Mortgage company will pay over $8M to resolve lending discrimination
allegations
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[October 16, 2024] BIRMINGHAM,
Ala. (AP) — A mortgage company accused of engaging in a pattern of
lending discrimination by redlining predominantly Black neighborhoods in
Alabama has agreed to pay $8 million plus a nearly $2 million civil
penalty to resolve the allegations, federal officials said Tuesday.
Redlining is an illegal practice by which lenders avoid providing credit
to people in specific areas because of the race, color, or national
origin of residents in those communities, the U.S. Department of Justice
said in a news release
The Justice Department and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
allege that mortgage lender Fairway illegally redlined Black
neighborhoods in Birmingham through its marketing and sales actions, and
discouraged residents from applying for mortgage loans.
The settlement requires Fairway to provide $7 million for a loan subsidy
program to offer affordable home purchase, refinance and home
improvement loans in Birmingham's majority-Black neighborhoods, invest
an additional $1 million in programs to support that loan subsidy fund,
and pay a $1.9 million civil penalty to the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau's victims relief fund.
Fairway is a non-depository mortgage company headquartered in Madison,
Wisconsin. In the Birmingham area, Fairway operates under the trade name
MortgageBanc.
While Fairway claimed to serve Birmingham's entire metropolitan area, it
concentrated all its retail loan offices in majority-white areas,
directed less than 3% of its direct mail advertising to consumers in
majority-Black areas and for years discouraged homeownership in
majority-Black areas by generating loan applications at a rate far below
its peer institutions, according to the news release.
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Attorney General Merrick B. Garland
said the settlement will “help ensure that future generations of
Americans inherit a legacy of home ownership that they too often
have been denied.”
“This case is a reminder that redlining is not a relic of the past,
and the Justice Department will continue to work urgently to combat
lending discrimination wherever it arises and to secure relief for
the communities harmed by it,” he said.
Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke, of the Justice
Department's Civil Rights Division, said the settlement will give
Birmingham's Black neighborhoods “the access to credit they have
long been denied and increase opportunities for homeownership and
generational wealth.”
“This settlement makes clear our intent to uproot modern-day
redlining in every corner of the county, including the deep South,”
she said.
The settlement marks the Justice Department's 15th redlining
settlement in three years. Under its Combating Redlining Initiative,
the agency said it has secured a “historic amount of relief that is
expected to generate over $1 billion in investment in communities of
color in places such as Houston, Memphis, Los Angeles, Philadelphia
and Birmingham.”
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