Beverly Brown Ruggia Financial Justice Program Director | Official Website
+ Legislature
L. E. Bushouse | Jun 28, 2024

New law aims to eliminate discriminatory practices in home appraisals

NEWARK – The New Jersey Institute for Social Justice, Fair Share Housing Center, New Jersey Citizen Action, and the Housing Community Development Network of New Jersey today praised the passage of a bill aimed at eliminating discrimination in home appraisals.

After previous passage in the Senate, the Assembly voted today in favor of S1311/A2280, which codifies the prohibition of discriminatory practices in real estate appraisals in New Jersey and requires appraisers to complete anti-bias training.

Discrimination in housing appraisals has been identified as a factor that strips wealth from Black communities and other communities of color who have historically been denied equal lending opportunities, public subsidies, and other supports that white communities have used to build wealth through homeownership. With homeownership being a primary driver of wealth, this kind of discrimination contributes directly to New Jersey’s significant racial wealth gap: a $300,000 disparity in median wealth between Black and white households.

The bill now goes to Gov. Murphy for his signature.

Below are statements from the Social Justice Advocates:

“Black families in New Jersey already face far too many barriers to acquiring generational wealth - they should not have to fear that their homes will be appraised at substantially lower values than if a white family stood in for the appraisal,” said Laura Sullivan, Director of the Economic Justice Program at the New Jersey Institute for Social Justice. “This legislation goes a long way in ensuring that the appraisal process is fair by providing necessary tools to tackle discrimination. We appreciate the work of Sen. Nellie Pou and Asw. Yvonne Lopez in making this a reality.”

“Holding appraisers accountable for discrimination is one of the ways we must address New Jersey’s racial wealth gap,” said Alex Staropoli, Managing Director of External Affairs at Fair Share Housing Center. “For most homeowners, their house is their most valuable asset. Appraisal bias has been robbing Black families of hard-won equity for decades — this is an important step toward repairing those multi-generational harms.”

"We applaud state lawmakers for passing legislation that gives New Jersey authorities more enforcement tools to hold appraisers accountable when they are guilty of discrimination," said Beverly Brown Ruggia, New Jersey Citizen Action Financial Justice Program Director. "Appraisal discrimination is a modern-day form of redlining that perpetuates the staggering racial gap in median wealth between Black and White families in the state of over $300,000 and hurts property values for entire communities. The legislation will help ensure that homes in communities of color are properly valued and that all homeowners will have access to the historically proven pathway to generational wealth."

“Homeownership is the single most direct way families and individuals can create and maintain wealth,” said Staci Berger, President and CEO, Housing Community Development Network of NJ. “With this bill and with the governor’s signature, we have an unprecedented opportunity to address NJ’s radical wealth gap, which is the widest in our country. We applaud the sponsors and leadership for moving this bill forward and helping mitigate systemic racism preventing Black and Brown families from achieving benefits like growing generational wealth.”

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Organizations in this story