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      Black Homeowners Face Discrimination in Appraisals 
Companies that  value homes for sale or refinancing are bound by law not to discriminate. Black  homeowners say it happens anyway. 
     
      Abena and Alex Horton wanted to take advantage of  low home-refinance rates brought on by the coronavirus crisis. So in June, they  took the first step in that process, welcoming a home appraiser into their  four-bedroom, four-bath ranch-style house in Jacksonville, Fla. 
      The Hortons live just minutes from the Ortega  River, in a predominantly white neighborhood of 1950s homes that tend to sell  for $350,000 to $550,000. They had expected their home to appraise for around  $450,000, but the appraiser felt differently, assigning a value of $330,000.  Ms. Horton, who is Black, immediately suspected discrimination. 
              The couple’s bank agreed that the value was off and  ordered a second appraisal. But before the new appraiser could arrive, Ms.  Horton, a lawyer, began an experiment: She took all family photos off the  mantle. Instead, she hung up a series of oil paintings of Mr. Horton, who is  white, and his grandparents that had been in storage. Books by Zora Neale  Hurston and Toni Morrison were taken off the shelves, and holiday photo cards  sent by friends were edited so that only those showing white families were left  on display. On the day of the appraisal, Ms. Horton took the couple’s  6-year-old son on a shopping trip to Target, and left Mr. Horton alone at home  to answer the door. 
      The new appraiser gave their  home a value of $465,000 — a more than 40 percent increase from the first  appraisal.  
       
        Race and housing policy have long been intertwined  in the United States. Black Americans consistently struggle more than their  white counterparts to be approved for home loans, and the specter of redlining  — a practice that denied mortgages to people of color in certain neighborhoods  — continues to drive down home values in Black  neighborhoods.        Even in mixed-race and predominantly white  neighborhoods, Black homeowners say, their homes are consistently appraised for  less than those of their neighbors, stymying their path toward building equity  and further perpetuating income equality in the United States. 
        Home appraisers are bound by the Fair Housing Act  of 1968 to not discriminate based on race, religion, national origin or gender.  Appraisers can lose their license or even face prison time if they’re found to  produce discriminatory appraisals. Title XI of the Financial Institutions  Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act, enacted in 1989, also binds appraisers to  a standard of unbiased ethics and performance. 
  “My heart kind of broke,” Ms. Horton said. “I know  what the issue was. And I knew what we needed to do to fix it, because in the  Black community, it’s just common knowledge that you take your pictures down  when you’re selling the house. But I didn’t think I had to worry about that  with an appraisal.” 
      Appraisals, by nature, are  subjective. And discrimination, particularly the subconscious biases and  microaggressions that have risen to the fore in white America this summer  following the death of George Floyd, is notoriously difficult to pinpoint. 
      Ms. Horton shared her experiment in a widely circulated Facebook post,  earning 25,000 shares and more than 2,000 comments, many of which came from  Black homeowners and carried the same message: This also happened to me. 
        In each comment, a repeated  theme: Home appraisers, who work under codes of ethics but with little  regulation and oversight, are often all that stands between the accumulation of  home equity and the destruction of it for Black Americans.  
      After the first appraisal came up short on his  house in an affluent, racially mixed suburb of Hartford, Conn., Stephen  Richmond, an aerospace engineer, took down family photos and posters for Black  movies and had a white neighbor stand in for him on a second appraisal. He was  hoping to refinance; with the second report, he saw his home’s value go up  $40,000 from the initial appraisal just a few weeks earlier. 
              In 2000, the American actor and comedian D.L. Hughley  had an appraisal on his home in the Montevista Estates neighborhood of West  Hills, a primarily white area in the San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles.  Despite a steady uptick in the housing market and the addition of a pool and  new hardwood floors, the house was appraised for nearly what he had bought it  for three years earlier — $500,000. 
        In Mr. Hughley’s case, his bank flagged the report. 
  “They were like, this has to be some kind of  mistake because in order for your house to have come in this low; it would have  to be in some level of disrepair,” Mr. Hughley said. 
        The bank ordered a new  appraisal, which came back $160,000 higher, and Mr. Hughley went on to sell the  home for $770,000. 
        Mr. Hughley talks about the experience in his book,  “Surrender, White People!”, a satirical look at white supremacy, which was  published in June by Harper Collins and examines racial inequality in the  United States across education, health care and the housing market. 
  “People always tell us to pull ourselves up by our  bootstraps. But what if you remove the straps?” he said. “You’re invested in  the American dream, you have capital, you have a chip in the game. And the fact  that somebody could summarily minimize my wealth just because of a bias, it  seemed crazy to me.” 
      In response to the coronavirus pandemic, a federal  ruling issued in March allowed appraisals for homes that were being sold to be  done remotely in certain circumstances, temporarily pausing the need for  interior home inspections. Those looking to refinance, however, still must  complete an in-person appraisal. 
              In Mr. Hughley’s case, the appraiser was fired. Ms.  Horton has filed a complaint with the Department of Housing and Urban  Development; when contacted about her case, HUD said it had been assigned to  the Jacksonville Human Rights Commission. The agency added that it receives a  handful of similar complaints each year. 
        In 2018, researchers from Gallup and the Brookings  Institution published a report on the  widespread devaluation of Black-owned property in the United States, which they  discussed in a 2019 hearing before the House Financial Services Subcommittee.  The report found that a home in a majority Black neighborhood is likely to be  valued for 23 percent less than a near-identical home in a majority-white  neighborhood; it also determined this devaluation costs Black homeowners $156  billion in cumulative losses. 
        Many appraisers, both during the hearing and in the  weeks after, defended their practice, noting that it’s their job to report on  local market conditions, not set them. 
      “Is there a problem with poor  and underserved communities in the United States? Yes. Is it the appraisal  profession’s fault? No,” wrote Maureen Sweeney, a Chicago-based appraiser in a  letter to the house subcommittee following the hearing. “It’s like blaming the  canary for the bad air in the coal mine, or blaming the mirror for your bad  hair day. Appraisers reflect the market; we do not create it.” 
        But what about a Black homeowner in a white  neighborhood whose property is appraised for less than his neighbor’s? Whether  appraisers are devaluing Black homes or entire Black neighborhoods, the core  issue is the same, said Andre Perry, one of the writers of the Brookings  Institution report and the author of “Know Your Price: Valuing Black Lives and  Property in America’s Black Cities.” 
        “We still see Black people as risky,” Mr. Perry  said. “White appraisers carry the same attitudes and beliefs of white America —  the same attitudes that compelled Derek Chauvin to kneel casually on the neck  of George Floyd are shared by other professionals in other fields. How does  that choking out of America look in the appraisal industry? Through very low  appraisals,” he said. 
       
    
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