• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Local News
  • Novato
  • Mill Valley
  • Ross Valley
  • Sausalito
  • San Rafael
  • Bay Area News
  • Columns
  • Letters to the Editor
  • Picture of the Week
  • Life Tributes (Obituaries)

Marin Local News

  • Local News
  • Novato
  • Mill Valley
  • Ross Valley
  • Sausalito
  • San Rafael
  • Bay Area News
  • Columns
  • Letters to the Editor
  • Picture of the Week
  • Life Tributes (Obituaries)

Marin County snags award for flagging racist deed language

December 21, 2022 by Marin Leave a Comment

Marin County

Special to Marinscope

A Marin County program to modify real estate documents that contain outdated racist covenants has attracted statewide attention and earned a coveted award.

The California State Association of Counties (CSAC) bestowed a Challenge Award to Marin’s Office of the Assessor-Recorder-County Clerk (ARCC) for its Restrictive Covenant Project, designed to redact racist restrictions in real estate documents that prohibit the purchase, lease, or occupation of property to people of color. Such deed language has long been illegal in the United States, but many title reports from Marin homes built prior to 1968 still contained the racist restrictions.

Assessor-Recorder-County Clerk Shelly Scott said in a county press release that she was proud that the program, launched during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, has made such an impact. Board of Supervisors President Katie Rice found racist language in her own title documents several years ago and was eager to draw attention to the need for change. A University of Minnesota mapping project that showed locations of homes containing racist restrictive covenants in deeds – triggering widespread housing segregation — helped lead to Marin’s project as well. County District 2 staff members Nancy Vernon and Crystal Martinez made key contributions along with the County Community Development Agency’s Liz Darby, the Geographic Information Systems (GIS) team, and many ARCC employees, Scott added.

“We’re extremely grateful to receive this award and want to extend appreciation to all those who got us on this path,” Scott said. “Learning more about institutionalized racism and seeing Minnesota’s redlining map really moved me, and I thought we needed to do it here. We’ve met with Monterey County about replicating this program, and we hope other counties look into adopting it as well.”

In an October update to the Board of Supervisors, Scott said roughly 8,500 homes were built in Marin from the time the racist language was legalized in 1926 and 1948, the year the U.S. Supreme Court declared it a violation of the 14th Amendment. As Marin’s subdivisions were planned and built during the Baby Boom years, its population more than doubled between 1948 and 1968 when the Fair Housing Act was passed. All the limitations became illegal with the passage of the 1968 law, which blocked loopholes in the larger Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Maps resulting from the project have promoted increased engagement from residents as they learn about the lasting impacts of past segregation and the generational wealth gaps that segregation has promoted.

The Restrictive Covenants Project website includes a time progression m

CSAC was formed in 1911 to represent county governments before the California Legislature, administrative agencies, and the federal government. CSAC places a strong emphasis on educating the public about the value and need for county programs and services.

Filed Under: Local News, San Rafael

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

To subscribe to the print edition or the online replica edition, click here.

Copyright © 2026 · News Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in