Housing

Housing is a basic human right, and equal access to housing is a civil right guaranteed under our laws.

A crowd stands in front of a rental management building with signs to advocate for equitable housing. Gus, our campaign manager, is in the center in focus with a sign that says "end housing discrimination against people with a record of conviction."

Housing is a basic human right, and equal access to housing is a civil right guaranteed under our laws. To create a more just society, we must work to end housing policies and practices that allow the government and private gatekeepers to disproportionately lock out marginalized communities from safe and stable housing. Historic and ongoing segregation and housing discrimination in our country have prevented Black people and other people of color, women, LGBTQ people, families with children, people with disabilities, immigrants, and many more from living in safe, affordable housing.

Throughout our history, we have litigated and advocated for housing access. We sued to try to end the Trump Administration’s proposed gutting of the federal Fair Housing Act and advocated against the Trump Administration’s proposed discrimination against undocumented people in public housing. In the courts, we successfully sued to prevent Fairfield’s zoning regulations from discriminating against people living with HIV, sued on behalf of the NAACP to try to prevent a Milford housing program that would have disproportionately hurt Black and Latinx people, and spoke out in cases to defend affordable housing laws and prevent the demolition of affordable housing in Norwalk.

The ACLU of Connecticut envisions a world where everyone — regardless of our race, where we’re born, our gender, whether we have a disability, whether we are living with a record of arrest or conviction, or whether we are a survivor of domestic violence — has equal access to safe, affordable, and stable housing. We seek to end housing discrimination against people living with a record of arrest or conviction and to reallocate money from prisons to instead go toward housing access. We support efforts to advance tenants’ rights and establish a right to housing in Connecticut law.

We support efforts to ensure unhoused people are able to live with dignity and full human and legal rights. We oppose the criminalization of homelessness and poverty, including unconstitutional city ordinances that try to ban people for asking for money or help and the creation of hostile architecture.

The Latest

News & Commentary
A group of women are standing in a hearing room at the Capitol, holding signs that says "Undocumented + Unafraid" and "Strengthen the Trust Act Now!"

Reflecting on the 2025 Legislative Session

The 2025 legislative session has come to a close, and it was certainly a trying session for all. In a session where roughly 3,800 bills were introduced, only about 380 bills were passed, rounding up to a passing rate of about ten percent.
News & Commentary
Terri, one of our Smart Justice Leaders, is a Black woman wearing a yellow leather jacket with her hair in a protective style (locs) and black wire rim glasses.

HB 6948 is about the fight for survival for each and everyone affected by the collateral consequences of living with a criminal record

My name is Terri Ricks, I am a resident of Hartford and a Smart Justice Leader with the ACLU of Connecticut. I am a person who has been directly impacted by homelessness due to housing challenges. I am an individual who is here speaking and fighting for change even when I lived for three-and-a-half years in a hotel due to housing challenges. Every day has been a fight, but nothing has been a fight as tough as being freed from prison in 2005. After completing changing my life, housing has consistently been a problem that even eludes me to this day.
News & Commentary
ACLUCT smart justice leader Tracie Bernardi stands facing the camera and smiling. She is wearing a blue Smart Justice zip-up and a yellow People Not Prisons pin. To her left is an ACLUCT banner that says we the people dare to create a more perfect union

Housing is the most critical and fundamental part of reentry

Housing is the most critical and fundamental part of reentry, but far too often the most difficult to achieve. The more I see it the more I understand why people go back to jail. HB 6948 is about giving people a fair opportunity to find a safe place to live.
News & Commentary
Jess, policy counsel, sits in front of the housing committee testifying in support of HB5242 with Smart Justice leaders behind her.

Housing is a Human Right: Q+A with Jess Zaccagnino

In order to better understand how HB 5242, an Act Concerning the Collateral Consequences of Criminal Records on Housing, helps people to get access to housing, digital content strategist Rachel Moon sat down with Jess Zaccagnino, our policy counsel, to discuss what exactly this bill does.
Court Case
Oct 23, 2020

Open Communities Alliance v Carson

With other civil rights organizations, the ACLU of Connecticut is suing over the Trump Administration's new HUD rule that would roll back critical protections for fair housing by creating unnecessary barriers for victims of housing discrimination attempting to prove discriminatory practices.