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Immigrant Homebuyers See Bias Against Relatives Sharing The Same Roof
Wall Street Journal | Jan 10, 2002 | Jonathan Kaufman

Posted on 01/10/2002 4:53:50 AM PST by tom paine 2

ELGIN, Ill. -- Ted and Brigid Trimble say they were happy when Jose Deanda, a Mexican immigrant, moved in next door four years ago. The house had been vacant for a year. Mr. Deanda and his wife had a small child with a baby on the way, potential playmates for the Trimbles' boys.

Then the Trimbles discovered how Mr. Deanda was paying the mortgage for the small two-family house. Downstairs was Mr. Deanda's immediate family of four. The two-bedroom flat upstairs housed his mother, two brothers, a sister and sister-in-law. Five men Mr. Deanda said were his nephews moved into the basement. Though zoned for six people, the home contained 14.

The Trimbles complained to Mr. Deanda about loud music blaring from the house and cars being fixed in the driveway. Mr. Deanda said the Trimbles' dog barked all the time. The Trimbles told housing inspectors that Mr. Deanda's house was overcrowded. Mr. Deanda said that if the police bothered him, he would file a discrimination lawsuit. The Trimbles put up a wooden fence.

In a time-honored American tradition, Hispanic immigrants are often doubling up and pooling resources to buy homes. But unlike earlier generations of immigrants who packed together in urban tenements, many Hispanics are heading straight to suburban communities, looking for better schools and safer streets. They are aided by real-estate agents eager to tap into the fast-growing Hispanic housing market and by banks and mortgage companies looking to boost their lending to minorities.

But the immigrants' drive for upward mobility is clashing with the suburban ideal of quiet streets and single-family homes, and in some places opening up a racially charged class war.

"Some people have this attitude, 'It's my house and I can do whatever I want,' " says Mrs. Trimble, who plans to go back to school and become an elementary-school teacher. "But when that happens, you no longer have a community -- you have a very unfriendly neighborhood."

'I Like to Get Along'

On the other side of the fence, Mr. Deanda, a supervisor at a furniture factory, says: "I like to get along with everyone, but you can't do that with some people. Some people don't like Hispanic people." Besides, he says, "I'm not going to throw my mom and brother on the street."

The Virginia Senate last year passed a bill permitting Fairfax County, which was seeing an influx of Hispanic families, to ban sleeping in any room except bedrooms. The bill was subsequently withdrawn amid charges that it was anti-immigrant. Rolling Meadows, another Chicago suburb, changed the definition of "family" in its zoning code to reduce the number of unrelated adults who can legally live together in a single family home to three from four.

Here in Elgin, an old industrial town outside Chicago that has seen its fortunes improve in recent years, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development charges that local housing inspectors are discriminating against Hispanic homeowners and renters. The agency says inspectors are conducting predawn raids looking for overcrowded conditions, but they disproportionately target Hispanics with relatives or others living in converted basements and attics. "Guilt ... is often assumed" by Elgin housing inspectors when dealing with Hispanics, concludes a HUD report issued in August 2000. The Justice Department's civil-rights division is reviewing 23 housing-discrimination complaints by Hispanics against the city and could decide to sue Elgin over its alleged mistreatment of Hispanic residents. The city and federal officials are meeting to try to resolve the dispute.

Enforcing Codes

But where HUD and many Hispanics see discrimination, Elgin city officials and many white residents say enforcing housing codes is necessary to ensure health and safety. Fires are a threat when houses are overcrowded or basements and attics lack a quick means of escape. In 1995, a three-year-old boy and his parents died when fire raced through their Elgin basement apartment, which had only one exit. Codes can also help neighborhoods from decaying and property values from declining.

"If I'm going to sink $30,000 into my house, I want to know my neighborhood is going to stay nice," says Sheri Buttstadt, who is renovating her house in one of Elgin's reviving historic neighborhoods. "If you can barely afford the mortgage, you don't have money to fix the roof or the screen door."

Hispanics lead the surge of immigrants seeking homes in the suburbs. The most popular surname among home buyers in California in 2000 was Garcia -- joined in the state's top 10 by Lopez, Martinez, Hernandez, Rodriguez and Gonzalez. More than 41% of the immigrant population in the Chicago area now lives in the suburbs, up from 33% in 1970. Hispanics are flocking to suburbs like Elgin because they offer service jobs in hotels and restaurants and other job opportunities such as landscaping.

Banks and mortgage lenders, under pressure from the Community Reinvestment Act, are boosting loans to low- and moderate-income home buyers, especially striving immigrants. Five years ago, World Savings & Loan, a unit of Golden West Financial of Oakland, Calif., started opening branches in the suburbs around Chicago. The bank established a special "community loan program" targeted at low-income minorities.

Last year, Lee Ann McLaughlin, a loan officer who serves Elgin, approved more than 200 loans to low-income minorities, up from 22 five years earlier. Three-quarters were to Hispanics pooling resources to buy homes, say Ms. McLaughlin. She says her foreclosure rate hasn't changed, remaining "well below" 1%.

Ms. McLaughlin recently approved a loan for a two-bedroom condominium that will house eight people. She discounts complaints by some whites in Elgin that the eagerness of mortgage lenders and real-estate agents to land Hispanic clients is fostering overcrowding.

"The more affluent we become, we tend to forget where we came from," she says, "I grew up in a four-bedroom farmhouse in Ohio with my grandparents, my mother, two uncles, a brother and a sister."

Moving Up on Returnables

After 11 years renting an apartment behind a Chinese restaurant in Duarte, Calif., Maximiliano Garcia moved into a four-bedroom, $150,000 house in a nicer residential area of the Los Angeles suburb. The mortgage is $1,200 a month, yet the 65-year-old Mexican immigrant earns just $300 a month collecting returnable bottles and cans.

As night falls and people come home from work, the economics of the Garcia household become clear. A young factory worker, his wife and their two young girls stop by the kitchen to get a snack. They rent two rooms at the back of the house. Mr. Garcia's 22-year-old son, Javier, who sells truck accessories, rents a bedroom off the living room. Another immigrant factory worker slips wordlessly past the bouquet of artificial red roses on the living-room coffee table into the bedroom next to Javier's. Finally, there's Maria Nevin, who peddles American clothes across the border in Mexico. She sleeps on an air mattress in the living room. Nine people live in Mr. Garcia's four-bedroom house. Everyone pays cash to Mr. Garcia, who gives the money to another son, a worker in a salvage yard, who then writes a check to the mortgage company.

"If everyone was separate, there would be no house," says Mr. Garcia with a smile.

Such arrangements don't trouble Duarte city officials in this racially mixed city. They say it's common for Hispanic homeowners to rent out rooms to relatives and strangers to meet the mortgage. "It's a traditional way of reaching homeownership," says Duarte city planner Steven Sizemore.

But in Elgin, the influx of Hispanics doubling-up is pitting neighbor against neighbor, whites against Hispanics.

An old industrial town northwest of Chicago, Elgin declined in the 1970s and 1980s. Starting in the 1990s, housing prices rose, prompted by a renewed interest in Elgin's many historic homes and a downtown renaissance aided by the opening of a riverboat casino in 1994. The city expanded its housing-code enforcement division to eight staffers from two and began cracking down on violations more vigorously.

At the same time, Hispanic home-buyers began flocking to the city, drawn by relatively low home prices and plentiful service jobs. Since 1990, Elgin's population has increased by 10,000 to 95,000. The proportion of Hispanic residents has grown from 19% to 34%. Hispanic homeowners say housing officials have applied the local codes much more vigorously to them than to white homeowners.

'My House Is Open'

Three years ago, Jose Lara and his wife bought a three-bedroom home in one of Elgin's neighborhoods, attracted by the two bedrooms the previous, white owner had added in a converted basement. Mr. Lara installed a bathroom in the spacious attic, carpeted the floors and invited his sister-in-law and two nephews to move into the attic. "My house is open to my relatives," he says. "I give them a helping hand."

Eight months later, after a complaint from a white neighbor, Elgin housing inspectors came by at 6 a.m. and declared that the bedrooms in both attic and basement violated city building standards -- the ceiling was three inches lower than allowed in the basement and the attic stairway was too small for a safe exit. The bathrooms and some electrical wiring had also been installed without proper permits. Mr. Lara's relatives moved out.

At night, Mr. Lara says, he sometimes goes up to his now vacant attic, looks out the window and sees the attics of white neighbors with people sleeping inside.

"The city doesn't want Latinos," says Mr. Lara. "I see my white neighbors sleeping in their attics. Why can't I use my attic?" He says he'd consider leaving Elgin, but his wife has family here.

Elgin city officials say they don't discriminate between Hispanic and white homeowners and are simply enforcing national housing codes. "It's a public health and safety issue," says the city's corporation counsel, William Cogley. Inspectors tend to find out about violations through complaints of neighbors, city officials say.

The Trimbles know about the code issues. When they bought their Prairie-style house 14 years ago for $76,000, it was advertised as a five-bedroom house. But two of those bedrooms were in the basement and so violated housing codes. The Trimbles converted the basement rooms to a family room and workshop, redid the kitchen, installed new electricity and plumbing and stripped much of the paint to reveal period details. They estimate their house today is worth $150,000.

Seeking the Real World

The Trimbles say they moved to Elgin because they wanted an affordable suburban neighborhood that wasn't all white. "We didn't want our kids growing up in an unreal world," Mrs. Trimble says. At the time, the neighborhood was predominantly white, with a smattering of blacks and Hispanics. Over the years, more and more Hispanics have moved in, and the Trimbles say their neighborhood is now filled with large Hispanic families and illegal boarders who crowd the streets with cars and significantly increase the amount of traffic on the street.

But the crime rate in Elgin has dropped 36% since 1995. Far from depressing housing prices, real-estate agents say the Hispanic demand has contributed to an overall rise. In the third quarter of 2001, housing prices in Elgin jumped 9.3% from the year-earlier period, more than twice the rate for Illinois as a whole. The value of their house has doubled since the Trimbles bought it in the 1980s.

"I'm not prejudiced," says Mr. Trimble, a mechanic with United Air Lines. "I just expect everyone to play by the same rules."

Banks and government-backed mortgage programs "are giving mortgages to people who can't afford them," says Mrs. Trimble. "It's gotten to the point where some people see owning a house as a right. But it's a privilege to own a house, not a right."

Mr. Deanda agreed to stop renting out his basement soon after housing inspectors came to his house. A few months later, one of his upstairs brothers bought his own house a few blocks away and took his mother and other relatives to live with him and help with the mortgage. The upstairs apartment is now occupied by another brother and his wife.

Mr. Deanda reckons that his house, which he bought for $96,000, has appreciated in value to $150,000 in the past four years. He just expanded a downstairs bedroom to accommodate his new baby, born in September. With the two relatives upstairs, the baby puts the house at its legal occupancy limit of six. Mr. Deanda says he would welcome other relatives to move in if they needed his help.

"I like the neighborhood," he says. "Why am I going to

leave?" Write to Jonathan Kaufman at jonathan.kaufman@wsj.com


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To: one_particular_harbour
I'm a proud libertarian, Spanish-speaking, friend of diversity, but even I think there has to be some middle ground. Some good points have been made here.

Yes, a man's house is his castle, but it's not a soverign nation. You still have to comply with the law. What if one of the homeowners started building wood and tin shanties in the backyard to accomodate even more renters. Would that be acceptable? I think a reasonable solution would be zoning laws that permit one resident per X number of square feet in the house.

Yes, housing prices are going up now, because the neighborhood has not yet felt the full impact of the influx and demand is high because the neighborhood is permitting the influx for now.

Eventually, when broken cars and plastic toys pile up in yards and streets, kids and animals play in the road, and houses fall into disrepair, the property values will plummet, leaving owners owing more on a mortgage than their property is worth.

I know, I've witnessed it firsthand.

41 posted on 01/10/2002 6:04:40 AM PST by tdadams
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To: Valin
"This is nothing new. "

You are correct, but it is something that has become forgotten.

42 posted on 01/10/2002 6:05:14 AM PST by Rebelbase
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Comment #43 Removed by Moderator

To: tdadams
Another thing to consider is public schools which are usually funded primarily by property taxes. People cramming 15 kids into a three bedroom house are paying the same property tax that a family with two or three kids pay. Some may consider this a minor point, but it's still another way your average citizen is getting ripped off.
44 posted on 01/10/2002 6:13:26 AM PST by Dakmar
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To: tom paine 2
I'm a live and let live type of guy, but at some point, lines do get crossed. One of my best friends since childhood has a next door neighbor in an affluent neighborhood like this. He said it started out just fine. The people who bought the house next to him were fine, hard-working mexican immigrants, and owned a resteraunt. It was a man and wife and their two children to start out with. Everything was fine for a year or so, with the immigrant family taking pride in their home, and keeping the house and yard in great shape. One day, "Larry" (my friend) said he started to notice quite a bit of cars coming and going and thought it odd. The next thing he knew, the family was adding on an addition that nearly doubled the size of the original house. The next step was when the family added a (I kid you not) parking lot in the back of the house. "Larry" and several of his neighbors started to become concerned after a string of car burgularies happened. When zoning inspectors showed up, there were 29 people living in that house, and all but 4 were illegal! These people had run seriously afoul of the zoning laws. This guy had the same mentality of "it's my house, I can do what I want". He is now in danger of losing the house entirely. Zoning laws exist for ALL members of a community, and this was an example of the laws working. If the guy wanted to do this, he should have gone out in the county where no zoning laws existed and done it. You start messing with property values, and you are going to ruffle some feathers!
45 posted on 01/10/2002 6:14:46 AM PST by Space Wrangler
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To: tom paine 2
In a time-honored American tradition, Hispanic immigrants are often doubling up and pooling resources to buy homes.

The WSJ musta meant time honored CENTRAL American tradition.

46 posted on 01/10/2002 6:18:01 AM PST by skeeter
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To: Valin
This is nothing new.

Neither is smallpox, but I don't want it either.

47 posted on 01/10/2002 6:21:53 AM PST by buccaneer81
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To: one_particular_harbour
I looked very carefully at this article, and didn't notice drug labs, whorehouses or slave markets mentioned.

Do they need to be?
Your statement that home ownership should be unrestricted was not qualified in any way.
Are you suggesting all building code and zoning laws should be ignored? or just the PC ones that you object to?

48 posted on 01/10/2002 6:23:18 AM PST by Publius6961
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Comment #49 Removed by Moderator

To: one_particular_harbour
I look at it like this - as you move up, the amount of the crap that you have to tolerate from neighbors goes down.

I live in a fairly upscale area. We have some Hispanic families and they are mostly professionals. One Saturday a while ago, an Hispanic neighbor about 5 houses down the way was out using a hoe to work his planters. He was using a hoe with a very short handle. I had to laugh. I was in the Sacramento valley in the 60's and 70's when Ceaser Chavez was protesting farm workers using short handled hoes. Now this guy lives in a very expensive house and uses a short handle hoe on weekends. Oh well.

50 posted on 01/10/2002 6:27:48 AM PST by Random Access
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To: Dakmar
But don't we have a right to expect that zonig ordinances will be enforced when we buy a home? Can I buy a house next to yours and set up an auto salvage operation in my yard?

And I plan on being buried in my front yard. Gonna put up a great big crypt with my eulogy carved in granite.

Capital "L" libertarians are insane.

51 posted on 01/10/2002 6:27:51 AM PST by skeeter
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To: Eaker
"No profiling here, just facts.

Hey, you sound like Lt. Friday. Just the facts!

Great line. When will we wake up! Our politicians are too blame.

They have a duty to protect our country from all threats outside and within. But, Yet they do nothing!

52 posted on 01/10/2002 6:28:29 AM PST by Osprey
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Comment #53 Removed by Moderator

To: tom paine 2
""Then the Trimbles discovered how Mr. Deanda was paying the mortgage for the small two-family house. Downstairs was Mr. Deanda's immediate family of four. The two-bedroom flat upstairs housed his mother, two brothers, a sister and sister-in-law. Five men Mr. Deanda said were his nephews moved into the basement. Though zoned for six people, the home contained ""

This is EXACTLY how Harlem went from a working class neighborhood to a slum. Pick up any history book and read and weep!!
54 posted on 01/10/2002 6:30:17 AM PST by 1 FELLOW FREEPER
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To: one_particular_harbour
No one has the "right" to devalue ANOTHERS property, hence zoning laws. They knew (or should have known) what those zoning laws were before they moved in. Now they cry "racism" when the LAW is enforced.

Zoning laws are city/county enforced. Landowners want them because they protect their investments. If they didn't want them, they would vote in politicians who would repeal them. Strict zoning is a good thing, IMO.

55 posted on 01/10/2002 6:31:30 AM PST by GuillermoX
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To: one_particular_harbour
Violations by the connected and monied are ignored all the time (shabby new constructions, substandard work and materials on gobment jobs, utility corner cutting) -

If what you list is true, seems to me then that a lot of laws are being violated and not being prosecuted. That is just as unacceptable.
You present the classic Clinton defense of "everybody does it".
Does this mean bank robbery and rape should be shrugged off because some criminals get away with it?

56 posted on 01/10/2002 6:34:16 AM PST by Publius6961
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To: tom paine 2
A friend of mine built a beautiful new home in a gated community in Jacksonville Fl. People bought the home next door. They were from Puerto Rico. About 20 or 25 moved in with dogs and kids and cars and now the place looks like a typical Puerto Rican slum. The govt. helped them get the house. My buddy moved and left the house at a great loss. I know I don't want a community moving in next door. Especially a group that plays loud bad samba music at all hours. And this isn't as bad as it could be. I mean it could have been French Canadians.
57 posted on 01/10/2002 6:47:16 AM PST by Joe Boucher
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To: tom paine 2
The Trimbles say they moved to Elgin because they wanted an affordable suburban neighborhood that wasn't all white.

I don't have much to say about this article except this: what a curious criterion!

58 posted on 01/10/2002 6:57:26 AM PST by B Knotts
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To: Joe Boucher
My buddy moved and left the house at a great loss.

This is the infuriating thing about this situation-- people having to sell at a loss. Not to mention the hassle, expense, etc. of being driven out of your neighborhood. My own neighborhood has been flooded with illegals in recent years, and I am now working two jobs to afford to move out. I don't care what race my neighbors are, but I want to live amongst people who share my work ethic, my values, and my standards of what a good neighbor is! A good neighbor is clean, considerate, quiet and law-abiding. Is that too much to ask for?

Especially a group that plays loud bad samba music at all hours.

Loud music was mentioned in the article. Where I live, they blast their mariachi music (and I mean BLAST-- sometimes they literally have live bands in their back yards!) at all hours of the night. I'm talking till 2:00, 3:00 in the morning, weekends, weeknights, doesn't matter. Not to mention the junky cars parked in the front lawns, abandoned shopping carts, graffiti, day laborers on the corners urinating openly and harassing women who walk by, cars stolen or broken into, traffic with crazy, unlicensed, uninsured drivers, overcrowded schools, etc., etc., etc. Soon coming to a neighborhood near you!

59 posted on 01/10/2002 7:06:56 AM PST by Nea Wood
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To: Cleburne
You want to make it illegal to sleep outside of your bedroom? To have more than six people in your home? Oh man, I don't know why the founders didn't put that in the Constitution, they should have known the horrors of these things! How did we ever survive 200 years...

"It cannot have escaped those who have attended with candor to the arguments employed against the extensive powers of the government, that the authors of them have very little considered how far these powers were necessary means of attaining a necessary end. They have chosen rather to dwell on the inconveniences which must be unavoidably blended with all political advantages; and on the possible abuses which must be incident to every power or trust, of which a beneficial use can be made. This method of handling the subject cannot impose on the good sense of the people of America. It may display the subtlety of the writer; it may open a boundless field for rhetoric and declamation; it may inflame the passions of the unthinking, and may confirm the prejudices of the misthinking: but cool and candid people will at once reflect, that the purest of human blessings must have a portion of alloy in them; that the choice must always be made, if not of the lesser evil, at least of the greater, not the perfect, good; and that in every political institution, a power to advance the public happiness involves a discretion which may be misapplied and abused. They will see, therefore, that in all cases where power is to be conferred, the point first to be decided is, whether such a power be necessary to the public good; as the next will be, in case of an affirmative decision, to guard as effectually as possible against a perversion of the power to the public detriment." James Madison, FEDERALIST No. 41

"Private property ... is a Creature of Society, and is subject to the Calls of that Society, whenever its Necessities shall require it, even to its last Farthing, its contributors therefore to the public Exigencies are not to be considered a Benefit on the Public, entitling the Contributors to the Distinctions of Honor and Power, but as the Return of an Obligation previously received, or as payment for a just Debt." Benjamin Franklin

"While it is a moot question whether the origin of any kind of property is derived from Nature at all ... it is considered by those who have seriously considered the subject, that no one has, of natural right, a separate property in an acre of land ... Stable ownership is the gift of social law, and is given late in the progress of society." Thomas Jefferson

60 posted on 01/10/2002 7:10:01 AM PST by skeeter
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