Long Island Village Agrees to Settle Housing Discrimination Suit
The Village of Mastic Beach on Long Island will pay $387,500 to plaintiffs who accused the village of discriminating against African-American renters under an agreement reached in Brooklyn federal court.
August 23, 2017 at 04:02 PM
3 minute read
The Village of Mastic Beach on Long Island has settled with several people who accused the village and its former administrator of discriminating against African-American renters and agreed to pay $387,500 to settle the charges.
The lawsuit, Long Island Housing Services v. Village of Mastic Beach, 15-CV-0629, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York in February 2015, claimed that the Village of Mastic Beach and its former administrator, Timothy Brojer, illegally evicted low-income African-American renters.
According to the lawsuit filed by The Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, the law firms of Cooley; Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll and the nonprofit organization Long Island Housing Services Inc., Village of Mastic Beach Code Enforcement evicted black tenants who received housing subsidies for minor housing violations, without providing lawful notice or giving the tenants an opportunity to be heard. Meanwhile, white tenants in homes with larger safety and health concerns were allowed to maintain their residences, the complaint claims.
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