Real Estate

Selling Houses While Black – The New York Times

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Tye Williams feels the heat. It’s 95 degrees out, and the North Carolina sun is beating like a drum. He’s in a full suit and tie and thinking about the tasks ahead. When he gets to the home he’s showing, will he arouse suspicion because he has trouble opening the lockbox? Will neighbors call the cops when they see him circling the property and peeping in its crawl spaces? Or will his extremely professional — and very warm — attire protect him? As a Black real estate agent, “I’m always sure I have my license ready,” he said.

Black agents say thoughts like these often run through their heads when they are out showing houses to their clients.

Despite groundbreakers like Philip A. Payton Jr., whose Afro-American Realty transformed Harlem into an international center of Black culture in the early 20th century, a history of racism in the real estate industry has shut Black people out and has discouraged them from becoming agents. Though the National Association of Realtors (N.A.R.) permitted Black people to join and to access its benefits in 1961 when the organization officially ended the exclusion of Black agents, the group still lobbied against the 1968 Fair Housing Act, a law to end housing discrimination.

In 2018, Chastin J. Miles, 33, a Black real estate agent and investor in Dallas, was excited to hold his first open house of a super-high-end home (about $3 million). It was a 6,000-square-foot colonial-style home with four bedrooms, five bathrooms, three living areas and a pool on an oversize corner lot on one of Dallas’ highest price-per-square-foot streets. His excitement disappeared abruptly, when would-be buyers, an older white couple, walked in and immediately walked out upon seeing him. “She opened the door and literally stopped there in the door frame and said to me, ‘Oh, you’re not who we were expecting,’ and her and her husband turned around and walked away,” he said. “They weren’t expecting me to be in that house on this street in this ZIP code.”

Some Black agents said they have come to expect bigotry, especially from older white people.

Darryl Dibbs, 33, a Black agent in Detroit, said many potential clients grew up under segregation and with laws like interracial marriage bans, “so I’m not convinced that this 60-year-old white man completely trusts me with selling his home when he lived in a time where I couldn’t even buy one.”

After the experience with the older couple in Dallas, Mr. Miles concluded: “I’m not supposed to be here.”

Mr. Miles didn’t host any more open houses at the mansion and considered selling less expensive houses. But then he came up with a new approach: He started “buddying up” with white agents, hiring them to come to his open houses and work as greeters at the door, while he remained a distance away in the kitchen. When a greeter referred potential clients to Miles to get answers to their questions about the home or buying process, they were often surprised that he was the one in charge. And while these potential buyers were always polite, they seemed unwilling to engage with him as they would have with his white colleague. They asked him simple questions that lacked the depth of those that buyers of multi-million-dollar homes usually ask. In these interactions, Mr. Miles was “left asking, ‘Are you sure that that’s it? You don’t want to know anything else?’”

Even before showing up at open houses with white buddies, some Black agents employ other tactics to hide their racial identity. Though it is standard practice for agents to include a headshot on their business cards and marketing materials, some Black agents omit photos to hopefully persuade prospective clients to work with them based on credentials and knowledge.

The longtime tradition of the lawn sign can be threatened by racism. When a white couple commissioned Fee Gentry, 54, a Black real estate consultant in the Austin area, to list their house for sale, they asked her to display a lawn sign that did not include her photo.

Pamela Chambers, 53, a Black agent in Tucson who is sure to wear her company badge in unwelcoming neighborhoods, recalled how white agents mocked the lesson in a required fair housing class that she has taken every two years since getting licensed in Arizona in 2017.

She said she lost faith in the course’s efficacy. Agents are “just taking it because they have to to keep their license,” said Ms. Chambers. To avoid classmates’ comments doubting that anti-Black housing discrimination still happens, she now plans to take these classes online.

Still, Ms. Chambers loves real estate and believes it’s a great career path: You don’t need a college degree, have uncapped earning potential, are poised to get into real estate investing, and get to participate in one of the best days of people’s lives.

She has encouraged other Black people to get into the business and started a mentorship program to increase the diversity of the brokerage where she works, which until recently only had two Black agents, Ms. Chambers and her ex-husband, out of about 500.

Many other agents I spoke to are similarly starting mentoring groups, affinity groups, and even buying real estate courses, “$67 on Groupon!,” for Black friends to encourage them to get into the business.

Mr. Williams makes sure to always post photos of real estate wins to social media, so that Black people considering getting into the business will see more people who look like them. He’s also involved in diversity, equity, and inclusion work with his local N.A.R. chapter, and tries to make changes on the ground. For example, after many experiences of walking into show homes and turning a corner to have the shock and insult of racially-charged posters, flags, and magnets, saying things like, “If you kneel for the national anthem, you don’t deserve to live,” he’s working to educate his colleagues on how listing agents should handle such situations. If it’s OK to tell clients to “paint their houses, redo their cabinets,” or “cut down a tree,” why can’t agents tell them to remove racist paraphernalia, he said.

The work is very much an extension of the Fair Housing Act, educating white colleagues, white homeowners and trying to ensure that Black people have an equal chance of buying a house. This summer, N.A.R.E.B. will begin a new mentorship program, which will support young people looking to get into the sector, in an effort to diversify the industry on a large scale.

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Sahred From Source link Real Estate

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