Attention America’s Suburbs: You Have Just Been Annexed

Guest Post by Stanley Kurtz

It’s difficult to say what’s more striking about President Obama’s Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing (AFFH) regulation:its breathtaking radicalism, the refusal of the press to cover it, or its potential political ramifications. The danger AFFH poses to Democrats explains why the press barely mentions it. This lack of curiosity, in turn, explains why the revolutionary nature of the rule has not been properly understood. Ultimately, the regulation amounts to back-door annexation, a way of turning America’s suburbs into tributaries of nearby cities.

This has been Obama’s purpose from the start. In Spreading the Wealth: How Obama Is Robbing the Suburbs to Pay for the Cities, I explain how a young Barack Obama turned against the suburbs and threw in his lot with a group of Alinsky-style community organizers who blamed suburban tax-flight for urban decay. Their bible was Cities Without Suburbs, by former Albuquerque mayor David Rusk. Rusk, who works closely with Obama’s Alinskyite mentors and now advises the Obama administration, initially called on cities to annex their surrounding suburbs. When it became clear that outright annexation was a political non-starter, Rusk and his followers settled on a series of measures designed to achieve de facto annexation over time.

The plan has three elements: 1) Inhibit suburban growth, and when possible encourage suburban re-migration to cities. This can be achieved, for example, through regional growth boundaries (as in Portland), or by relative neglect of highway-building and repair in favor of public transportation. 2) Force the urban poor into the suburbs through the imposition of low-income housing quotas. 3) Institute “regional tax-base sharing,” where a state forces upper-middle-class suburbs to transfer tax revenue to nearby cities and less-well-off inner-ring suburbs (as in Minneapolis/St. Paul).

If you press suburbanites into cities, transfer urbanites to the suburbs, and redistribute suburban tax money to cities, you have effectively abolished the suburbs. For all practical purposes, the suburbs would then be co-opted into a single metropolitan region. Advocates of these policy prescriptions call themselves “regionalists.”

AFFH goes a long way toward achieving the regionalist program of Obama and his organizing mentors. In significant measure, the rule amounts to a de facto regional annexation of America’s suburbs. To see why, let’s have a look at the rule.

AFFH obligates any local jurisdiction that receives HUD funding to conduct a detailed analysis of its housing occupancy by race, ethnicity, national origin, English proficiency, and class (among other categories). Grantees must identify factors (such as zoning laws, public-housing admissions criteria, and “lack of regional collaboration”) that account for any imbalance in living patterns. Localities must also list “community assets” (such as quality schools, transportation hubs, parks, and jobs) and explain any disparities in access to such assets by race, ethnicity, national origin, English proficiency, class, and more. Localities must then develop a plan to remedy these imbalances, subject to approval by HUD.

By itself, this amounts to an extraordinary takeover of America’s cities and towns by the federal government. There is more, however.

AFFH obligates grantees to conduct all of these analyses at both the local and regional levels. In other words, it’s not enough for, say, Philadelphia’s “Mainline” Montgomery County suburbs to analyze their own populations by race, ethnicity, and class to determine whether there are any imbalances in where groups live, or in access to schools, parks, transportation, and jobs. Those suburbs are also obligated to compare their own housing situations to the Greater Philadelphia region as a whole.

So if some Montgomery County’s suburbs are predominantly upper-middle-class, white, and zoned for single-family housing, while the Philadelphia region as a whole is dotted with concentrations of less-well-off African Americans, Hispanics, or Asians, those suburbs could be obligated to nullify their zoning ordinances and build high-density, low-income housing at their own expense. At that point, those suburbs would have to direct advertising to potential minority occupants in the Greater Philadelphia region. Essentially, this is what HUD has imposed on Westchester County, New York, the most famous dry-run for AFFH.

In other words, by obligating all localities receiving HUD funding to compare their demographics to the region as a whole, AFFH effectively nullifies municipal boundaries. Even with no allegation or evidence of intentional discrimination, the mere existence of a demographic imbalance in the region as a whole must be remedied by a given suburb. Suburbs will literally be forced to import population from elsewhere, at their own expense and in violation of their own laws. In effect, suburbs will have been annexed by a city-dominated region, their laws suspended and their tax money transferred to erstwhile non-residents. And to make sure the new high-density housing developments are close to “community assets” such as schools, transportation, parks, and jobs, bedroom suburbs will be forced to develop mini-downtowns. In effect, they will become more like the cities their residents chose to leave in the first place.

It’s easy to miss the de facto absorption of local governments into their surrounding regions by AFFH, because the rule disguises it. AFFH does contain a provision that allows individual jurisdictions to formally join a regional consortium. Yet the rule leaves it up to local authorities to decide whether to enter regional groupings — or at least the rule appears to make participation in regional decision-making voluntary. In truth, however, just by obligating grantees to compare their housing to the demographics of the greater metropolitan area, and remedy any disparities, HUD has effectively turned every suburban jurisdiction into a helpless satellite of its nearby city and region.

We can see this, because the final version of AFFH includes much more than just the provisions of the rule itself. The final text of the regulation incorporates summaries of the many public comments on the preliminary rule, along with replies to those comments by HUD. This amounts to a running dialogue between leftist housing activists trying to make the rule more controlling, local bureaucrats overwhelmed by paperwork, a public outraged by federal overreach, and HUD itself.

Read carefully, the section of the rule on “Regional Collaboration and Regional Analysis” (especially pages 188–203), reveals one of AFFH’s key secrets: It doesn’t really matter whether a local government decides to formally join a regional consortium or not. HUD can effectively draft any suburb into its surrounding region, just by forcing it to compare its demographics with the metropolitan area as a whole.

At one point (pages 189–191), for example, commenters directly note that the obligation to compare local and regional data, and remedy any disparities, amounts to forcing a jurisdiction to ignore its own boundaries. Without contradicting this assertion, HUD then insists that all jurisdictions will have to engage in exactly such regional analysis.

Comments from leftist housing activists repeatedly call on HUD to pressure local jurisdictions into regional planning consortia. At every point, however, HUD declines to demand that local governments formally join such regional collaborations. Yet each time the issue comes up, HUD assures the housing activists that just by compelling local jurisdictions to compare their demographics with the region as a whole, suburbs will effectively be forced to address demographic disparities at the total metropolitan level (e.g., page 196).

When housing activists worry that a suburb with few poor or minority residents will argue that it has no need to develop low-income housing, HUD makes it clear that the regulation as written already effectively forces all suburbs to accommodate the needs of non-residents (pages 198–199). Again, HUD stresses that the mere obligation to analyze, compare, and remedy demographic disparities at the local and regional levels amounts to a kind of compulsory regionalism.

HUD’s language is coy and careful. The Obama administration clearly wants to avoid alarming local governments, so it underplays the extent to which they have been effectively dissolved and regionalized by AFFH. At the same time, HUD wants to tip off its leftist allies that this is exactly what has happened.

At one level, then, the apparatus of formal and voluntary collaboration in a regional consortium is a bit of a ruse. AFFH amounts to an annexation of suburbs by cities, whether the suburbs like it or not. Yet the formal, regional groupings enabled by the rule are far from harmless.

Comments from housing advocates (pages 194–197), for example, chide HUD for failing to include a mention in AFFH of the hundreds of federally-funded regional plans already being developed by leftist activists across the country (the “Sustainable Communities Regional Planning Grant” program). These plans entail far more than imposing low-income housing quotas on the suburbs. They embody the regionalist program of densifying housing in suburb and city alike, and they structure transportation spending in such a way as to make suburban living far less convenient and workable. HUD replies that these plans can indeed be used by regional consortia to fulfill their obligations under AFFH.

So a city could formally join with some less-well-off inner-ring suburbs and present one of these comprehensive regionalist dream-plans as the product of its consortium. At that point, HUD could pressure reluctant upper-middle-class suburbs to embrace the entire plan on pain of losing their federal funds. In this way, AFFH could force the full menu of regionalist policies—not just low-income housing quotas—onto the suburbs.

There are plenty of ways in which HUD can pressure a suburb to bend to its will. The techniques go far beyond threats to withhold federal funds. The recent Supreme Court decision in Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs v. Inclusive Communities Project has opened the door to “disparate impact” suits against suburbs by HUD and private groups alike. That is, any demographic imbalance, whether intentional or not, can be treated by the courts as de facto discrimination.

Just by completing the obligatory demographic analysis demanded by AFFH—with HUD-provided data, and structured according to HUD requirements—a suburb could be handing the government evidence to be used in such a lawsuit. Worse, AFFH demands that suburbs account for their demographic disparities, and forces them to choose from a menu of HUD-provided explanations. So if a suburb follows HUD’s lead and formally attributes demographic “imbalances” to its zoning laws, the federal government has what amounts to a signed confession to present in a disparate-impact suit seeking to nullify local zoning regulations. With a (forced) paper “confession” from nearly every suburb in the country in hand, HUD can use the threat of lawsuits to press reluctant municipalities to buy into a regional consortium’s every plan.

Regionalists consider the entire city-suburb system bigoted and illegitimate, so there are few local governments that HUD would not be able to slap with a disparate-impact suit on regionalist premises. It’s unlikely that any suburb has a perfect demographic and “asset” balance in every category. All HUD has to do is decide which suburban governments it wants to lean on. With every locality vulnerable to a suit, every locality can be made to play the regionalist game.

Leftist housing activists worry that AFFH never specifies the penalties a suburb will face for imbalances in its housing patterns. These activists just don’t get it. A thoughtful reading of AFFH, including its extraordinary “dialogue” section, makes it clear that HUD can go after any suburb, any time it wants to. The controlling consideration will be politics. HUD has got to boil the frog slowly enough to prevent him from jumping.

It will take time for the truth to emerge. Just by issuing AFFH, the Obama administration has effectively annexed America’s suburbs to its cities. The old American practice of local self-rule is gone. We’ve switched over to a federally controlled regionalist system. Now it’s strictly a question of how obvious Obama and the Democrats want to make this change — and when they intend to bring the hammer down. The only thing that can restore local control is joint action by a Republican president and a Republican congress to rescind AFFH and restrict the reach of disparate impact litigation. We’ll know after November 8, 2016.

Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/421389/attention-americas-suburbs-you-have-just-been-annexed-stanley-kurtz

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
36 Comments
bb
bb
July 24, 2015 10:27 am

Well I hope those fucking white liberal suburban neighborhoods get it good and hard.I hope get diversity jammed up their asses all the way to Pluto.

bluestem
bluestem
July 24, 2015 10:37 am

My redneck uncle who lives in a gated community in Dallas is not going to like this, John

NickelthroweR
NickelthroweR
July 24, 2015 11:19 am

Greetings,

It would appear, at least on the surface, that this is nothing more than a way to ensure job security by creating endless committees to produce countless reports that will be outdated before anyone can be bothered to read them.

One only need look to the Law of Diminishing Returns to see where this is going.

If a city must take these steps in an attempt to force people to move back into their shitholes or shake down nearby municipalities in order to keep the lights on then it is pretty much Game Over. It means that they have run out of things to try and are now just flailing about.

flash
flash
July 24, 2015 12:05 pm

Ha ha ha…this is almost as entertaining as watching Trump burn down the Republican house. Let’s see how liberal the “check you white privilege” bitches are when Dontavious and his OG posse moves in next door. …schadenfreude bitchez…it’s what”s for supper.

kokoda
kokoda
July 24, 2015 12:14 pm

bb……seems like you have an envy/jealously problem. Do you live in a cockroach infested city shithole that you want everyone else to experience? Your post exudes the worst side of human nature.

bb
bb
July 24, 2015 12:15 pm

Nickel Thrower , that’s one good thing about living on a boat. You can just pick up and sail away. Beingmobile is a blessing.
I see you are coming back to reality. Your not as delusional as I thought.I’m still am to keep an eye on you for your own good.

Thinking about getting a HAM RADIO LICENSE. Any thoughts?

starfcker
starfcker
July 24, 2015 12:16 pm

Every cluster of counties has one of these, south florida calls theirs seven/50, dallas is NCTCOG, tampa is plan hillsborough, etc. The idea is to create a new layer of government beaurocracy between county and state. They are funded by DOT-HUD-DOE. Harder to find on the internet than you might think. Kunstler probably knows a lot about this crap.

Bea Lever
Bea Lever
July 24, 2015 12:17 pm

This is already in full swing in Georgia…

The funding ( from who knows where) is putting Dontavious and the OG posse as Flash would say, into million dollar neighborhoods. Anyone want to hazard a guess as to who is behind the 0% down and no payments newly formed millionaire FSA class. Hmmmm..

starfcker
starfcker
July 24, 2015 12:20 pm

Nickle, the next president is going to face a huge problem. What to to with the non productive underclass. I agree, for the most part, stuff like this will stop after obama is gone, but then what? What do you physically do with them?

starfcker
starfcker
July 24, 2015 12:25 pm

Bea, in nw georgia it is the ARC, I believe. Look it up check it out. Funded by the agencies listed above. Common core for your neighborhood

Bea Lever
Bea Lever
July 24, 2015 12:27 pm

Star

The next president Cankles Clinton will embrace the non-productive underclass as you say with open arms……those are her peeps. She will give them everything their heart desires so her next four years in office will be guaranteed. She will prolly house them next door to you and me.

bb
bb
July 24, 2015 12:31 pm

Kokoda , I don’t have a jealousy , envy Problem. I have a hate problem. When I read and see the damage done by white progressives in government it’s hard for me not to hate the people who vote them into office. These white liberals live in lollipop fantasy land.It is good to see the shit they force upon society to come back on them.I try not to hate but it just gets harder every day.

I used to have sympathy and empathy for blacks but not anymore. They vote these liberals and community organizers into office. Then constantly complain about how bad live is.Well fuck them and white liberals.I’m just sick and tired of whole political class.

dc.sunsets
dc.sunsets
July 24, 2015 12:41 pm

It’s human nature to mistake a bunch of successes for evidence of omnipotence.

“Nothing sets up failure like success.” -David Calderwood, circa 1996

The leftists are DRUNK on their smashing judicially-sponsored stagger to Hard Left Collectivism recently, and they are in the “We believe our own PR” stage of self-destruction.

Wait until this assault on the suburbs hits near north suburbs of Chicago (e.g., zip 60022 near north suburb of Chicago with a median home price $949,000)

Dems will be DESTROYED in future elections as their campaign contributions simply disappear.

dc.sunsets
dc.sunsets
July 24, 2015 12:41 pm

bb, I plan to start attending the local ham radio club meetings to learn enough to buy radios so, no matter what happens, I can coordinate with my kids’ families.

kokoda
kokoda
July 24, 2015 12:47 pm

bb…FYI, I think your original post was unclear. I happen to live in a small town in CT – the suburbs. Most of the ‘white people’ like me are not rich/wealthy and own a McMansion. You might refer to me and most others in my ‘group’ as lower middle class cuz we worked our butts off our entire lives. Grew up very poor and glad I am not in that position now.

bb
bb
July 24, 2015 12:49 pm

Maybe a little diversity will turn some of these liberals into race – realists. They will see just how different black culture is from white European culture. Maybe it will open their eyes.I lived in an apartment complex that was about half black for a while. Blacks as a group are loud ,obnoxious and rude.They will steal everything not bolted down. They fight constantly with each other and anyone else who comes along. The police had to be called out at least once a week. I finally got the Hell out of there. It was my first real wake-up call .I knew something was wrong with blacks that no amount of government aid would ever change.It is best for the white population to stay as far away as they can get from blacks.Blacks bring nothing but misery and destruction.I understand completely why whites had segregation and Jim crow laws.

kokoda
kokoda
July 24, 2015 12:50 pm

bb….you also might want to look at my post on the TBP ‘Who Freed the Slaves”.

bb
bb
July 24, 2015 12:56 pm

DC , that what I’m going to do.As a truck driver I need more then a cb radio. I need to know what’s going on in the big cities. From what I have read on the internet it’s easy to get license .Radio prices are all over the place. Hundreds to thousands of dollars.

kokoda
kokoda
July 24, 2015 1:00 pm

bb…a while back I read an article in a local something and it was about joining a radio club. Almost bit on it but I got busy with other stuff. Advantage is you would obtain knowledge from experienced people and also steer you into buying the right equipment at the price you can afford.

AC
AC
July 24, 2015 1:00 pm

Wait until the killing starts. Shades of pre-breakup Yugoslavia.

If you have never read Chittum’s Civil War Two, it’s not quite too late to do so.

dc.sunsets
dc.sunsets
July 24, 2015 1:17 pm

@bb,

The price for a decent 2-way radio with (if I’m correctly interpreting the data I’ve seen) the ability to access HAM repeaters is pretty low right now.

This is for a two-pack.

I know next to nothing about radio so I figure that before I go off and spend any money, I should learn from knowledgeable people (hence my interest in the local club.) If I were going to start out from scratch in the “gun thing” now I’d do the same thing.

Ironically, my first firearm purchase is still my favorite, closing in on 40 years later. I should do so well with radio…

PS: The low prices for electronics will end when globalism blows up. Sooner or later, inexpensive stuff from China will no longer be available and what replaces it will be, in real terms, vastly more expensive (assuming it’s available at all.)

Anonymous
Anonymous
July 24, 2015 1:32 pm

AC- yep…reads likes prophecy.. Chttum’s #1 recommendations for surviving the shitstorm… stay out of crowds.

read here:
https://docs.google.com/file/d/0BzmzYUZFyTg4ZkF2X0pFSldKWmM/edit?pli=1

Covert into other ebook formats here:
http://calibre-ebook.com/

Bea Lever
Bea Lever
July 24, 2015 2:08 pm

AC +1

Irish
Irish
July 24, 2015 2:45 pm

The key nugget of information from this article is here:

“AFFH obligates any local jurisdiction that receives HUD funding to conduct a detailed analysis of its housing occupancy by race, ethnicity, national origin, English proficiency, and class (among other categories).”

Tell your local representation not to accept HUD funding. Make it the litmus test for your vote and spread the word around your neighborhood and within your social circles. Which is a better outcome — federal “assistance” with onerous requirements, or less money but preservation of local autonomy?

Hollow man
Hollow man
July 24, 2015 3:37 pm

Communists working toward a shared goal. Doing it without much resistance from the American people too.

starfcker
starfcker
July 24, 2015 5:36 pm

Irish, good catch. My doomstead plan revolves around that exact tidbit.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
July 24, 2015 5:53 pm

Not sure what is meant by “HUD funding”. As far as how it works here in Minneapolis/ St Paul, yeah we’ve had an (unelected) “Metro Council” for years and they get their hand is most development issues. If they’re extracting money from suburbs, it’s hard to tell, since the tax rate on homes in Minneapolis is still a lot higher than in an adjoining suburb like Edina. I’m not saying there isn’t danger in these do-gooder schemes, but things don’t seem any different here than in other cities, from what I can tell. People with fucked up social pathologies will fuck up any area they dominate, no matter how much or how little money is spent there. Minneapolis Public Schools spend ~ $23k per K-12 student / year – much more than, say, Philly and the outcomes are similar.

Jane
Jane
July 24, 2015 7:52 pm

We’ve been warned about the word “regionalist”. It’s communism.

starfcker
starfcker
July 24, 2015 8:02 pm

the idea of regionalism is simple. if you want to run everything from Washington DC, it would be much easier to have regional control as opposed to having to deal with every little county and city on the map

Anonymous
Anonymous
July 24, 2015 8:22 pm
NickelthroweR
NickelthroweR
July 25, 2015 1:05 am

@Starfcker

Greetings,

You asked as to what we should do with the FSA.

In so far as I can tell, poverty and dependency has been with us as long as there have been authors to write about it. It would appear, too, that about 20 to 25% of the people of any given community at any given time over the last few thousand years were poor. What was done for or to them was this:

Slavery – the poor could be rounded up and either sold into slavery or used by the community (State) to labor in exchange for food but doing the worst possible work imaginable.

Begging – begging was tolerated so long as the person doing the begging had good reason to do so. For example, a blind person without family would be allowed to beg. An able bodied person caught begging would be tied up and flogged.

Starvation –

starfcker
starfcker
July 25, 2015 2:55 am

Nickle, yours is southern cali association of gubbermints (SCAG). All of these regional deals promise local choice and control, amazingly, every single one eventually decides it needs more midrises packed with SNAP neegrows. Your county is a member. http://www.scag.ca.gov/Pages/default.aspx

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
July 25, 2015 3:24 am

This is one reason why you should –>never<– reply to the census. Information is the most valuable commodity on the planet. Trouble is you never know how it will be valued or by who.

In light of recent developments it might not be a bad idea for all whites to fill it out but report as a minority instead of white. If we all reply as hispanic or black next time that would really fuck up their plans!

Vinman
Vinman
May 19, 2018 1:12 am

White flight, question, where do we run to, after this….?