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MU210\5\960017.v4 <br />ORDINANCE NO. 1014 <br />CITY OF MOUNDS VIEW <br />COUNTY OF RAMSEY <br />STATE OF MINNESOTA <br />AN ORDINANCE ADDING A NEW CHAPTER 38 TO TITLE III OF THE MOUNDS VIEW <br />CITY CODE REGARDING DISCRIMINATORY COVENANTS <br />THE CITY OF MOUNDS VIEW ORDAINS: <br />SECTION 1. The City Council of the City of Mounds View hereby amends Title III by adding a new <br />chapter as follows: <br />Chapter 38: Discriminatory Covenants <br />38.001 Findings <br />38.002 Definitions <br />38.003 Discharge of Discriminatory Covenants <br />38.004 Discriminatory Covenants Prohibited <br />38.999 Penalty <br />§ 38.001 Findings. <br />(A)Discriminatory covenants were tools used by real estate developers to prevent persons <br />of color and non-Christian individuals from buying or occupying property in certain areas, and <br />they were common throughout the United States from the early 1900s to the 1960s; and <br />(B) The purpose of discriminatory covenants was to racially and religiously homogenize <br />communities by excluding persons of color and non-Christian individuals from Mounds View. <br />These tools segregated the metro area and built a hidden system of apartheid; and <br />(C) In 2016, the University of Minnesota founded Mapping Prejudice to expose the racist <br />practices that shaped the landscape of the metro area. Mapping Prejudice researched restrictive <br />covenants in Ramsey County and created the first-ever comprehensive map of racial covenants <br />in an American city. As of February 2024, the project mapped 5458 covenants in Ramsey <br />County, including 531 covenants in Mounds View; and <br />(D) An example of a covenant in Mounds View declared that "No person or persons other <br />than of the Caucasian race shall be permitted to occupy said premises or any part thereof”; and <br />(E)The discriminatory covenants exist in Mounds View throughout the city; and <br />(F)Restrictive covenants are no longer enforceable. Legal efforts to eliminate <br />Discriminatory Covenants include Shelley v. Kraemer, 334 U.S. 1 (1948), in which the <br />United States Supreme Court prohibited courts from enforcing Discriminatory Covenants <br />and the Minnesota legislature in 1953 enacted statutes that prohibited new covenants, but <br />existing covenants were still legal in Minnesota until 1962; and <br />(G)As a result of these judicial and legislative actions, today, Minnesota law and federal <br />law prohibit discrimination in the sale or lease of housing based on race, color, creed, religion, <br />national origin, sex, marital status, status with regard to public assistance, disability, sexual <br />orientation, or familial status and those state and federal prohibitions extend to the refusal to sell or to <br />circulate, post or cause to be printed, circulated, or posted, any limitation, specification, or