Current:Home > ScamsA Minnesota city will rewrite an anti-crime law seen as harming mentally ill residents -Global Finance Compass
A Minnesota city will rewrite an anti-crime law seen as harming mentally ill residents
View
Date:2025-04-27 13:06:54
A Minnesota city has agreed not to disclose private medical information about renters with mental health issues and to pay $175,000 to resolve a complaint from the federal government that the city discriminated against mentally ill residents in enforcing an anti-crime law.
The U.S. Department of Justice on Tuesday announced its agreement with the city of Anoka, a medium-sized suburb of Minneapolis. It addresses allegations that the city violated the federal Americans with Disabilities Act by improperly pressuring landlords to evict tenants with mental health issues over multiple police or emergency calls to their addresses. The DOJ also filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday against the city, but that case won’t go forward if a judge approves the agreement.
The department told the city in a letter in November that an investigation showed illegal discrimination in enforcing a “crime-free” housing ordinance allowing the city to fine or deny rental licenses to landlords whose properties are deemed a nuisance or a source of criminal activity. In at least 780 cases from 2018 through mid-2023, the city issued weekly reports to landlords sharing details about people’s mental health crises and even how some tried to kill themselves, the DOJ said.
DOJ officials described the November letter as a first-of-its-kind finding of discrimination against people with mental health disabilities from one of the hundreds of anti-crime ordinances enacted by cities across the U.S. since the early 1990s. Housing and civil liberties advocates have long argued that those policies are enforced more harshly in poor neighborhoods and against people of color.
“Anoka’s so-called ‘crime-free’ housing program does not protect public safety but rather risks lives by discouraging people with disabilities and their loved ones from calling for help when needed most,” Assistant U.S. Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division, said in a statement.
Anoka, with about 18,000 residents, is about 20 miles (32 kilometers) northwest of Minneapolis, and has been home to a state psychiatric hospital for more than 100 years.
The city’s mayor and its attorney did not immediately respond to email and phone messages seeking comment, but the agreement said the city denied wrongdoing and the allegations in the November letter and the lawsuit filed Tuesday.
“However, the City desires to avoid any litigation,” the agreement said, adding that Anoka wanted to ensure that its policies comply with both the ADA and federal fair housing laws.
The city’s $175,000 payment will cover compensation for people the DOJ identifies as having been harmed by Anoka’s enforcement of its anti-crime ordinance.
The city will have 30 days to revise its anti-crime housing ordinance, which allows the Anoka to suspend a landlord’s rental license if there are more than four “nuisance” calls to an address in a year. A nuisance call involves “disorderly conduct,” such as criminal activity and acts jeopardizing others, but also “unfounded calls to police” and allowing a “physically offensive condition,” without defining those further.
Under the agreement, the city cannot treat mental health-related calls to an address as nuisance calls, and it is required to notify both a renter and landlord whenever a call for another reason is deemed a nuisance call, giving them information about how to appeal.
veryGood! (63654)
Related
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Ohio State fires men's basketball coach Chris Holtmann in middle of his seventh season
- A dinosaur-like snapping turtle named Fluffy found in U.K. thousands of miles from native U.S. home
- NYC trial scrutinizing lavish NRA spending under Wayne LaPierre nears a close
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- A man died from Alaskapox last month. Here's what we know about the virus
- North Dakota lieutenant governor launches gubernatorial bid against congressman
- Soccer star Megan Rapinoe criticized those who celebrated her career-ending injury
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- 12 Epstein accusers sue the FBI for allegedly failing to protect them
Ranking
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- MLB Network celebrates career of Joe Buck in latest 'Sounds of Baseball' episode
- Virginia Utilities Seek Unbridled Rate Adjustments for Unproven Small Modular Nuclear Reactors in Two New Bills
- A former South Dakota attorney general urges the state Supreme Court to let him keep his law license
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- How Gigi Hadid and Bradley Cooper Spent Their First Valentine's Day Together
- State agency in Maine rejects Canadian mining company’s rezoning application
- Should the CDC cut the 5-day COVID-19 isolation guidelines? Experts weigh in.
Recommendation
Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
Key points of AP report into missed red flags surrounding accused US diplomat-turned-Cuban spy
Snoop Dogg creates his own Paris Summer Olympics TV reporter title: 'Just call me the OG'
Louisiana lawmaker proposes adding nitrogen gas and electrocution to the state’s execution methods
Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
American Idol Alum Alex Miller’s Tour Bus Involved in Fatal Crash
Could a shark have impregnated a stingray at a North Carolina aquarium? What one expert says
North Dakota takes federal government to trial over costs to police Dakota Access Pipeline protests