Press Release
For Immediate Release:
November 21, 2003
Contact: Danielle Lewis 202/833-9771
National Campaign Launched to Combat Housing Discrimination
PSAs Arm Victims of Under-Reported Problem With Facts
(Washington, DC) ? A public service announcement promoting
fair housing laws received the Ad Council's Golden Bell Award
for the Best PSA of 2003. Produced by New York-based
advertising agency Merkley Newman Harty under
the direction of the Leadership Conference on Civil
Rights Education Fund (LCCREF), the National Fair Housing
Alliance (NFHA) and the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development (HUD), the PSA seeks to
arm victims of under-reported housing discrimination with the
facts about their rights.
The fair housing PSA was selected among 54 current Ad
Council campaigns by its Campaign Review Committee composed of
leading advertising executives. This is the second time an
LCCREF-sponsored campaign has received the Golden Bell
Award.
Titled "Accents," the television spot opens with a white man
making calls to a rental office. He gives a different name and
uses a different voice for each call, reflecting various races
and ethnicities, and is told each time that the apartment is
not available. When he uses a Caucasian-sounding name
and accent, he is assured that the apartment is
vacant. The ad has appeared on television stations
across the country, and the radio version aired during the
nationally-syndicated Tom Joyner Morning Show.
The award-winning PSA is part of a year-long,
multi-media campaign that includes English and Spanish
print, radio and television spots. LCCREF, sister organization
of the nation's leading civil rights coalition, the Leadership
Conference on Civil Rights, developed the campaign to inform
renters and homebuyers about insidious forms of exclusion,
ranging from linguistic profiling during telephone contacts to
barring families with children from housing opportunities.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
estimates that more than two million instances of
housing discrimination occur each year, but fewer than one
percent are reported. In order to effectively combat
housing discrimination, renters and homebuyers must know their
rights and how to spot illegal behavior by landlords or
realtors.
"It is difficult to fight housing discrimination without
being armed with information," explains Shanna Smith, NFHA
president. "This campaign is vitally important because it
empowers people who are unaware that they have been victims of
housing discrimination with facts on what to look for and then
how to respond."
"Housing discrimination is a pervasive problem nationwide,"
added Karen McGill Lawson, LCCREF executive director. "We hope
our campaign sends a signal to those who discriminate, but more
importantly we want victims of discrimination to know that
there is redress."
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