April 3, 2016

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Opening Day In Major League Baseball Featured 3 Games

Cardinals leadoff man Matt Carpenter walked up to the plate, shook hands with the umpire, greeted the Pittsburgh catcher and got comfortable in the batter’s box.

Just like that, fans everywhere settled in for a fresh new season.

“Opening day, for me, is sort of like Christmas,” Commissioner Rob Manfred said at the Toronto-Tampa Bay game. “It’s one of the most exciting days of the year.”

A World Series rematch in Kansas City and a meeting of NL playoff teams sweetened Sunday’s schedule.

It was 39 degrees at PNC Park when Pirates lefty Francisco Liriano threw the first pitch of the season. Hours earlier, the grounds crew cleared ice off the tarp after snow flurries fell.

Liriano did just fine: six shutout innings, 10 strikeouts and an RBI single for the first run of 2016 in a 4-1 win over St. Louis. Pirates newcomer David Freese did well, too, getting the first hit of the season.

All-Star Chris Archer had no weather worries when he started for the Rays under the dome at Tropicana Field. His bigger concern was the Blue Jays – the highest-scoring in the big leagues last season, Toronto got a two-run single in the first inning from Edwin Encarnacion and went on to win, 5-3. Troy Tulowitzki hit the majors’ first home run of the year.

In Kansas City, it was 74 degrees under a setting sun when the champion Royals hosted the team they beat last October, the New York Mets.

The parking lots at Kauffman Stadium were jammed with tailgaters long before the first pitch, and Royals rooters roared when the World Series flag was raised in right field.

“It’s a fun day to be part of,” Kansas City first baseman Eric Hosmer said, adding, “but once it’s over it is, ‘OK, time to get back into the routine.'”

Matt Harvey started for the Mets vs. Edinson Volquez. They faced each other on the final day of 2015, in Game 5 at Citi Field, where the Royals rallied to win the crown. Volquez took the mound wearing a different hat than his teammates, the spring training version with a gold crown over the KC logo.

But everything else went according to plan for the Royals, who picked up where they left off in November by beating Harvey and the Mets 4-3 in the first opening-day rematch of a World Series.

With runners at the corners in the ninth inning, All-Star closer Wade Davis struck out David Wright and Yoenis Cespedes to preserve the victory.

Fans in Kansas City saw something new, too. There’s extra netting behind the plate to protect crowds from foul balls, a recommendation MLB made to all teams during the offseason.

Most every other club starts up Monday. The Tigers and Marlins are the last to open, on Tuesday at Marlins Park.

David Ortiz begins his farewell tour when the Red Sox play at Cleveland in the Boston debut of high-priced ace David Price. Big Papi and Price took it easy Sunday, going across the street from Progressive Field to watch LeBron James and the Cavaliers take on Charlotte.

Plenty of top pitchers were on tap to start Monday, with Zack Greinke, Dallas Keuchel, Clayton Kershaw and Felix Hernandez among them.

NL Cy Young Award winner Jake Arrieta starts Monday night as the popular and talented Chicago Cubs visit the Los Angeles Angels.

“If you factor in everything – experience, talent level, the motivation of the group – they want to become a part of the first team that wins a World Series for the Cubs in a long, long time,” Chicago manager Joe Maddon said. “So there’s so many good things that can repel pressure and expectations.”

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Denying Housing Over Criminal Record May Be Discrimination, Feds Say

Rowhouses in Baltimore sit across the street from a church where Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) held a meeting last summer about, among other things, reducing ex-convict recidivism.

Rowhouses in Baltimore sit across the street from a church where Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) held a meeting last summer about, among other things, reducing ex-convict recidivism. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

The Department of Housing and Urban Development is making it easier for people with criminal records to find housing.

In new guidance, released Monday, HUD tells landlords and home sellers that turning down tenants or buyers based on their criminal records may violate the Fair Housing Act.

People with criminal records aren’t a protected class under the Fair Housing Act, and the guidance from HUD’s general counsel says that in some cases, turning down an individual tenant because of his or her record can be legally justified.

But blanket policies of refusing to rent to anybody with a criminal record are de facto discrimination, the department says — because of the systemic disparities of the American criminal justice system.

When A Criminal Past Closes Doors

One in four Americans has a criminal record, as NPR’s Carrie Johnson has reported. Those records can include arrests that never led to convictions, as well as convictions for a wide range of crimes — from petty to serious — that may have happened decades ago.

A record can make it hard to find a job — or a home. Many private landlords and public housing projects have policies against renting to people with criminal records.

Take Melvin Lofton, who spoke with NPR’s Cheryl Corley. Lofton was convicted of burglary and theft when he was in his 20s; now he’s 51.

He lives with his mom, and says it would be hard to find housing without that family connection. He remembers one time when he tried to rent a home in a trailer park.

Melvin Lofton, who lives with his mother, says landlords have turned him away in the past because of his record.

Melvin Lofton, who lives with his mother, says landlords have turned him away in the past because of his record. Cheryl Corley/NPR hide caption

toggle caption Cheryl Corley/NPR

“I was at work and the guy called me and told me to come pick up my keys. So I was happy. I got a place to stay,” Lofton says. “So then … 45 to 50 minutes later he calls and says, ‘Is there something you’re not telling me?’ and I say, ‘No, what is there? And he says, ‘You didn’t tell me you had a background.’ “

Lofton had been out of prison for 20 years at the time, Cheryl reports.

Seemingly Neutral Policies Can Be Discriminatory

HUD’s new guidance warns that landlords could be breaking the law when they refuse to rent to people with criminal records — even if they have no intention to discriminate — because such a policy would likely have a disproportionate impact on African-American and Hispanic applicants.

Housing Secretary Julian Castro puts it another way, NPR’s Cheryl Corley reports: “When landlords refuse to rent to anyone who has an arrest record, they effectively bar the door to millions of folks of color for no good reason.”

E. Ann Carson, Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Dept of Justice, "Prisoners in 2014," and Census data, via HUD.

E. Ann Carson, Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Dept of Justice, “Prisoners in 2014,” and Census data, via HUD. Camila Domonoske/NPR hide caption

toggle caption Camila Domonoske/NPR

HUD notes that whether an individual landlord’s policy has a discriminatory impact will need to be determined on a case-by-case basis. But on a national level, HUD provided a list of statistics — direct from the Justice Department — demonstrating disproportionately high rates of arrest and incarceration based on race. They noted African-American men are imprisoned at a rate nearly six times that of white men, and Hispanic men at more than twice the rate of white men.

All Criminal Records Aren’t Created Alike …

That doesn’t mean landlords are completely barred from considering criminal records — but they’d have to prove that their policy legitimately serves to protect safety or property.

Saying “criminals are poor tenants” doesn’t cut it, HUD says: “Bald assertions based on generalization or stereotype” aren’t sufficient.

Barring people based just on arrest records is no good, HUD says, because arrests alone aren’t proof of guilt. And even if you only consider convictions, refusing to rent to all ex-cons — “no matter when the conviction occurred, what the underlying conduct entailed, or what the convicted person has done since then,” HUD writes — also isn’t defensible, since not all ex-cons will pose a risk to safety or property.

Instead, HUD writes, landlords should have a policy that takes into consideration what the crime was and when it happened, as well as other factors, to reduce the discriminatory impact. (The only exception is if a conviction was for manufacturing or distributing drugs.)

… And You Can’t Use Records As A Pretext For Discrimination

HUD also warns landlords that if they do intend to discriminate, and use criminal records as a cover for their actions, they can be found in violation.

For instance, landlords who reject black or Hispanic applicants ostensibly because of criminal records — but accept a white tenant with a similar criminal record — could be found guilty of violating the Fair Housing Act.

From Jan. 10 on All Things Considered

That discrimination could happen even before a candidate applies, HUD writes:

“Intentional discrimination may be proven based on evidence that, when responding to inquiries from prospective applicants, a property manager told a African American individual that her criminal record would disqualify her from renting an apartment, but did not similarly discourage a White individual with a comparable criminal record from applying.”

In both cases — whether the discrimination is accidental or intentional — each instance would have to be considered on a case by case basis.

But “arbitrary and overbroad” policies, as well as any that are mere pretexts to conceal discrimination, aren’t protected.

HUD officials told NPR’s Cheryl Corley that the goal is to make landlords consider: Is their policy towards criminal records about keeping a community safe?

Or is it about keeping somebody out of a home?

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