Valencia v. City of Springfield, Illinois

CourtDistrict Court, C.D. Illinois
DecidedMarch 3, 2020
Docket3:16-cv-03331
StatusUnknown

This text of Valencia v. City of Springfield, Illinois (Valencia v. City of Springfield, Illinois) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valencia v. City of Springfield, Illinois, (C.D. Ill. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE CENTRAL DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS SPRINGFIELD DIVISION

MARY B. VALENCIA, et al., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) Case No. 16-3331 ) Consolidated with CITY OF SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS, ) Case No. 17-3278 ) Defendant, ) ) UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) ) CITY OF SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS, ) ) Defendant. )

OPINION

RICHARD MILLS, United States District Judge:

This is a consolidated action, wherein each party has moved for summary judgment. The Court now considers the Motion of Plaintiff United States of America for Summary Judgment on liability and Defendant City of Springfield’s Motion for Summary Judgment on the issues of jurisdiction, civil penalties and damages. I. INTRODUCTION Plaintiffs filed this case when Defendant City of Springfield (“the City”)

refused to grant a zoning permit to allow a group home for three men with intellectual and physical disabilities to remain open. This Court granted the Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction, finding that Plaintiffs were likely to

succeed in showing the City had violated the Fair Housing Act (“FHA”) by discriminating on the basis of disability. The Seventh Circuit affirmed. Plaintiff United States of America alleges the City’s conduct constitutes both a “pattern or practice” of discrimination and a denial of rights to a group of persons

that raises an issue of general public importance. The United States asks the Court to grant summary judgment to the United States as to Springfield’s liability and order the City to submit a plan to remediate its violations.

II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND Reaction to FHA amendment After the FHA was amended to prohibit discrimination against persons with disabilities, Illinois enacted the Illinois Community Residence Location Planning

Act which required home-rule cities to develop a plan to comply with these new prohibitions. Daniel Lauber was a consultant to the Illinois Planning Council on Developmental Disabilities. In that capacity, he provided guidance to cities in order to comply with the FHA. The City submitted its plan for compliance with the FHA amendments to Mr. Lauber.

On August 30, 1990, Mr. Lauber sent a letter to the City advising that its plan to amend its zoning code to comply with the FHA was “excellent” and that, upon enactment, the “City of Springfield will be in compliance with the requirements of

both the Illinois Community Residence Location Planning Act and the Fair Housing Act, as we understand the act and case law interpreting it.” The City alleges that, at the time he sent the letter, Mr. Lauber was concerned that because the definition of group home included a range of numbers of residents which overlapped the number

of unrelated residents allowed in the definition of family, there might be uncertainty or ambiguity about whether a group home with 5 or fewer residents should be subjected to requirements of group homes instead of being considered a family. Mr.

Lauber was directed by a member of the staff of the Governor at the time not to raise such concerns with the cities he was advising. Mr. Lauber drafted the recommendations to the Illinois General Assembly which were submitted on January 31, 1991 by the Illinois Planning Council. In that

recommendation, Lauber reported that 76 of the cities which participated in the Council’s analysis had spacing requirements for community residences within single family zoning districts: 20 cities required 600 feet or less, 8 required 601 to 999 feet

separation, 36 required 1000 feet and 12 required more than 1320 feet. Since the City adopted the changes to the zoning ordinance endorsed by Mr. Lauber in 1990, the City has sought to enforce the 600 foot spacing provision on

only two occasions, both in the summer of 2016. The Group Home at 2328 S. Noble Ave. In 2014, Plaintiff Individual Advocacy Group (“IAG”) began operating a

group home for three persons with disabilities located at 2328 S. Noble Ave., in a residential zoning district in Springfield. IAG is licensed to provide these services by the State of Illinois through the Illinois Department of Human Services. The home at 2328 S. Noble Ave. is a Community Integrated Living

Arrangement (“CILA”) and, as such, it is approved, licensed, funded and overseen by the State of Illinois. The CILA program is the means by which, through Medicaid, the State of Illinois provides community-based residential services to

persons with intellectual disabilities. See Ill. Admin. Code tit. 59, pt. 115. Its purpose is to enable persons with intellectual disabilities to live in the community rather than in institutional settings, in order to “promote optimal independence in daily living and economic self-sufficiency of individuals with a mental disability.”

Id. § 115.100(b). CILAs are permitted to have up to eight residents. As a licensed CILA, 2328 S. Noble Ave. must “be typical of homes in the community and residential neighborhood” and its presence must “not appreciably

alter the characteristics of the neighborhood.” Id. § 155.310(a). Consistent with this mandate, 2328 S. Noble Ave. is a ranch-style, three bedroom home that does not appear outwardly different from other homes on the block. The home has created

no traffic or parking issues for the City. It also has not been the subject of any police or emergency calls, other than a domestic disturbance call in 2014 that was unrelated to and did not involve the residents.

Since the spring of 2014, 2328 S. Noble Ave. has been the home of J.D., a 35- year-old man with intellectual and physical disabilities, and J.M., A 36-year-old man with intellectual disabilities. Another adult man with intellectual and physical disabilities, A.D., lived with J.D. and J.M. at 2328 S. Noble Ave. until his death in

September 2017. The residents of 2328 S. Noble require 24-hour assistance with their activities of daily living including bathing, dressing and eating, and they receive those services

in the home from the staff of IAG. Additionally, J.D. and J.M. attend an IAG-run program with supported employment services during the day. A.D. was medically fragile prior to his death and received day support services from IAG at home. Typically, two staff persons are present when the three residents are at home and

awake, and one staff person is at home at other times. Through their guardians, the residents of 2328 S. Noble lease the home directly from the landlords, Christine and Robyn Hovey. With the families’ consent,

IAG handles rental payments and other administrative functions related to the tenancy. This is consistent with federal law governing Medicaid-funded community residential services for persons with disabilities. See 42 C.F.R. §

441.301(c)(4)(vi)(A) (residential services should be provided in a “unit or dwelling . . . that can be owned, rented, or occupied under a legally enforceable agreement by the individual receiving services”).

The first tenant to sign the lease for 2328 S. Noble was A.D., through his sister and guardian Mary Valencia. A.D. lived alone at the home for approximately six weeks before J.D. and J.M. moved in. At the time Ms. Valencia signed the lease on behalf of A.D., both she and IAG were unaware that an agency called Sparc operated

another CILA on the same block of S. Noble Ave. J.D. primarily uses a wheelchair to ambulate, as did A.D. 2328 S. Noble Ave is fully accessible to persons with disabilities. The Hoveys modified the home at

their own expense to make it more physically accessible by, for example, installing lowered kitchen countertops, accessible door thresholds, a roll-in shower and accessible sliding doors opening onto the back patio. The guardians of J.D. and A.D. as well as IAG found it difficult to locate

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