have the owners
correct the problem, shows that in
Montana those laws are too often not
followed and not enforced."
The case against American Capital
Development began in 1996, at
Wildflower Apartments, when Betty Sept
and her mother were both residents
there. Ms. Sept's mother suffered from
progressive bone cancer and was having
increased difficulty in reaching her own
home by way of the stairs built to the
ground floor unit where they lived. Her
daughter requested assistance from the
owners and managers at the project, but
was unable to obtain wheelchair access,
which should have been part of the
original design under the fair housing
laws. Ms. Sept sought help from
Montana Fair Housing and later Summit
in arranging a temporary ramp and in
advising the owners that the barriers
built into the project violated the federal
Fair Housing Act and the Montana
Human Rights Act. Further investigation
by Montana Fair Housing led to the
discovery that Bill Chatterton, who uses
a wheelchair for mobility, had applied at
Wildflower and Creekside Apartments
and been rejected because the
developers did not meet the accessibility
requirements under the law and were
unwilling to make modifications.
"Our requests to the company in
Seattle essentially went unanswered,"
according to Bob Liston, Executive
Director of Montana Fair Housing.
"When it became clear that this was a
te, Missoula, MT 59801 (4061 542-2611/e-mail' mllv.ngWmontana.com
major developer of residential housing in
Montana and that the state had provided
them with more than a million dollars in
tax credits to build these projects, formal
action was the only recourse," said
Liston. Montana Fair Housing then
assisted Betty Sept, Bill Chatterton and
Summit in filing complaints with the
state Human Rights Commission and
with the Department of Housing and
Urban Development, the federal agency
responsible for fair housing enforcement.
After the state investigation concluded
that there was substantial evidence to
support their claims, a lawsuit was filed
in federal district court when the
developer still declined to correct the
problems. In November of last year,
Judge Molloy issued an order finding that
American Capital Development had
violated the accessibility provisions of
both state and federal fair housing laws
and was responsible for the harm caused
by those violations.
The individual plaintiffs and the
organizations involved hope the
resolution of this case means builders
and developers in the state learn that by
complying with the accessibility
requirements of the fair housing laws
these problems can be prevented early
on rather than corrected years later.
According to Betty Sept, whose mother
died while the case was pending, "it's
always seemed a lot easier if they did it
right in the beginning, and a lot less
expensive, even if they didn't understand
how hurtful it could be to deny someone
access to their own home."
Volume: 024 November 2000 Montana Fair Housing 904-A Kensingtc
The consent order entered in June
is a landmark decision in state fair
housing cases. It is the first design and
construction case resolved since the laws
were passed and the largest settlement
awarded in any fair housing case in
Montana. However, according to the
Montana Advocacy Program attorney
Mary Gallagher, one of the attorneys for
the Plaintiffs, "we expect that this is not
the end of the process, only the
beginning."
The work of Montana Fair Housing
in regards to this case was funded by a
grant through the Department of
Housing and Urban Development's Fair
Housing Initiatives Program.
HUD announced in October that Montana Fair Housing
received a two-year grant of $300,000 toward continuing
our education, outreach, and enforcement activities
throughout the state.
Landlords pay $540K
for lead paint problems
(WASHINGTON, Oct. 5, 2000) --
Two of the District's largest property-
management companies agreed to pay
$540,000 yesterday to settle claims that
they illegally failed to warn tenants that
their homes may contain dangerous
levels of lead paint.
Borger Management Inc. and William
Calomiris Investment Corp. will pay
$500,000 to assess and fix lead-based
paint hazards in about 4,500 housing
units in more than 160 buildings in the
District and Virginia under a deal with
the Justice Department. About 12 cases
of child lead poisoning had been
reported in their properties.
w, Missoula, MT 59801 (406) 542-2611/e-mail'. mtt¢ng(dmontana.com
The settlements come as Mayor
Anthony A. Williams (D) has proposed a
comprehensive overhaul of lead-hazard
laws. The District has a higher-than-
average incidence of childhood lead
poisoning, partly because its housing'
stock is among the oldest of any U.S.
city.
Under the settlements, which were
filed along with formal complaints
against the landlords in U.S. District
Court, Borger also will pay $25,000 in
penalties and Calomiris will pay $5,000.
Calomiris also will spend $10,000 on lead
poisoning education and prevention in
the District, which joined the federal
complaint against the company.
The U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development also announced it
has imposed a $34,800 penalty on a
third firm, American Rental Management
Co., for failing to notify tenants in two
buildings about potential lead hazards.
The company agreed to spend $63,000
to fix lead hazards in a third building.
Editor's Note: Under the federal Fair
Housing Act, a housing provider must
only warn consumers about lead-based
paint dangers. A provider cannot evict a
consumer because of the dangers of
lead-based paint.
H"4 yuw <A&, Gwd
Montana Fair Housing has scheduled
our annual conference for
April 11'r, 12itand 13"', 2001.
Housing Conference 2001
will be held in Great Falls.
HUD disclaimer notice: The work that provided the basis for this
publication was supported by funding under a grant awarded by the US
Department of Housing and Urban Development. The substance and
Flndings of the work are dedicated to the public. The authors and
publisher are solely responsible for the accuracy of the statements and
interpretations contained in this publication.
Montana Fair Housing
904-A Kensington Avenue
Missoula, Montana 59801
We are now on line (a httP.Ilmontanafairhousing.click2sile.com,
Chuck Rodgers
Office of the Mayor
P.O. Box 10
Laurel, MT 59044
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29G
R I I I I I "'1
DEC 5 ...
D
CITY OF LAUREL
Federal and state fair housing laws prohibit discrimination in housing based on race, color,
national origin, religion, gender, familial status, disability, marital status, age, and creed. It is
illegal, according to the Federal Fair Housing Act and the Montana Human Rights Act, to
consider protected class status in most rental, sales, lending, advertising, or homeowner's
insurance decisions.
Know your rights and obligations as a housing consumer or provider!
If you suspect unfair housing practices and/or want to find out more
information contact:
Department of Housing and Urban Development
1-800-877-7353
TDD 1-800-927-9275
or
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
Montana Fair Housing
1-800-929-2611
(406) 542-2611
e-mail: mflizng@,montana.com
Website: http://montanafairhousing.click2site.com
,, TDD 1-800-253-4093