REDLINING

A banking and real estate strategy that discouraged new construction, investment, and mortgage lending in Black neighborhoods, with the goal of ensuring that segregated neighborhoods remained segregated.

Key Takeaways:

 

  • The patterns of segregation visible in redlining maps actually preceded them; redlining maps made these patterns enduring by attaching new, government-backed and more accessible long-term and low-down-payment mortgages to segregation as the nation became a nation that mostly consisted of homeowners after the New Deal.
  • Even after racially restrictive covenants once critical to federal underwriting standards were declared illegal by the Supreme Court, the agency continued to systematically discriminate against Black neighborhoods and Black homebuyers on a similar basis well into and after the 1960s. For this reason, redlining maps strongly correlate to patterns of neighborhood inequality and segregation visible today.

Multiple historians have done extensive work documenting the close relationship between the National Association of Real Estate Boards and the establishment of various federal housing programs under the New Deal during the 1930s. Ernest Fisher, H. Morton Bodfish, and Frederick Babcock, for example, all learned the art of discriminatory real estate appraisal while working as researchers associated with the NAREB. All, ultimately, became key players in the newly created Home Owners’ Loan Corporation and Federal Housing Administration responsible for the federal government’s first major intervention in the U.S. housing market through programs like the redlining maps and the FHA’s Underwriting Manual.