PER CURIAM:
For nearly a decade, plaintiff-appellant the County of Westchester (the "County" or "Westchester") has been engaged in litigation with the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development ("HUD" or "the Government") over whether the County has adequately analyzed — in its applications for HUD funds — impediments to fair housing within the County's jurisdictions.
In this appeal, the County challenges final administrative determinations by HUD to withhold funds allocated to the County under the Community Planning and Development Formula Grant Programs ("CPD funds")
On July 17, 2015, the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Denise L. Cote, Judge) granted defendants-appellees' motion for summary judgment, holding that HUD's decision was not arbitrary or capricious and that § 12705 and § 12711 did "not relieve the County of its obligation to make accurate Certifications and to produce adequate AIs in order to obtain CPD Funds."
Because we agree that HUD's withholding of CPD funds did not violate federal law, we
In order to understand the current dispute between the County and HUD, it is necessary to review the last decade of litigation against the County.
In April 2006, the Anti-Discrimination Center of Metro New York ("the relator") filed a qui tam lawsuit alleging that the County violated the False Claims Act
During pretrial proceedings, the district court entered several rulings in favor of the relator. On July 13, 2007, it denied the County's motion to dismiss, holding that relator had stated a claim that the County violated the False Claims Act by falsely certifying that it considered race when evaluating fair housing impediments and corrective actions.
On August 10, 2009, the Government intervened in the action in place of the relator and, on the same day, presented the district court with a consent decree that all parties — including the County — agreed to enter.
By settling the case and agreeing to the consent decree, the County avoided the risk of paying treble damages of more than $150 million. Instead, the decree obligated the County to pay $30 million to the United States — of which $21.6 million would be credited to the County's account with HUD — and to take numerous steps to further "fair housing."
The consent decree "anticipated that the County [would build these 750 units] by leveraging the funds that it is expending pursuant to [the consent decree] with supplemental funds."
Additionally, the consent decree required the County to complete, within 120 days, an analysis of impediments to fair housing choice ("AI") "deemed acceptable by HUD."
The County also agreed to "promote, through the County Executive, legislation... to ban `source-of-income' discrimination in housing."
Finally, the consent decree provided for the appointment of a monitor to oversee compliance, to recommended additional actions needed to ensure compliance, and to assess "whether the County has taken all possible actions to meet its obligations ... including ... promoting inclusionary and other appropriate zoning by municipalities by offering incentives, and, if necessary, taking legal action."
The August 2009 consent decree settled all False Claims Act charges stemming from the County's applications for HUD funding from 2000 to 2009. Since 2009, however, the County has continued to apply for CPD funds. The present dispute concerns HUD's rejection of the County's post-consent decree applications for funding. Specifically, this litigation concerns HUD's decision to withhold the County's CPD funds for FY 2011, 2013, and 2014.
The County first challenged HUD's withholding of its CPD funds for FY 2011. As noted above, the consent decree required the County to make efforts to ban "source-of-income discrimination." In 2009, the County's Board of Legislators debated a bill to meet this obligation. The County Executive at the time, Andrew Spano, sent letters to advocacy organizations expressing support for the pending bill, and to the leadership of the County Board of Legislators encouraging them to pass the bill. Although the Board failed to pass the legislation in 2009, an identical bill was reintroduced in 2010. On June 14, 2010, the Board passed a slightly modified version of the bill, but, on June 25, 2010, the newly elected County Executive, Robert Astorino, vetoed it.
Under the consent decree, the County's revised AI was due on December 8, 2009. After HUD granted several of the County's extension requests, the County submitted a revised AI on July 23, 2010. On December 21, 2010, HUD rejected the revised AI in a six-page letter to the County, in which HUD described actions the County
On July 11, 2011, the County submitted another revised AI, which HUD also rejected. By letter dated July 13, 2011, HUD rejected the County's proposed AI because it "did not incorporate the Corrective Actions" that HUD had earlier specified, including "promotion of source-of-income legislation or plans to overcome exclusionary zoning practices."
HUD's withholding of FY 2011 funds prompted the referral of two issues to the monitor. On November 14, 2011, the monitor found that: (1) the County breached its obligation to promote source-of-income legislation; and (2) the County was required to analyze the effect of zoning ordinances in its AI.
On March 16, 2012, Magistrate Judge Gorenstein sustained the County's objection to the monitor's report in part, concluding that the County Executive's veto of the source-of-income legislation did not constitute a breach of the consent decree.
However, Magistrate Judge Gorenstein overruled the County's other objections. Specifically, the County had challenged the monitor's conclusion that the County was required (1) to specify a strategy to overcome exclusionary zoning practices, and (2) to identify the types of zoning practices that would, if not remedied by the municipality, prompt the County to pursue legal action. With respect to these objections, Magistrate Judge Gorenstein ruled in favor of HUD, concluding that the County was required to analyze the effect of zoning laws in its AI. Accordingly, Magistrate Judge Gorenstein held that the monitor and HUD could require the County to explain how it intended to persuade its municipalities to remove exclusionary zoning practices, and what steps it would take if a municipality refused. The County did not appeal this aspect of the Magistrate Judge's ruling.
The United States did, however, appeal his ruling concerning "source-of-income"
On April 5, 2013, we affirmed the May 3, 2012 order of the district court,
As noted above, the monitor's report in November 2011 found that the County was required to analyze the effect of zoning ordinances in its AI.
After the monitor issued his report in November 2011 — and while litigation before the district court and this Court was pending — the County submitted a series of zoning analyses to HUD, all of which were rejected. Specifically, HUD informed the County that, in its view, the County's submissions contained flawed data analysis, failed to address whether zoning practices were exclusionary under state and federal law, and lacked adequate strategies for bringing about changes to problematic zoning practices in some of the County's municipalities.
On March 25, 2013, HUD notified the County that it intended to reallocate the $7.4 million it had withheld in FY 2011 funds.
One day before this deadline, the County submitted a revised AI and filed suit against HUD in federal court, asserting that HUD's denial of the County's CPD funds for FY 2011 was a violation of the APA and 42 U.S.C. § 12711.
On August 14, 2013, Judge Cote granted HUD's motion to dismiss the complaint in its entirety. As to the APA claims, the district court ruled that HUD's rejection of the County's submissions was an act "committed to agency discretion by law," see 5 U.S.C. § 701(a)(2), and thus not subject to judicial review.
On February 18, 2015, we affirmed the dismissal (as moot) of claims relating to funds that had been reallocated to other jurisdictions, but vacated the district court's dismissal of claims relating to funds — exclusively under the HOME program — that had not yet been reallocated.
While proceedings concerning the FY 2011 funds were pending, the monitor prepared two reports on the impact of zoning laws in Westchester County.
The first of these reports, filed on September 13, 2013,
In its various AIs submitted to HUD, the County concluded that there was no evidence of exclusionary zoning in any of the 31 eligible municipalities in Westchester County.
The purpose of the monitor's 2013 report was to assess whether the County was correct that none of its 31 eligible communities had exclusionary zoning laws, or whether HUD was correct that the County's analysis was flawed, inaccurate, and incomplete. The monitor concluded:
The seven municipalities that the monitor concluded "had zoning ordinances that limited affordable housing or made the development of affordable housing practically infeasible" were Croton-on-Hudson, Harrison, Lewisboro, Mamaroneck, Ossining, Pelham Manor, and Pound Ridge.
On September 8, 2014, the monitor issued another report.
The six municipalities that the monitor concluded had zoning codes that were presumptively exclusionary under Huntington were Harrison, Larchmont, Lewisboro, North Castle, Pelham Manor, and Rye Brook.
On October 24, 2014, the Government sent a letter to the monitor — with a copy sent to the County — which stated that the County's adoption of the monitor's 2013 and 2014 reports would satisfy its obligation to submit an acceptable AI.
The County declined to adopt the monitor's reports or to incorporate any of the
On February 3, 2015, HUD advised the County that its failure to receive a grant for FY 2012 had resulted in the termination of its qualification as a Community Development Block Grant ("CDBG") urban county and HOME participating jurisdiction, and that until it requalified, it was ineligible to receive CPD funds.
On May 9, 2014, the County informed HUD that it would not be seeking requalification under the CPD programs for the FY 2015 to FY 2017 period. See id.; ___ F.Supp.3d at ___ n. 3, ___, 2015 WL 4388294 at *2 n. 3, *18.
On March 17, 2015, the County filed its second lawsuit, which primarily sought to enjoin the reallocation of FY 2013 and FY 2014 CPD funds.
On March 19, 2015, HUD informed the County that its FY 2013 and FY 2014 CPD Funds could be "obligated" to other jurisdictions as early as April 3, 2015.
On March 30, 2015, the County appealed the District Court's denial of its motion for a preliminary injunction. On April 3, 2015, the County filed a motion with this Court for an injunction pending appeal and for a Temporary Restraining Order ("TRO"). On April 20, 2015, this Court granted the County's request for a TRO pending resolution of its motion.
On July 17, 2015, while the County's appeal from the denial of the preliminary injunction was pending, the District Court resolved the case on the merits, granting HUD's motion for summary judgment and dismissing the County's complaints in their entirety.
The broader dispute between the County and HUD implicates many "big-picture" questions. Beyond prohibiting direct discrimination based on race or other protected categories, what must a jurisdiction do to "affirmatively further fair housing"? What is the difference, if any, between furthering "fair" housing and furthering "affordable" housing? How much control may HUD exert over local policies, which, in its view, impede the creation of "fair" or "affordable" housing? And if conflicts of this sort between HUD and local governments are to be avoided, is the simplest solution to avoid applying for federal funds in the first place?
This appeal, however, presents a much narrower question: May HUD reject a jurisdiction's application for funding because it determines that the jurisdiction's analysis of impediments fails to adequately consider the potential exclusionary impact of the jurisdiction's zoning laws?
In the sections that follow, we first describe the relevant statutory requirements and then analyze the County's challenge to HUD's action under the APA and §§ 12705 and 12711.
The County challenges HUD's withholding of Community Planning and Development Formula Grant Program ("CPD") funds distributed under three different programs: the Community Development Block Grant ("CDBG") program, the Emergency Solutions Grant ("ESG") program, and the HOME Investment Partnerships program ("HOME"). The authorizing
The CDBG program was established under the Housing and Development Act of 1974
The ESG program was initially authorized as the "Emergency Shelter Grants" program by the Stewart B. McKinney Homeless Assistance Act of 1987, but was modified to its current form by the Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing (HEARTH) Act of 2009.
Finally, funding under the HOME program is allocated under the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act of 1990.
Each of these grant programs requires an applying jurisdiction to submit to HUD a comprehensive "housing affordability strategy" in accordance with 42 U.S.C. § 12705.
Second, grantees must certify "that the jurisdiction will affirmatively further fair housing."
The requirement to "affirmatively further fair housing" is identical under HOME and CDBG — and, by extension, ESG.
In this case, HUD determined that the AIs submitted by the County in support of its applications for FY 2011, 2013, and 2014 funds were inadequate, because they failed to accurately analyze impediments to fair housing, including certain zoning laws. Accordingly, HUD rejected the County's certification that it would "affirmatively further fair housing," and withheld the County's funds under all three programs.
The County asserts that HUD's decision to withhold these funds violated the APA and two other statutory provisions — §§ 12705 and 12711. We address each claim in turn.
Under the APA, a reviewing court must uphold agency action unless it is "arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law."
The relevant agency action here was HUD's decision to reject the County's AIs for FY 2011, 2013, and 2014, and to withhold the CPD funds allocated to the County for all three years. Before 2006 — when the qui tam action was filed — HUD had for decades approved the County's applications for CPD funds without any objection. However, once the District Court ruled, in connection with the qui tam case, that HUD's submissions were false as a matter of law, the County unexpectedly faced the prospect of severe financial penalties — more than $150 million. The County Executive at the time chose to settle the case and to sign the consent decree.
But nothing in that consent decree purports to give HUD authority to impose conditions on the County's future CPD grant applications beyond those governing all applicants under the relevant statutes and regulations. Rather, as discussed at notes 16 to 28, ante, and accompanying text, the consent decree largely involves a promise to construct 750 new affordable housing units and a series of promises peripheral to that goal. The County also promised to submit an adequate AI within 120 days of the consent decree, and failure to do so could, therefore, constitute both a breach of the consent decree and grounds for rejection of its future CPD grant applications. But many of the promises the County made in the consent decree, such as the promise to promote "source-of-income" legislation, are independent of the requirements for CPD grant eligibility. To the extent HUD has identified the County's failure to satisfy these independent consent-decree requirements to support its rejection of County grant applications,
That said, we need not definitively decide whether, or to what degree, HUD may have overstepped statutory grounds in denying County grant applications, because HUD has consistently explained that its primary justification for such rejections has been that the County's AIs contained inadequate analysis and reached conclusions — that no municipality's zoning laws are exclusionary under state or federal law — unsupported by the record.
We are obliged under the APA to uphold agency action unless it is "arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law."
Accordingly, we affirm the District Court's judgment insofar as it dismissed the claim that HUD's action violated the APA.
The County's arguments under § 12705 and § 12711 fare no better. These two provisions generally preclude HUD from requiring a jurisdiction to change its local policies — including its zoning laws — in order to qualify for CPD funding. According to the County, HUD's decision to withhold the CPD funds at issue was a thinly veiled attempt to induce the County to force its municipalities to change their zoning laws. Specifically, the County claims that two demands by HUD were improper: (1) that the County change the conclusions in its AIs concerning the exclusionary impact of municipal zoning laws; and (2) that its AIs identify the steps the County would take to ensure its municipalities changed any exclusionary zoning laws.
Under § 12705(c)(1), HUD may only disapprove of the housing strategy of an applying jurisdiction if it concludes that
The cross-referenced paragraph, § 12705(b)(4), requires grantees' housing
Section 12705(c) thus provides that the continuation or adoption of local zoning ordinances may not form the basis for HUD's disapproval of a jurisdiction's housing strategy. Section 12711 similarly prohibits HUD from denying funds based on "the adoption, continuation, or discontinuation by a jurisdiction of any public policy, regulation, or law that is (1) adopted, continued, or discontinued in accordance with the jurisdiction's duly established authority, and (2) not in violation of any Federal law."
The County is therefore correct that HUD may not — under either § 12705 or § 12711 — condition funding on changes to local policies, including zoning laws. But that is not what HUD did here. HUD did not at any point tell the County that its CPD funds would only be released if certain municipalities in the County changed their zoning laws. Instead, HUD required the County to assess and analyze whether certain zoning laws in the jurisdiction impeded fair housing and, if so, to identify a plan to overcome the effects of such impediments. As the Supreme Court recently stated, challenges to zoning laws and other housing restrictions "that function unfairly to exclude minorities from certain neighborhoods without any sufficient justification... reside at the heartland of disparate-impact [fair housing] liability."
Here, HUD rejected the County's AI because the County reached the same boilerplate conclusion for every municipality — namely, that the local zoning laws did not have a disparate impact on minorities and did not pose an impediment to affirmatively furthering fair housing with respect to race. HUD determined that this repetitive conclusion for each municipality was not supported by the available data and did not reflect an adequate disparate impact analysis, because,
As HUD made clear in this letter, the basis for its rejection of the County's AI was not that the County's municipalities failed to change their zoning laws. It was that HUD determined — based on its own review of the laws and the data, as well as the monitor's reports — that the County's zoning analysis was flawed, inaccurate, and incomplete. Because HUD did not deny CPD funds to the County based on the "adoption, continuation or discontinuation" of a zoning ordinance by any municipality, it did not violate either § 12705 or § 12711.
Once a jurisdiction requests CPD funds, HUD may require the jurisdiction to analyze how the zoning laws of its municipalities may impede the overall effort to "affirmatively further fair housing." To the extent that the analysis identifies such laws as impediments to fair housing, HUD may also require that the jurisdiction develop a strategy to "overcome the effects of [those] impediments."
Here, Congress has charged HUD with using its grant programs to eradicate practices — such as exclusionary zoning — that
In urging otherwise, the County argues that HUD was required to approve its AI because it was "substantially complete." Under § 12705(c)(1), HUD must approve an otherwise acceptable housing strategy within 60 days of receipt so long as it is "substantially complete." However, HUD has the authority to "disapprove a plan or a portion of a plan if it is ... substantially incomplete," and an example of such a plan is one "for which a certification is rejected by HUD as inaccurate, after HUD has inspected the evidence and provided due notice and opportunity to the jurisdiction for comment."
Nor are we persuaded by the County's argument that the four so-called "Special Assurances" HUD requested from the County in its August 9, 2013 and July 18, 2014 letters violated § 12705 or § 12711.
Accordingly, we affirm the District Court's judgment insofar as it dismissed the County's claim that HUD's action violated § 12705 and § 12711.
This case resolves a narrow question: May HUD require a jurisdiction that applies for CPD funding to analyze whether local zoning laws will impede the jurisdiction's mandate to "affirmatively further fair housing"? Because HUD may impose such a requirement on jurisdictions that apply for CPD funds, and because the decision to withhold Westchester County's CPD funds in this case was not arbitrary or capricious, we conclude that HUD's action complied with federal law.
It bears emphasizing that this decision does not mean that any of Westchester County's municipalities violated the Fair Housing Act or engaged in discrimination on the basis of race. We merely conclude that HUD's decision — in the context of providing federal funds — to require the County to redo its zoning analysis and to develop strategies to overcome impediments to fair housing did not violate federal law. In short, there has been no finding, at any point, that Westchester actually engaged in housing discrimination.
As a consequence of this decision, HUD is authorized to reallocate Westchester's CPD funds for FY 2013 and, eventually, for FY 2014, and to continue withholding the roughly $750,000 in funds remaining for FY 2011. As noted above, the County has indicated that it will no longer seek CPD funds for FY 2015 to FY 2017. In response to an Order we issued on August 28, 2015, the Government stated that the County's decision not to apply for future funds does not affect any continuing obligations under the consent decree, including the requirement that the County submit an AI deemed acceptable by HUD.
In sum, we
HUD is authorized to reallocate the County's FY 2013 funds forthwith. As to the County's FY 2014 funds, however, HUD is directed to delay reallocating those funds until after the County exhausts its right to seek further review of this decision.
The congressional appropriation for the FY 2011 funds expired on September 30, 2013. See Department of Defense and Full-Year Continuing Appropriations Act 2011, Pub.L. No. 112-10, Div. B, Title I, § 1103, 125 Stat. 38, 103 (2011) (carrying forward previous appropriations bill's limitation that CPD funds are available to be allocated for two years after the designated fiscal year). These funds, therefore, may not be reallocated to other jurisdictions, but they remain available to the County until September 2018. See 31 U.S.C. §§ 1552(a), 1553(a); Cty. of Westchester v. U.S. Dep't of Hous. & Urban Dev., 778 F.3d 412, 417 n. 8 (2d Cir.2015) (explaining that after an appropriation expires, unallocated funds remain in an "`expired account,' where they will `retain their fiscal year identity ... for that appropriation for an additional five fiscal years'") (quoting 1 Gov't Accountability Office, Principles of Federal Appropriations Law (GAO Redbook) 5-67, 5-72 (3d ed.2004)) (ellipsis in original). Accordingly, because some of the FY 2011 funds remain available to satisfy obligations to the County, the pending dispute over these funds is not moot. See note 45, post (noting that a total of $752,844 remains from the County's FY 2011 allocation).
The congressional appropriation for the FY 2013 funds expires on September 30, 2015. See Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act 2013, Pub.L. No. 113-6, Div. F, Title I, § 1103, 127 Stat. 198, 412-13 (2013). Until then, HUD is able to reallocate the funds, which, according to HUD, total approximately $5 million. We have therefore sought to resolve this case expeditiously, in order to give HUD the flexibility — if it prevailed — to reallocate the FY 2013 funds to other jurisdictions.
Finally, the congressional appropriation for the FY 2014 funds expires on September 30, 2016. See Consolidated Appropriations Act 2014, Pub.L. No. 113-76, Div. L, Title 2, 128 Stat. 5, 613-14 (2014). Therefore, if HUD wishes to reallocate these funds — also totaling approximately $5 million — it must do so before that date. As noted above and below, HUD is directed not to reallocate the FY 2014 funds until the County exhausts its right to seek further review of this decision.
In November 1985, Judge Sand found the City and CDA liable for housing segregation and the City and Board liable for school segregation. See United States v. Yonkers Bd. of Educ., 624 F.Supp. 1276 (S.D.N.Y.1985). Following a series of remedial hearings, the district court ordered the City to undertake several actions, including providing sites for 200 units of public housing in non-minority areas, and reallocating federal housing grants towards fostering the development of low- and moderate-income housing. The defendants appealed the judgment, and in 1987, our Court concluded that the district court "properly applied the appropriate legal principles, that its findings of fact [were] not clearly erroneous, and that its remedial orders [were] within the proper bounds of discretion." See United States v. Yonkers Bd. of Educ., 837 F.2d 1181, 1184 (2d Cir.1987). Accordingly, we affirmed the district court's judgment in all respects.
On July 3, 2007, the district court approved a settlement agreement that ended its supervision over implementing these Yonkers-related remedial orders. See No. 80 Civ. 6761(LBS), Dkt. No. 2100 (S.D.N.Y. July 3, 2007).
Consent Decree ¶ 14(d). The district court appointed as monitor James E. Johnson of Debevoise & Plimpton LLP.
Frew ex rel. Frew v. Hawkins, 540 U.S. 431, 442, 124 S.Ct. 899, 157 L.Ed.2d 855 (2004).