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Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing (AFFH)

The Fair Housing Act requires HUD and its recipients of federal financial assistance to do more than simply not discriminate; they must take meaningful actions to overcome patterns of segregation and foster inclusive communities.

AFFH NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULEMAKING

On February 9, 2023, HUD published in the Federal Register a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) entitled “Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing”. The proposed rule would faithfully implement the Fair Housing Act’s statutory mandate to affirmatively further fair housing (AFFH), which directs HUD to ensure that the agency and its program participants proactively take meaningful actions to overcome patterns of segregation, promote fair housing choice, eliminate disparities in opportunities, and foster inclusive communities free from discrimination. The public comment period ended on April 24, 2023. HUD will take the upcoming months to review public comments before making revisions and finalizing the rule. The public can check this webpage or at regulations.gov for the final version.

The AFFH Interim Final Rule remains in effect during proposed rulemaking.

AFFH NPRM Briefing

HUD recorded a virtual briefing about the AFFH Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM). This comprehensive briefing covers the main components of the proposed rule and presents supplementary information that focuses on planning by Community Planning and Development program participants, planning by Public and Indian Housing program participants, and engagement by residents and community members.

Please use the links below to view the recorded briefing in English and Spanish:

American Sign Language interpretation is available.


What is AFFH?

Who must comply?

How does HUD implement the AFFH Mandate?

Why is AFFH part of the Fair Housing Act?

What is the legacy of the AFFH Mandate?

Resources

WHAT IS AFFH?

Title VIII of the Civil Rights Act of 1968, known as the Fair Housing Act, requires HUD and recipients of federal funds from HUD to affirmatively further the policies and purposes of the Fair Housing Act, also known as “affirmatively further fair housing” or “AFFH.” The obligation to affirmatively further fair housing requires recipients of HUD funds to take meaningful actions, in addition to combating discrimination, that overcome patterns of segregation and foster inclusive communities free from barriers that restrict access to opportunity based on protected characteristics, which are:

Race

Color

National origin

Religion

Sex (including gender identity and sexual orientation)

Familial status

Disability

Generally, in administering programs and activities relating to housing and community development, the federal government, HUD, and its recipients must:

  • Determine who lacks access to opportunity and address any inequity among protected class groups
  • Promote integration and reduce segregation
  • Transform racially or ethnically concentrated areas of poverty into areas of opportunity

WHO MUST COMPLY?

In general, the AFFH mandate applies to HUD and its grantees, as well as all executive agencies and departments of the federal government, and relates to the administration of any program or activity relating to housing and urban development.

HOW DOES HUD IMPLEMENT THE AFFH MANDATE?

On February 9, 2023, HUD published in the Federal Register a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) entitled “Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing”. During proposed rulemaking, the AFFH Interim Final Rule (IFR) remains in effect.

For decades, HUD has required recipients of federal financial assistance such as States, local governments, insular areas, and PHAs (program participants) to engage in fair housing planning. Such planning has previously consisted of the Analysis of Impediments to Fair Housing Choice and the Assessment of Fair Housing and was done in connection with other types of planning required by program requirements, such as the consolidated plan, annual action plan, and PHA plan.

HUD implements the AFFH mandate in other ways, such as through its collection of certifications from program participants, provisions regarding program design in its notices of funding opportunity (NOFOs), affirmative fair housing marketing and advertising requirements, and enforcement of site and neighborhood standards.

HUD’s 2021 Interim Final Rule, “Restoring Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing Definitions and Certifications,” requires program participants to submit certifications that they will affirmatively further fair housing in connection with their consolidated plans, annual action plans, and PHA plans.  In order to support these certifications, the IFR creates a voluntary fair housing planning process for which HUD will provide technical assistance and support.

The IFR also rescinded the 2020 Preserving Communities and Neighborhood Choice rule, which caused program participants to certify “compliance” with a regulatory definition that is not a reasonable construction of the Fair Housing Act’s mandate to affirmatively further fair housing.  With the IFR, HUD put itself and its program participants back in a position to take meaningful steps towards improved fair housing outcomes.

The IFR does not require program participants to undertake any specific type of fair housing planning to support their certifications, and commits HUD to providing technical assistance to those that wish to undertake Assessments of Fair Housing (AFHs), Analyses of Impediments to Fair Housing Choice (AIs), or other forms of fair housing planning.  HUD is currently providing resources to assist program participants.

Contacting HUD with questions about the AFFH Interim Final Rule (IFR) or TA support: Should HUD program participants have any questions about the AFFH IFR or TA support, they can contact the FHEO Policy Legislative Initiatives division at: AFFH@hud.gov

Learn more about HUD’s proposed rule to further implement AFFH.

WHY IS AFFH PART OF THE FAIR HOUSING ACT?

For much of the late 19th and early 20th century, government at all levels throughout the United States, along with private developers, and mortgage lending institutions, played an active role in creating segregated living patterns and inequalities of opportunity. The federal government used the power of the military to remove Native Americans from their homelands, restricted federally insured mortgages on the basis of race and used "slum clearance" and "urban renewal" programs to demolish neighborhoods for infrastructure projects that largely benefitted white Americans at a significant cost to and perpetuated the segregation of Black communities, Indigenous communities, and other communities of color. Private housing developers also used racially restrictive covenants that perpetuated segregation and restricted access to homeownership and other housing opportunities for communities of color, among many other forms of discrimination.

In 1967, following the “Long, Hot Summer of 1967,” which consisted of over 150 race-related riots, President Lyndon B. Johnson established the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders, also known as the Kerner Commission. The Commission was tasked with investigating the causes of the riots that occurred in cities like Los Angeles, Detroit, Chicago, Newark, Milwaukee, and New York City. The final report of the Commission, issued in 1968, pointed to a lack of economic opportunity, failed government programs, police brutality, and racism, among other causes. The Commission’s Report is famously known for its declaration that “Our nation is moving toward two societies, one black, one white—separate and unequal.”

In 1968, when Congress enacted the Fair Housing Act, one of the Act’s co-sponsors, Senator Walter F. Mondale, explained that “the purpose that the proposed law was designed to replace the ghettos by ‘truly integrated and balanced living patterns.’” Congress intended that HUD do more than simply not discriminate itself and intended for HUD to use its grant programs to assist in ending discrimination and segregation, to the point where the supply of genuinely open housing increases. As such, since 1968, the federal government recognized its role in creating segregated living patterns that continue to have negative impacts on health, education, and the economy and its responsibility to undo the effects of policies, practices, and procedures that result in a lack of equity.

WHAT IS THE LEGACY OF THE AFFH MANDATE?

As recently as 2015, the U.S. Supreme Court reaffirmed one purpose of the Fair Housing Act when it explained that “much progress remains to be made in our Nation’s continuing struggle against racial isolation…The Court acknowledges the Fair Housing Act’s continuing role in Moving the Nation toward a more integrated society.”

HUD and the federal government continue to work toward achieving the integrated and more balanced living patterns envisioned by the Fair Housing Act in 1968. In 2021, the White House issued a Memorandum to the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, which declared that the affirmatively furthering fair housing provision in the Fair Housing Act, “...is not only a mandate to refrain from discrimination but a mandate to take actions that undo historic patterns of segregation and other types of discrimination and that afford access to long-denied opportunities.” The White House, in 2021, also issued a number of Executive Orders that implicate HUD’s responsibility for implementing the AFFH mandate, including Executive Order 13895, “Advancing Racial Equity for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government” and Executive Order 13988, “Preventing and Combating Discrimination on the Basis of Gender Identity or Sexual Orientation.”

RESOURCES

HUD is providing resources to assist communities undertaking fair housing planning. These resources are intended to serve as guidance for program participants, and need not be submitted to HUD. These resources are for guidance purposes only and are not mandatory.

Fair Housing Planning Toolkit

This Fair Housing Planning Toolkit is a “How-To Guide” for HUD Program Participants. The modules in this Toolkit guide a Program Participant through undertaking Fair Housing Planning.

Please note: This Toolkit will be periodically updated by the Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity (FHEO) as new information and resources become available.

Assessment Tool for Local Governments [PDF] [Word]

The Assessment Tool for Local Governments may be used by local governments and any collaborating program participants that choose to conduct an Assessment of Fair Housing (AFH).

Assessment Tool for Public Housing Agencies [PDF] [Word]

The Assessment Tool for Public Housing Agencies may be used by PHAs and any collaborating PHAs that choose to conduct an Assessment of Fair Housing.

Assessment Tool for States and Insular Areas [PDF]

The Assessment Tool for States and Insular Areas was not finalized by HUD in connection with the 2015 AFFH Rule; however, HUD is making the latest version of that document available to assist States and insular areas in conducting fair housing planning.

AFFH Rule Guidebook [PDF]

The AFFH Rule Guidebook provides guidance regarding ways communities could affirmatively further fair housing, as well as how to use the Assessment Tools and the AFFH Data and Mapping Tool issued in connection with HUD’s 2015 AFFH Rule.

AFFH Data and Mapping Tool (AFFH-T)
HUD will continue to update the information provided relating to the AFFH-T

This publicly available, interactive tool provides access to HUD-provided data. Additional resources for using the AFFH-T include:

AFFH-T User Guide [PDF], which explains how to use the AFFH-T.

AFFH-T Data Documentation, which explains the data methodology in the AFFH-T.

Data Documentation - AFFHT0001

Data Documentation - AFFHT0002

Data Documentation - AFFHT0003a

Data Documentation - AFFHT0004

Data Documentation - AFFHT0005

Data Documentation - AFFHT0006

AFFH-T Known Issues, which is a document that describes issues known to persist in the AFFH-T.

AFFH-T Known Issues - July 2017

AFFH-T Known Issues - September 2017

AFFH-T Known Issues - December 2017

AFFH-T Raw Data are files that contain the raw data included in the AFFH-T.

AFFHT0001 Raw Data

AFFHT0002 Raw Data

AFFHT0003 Raw Data

AFFHT0003a Raw Data

AFFHT0004 Raw Data

AFFHT0005 Raw Data

AFFHT0006 Raw Data

Fact Sheets

The following fact sheets were issued in connection with HUD’s 2015 AFFH Rule and may be useful to program participants and their communities as they engage in fair housing planning.

Fair Housing Planning Guide – Volume 1

Published in March 1996, the Fair Housing Planning Guide provides guidance on how to conduct an Analysis of Impediments to Fair Housing Choice.

Fair Housing Planning Guide – Volume 2

Originally published in May 1996, the second volume of the Fair Housing Planning guide provides guidance on grantee activities undertaken in connection with an Analysis of Impediments to Fair Housing Choice and how to affirmatively further fair housing.

Frequently Asked Questions

The FAQs provide answers to frequently asked questions about the AFFH Interim Final Rule.


Videos

The Restoring Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing Definitions and Certifications: Interim Final Rule Training​

Introduction to the AFFH-T Mapping Tool

FHEO Technical Assistance (TA) Related to Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing

Fair Housing Planning using the Analysis of Impediments AI to Fair Housing Choice

Fair Housing Planning using the Assessment of Fair Housing AFH