Rutgers CLiME

Rutgers CLiME The Rutgers Law School Center on Law, Inequality & Metropolitan Equity (CLiME) studies the role of law and policy on place-based opportunity.

The Rutgers Law School Center on Law, Inequality & Metropolitan Equity (CLiME) is committed to studying the role of law and policy in encouraging or inhibiting opportunity based on place. Our non-partisan efforts are designed to promote more equitable approaches to public law and policy amid rapid demographic change, shrinking government resources and enduring racial and economic divides. The stud

y of metropolitan equity reveals the structural inequality that often exists among communities and municipalities within the very same region and the inequitable processes that sustain inequality. Persistent patterns of racial and economic segregation brought about through exclusion, flawed public policy and discrimination exacerbate inter-local disparities in ways that threaten the prospects for opportunity across entire metropolitan areas, making them less competitive, more expensive and, for those in greatest need, unnecessarily difficult. Through CLiME’s research, archives, public forums and collaboration with others, our fellows and faculty staff are committed to promoting both statewide and national discourse on the many subjects we collectively refer to as “metropolitan equity.”

Earlier this year, CLiME released a report that was the result of a collaboration to assess property owned by the City o...
05/31/2024

Earlier this year, CLiME released a report that was the result of a collaboration to assess property owned by the City of Newark. "What we found was a gold mine of opportunity to address critical policymaking needs with the city’s undesignated property," said Director David Troutt.

Read more here:

Study Finds ‘Gold Mine’ of City-Owned Land in Newark Could Benefit Public.

“The initiative, ‘Equitable Investments in Newark Communities’ is a response to reports by the Rutgers Center on Law, In...
03/28/2023

“The initiative, ‘Equitable Investments in Newark Communities’ is a response to reports by the Rutgers Center on Law, Inequality and Metropolitan Equity (CLiME) and the NJ Institute for Social Justice that document the enormous wealth gap between white and black/brown families in New Jersey. The reports also show that homeownership, the major path for families to build wealth, is being eroded in Newark by the widespread purchase of residential properties by corporate buyers.”

Official Page of Newark, NJ News: NEWARK SEEKS EXPERIENCED CONTRACTORS, DEVELOPERS, NON-PROFITS FOR MAJOR NEW EQUITABLE GROWTH HOUSING INITIATIVE

09/30/2022

Lakeland Bank in New Jersey admitted no wrongdoing, but agreed to set up a $12 million homeownership fund and open two new branches in minority neighborhoods.

CLiME Director, Professor David Troutt, comments in NYT article about Lakeland Bank's settlement based on allegations of...
09/29/2022

CLiME Director, Professor David Troutt, comments in NYT article about Lakeland Bank's settlement based on allegations of redlining by Justice Department. “Accountability has been almost entirely missing in discussions of redlining, past and present.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/28/nyregion/redlining-is-racist-12-million-settlement-ends-lending-inquiry.html?smid=url-share

The report, "Who Owns Newark?" that is mentioned in the article is available here: https://www.clime.rutgers.edu/publications-filtered/who-owns-newark

Lakeland Bank in New Jersey admitted no wrongdoing, but agreed to set up a $12 million homeownership fund and open two new branches in minority neighborhoods.

“Housing stability is really the essence of family stability and workplace stability,” Troutt said. “It affects child we...
05/13/2022

“Housing stability is really the essence of family stability and workplace stability,” Troutt said. “It affects child welfare, peoples’ access to schools, healthcare, and the experience of their lives without so much stress that they can’t figure out what their next move is going to be.”

Read more about Newark's plan to commit $20 million to affordable housing and CLiME's recent research on housing trends in the city:

NEWARK, NJ — Newark officials are investing $20 million into multiple development projects through an initiative to make affordable housing more accessible to residents earning less than the area...

As investor buyers target predominantly Black residential neighborhoods across many American cities, CLiME releases its ...
05/02/2022

As investor buyers target predominantly Black residential neighborhoods across many American cities, CLiME releases its investigative report on the unprecedented impact this trend is having on 1-4 unit homes in Newark, New Jersey. In Who Owns Newark? Transferring Wealth from Newark Homeowners to Corporate Buyers, David Troutt and Katie Nelson tell the detailed story of large-scale rent seeking by investors, taking advantage of the city’s foreclosure crisis, high percentage of renters and declining homeownership rate. Among the first neighborhood-level analyses of an American city for sale to outside investors, Who Owns Newark? highlights the risks this trend poses for renters, low-income residents, first-time homeowners and a city seeking neighborhood stability and offers recommendations for how local governments can regulate in the public interest.

Read Who Owns Newark? here:

This report shows that the national trend in investor buying of 1-4 unit homes in predominantly Black neighborhoods is most acute in Newark, New Jersey where almost half of all real estate sales were made by institutional buyers. The trend grew out of the foreclosure crisis that wiped out significan

How can states incentivize economic growth where it’s most needed? What would equitable tax incentive policy look like? ...
04/20/2022

How can states incentivize economic growth where it’s most needed? What would equitable tax incentive policy look like? CLiME’s collaboration with SPAA scholars details the state of New Jersey’s business tax incentives through the lens of equity. Read Investing in the Equitable State here:

This report and accompanying matrix are a critical evaluation of New Jersey’s tax incentives programs through the policy lens of equitable growth. Persistent inequality between New Jersey’s communities and households hurts all of New Jersey. We assumed that the expenditure of taxpayer dollars fo...

Mayor Baraka Proposes Changes to Inclusionary Zoning Ordinance in Order to Create Additional Affordable Housing"The rese...
03/09/2022

Mayor Baraka Proposes Changes to Inclusionary Zoning Ordinance in Order to Create Additional Affordable Housing

"The research and advice of Commissioner David Troutt, who co-authored, Homes Beyond Reach: An Assessment and Gap Analysis of Newark's Affordable Rental Stock, released in February by the Rutgers Center on Law, Inequality and Metropolitan Equity was central to the development of the IZO amendment. Dr. Troutt’s report detailed the affordability gaps in Newark’s rental stock. "

Official Page of Newark, NJ News: MAYOR BARAKA PROPOSES CHANGES TO INCLUSIONARY ZONING ORDINANCE IN ORDER TO CREATE ADDITIONAL AFFORDABLE HOUSING

CLiME collaborated with the New Jersey State Policy Lab on a report examining the challenges that local governments face...
03/04/2022

CLiME collaborated with the New Jersey State Policy Lab on a report examining the challenges that local governments faced when trying to quickly distribute emergency rental assistance during the pandemic.

Read report here:

Affordable housing is increasingly scarce within the United States, and COVID-19 has dramatically exacerbated the simmering crisis in affordable housing. In New Jersey, the risk of eviction is greater than across the country, as 393,000 households are delinquent on their rent, (22.3% of households i

CLiME Director, Professor David Troutt joined a Black History Month symposium hosted by Mount Zion Baptist Church last w...
03/01/2022

CLiME Director, Professor David Troutt joined a Black History Month symposium hosted by Mount Zion Baptist Church last week to discuss "strategies for combating residential segregation and inequality and creating a better future."

Read more about the event here:

PLEASANTVILLE — A local pastor brought his Black History Month teach-ins to a close by discussing strategies for combating residential segregation and inequality and creating a better future.

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