Four housing choice voucher holders and nonprofit HOPE Fair Housing Center filed a class-action lawsuit against Mac Properties on Tuesday, following years of complaints against the property management company that controls a wide swath of the apartments in Hyde Park.
The complaint, filed in federal court, alleges Mac Properties systemically discriminates against voucher holders looking to rent in Mac’s newer, high-rise apartments, steering them toward outdated buildings that often lack the amenities of their desired properties.
In some instances, plaintiffs said they were denied apartment applications or tours of certain Mac buildings once leasing agents learned of their voucher. Other voucher holders said agents falsely told them that their desired property did not have any available units, only for non-voucher holders to inquire about the same units with success.
The suit estimates Mac owns about 100 apartment buildings in or surrounding Hyde Park, totaling more than 5,000 units. Mac also owns and manages buildings in Kansas City and St. Louis.
The complaint estimates the class could include more than 40 voucher holders who experienced income discrimination by Mac starting Dec. 17, 2021.
“Mac has effectively controlled most of the Hyde Park rental market, and that makes them a big player in the Chicago South Side rental market,” said Tory Tilton, a lawyer with Hughes Socol Piers Resnick & Dym Ltd. who represents the class. “We’re troubled to hear about the repeated complaints from voucher holders and tenants.”
A Mac Properties spokesperson denied any wrongdoing in a statement to the Sun-Times, saying the company “will not allow our reputation to be tarnished by misinformation.”
“These allegations are entirely baseless and misrepresent the facts,” the spokesperson said. “Mac Properties has a proven and longstanding commitment to providing equal access to housing for all individuals, regardless of income. We strictly adhere to all local, state and federal housing laws — without exception.”
“The facts speak for themselves: Of the 5,000 residential units we manage in Hyde Park, hundreds of renters have successfully secured housing using vouchers.”
‘I knew it was wrong’
HOPE, a nonprofit whose mission is to create housing opportunities for all through education, is a plaintiff in the suit alongside the voucher holders.
HOPE Executive Director Michael Chavarria said Mac has been on his radar for almost his entire 11-year career as a housing advocate.
Repeated complaints about Mac Properties spurred HOPE’s investigation, which verified the experiences of voucher holders, according to Chavarria.
Plaintiffs Sheliah Ayanwale, Cadeidga Coleman, Janishia Fleming and RySheena Moore are all Black women with housing vouchers who were looking for apartments in Hyde Park. About 89% of voucher holders in Chicago are Black, according to CHA data in the complaint.
Ayanwale, a Chicago native who lives in Texas with her daughter, wanted to move back to Chicago to be closer to family. Mac Properties’ 5252 Apartments, at South Cornell Avenue and East 53rd Street, had amenities she sought, like a gym, and was close to her cousin, she said.
Ayanwale said she reached out to Mac “almost a million times” after taking a video tour of the building — and multiple leasing agents evaded her requests for an application. One leasing agent discouraged her from applying with a voucher, according to the complaint.
“It felt like I was calling, and [as] soon as I mentioned my voucher, I would get hung up on. I would get convinced that I couldn’t rent there without them asking the important questions, like, ‘What’s your voucher amount?’” Ayanwale said.
After a leasing agent with Mac said no units at 5252 Apartments were available, Ayanwale asked her cousin to call and ask about studio apartments. A leasing agent confirmed units in Ayanwale’s price range were available, according to the complaint. “Then I knew it was wrong,” Ayanwale said.
“Mac Properties had lied to Ms. Ayanwale again,” the complaint says.
Moore, a U.S. Army veteran, had a similar experience.
In February 2023, she inquired about an apartment in Kenwood’s Regents Park Apartments at East Hyde Park Boulevard and South East End Avenue and mentioned her voucher. She was excited about being close to the lake, the nearby schools and having a pool for exercise to help manage her PTSD.
A leasing agent agreed to show Moore an apartment, but never told her a time, according to the complaint. He responded days later and told Moore no apartments were available in her price range.
The agent also sent Moore a separate email suggesting she tour apartments in different areas of the neighborhood. The apartments didn’t have the amenities Moore wanted and were further from the lake.
Moore then visited Regents Park and Mac’s leasing office in-person, she said, and she was denied tours and the ability to rent at Regents Park.
“I was thoroughly shocked and appalled,” she said. “I’m like, ‘Oh, I can’t believe they’re doing this. And if they’re doing that to me, they’re doing that to other people.’”
Mac investigation ‘very disturbing to us,’ nonprofit says
HOPE started investigating Mac Properties in 2023 after complaints like Ayanwale’s and Moore’s piled up.
HOPE’s focus is on educating and preventing housing discrimination, Chavarria said, and it investigates claims of discrimination.
HOPE had trained testers pose as applicants and inquire about properties. Several testers contacted Mac, some mentioning using a voucher and others not.
The housing choice voucher program is federally funded by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. It helps people who are low-income, elderly or disabled afford quality housing. Families with vouchers find their own housing, and local housing authorities manage the program and funds. In Chicago, the Chicago Housing Authority manages the program.
Families with vouchers contribute about 30% of their income toward rent and utilities.
The testers who mentioned vouchers were given “different information” and treated worse than nearly identical testers with the same budget who did not mention vouchers, according to the complaint.
The investigation verified what HOPE was hearing from voucher holders, Chavarria said.
“We were able to demonstrate that this is a repeatable, demonstrable practice — that there is clearly some sort of directive that was passed down from higher up to the leasing agent staff to erect barriers and prevent voucher holders from having access to the recently renovated or amenity-rich buildings that our testers were inquiring about,” Chavarria said.
“That is an important piece to us when we’re investigating this: Is it just a bad apple? Is it a leasing agent, and they need to be corrected through some outreach and advocacy, some education that we offer? In this case, no matter who you call, you run into the same sort of practice of erecting barrier after barrier.”
Seeking change in Hyde Park
The Chicago Lawyers’ Committee, which represents the plaintiffs along with Hughes Socol Piers Resnick & Dym, has seen an escalation of calls and complaints regarding Mac Properties in the last three years, according to MacKenzie Speer, program counsel at the committee.
Mac’s apartments are concentrated in Hyde Park — one of the Chicago Housing Authority’s “mobility areas.”
Mobility areas have below-average poverty rates and crime levels, according to CHA. Families in mobility areas can get more assistance with rent, in addition to personal counseling that helps families find housing that best suits their needs.
Hyde Park is a desirable neighborhood for many Black voucher holders because they can live in a diverse neighborhood with a significant Black population that also has the resources a mobility area provides, Speer said.
Chicago has had protection against income discrimination since 1990. As of 2023, the Illinois Human Rights Act also protects against income discrimination.
Mac Properties said in its statement that hundreds of individuals have rented through the company using a voucher.
Speer said her team believes individuals with housing vouchers may be renting from Mac, but they’re being steered toward properties they didn’t ask about — which is still a form of housing discrimination.
Plaintiffs who were steered toward other Mac apartments allege in the complaint that they were shown units with less amenities. Units were sometimes described as dirty or smelly.
The lawsuit alleges violations of the Illinois Human Rights Act on counts of income and racial discrimination, in addition to the federal Fair Housing Act and Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act.
Speer said most of the complaints against Mac Properties are from people who are so frustrated with the company that they no longer move in — they just want Mac’s practices to stop. HOPE also is seeking compensation for its investigation.
Moore said she would still like to move to the Hyde Park area. But knowing how many of the properties Mac owns there, the thought of moving fills her with anxiety.
“I hope that voucher holders are treated just like any other market-rate renter,” Moore said. “That’s my biggest thing: there should be no discrimination based on source of income. Regardless of your income, you should be able to rent at that place if you qualify.”