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Ad Council Campaign Fighting Housing Bias

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  • Ad Council Campaign Fighting Housing Bias

    RisMedia.com, CT
    May 5 2005

    Ad Council Campaign Fighting Housing Bias


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    by Daniel Dunaief

    Daily News, New York

    RISMEDIA, May 5 - (KRT) - The same folks who tugged at people's hearts
    with ads featuring the crying Indian near a pile of garbage are trying
    to make sure Indians, African-Americans and everyone else get a fair
    shake when they apply for housing.

    The Advertising Council, partnering with several housing agencies,
    recently started the second phase of ads designed to raise awareness
    of the Fair Housing Act, which prohibits housing discrimination.

    The print and radio spots, which were designed pro bono by New York
    city-based Merkley + Partners, targets people most likely to run
    into problems when they rent or buy a property, or when they apply
    for loans.

    The Department of Housing and Urban Development estimates that one in
    five African-Americans, Hispanics and Asians experience discrimination
    in housing transactions.

    In one radio ad, a man calls a newspaper to list an apartment for rent,
    which he says is available immediately.

    "Unless," he adds, "you're African-American, Hispanic, Asian,
    Middle-Eastern, Indian or a member of any minority group."

    The announcer warns: "Unfortunately, housing discrimination isn't
    always this obvious."

    An estimated two million instances of housing discrimination occur
    in America each year, the National Fair Housing Alliance (NFHA) said.

    "These ads educate people about fair housing and tell them there's
    a place to go if they think they've been discriminated against,"
    said Karen McGill Lawson, the executive director of the Leadership
    Conference on Civil Rights Education Fund, which is a partner in
    the effort.

    The campaign started in 2003 with TV ads featuring one man making a
    series of calls, while using different accents, to inquire about an
    apartment on "Park Street."

    He uses names including Juan Hernandez, Sanjay Kumar and Tyrone
    Washington -- all of whom get a brisk brush-off from a woman who says
    the apartment's been rented.

    When he calls and says he's Graham Wellington, the woman says the
    apartment is available.

    The ad, which has appeared on UPN and ABC, was based on the real-life
    experience of Kathy Fletcher, the director of member services with
    the NFHA.

    Her ex-husband, who is Armenian, was trying to get an apartment in a
    building where she had been told there was a vacancy. When he called,
    he was told nothing was available.

    "You don't think these things happen in cities like Washington,
    D.C., or New York," she said. "We're finding an egregious amount of
    discrimination and steering."

    The Ad Council said the campaign has helped raise awareness,
    which has increased to 74 percent from 67 percent before the effort
    started. Anyone wishing to report discrimination is encouraged to call
    (800) 669-9777, or go to www.fairhousinglaw.org.

    Strategic planner Sara Bamber of Merkley, whose clients include
    Pfizer and Mercedes, said the ads are designed to make it clear that
    "everyone has a legal right to live where they want to."

    Separately, state Attorney General Eliot Spitzer has requested
    information from several area banks in the early stages of a probe
    of mortgage rates and fees, sources said.

    The results of that effort, experts said, could be to create tougher
    guiding principals for how banks set lending rates.

    Copyright © 2005, Daily News, New York

    Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News.

    --Boundary_(ID_0q4TM2vStLeJmZTNsjZmYg)--
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