The Honorable Julián Castro, former Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, marks the 50th anniversary of the Fair Housing Act signing by LBJ. He sits down with Dean Angela Evans to talk about how far we’ve come since the act was signed, and what challenges remain in making housing fair and available for all.
Guests
- Julián CastroFormer Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development
Hosts
- Angela EvansDean of the LBJ School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin
This is policy on purpose. A podcast produced by the LBJ School of Public
Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin. We take you behind the scenes of policy
with the people who helped shape it. For more, visit LBJ. Don’t you, Texas?
Welcome to Pile Sand Purpose. My name is Angela Evans, and I have the privilege of being the dean of the
Lyndon Baines Johnson School of Public Affairs here at the University of Texas at Austin. My special
guest today is the honorable Julian Castro. Mr. Castro started his political career
in his hometown of San Antonio, just down the road from Austin as a councilman and then a mayor.
He was then appointed by then President Barack Obama as secretary of the Department of Housing
and Urban Development. Today, we’re so fortunate to call Mr. Castro one of our
own. He has since the fall served as the deans distinguished fellow and the fellow
of the Davola chair in international trade policy right here at the LBJ School. He’s been a tremendous
asset to the school and to the students. He’s been generous in his time and is
sharing of his knowledge and expertize. This week, we’re celebrating the fiftieth anniversary
of Lyndon Baines Johnson signing of the Fair Housing Act, which prohibited discrimination concerning
the sale, rental and financing of housing based on race, religion,
national origin or gender. We have right here a ready made expert has a
former HUD secretary. Mr. Castro knows as well as anyone some of the most pertinent challenges we’re
facing in America today. So we’re fortunate to have him here to talk with us today about his experience
not only at HUD, but also as mayor of San Antonio, where housing obviously was one of the more important
issues that he faced as mayor. So welcome, Liane. Thank you. It’s great to be with you.
So first, let’s talk up through your career a little bit. Your career took you from councilman to
mayor to then HUD. When you think about the trajectory and if you think about the threat of housing.
Talk about housing. Really how housing was an anchor for you in terms of where you wanted to go and
where you are now in terms of public service. Yeah. I first got interested
in public service when I went away from my hometown of San Antonio and
I could see my home community for the first time with a fresh set of eyes.
My brother and I went away to college at Stanford and over there I saw a community that seemed
to have higher income levels, higher education levels seem to be more innovative and ready
for the future. And I also didn’t see that many folks who had come
from the community that I come from, from the neighborhoods in San Antonio or even the city
in general. And that was the beginning of me thinking that
I wanted to dedicate some of my time and effort to making sure that other folks could have the same
opportunity that I did. And a lot of that was related
to the neighborhood that walking in my brother walking and I had grown up in on the west side of San Antonio.
It was low income to lower middle income. We went to the public schools and I could see
at that time, you know, even as a 19 or 20 year old, how
much of a difference it makes, what kind of opportunity you get based on what
neighborhood you live in, the housing that you have, the access that you have to
different educational institutions, different amenities in life.
So, you know, it’s been a part of the spark for my decision to go
into public service in the first place. So when you think about that as a young man and knowing
that and having that realization, you know, sort of the light bulb goes off at some point very early in your life
and then you come back and you’re running for council and then you run for mayor when you’re thinking about
those trajectories. How did that influence of just understanding the neighborhood
and its environment, how did it affect you when you ran and in you governed in these different state,
local and federal positions? I think it always grounded me. First
of all, when I moved back home after law school to San Antonio. I didn’t move too far away from
where I had grown up. And so I was still interacting with a lot of the same people are
still seen everyday the challenges of the folks in terms of housing, in
terms of economic development, in terms of educational opportunity. So
I think it mattered that I lived the experience of growing up in those neighborhoods that that were some of the most distressed
in the city. And then that I returned to that area and I’ve really
tried to make my time in public service about creating opportunity
for people, focusing on opportunity. When I was on the council, that meant
making sure that we could make good infrastructure investments. That’s a lot of what council members do. They
focus on streets and sidewalks and sort of the basic services out there. As mayor, it meant
pushing the envelope in terms of San Antonio’s investment in educational opportunity.
We passed something called pre-K for s.A, which was a ballot initiative to raise
the sales tax by an eighth of a cent to significantly expand high quality, full day pre-K. The voters
passed that in 2012. And the young child. Four year olds who are able to take advantage
of that are largely from families that are lower income and often
don’t have the opportunity to get a great educational start in life. And then at HUD,
it influenced how I saw that job. I wanted the folks who lived
in public housing and HUD assisted housing to be like the sun that opportunity
services would orbit around. So whether it were improving the schools or
better health care or access to transit, I wanted to make sure
that we could create an envelope there where they had more opportunity
for good jobs and quality of life around them. One of the things some as you’re talking,
I’m thinking about a lot of these decisions in a lot of these environments are outcomes of policy. So when you think
about President Johnson and the fiftieth anniversary of many of his pieces of legislation,
housing was really an important piece of a policy framework trying to get at this very issue.
When I think about this in your short life, in your short career, how do you see that federal
initiative in terms of the Fair Housing Act really influencing the kinds of decisions you
made and the kind of circumstances that you saw? It’s been essential to the ability
of cities to prosper more and especially vulnerable communities.
It’s been essential the Fair Housing Act for people
of color or other folks or vulnerable communities to be able to move into higher opportunity
areas over time. Yeah, it’s clear that we still have a ways to go, but it’s also
clear that we’ve made a tremendous amount of progress since Lyndon Johnson signed the Fair Housing
Act. You see some of the most important. If you had to name the one or two top things that you are so
you feel are really the most important things that this act did. Number one, you see
more integration in a lot of neighborhoods, especially a lot of higher opportunity neighborhoods
than we used to see. And that’s because this Fair Housing Act was instrumental
in helping to root out outright discrimination. Now,
you know, has to be pointed out, we’re not all the way there. That still does happen. And we have Fair Housing Act
enforcement right now under the law. But 1968 versus 2018 is
night and day. So the number one thing, the number one accomplishment of this Fair Housing
Act and the legacy of Lyndon Johnson is that it opened up the
opportunity for people of color and other folks from protected classes to get into
neighborhoods that they wanted to get into, where they had better schools, they had more access to transit, they had better
job opportunities. And that’s been tremendous for families across the United States.
Well, one of the things you did when you were secretary of HUD in 2015, you rolled out some new
rules that strictly more strictly combat racial segregation in residential
neighborhoods. Talk to us a little bit about what motivated you in that in terms of the regulatory
structure and determining how best it worked for you. And did it really meet the objectives that
you set out for them to meet? I believe in equal housing opportunity.
I very much am a fan of the Fair Housing Act and the work of Lyndon Johnson and all
of the advocates who helped make that possible. You know, that was signed only a week after the assassination
of Martin Luther King. And he and folks in the movement had pushed
for fair housing legislation in 1966 67. And then Lyndon Johnson signed it
on April 11th of 68. In 2015, we accomplished
something called affirmatively furthering fair housing. The act says that the secretary of HUD has the
obligation to affirmatively further fair housing, but nobody had actually put that into a
rule that it hadn’t been given any statement of aspiration. That’s right. Why is ya
sure? Yeah. And and, you know, it’s kind of sounds like a bureaucratic phrase, right? It’s about
not the warmest of phrases, but basically our rule said to communities
that receive HUD money, federal taxpayer money, that you have to become more serious
about ensuring equal housing opportunity in your community when you invest your Reesa, your federal
resources, when you do your development code.
All of those things that go into creating equal housing opportunity. It had been tried
about 20 years earlier in the Clinton administration, and they almost got it over the finish
line. We were proud to get it over the finish line. And what it required communities
to do, local communities, is to put together robust plans, meaningful
plans on how in the years to come they’re going to actually create more equal housing opportunity.
I believe also that over time, it’s going to have the effect of further desegregating
our country. And that’s a positive thing right now. Of course,
in Washington, there’s a bit of a different direction that the current administration is going in. But
I do think that the. He is out of the bottle and that we’re going to continue to get better and better
because of this rule, fervently furthering fair housing that we promulgated
does what they’ve always been very curious about. You started as a councilman, so very, very close to your constituents.
Then there’s a mayor. You’re still close. Not as close as if your councilman. Then you go to the national
level. How does one in your position stay in touch with the very people
at the highest level creating policy? How do we keep in touch with those people that we think that
we’re really serving? That’s a great question. I enjoyed working at the local
level, in part because you are so close to the people that you represent and
you can see the the impact of your work very directly in
the community that you drive around in that you go and spend time with your family in
the neighbors that you talk to. It’s different at the national level and you’re not as close to the people. The
way that I tried to bridge that gap was to make sure when I traveled for HUD
business, whether it was about the Fair Housing Act or public housing
or vouchers or whatever it was to actually meet with the people who were impacted
by our work, folks who lived in public housing or who had housing choice vouchers or
veterans or others who were experiencing homelessness so that I could hear firsthand
how they thought that the program was working, you know, ways that we could improve it. All of those
things that that you can only learn from the firsthand people that
are actually dealing with the policy that is said. You know, that’s how I tried to keep in touch
with real people and to stay grounded. I think that’s very, very hard. And I
think it has to be something that is an intentional goal when we’re doing that, because the farther
away we get from the actual constituencies, the more removed we are from real life situations
at something. At the LBJ school, we’re trying to instill in our students today as they go out, they
really have to stay in touch with the very people that they think they’re serving. Because you came into the
federal sector at a very high level in an area called housing, yet you were part of a presidential
cabinet. So when you think about the cabinet and the discussions of policy at that level
and this again is that, you know, is an Obama administration, not every administration. So how did that reflect on your
ability to work with others? Because you talked at the very beginning of this about how important education
is, how important transportation is, how can we continue to make sure that people
at the very highest levels who are very busy. Talk to each other and collaborate around these larger
areas. And how did you do that as secretary? Well, fortunately, I came into the administration in 2014
when President Obama had said a strong blueprint of
cabinet agencies, these departments working across silos. They
started off with a really neat initiative called Sustainable Communities in 2010.
That was a partnership with HUD, the EPA and the Department of Transportation
to invest in both planning and and actual implementation of
policy that connected all of those things together, housing, transportation and a better
environment. And then champion things like promise zones and choice
neighborhoods at HUD that similarly looked across those silos of how we can
put policy together to improve overall quality of life and economic opportunity. So the answer is
that by the time that I got there, all of these cabinet secretaries were already kind of working
together in this mode because of President Obama’s leadership. And so when we worked
on things like Promise Zones or we worked on Choice Neighborhoods or Secretary
Fox, if the department transportation’s working on Tiger grants, we would communicate and share ideas
and think through how we could work more closely together. My hope also is that
the example that that said and the cities that started to do that to
an even greater extent because of the leadership that the federal government showed.
My hope is that that will continue in those local communities and that the federal government also will continue
to do that in the years to come. I think some people forget that the seating is just not the
the secretary level is getting together and talk, but there’s a whole echo system
with them as well, an infrastructure within their departments that they start getting this ideas
and they start working on this. So regardless, you seeded an idea and sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t.
But that kind of initiative at the very high level is almost like a bully
pulpit, kind of an initiative that says this is important, Justin, we can do that. Yeah. And, you know, maybe
the best example of that cross agency work was the Obama
administration’s push to end veteran homelessness. It started in 2010 with a blueprint
called Opening Doors in the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness. Coordinated
the work of. 19 different federal agencies, including HUD, partment
of education transfer, take all of them, 19 different federal agencies, and because of that
coordination and very good coordination on the ground in many American
cities, we were able to see a reduction of veteran homelessness by 47 percent between 2010
and 2016. That’s how Washington should work. Congress did its part. They
made the investment in resources that they rightfully should for veterans who are homeless.
And because of that, you have thousands and thousands of veterans out there who now have a home
and who are living healthier, more productive lives. This is why I love these kinds of podcasts and
and talking to people, because people are often they may hear about it, but they don’t really listen to some
of the things that are done and how good policy can really seed good outcomes for
the citizens. I want to shift a little bit. I’m thinking of the future. When you think about cities
and you think about how people live and how they commute and how they go to work. Now, you’ve got artificial intelligence,
you have I.T., you have gentrification. There’s a lot that’s going on in terms of how you
think in the next 50 years, because this fiftieth anniversary, fair housing, when you think about the next
50 years, talk to us a little bit about what you think are some of the big challenges with these social
and economic shifts that are going on. Yeah, it’s absolutely fascinating. I mean, what we see happening
in the urban cores of communities across the United States is that rents
are going up tremendously. We have a rental affordability crisis in this country. We need to increase
supply. We do increase housing opportunity in general and invest more in it.
One of the big challenges that I see in the years to come is this growing inequality. And
part of the way that that expresses itself in cities, places like here in Austin is a lot of displacement
and gentrification. And I will say that I haven’t seen one single city that
I would grade with an A toward handling that challenge. Wow. And it’s understandable a
lot of times why? You know, because there’s this cycle that happens where you have a distressed neighborhood
and then, you know, folks that that may maybe middle income are a little bit more than that, start moving in and they start improving the
homes. But it’s still mostly a distressed neighborhood. And then more investment is made
and more and more folks start moving in. And it’s been the aspiration of the folks who live there to see
more infrastructure investment and see more amenities. But they’re also getting priced out
as right or they’re cashing out in some way. Sometimes they sell their home.
And then before you know it, you’re in this situation as a city where it’s
almost too late. East Austin is a good example of that. I’m not saying that it is
too late there, but but it’s a good example of what happens to many communities across
the United States. So that’s one challenge. Another challenge will be for
rural and small town America to better link these things up. I remember visiting
a small town, Wisconsin, with Representative Sean Duffy
when I was there at HUD. And one of the things I heard over and over was that they needed better
access to transit because the jobs were too far away. And
for rural and small town America, we need to figure out ways to do
what we’ve done a lot of in cities, which is to connect the dots, these different quality of life
components and amenities. I think we still hear there, too. I know the students did
a study on food insecurity and talked to people about that. And the industries had all these
grandiose ideas. Let’s have victory gardens and let’s get better grocery stores when they talk to the people, like
get me transportation to a job. So it it’s like this these two infrastructure in your your housing
and your ability to move out of that area to get other opportunities is really important to see those two
as almost tied at the hip. Absolutely. Absolutely. As we go on. So I have a
last question for you. And the ad is, OK, we have students here and you’ve
been exposed to these students for the last, you know, a semester and a half. And, you know, they’re
very passionate about what they want to do and make a difference in the world. When you think about
how to talk to them about staying involved, not being cynical, moving into
things, what kind of advice would you give to them? Maybe it’s not advice. Maybe just here’s my story.
I’m going to share my story with you. And I have advice. And tonight, I actually have my
last lecture this semester and I’m going to share some of that perspective with them.
First of all, I start off by telling them that they made me feel old already
available. But now, I mean, the advice that I give folks
is number one. It’s true what people say, that you should find things that you’re passionate about, because
if you’re going to spend your career doing it, it needs to be something that you can get up in the morning and want to excel
at because you love it. And then secondly, I asked them.
To always believe in themselves and surround themselves with people who believe in them. And
then third, I tell them really that they should do everything
possible that they can to find a way
to connect these dots. Maybe it’s not what we’ve been talking about necessarily with certain
distinct types of policy. But to think through from the perspective of the people that
are trying to serve, not from their perspective, they’re sitting behind a desk or as an elected official,
you know, getting all the plaudits, but from the perspective of the people that they’re trying to serve. How does
it all work together in policymaking? Indeed, they always keep the perspective
of the folks they’re supposed to serve at the forefront that I don’t think that you can
go wrong ultimately. And I don’t think we can go wrong ending there. And that’s a perfect ending
in terms of what we need to be talking not only to our students, but to the rest of us who are citizens in the United
States. So thank you so much. Really. I really appreciate taking your time to do this. Thank you.
This is Policy on Purpose, a podcast produced by the LBJ School of Public Affairs at the
University of Texas at Austin. We take you behind the scenes of policy with the people
who help shape it. To learn more, visit LBJ, you, Texas, study you
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you for listening.