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Attorney General's Office Proposes Rules to Remove Barriers to Housing for People with Criminal Records

Acting Attorney General Andrew J. Bruck announced today that the Division on Civil Rights (DCR) has proposed new rules to help increase housing opportunities for people with criminal records and reduce the likelihood that housing instability will lead them to commit another crime.

According to Acting Attorney General Bruck, the proposed rules will implement the Fair Chance in Housing Act, which Governor Murphy signed into law in June. 

The law bars landlords from asking about criminal history on housing applications in most instances and reflects the Murphy Administration’s commitment to dismantling systemic racial disparities that have been allowed to exist for too long in New Jersey.

A Virtual Community Roundtable focused on the Fair Chance in Housing Act is scheduled for September 22, from 6:00 p.m. until 7:30 p.m. Acting Attorney General Bruck will serve as moderator for the event, which will feature a discussion of the law by a speakers’ panel including representatives from DCR and community organizations. 

Members of the public can register here and have the option to submit questions in advance.

“Everyone in New Jersey should have a fair chance to find safe and affordable housing,” Acting Attorney General Bruck said. 

“But for too long, having a criminal record has made it too hard for too many people to find a place to live, and that burden has fallen disproportionately on people of color. 

Governor Murphy and the Legislature have helped even the playing field with the Fair Chance in Housing Act. Today’s proposal by the Division on Civil Rights moves us one step closer towards real equity in housing.”

According to Acting Attorney General Bruck, with limited exceptions, the Fair Chance in Housing Act and the DCR rules proposed today will bar landlords in New Jersey from requiring prospective tenants to fill out an initial application that includes questions about their criminal background.

Likewise, the Act and the rules will bar landlords from running a criminal background check on an applicant until a conditional offer of housing has been made, Acting Attorney General Bruck said. 

Only after otherwise approving an applicant and making a conditional offer will a landlord be able to ask about the applicant’s criminal history or conduct a criminal background check.

Acting Attorney General Bruck said that even then, additional requirements will need to be satisfied before the landlord may reject an applicant based on the applicant’s criminal history. And in most cases, landlords will not be permitted to deny housing to someone simply because they have a criminal record.

Before the Act’s passage, housing providers were not explicitly prohibited from inquiring about applicants’ criminal histories on initial application materials and rejecting them on that basis, even if the record included only a minor infraction unrelated to eligibility as a future tenant. 

Because of existing racial disparities in the criminal justice system, this had a racially disparate impact on communities of color in New Jersey, especially on Black people.

According to Acting Attorney General Bruck,  under the Act and proposed rules, a landlord who has issued a conditional offer to a housing applicant will only be permitted to rescind that offer based on the applicant’s criminal history in certain circumstances. 

Specifically, the landlord will be permitted to consider the applicant’s criminal record only if the applicant has a criminal conviction and if the conviction meets certain requirements relating to the seriousness of the offense and how much time has passed.

In these circumstances, a landlord will be permitted to withdraw a conditional offer if the withdrawal is necessary to fulfill a substantial, legitimate, and nondiscriminatory interest. 

However, landlords who withdraw a conditional offer will need to provide written notice to the applicant explaining the specific reason(s) for the decision and provide an opportunity for the applicant to show the criminal history at issue contains errors or offer evidence of rehabilitation or other mitigating factors, Acting Attorney General Bruck said.

In addition, with limited exceptions, housing providers will not be permitted under the proposed rules to discriminate in advertisements, notices, or other publications against those with criminal records by indicating that they will not consider anyone with a criminal record.

Exceptions to the law’s screening and advertising requirements will exist for convictions subjecting the applicant to lifetime registration as a sex offender and for convictions for the manufacture or production of methamphetamine on the premises of federally assisted housing.

According to Acting Attorney General Bruck, the proposed rules also will establish procedures for enforcement of the law by DCR. Any individual who believes that a housing provider has violated a provision of the Fair Chance in Housing Act will be able to file a complaint with DCR within 180 days of the alleged violation by submitting a signed complaint to DCR. 

If DCR conducts an investigation that identifies a violation, DCR may impose penalties and other remedies.

Members of the public are invited to submit comments by November 6. Comments can be submitted by mail to Aarin Williams, Interim Chief of Strategic Initiatives and Enforcement, Department of Law and Public Safety, Division on Civil Rights, 31 Clinton Street, 3rd Floor, PO Box 46001, Newark, New Jersey, 07102. Comments can also be submitted electronically at regulations@njcivilrights.gov.

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