Black Real Estate Professionals Recruit Black Appraisers to Combat Bias, Declare War on Black Homeownership Gap
(TriceEdneyWire.com) - When a former client of leading
Black real estate broker Donnell Williams was about to get his
house refinanced in Wharton, New Jersey, Williams quoted him as asking, “‘Should I have my White friend come over and open up the door for the appraiser?’”
well aware that his former client’s perception of racism within the real estate industry is indeed a reality. Current media stories are full of reports of people who have had to conceal their racial identities– going as far as to hide family photos and cultural art - in order to get a fair and equitable appraisal of their home.
Professionals Alliance (BREPA. org) of which Williams is president, has joined with the Appraisal Institute (AI). Together, BREPA and AI are launching a trailblazing program to recruit and train at least “100 Black Appraisers in 100 Days”. This is a new initiative aimed at bringing parity to the field
of appraising. BREPA is teaming with AI’s “Appraisal Diversity
Initiative.” Here are the facts:
association of real estate appraisers, there are 78,000 appraisers in the U. S. which includes 85.4 percent White appraisers, but only 1.3 percent African- Americans.
the National Association of Real Estate Brokers (NAREB), has declared war on the homeownership gap experienced
by communities of color. According to the U.S. Census, as
of the second quarter of last year, the Black homeownership rate was 44.6 percent compared to 74.2 percent for Whites, according to NAREB’s State of Housing in Black America (SHIBA) report. That is a gap of 29.6 percent - larger than the 27 percent gap that existed “in 1960, before the Civil
Rights movement and Fair Housing laws,” the SHIBA report said.
close the gap, thereby help to realize the highest homeownership rate in years for first time buyers. Civil rights organizations that deal with economic justice issues agree
that the appraisal bias issue is a key to bringing parity.
home and property appraisals as a barrier to Black homeownership and generational wealth building,” said Marc H. Morial, NUL president/CEO. “Through our work as one of the nation’s largest providers of housing counseling assistance to communities of color, we know all too well that this type
of discrimination has gone on for too long and in plain sight.”
Real Estate Brokers, contends that providing scholarships (which will differ from state to state), helping to facilitate the required 2,000 apprentice hours, and the full and final licensing of more African-American appraisers, will provide African-American homeowners with a sense of certitude in the appraisal process.
greater confidence in the appraisal process, but will also create jobs in the Black community that pay a living wage with salaries that can range from $57,000-$147,000 a year. Together, these actions will serve to increase Black home ownership and help close the wealth gap, Williams says.
opportunity to become an appraiser on BREPA.org. One potential apprentice, Candis Pressley of Philadelphia, is a seasoned real estate broker of 23 years. She has a bachelor’s and master’s degree in real estate and says she simply loves the business. However, she too has run into racially biased
appraisers.
not seek to become appraisers is “because of the gatekeepers. It’s hard to get mentorships even if you meet the qualifications. Then they want you to have a bachelor’s degree. Then you have to put in so many apprentice hours. It’s a good ole boy network we can’t get in to do those training hours.”
Black appraisers will assist in remedying the issue of appraisal
bias.
Center for Responsible Lending, quoted The Urban Institute:
“Appraiser bias has likely played a role in homeownership and
housing wealth outcomes, and increasing diversity in the field
can diminish this bias in the long term.”
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