Neighborhood Intel

What to know about the ongoing discriminatory practice of redlining in NYC

  • Government agencies historically designated neighborhoods as desirable or undesirable for investment
  • Bank redlining in NYC 'lies at the very heart of neighborhood segregation, inequality, and poverty'
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By Emily Myers  |
June 19, 2024 - 9:30AM
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Racism in lending practices has had a lasting effect on the development of historically poorer neighborhoods in NYC.

FrankvandenBergh/iStock

Amid the furor over the killing of George Floyd, which sparked widespread protests in support of Black Lives Matter across the U.S. and New York City, the concept of systemic racism received new attention, as well as the exclusionary practice of redlining neighborhoods.

You may have seen on social media a child-friendly video created 2019 by Alex Cequea that explains the roots behind the differences between Jamal, an Black boy who lives in a poor neighborhood, and his white friend Kevin, who lives in a wealthy neighborhood.

The children grow up with disparate opportunities, even though they live only blocks apart, because government agencies historically mapped U.S. neighborhoods, designating them as desirable or undesirable for investment, creating lasting disparity.

Not just in the past

Getting financing to buy a house or apartment is a crucial step in the process towards home ownership, and blocking access to funds has historically been used to prevent people of color from owning property. Bias in lending is not just a thing of the past: New studies have found evidence of racial discrimination by banks against home loan applicants in dozens of cities.

Bias among real estate brokers also creates segregated neighborhoods. A bombshell, three-year investigative report by Newsday found that almost half of all Black buyers and renters on Long Island are likely to face discrimination from agents. The report found that some agents showed minorities fewer listings or scrutinized their finances more heavily. White buyers often received coded messages designed to steer them away from minority communities.


[Editor's note: An earlier version of this post was published in March 2019. We are presenting it again in recognition of Juneteenth and the work that needs to be done to address systemic racism.]


Redlining refers to 1930s maps used by banks to determine who they’d lend to—Black neighborhoods were highlighted in red and deemed "hazardous," which meant residents who lived there didn't qualify for loans. This in turn prevented families from creating generational wealth through home ownership.

Modern day redlining

In 2019, the Center for Investigative Reporting, along with Reveal, WNYC's in-depth news program, published details of modern day redlining in 61 metro areas from Oklahoma to Florida and as close to home as New Jersey. They didn’t find clear evidence of discrimination in NYC but the New Economy Project used the same methodology and found banks and other mortgage lenders were significantly more likely to deny loan applications as the percentage of Black or Latino residents in NYC neighborhoods increased.

Parts of Brooklyn, Queens, the Lower East Side, and Harlem lost opportunities for investment due to redlining. It's no surprise redlining maps had an "economically meaningful and lasting effect on the development of urban neighborhoods through reduced credit access and subsequent disinvestment." That's the verdict of an updated study by The Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago.

The persistence of bank redlining in NYC is troubling enough but the New Economy Project claims it "lies at the very heart of neighborhood segregation, inequality, and poverty." Their research found banks and other mortgage lenders denied Black applicants more than twice as often as white applicants, by 26 percent over 12 percent. They also identified similar denial rate disparities for New Yorkers looking to refinance an existing mortgage, identifying that banks and other lenders denied 53 percent of Black, 44 percent of Latino, and 40 percent of Asian New Yorkers, compared to 30 percent of white New Yorkers.

Attempts to redress inequity

The Community Reinvestment Act (1977) was an attempt to redress inequity by making sure banks served poor neighborhoods and faced consequences if they didn’t. The New Economy Project says entrenched patterns of bank redlining indicates "these laws have proven woefully inadequate." Cut to the current administration—following a pattern of deregulation, the government has asked for public comments on ways to modernize the rules.

That has critics worried it will make it easier for banks to tick the box of compliance rather than actually provide the loans they should. In an open letter, the New Economy Project suggests the focus should be on "assessing whether national banks are equitably meeting community credit needs" rather than prioritizing how convenient it is for national banks to meet certain guidelines. 

If you are concerned you are being denied a loan based on your race, the best starting point is to contact the Fair Housing Justice Center.

 
Headshot of Emily Myers

Emily Myers

Senior Writer/Podcast Producer

Emily Myers is a real estate writer and podcast host. As the former host of the Brick Underground podcast, she earned four silver awards from the National Association of Real Estate Editors. Emily studied journalism at the University of the Arts, London, earned an MA Honors degree in English Literature from the University of Edinburgh and lived for a decade in California.

Brick Underground articles occasionally include the expertise of, or information about, advertising partners when relevant to the story. We will never promote an advertiser's product without making the relationship clear to our readers.

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