HUD
SECRETARY, ATTORNEY GENERAL, PLEDGE TO FIGHT HOUSING DISCRIMINATION
WASHINGTON - U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Mel Martinez
and Attorney General John Ashcroft today commemorated the 33rd anniversary
of the Fair Housing Act by pledging to continue aggressively fighting
housing discrimination.
"To deny anyone a place to call 'home' is to deny that person their
lawful share of the American Dream," Martinez said.
"I
am committed to enforcing our nation's fair housing laws, which
protect the rights of any American to live in any home in any neighborhood,"
he added. "HUD will aggressively pursue those who ignore the law
and abrogate that right."
The
HUD Secretary, a member of the President's Fair Housing Council,
was also joined at the event by the U.S. Attorney General, another
Council member.
"I'm
pleased to be working with Secretary Martinez to make sure all Americans'
rights are guaranteed," Attorney General John Ashcroft said. "Discrimination
in housing simply will not be tolerated, and we will prosecute those
who violate the Fair Housing Act."
Each
man spoke about his department's efforts to fight housing discrimination,
and then signed the Fair Housing Pledge.
The
Fair Housing Act of 1968 bars housing discrimination because of
race, color, religion, sex, disability, family status and national
origin. The Act covers the sale, rental, financing and advertising
of almost all housing in the nation. Fair housing investigations
are conducted by HUD investigators, state and city agencies working
with HUD, and private fair housing groups that receive HUD funds.
The
Fair Housing Council, chaired by the HUD Secretary, is comprised
of the secretaries of Health and Human Services, Transportation,
Education, Labor, Defense, Agriculture, Veterans Affairs, Treasury,
Interior and the Attorney General. Also on the Council are the Chair
of the Federal Reserve, Comptroller of the Currency, the Director
of the Office of Thrift Supervision, the Chair of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp., and other executive department officials that the
President may appoint.
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