LOS ANGELES (AP) 鈥 The city of Los Angeles will pay $38.2 million to settle a 2017 lawsuit after 鈥渇alsely鈥 stating on federal documents that its multifamily affordable housing units built with federal funds were accessible for people with disabilities.
The complaint was filed by the U.S. Department of Justice on behalf of a Los Angeles resident, Mei Ling, who uses a wheelchair and the Fair Housing Council of San Fernando Valley, a disability rights advocacy group. Their share of the settlement has not been determined.
Ling, 57, has used a wheelchair since January 2006鈥 and has either been homeless or in housing without the accessibility features, the lawsuit said.
It alleged that the city of LA did not make its multifamily affordable housing options accessible to those with disabilities for at least six years. Some issues were slopes that were too steep, counters that were too high, and entryways that did not permit wheelchair access, officials said.
The lawsuit also stated the city failed to maintain a publicly available list of accessible units and their accessibility features, and that it 鈥渒nowingly and falsely certified鈥 to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development that it complied with these requirements. By doing so, it violated the False Claims Act, the lawsuit said.
鈥淭he City denies that it violated the False Claims Act,鈥 LA city attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto said in an emailed statement. 鈥淣onetheless, we are pleased to have reached this $38.2 million settlement, particularly in light of the federal government鈥檚 initial claim that it was entitled to well over $1 billion in alleged damages.鈥
When the Housing and Urban Development department provides grant funds to local governments to build and rehabilitate affordable multifamily housing units, they must comply with federal accessibility laws, officials said. This includes a mandate that 5% of all units in certain types of federally assisted housing be accessible for people with mobility impairments, and another 2% be accessible for people with visual and auditory impairments.
They also must maintain a publicly available list of accessible units with a description of their accessibility features, among other housing-related accessibility requirements.
In the six years prior to the lawsuit filing in 2017, LA received nearly a billion dollars in various funds from the federal housing agency that went toward at least 28 multifamily housing projects, according to the plaintiffs. None of them contained the minimum number of accessible units required by law.
Meanwhile, the city 鈥渃aused HUD and the public to believe that it was in compliance with all federal obligations relating to the receipt of federal housing and community development funds,鈥 the lawsuit said.
Previously, the .