v.
Defendant
______________________________
COMPLAINT
1. This action is brought by the United States of America
to enforce the provisions of the Fair Housing Act, as amended,
42 U.S.C. §§ 3601 et seq.
2. This Court has jurisdiction over this action under
28 U.S.C. § 1345 and 42 U.S.C. § 3614.
3. Defendant Village of Addison is a governmental
subdivision incorporated in the State of Illinois, located in
DuPage County, within the Northern District of Illinois.
4. The Village of Addison is governed by a Village
President and the Addison Village Board of Trustees.
5. The Village exercises authority over land within its
boundaries. The Village Board of Trustees has enacted
resolutions and ordinances to create redevelopment districts
called "TIFs" (Tax Increment Financing Districts) pursuant to the
State of Illinois Tax Increment Allocation Redevelopment Act,
Section 65 ILCS 5/11-74.4-3. A "TIF" is a tax incentive
financing district that is established pursuant to procedures set
forth in the State of Illinois Tax Increment Allocation
Redevelopment Act, supra, that provides tax incentives to enable
local governments to redevelop or renovate areas that are
"blighted".
6. The Village of Addison approved an ordinance creating
the Army Trail/Mill Road TIF District on March 21, 1994, and it
has enacted numerous ordinances authorizing the Village to
purchase private property located within this TIF District. The
Village has purchased numerous parcels of private residential
property in this TIF District and has begun a program of
demolishing these residential properties.
7. The geographic area defining the Army Trail/Mill Road
TIF District includes Green Oaks Court Apartments, a
predominantly Hispanic neighborhood within the Village of
Addison.
8. On October 3, 1994, the Village of Addison adopted an
ordinance establishing the Michael Lane TIF District. The
geographic area defining this TIF District includes a
predominantly Hispanic neighborhood within the Village of
Addison.
9. Much of the property located in these two TIF Districts
is moderately priced, decent, and affordable housing which is
occupied by persons of Hispanic origin.
10. At the time of the 1980 Census, the Village of Addison
had a total population of 29,759. The Village's population in
1980 included 1,732 persons of Hispanic origin, comprising 5.8%
of the total population.
11. The 1990 Census revealed a substantial increase in the
Hispanic population of the Village of Addison. In 1990 the
Village had a total population of 32,058, of whom 4,287 or 13.4%
were Hispanic.
12. Based on 1990 Census data, the two TIF districts
created by the Village of Addison, Army Trail/Mill Road and
Michael Lane, include, at a minimum, 36% of the Hispanic
population, but only 2.8% of the non-Hispanic population, of the
Village of Addison.
13. There are eight census blocks in the Village of Addison
in which the Hispanic population makes up over 50% of the
population and which include a minimum of fifty persons. Six of
these eight Hispanic majority census blocks are located either
wholly or partially in the TIF Districts. Included in these
census blocks is the block with the highest number of Hispanic
persons (738 Hispanic persons) of any census block in Addison.
14. According to 1990 Census data, the number of persons
within all census blocks that are located exclusively within the
two TIFs, or which have residential areas that fall entirely
within the two TIFs, is approximately 2,008 persons, of which
approximately 1,322 or 66% are Hispanic and 686 or 34% are non-Hispanic.
15. The defendant was aware of the large concentration of
Hispanic families residing in the Army Trail/Mill Road and
Michael Lane areas before it formally created these TIF
Districts.
16. On or about April 1994, the Village began purchasing
four-unit apartment buildings within the Green Oaks Court
Apartments, located in the Army Trail/Mill Road TIF District, for
purposes of demolishing them. Since that time, the Village has
demolished at least eight residential buildings in the Green Oaks
Court Apartments.
17. The housing units that the Village of Addison has
purchased or sought to purchase, and targeted for demolition at
the Green Oaks Court Apartments, located in the Army Trail/Mill
Road TIF District, are decent, affordable housing for citizens
with low to moderate income.
18. The housing units that the Village of Addison has
purchased or sought to purchase, and targeted for demolition at
the Green Oaks Court Apartments, located in the Army Trail/Mill
Road TIF District, are housing that the Village aggressively and
regularly inspects, and has required to be maintained in
accordance with the standards of the Village of Addison Housing
Code. The housing units the Village of Addison has targeted for
demolition and redevelopment in the Green Oaks Apartments are not
slums, and can not be considered uninhabitable housing.
19. In August 1994, the Village entered into contracts to
purchase four four-unit residential apartment buildings in the
Michael Lane TIF with the intent to acquire and demolish such
buildings.
20. The housing units in the Michael Lane TIF District are
decent, affordable housing for citizens with low to moderate
income. This housing is not a slum, and can not be considered
uninhabitable housing.
21. The Village of Addison has not taken steps sufficient
to assist the displaced residents of the buildings that it has
demolished or intends to demolish at Green Oaks Court Apartments
or Michael Lane in finding alternative affordable housing.
22. The Village of Addison has an extremely low vacancy
rate of affordable housing. Accordingly, many of the displaced
families of Green Oaks Court Apartments, and those affected in
the Michael Lane TIF District, will not be able to find
comparable alternative housing in Addison. According to the 1990
Census, there were 136 vacant rental units in the Village of
Addison at a rental amount of $599 or less per month, the range
affordable to the residents of Green Oaks Court Apartments and
the Michael Lane TIF District. Included in the 136 units are
efficiencies and one-bedroom units, units too small for the
average size family.
23. A significant number of residents who are displaced by
the Village of Addison's TIF plans will be forced to move outside
of the Village of Addison due to the unavailability of
alternative affordable housing in Addison.
24. The purpose and effect of the Village's actions are to
limit or reduce the number of Hispanic families residing within
the Village of Addison.
25. By establishing the Army Trail/Mill Road TIF District,
and taking steps to acquire and demolish housing located at Green
Oaks Court Apartments, and by establishing the Michael Lane TIF
District with the intent of acquiring and demolishing housing,
the defendant has made unavailable and denied dwellings to
persons because of national origin in violation of 42 U.S.C.
§ 3604(a).
26. The conduct of the defendant described above
constitutes:
(a) A pattern or practice of resistance to the full
enjoyment of rights secured by Title VIII of the Civil Rights Act
of 1968 (the Fair Housing Act), as amended by the Fair Housing
Amendments Act of 1988, 42 U.S.C. §§ 3601 et seq; and
(b) A denial to a group of persons of rights granted by
Title VIII of the Civil Rights Act of 1968 (the Fair Housing
Act), as amended by the Fair Housing Amendments Act of 1988,
42 U.S.C. §§ 3601 et seq., which denial raises an issue of
general public importance.
27. The defendant's discriminatory actions have caused
injury to persons seeking to occupy residential dwellings within
the Village of Addison and to landlords involved with those
transactions. Those persons are entitled to be compensated by
the defendant for the injuries caused by the discriminatory
conduct.
28. The defendant's actions were intentional, willful, and
taken in disregard of the rights of others.
WHEREFORE, the United States prays that the Court enter an
ORDER that:
1. Declares that the Village of Addison's redevelopment
scheme for the Mill Road/Army Trail TIF District and the Michael
Lane TIF District violates the Fair Housing Act, as amended,
42 U.S.C. §§ 3601 et seq;
2. Enjoins the defendant, its officials, agents, employees,
successors, and all other persons in active concert or
participation with it from continuing to demolish any further
housing located in either TIF, and from further purchasing
housing in those districts, and from continuing to discriminate
on account of national origin in violation of 42 U.S.C. §§ 3601
et seq;
3. Requires such actions by the defendant as may be
necessary to restore all persons aggrieved by the defendant's
discriminatory housing actions to the position they would have
occupied but for the defendant's discriminatory housing actions;
4. Awards such damages as would fully compensate each
person aggrieved by the defendant's discriminatory housing
actions for the injury caused by the defendant's discriminatory
housing actions, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 3614 (d)(1)(B);
5. Awards each person aggrieved by the defendant's
discriminatory housing actions punitive damages because of the
intentional and willful nature of the defendant's conduct
pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 3614(d)(1)(B); and
6. Assesses a civil penalty against the defendant in an
amount of money authorized by 42 U.S.C. § 3614(d)(1)(C), in order
to vindicate the public interest.
The United States further prays for such additional relief
as the interests of justice may require.
JANET RENO,
ATTORNEY GENERAL
DEVAL L. PATRICK,
Assistant Attorney General
JAMES B. BURNS,
United States Attorney
PAUL F. HANCOCK,
Chief, Housing and Civil Enforcement Section
ISABELLE M. THABAULT
JEFFREY M. SENGER
ELIZABETH A. SINGER
Attorneys, Housing and Civil Enforcement Section
Civil Rights Division
U.S. Department of Justice
P.O. Box 65998
Washington D.C. 20035-5988
(202) 514-4749
JOAN LASER
Assistant United States
United States Attorney's Office
Dirksen Federal Building
Fifth Floor
219 S. Dearborn Street
Chicago, IL 60604
(312) 353-1857