Pubdate: Wed, 27 Mar 2002 Source: Daily Review, The (CA) Copyright: 2002 ANG Newspapers Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1410 Website: http://www.dailyreview-ang.com/ Author: Josh Richman Note: Lisa Friedman and Jeff Chorney contributed to this story. COURT RULES AGAINST OAKLAND TENANTS Rehnquist - Drug Use Merits Eviction From Public Housing Public housing tenants can be evicted for their relatives' or visitors' drug activity on public property even if the tenants didn't know about it, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Tuesday in an Oakland case. The ruling spelled final defeat for four elderly Oakland Housing Authority tenants whose case spiraled from the streets of Oakland to the nation's highest court. Although the court voted 8-0 to uphold the law allowing these evictions, housing authority officials said Tuesday it's unclear whether the four will be kicked out. "We were on the side of the angels, but the gods don't appear to be with us," said San Francisco attorney Paul Renne, who argued the tenants' case to the high court. Oakland Housing Authority attorney Gary Lafayette said the ruling "gives this agency and other agencies the opportunity to fully respond to drugs and problems associated with drug activity in public housing," ensuring safe and decent housing for law-abiding citizens. At issue was the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development's "one-strike" policy, holding tenants responsible for their visitors' drug activity on or near public property. The residents in this case were: Pearlie Rucker, 66, who lived with her daughter, her two grandchildren and her great-grandchild. Her daughter was found with an open alcohol container and cocaine three blocks from the apartment. Willie Lee, 74, and Barbara Hill, 66, each of whom lived with a grandson who had marijuana in a public housing parking lot. Herman Walker, 78, who is disabled. His home health-care worker brought crack cocaine into his home. The housing authority moved to evict each tenant, and they sued to keep their homes. A three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit appellate court upheld the eviction policy in February 2000, but that ruling was withdrawn six months later when the court voted to rehear the case with an 11-judge panel, which ruled in the plaintiffs' favor in January 2001. Even though the court decision could affect anyone who lives in government-subsidized housing, Alameda County Housing Authority executive director Ophelia Basgal said she does not expect a flurry of evictions. First, there isn't a pile of outstanding drug cases sitting on her desk, she said. Cracking down on tenants for drugs is rare, as is cracking down on their relatives. Second, most local subsidized housing is not like that in the Oakland case. In the Oakland projects, the government is the landlord. In central and south Alameda County, it's more common to find Section 8 leases where the property is not owned by the government. Even so, Basgal said she believes the Supreme Court decision will set a legal precedent to allow Section 8 landlords to evict tenants for drugs. Already, those landlords are allowed to write anti-drug conditions into Section 8 leases. In San Leandro and nearby unincorporated areas, there are nine apartment complexes that take Section 8. Hayward has 14, including several large apartment buildings in the south part of the city where 20 to 50 percent of units can accommodate Section 8 tenants. Union City has three buildings that take Section 8 and also has 194 public housing units, the largest concentration in the south county. Chief Justice William Rehnquist wrote Tuesday's opinion overturning the 9th Circuit ruling. Congress has incorporated exceptions for lack of knowledge into other laws, he noted, but didn't do so in this one. The 9th Circuit was wrong to find a plain reading of the law brings absurd results, he wrote. The law doesn't require eviction, he noted -- it entrusts that decision to local housing authority officials who can gauge how much drug-related or violent crime the area has, the offense's severity, and whether the tenant took all reasonable steps to prevent it. "It is not 'absurd' that a local housing authority may sometimes evict a tenant who had no knowledge of the drug-related activity," Rehnquist wrote - -- regardless of knowledge, a tenant who can't control a household member's actions which threaten other residents' health or safety is also a threat. Nor does this violate tenants' constitutional right to due process of law, he wrote. "The government is not attempting to criminally punish or civilly regulate respondents as members of the general populace. It is instead acting as a landlord of property that it owns, invoking a clause in a lease to which respondents have agreed and which Congress has expressly required." Renne called the ruling "not surprising based on the tone of the oral arguments." He said it's "another example of the double standard that exists if you are poor and there are drug problems." Nobody will evict Florida Gov. Jeb Bush from the governor's mansion because of his daughter's prescription drug abuse, he noted, or kick President Bush out of the White House because of his daughter's underage drinking. The Oakland Housing Authority has withdrawn the eviction action against Rucker but could refile it, while the actions against the other three have been on hold pending Tuesday's ruling. Oakland Housing Authority spokeswoman Lily Toney said the housing authority is considering the four cases and will make a decision "within a day or two." Lafayette said it might take a few weeks. Catherine Bishop, an attorney with the National Housing Law Project in Oakland, noted the Supreme Court didn't consider the legislative history behind the law because they found the law's wording unambiguous. "My feeling is they didn't quote it (the legislative history) because it was too powerful for them. This particular legislation was enacted and only was enacted because we're talking about low-income and poor people, people who don't have a voice in this country," Bishop said. She urged people to think what would happen if similar no-fault language were attached to homeowners' income tax deduction, so a homeowner whose relative engages in drug activity would lose the deduction. "How do you think the U.S. Supreme Court would've analyzed that legislation? Or would that legislation ever even be enacted?" Richard Rothchild, director of litigation for the Western Center on Law & Poverty, called the case's result "pretty awful. What it means in practice is that the housing authorities are given freedom to evict the frail and elderly." Nancy Ferris, spokeswoman for the National Low-Income Housing Coalition, said, "It's going to mean an increase in people with not a lot of resources becoming homeless." Asked whether public housing will be safer because of the ruling, she said, "I don't know. I just think it's a shame when low-income people are sacrificed in the name of some vague security interest." Toney rejected such predictions: "We don't think the ruling is going to result in a lot of evictions. We're just going to continue to do what we've been doing, providing as best we can a safe environment for all of our residents." Justice Stephen Breyer did not take part in Monday's ruling because his brother, Charles Breyer, was the U.S. District Judge in San Francisco who originally presided over the case. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk