HomeJustice MattersLegislation to Ban Facial Recognition & Biometric Identification Technology in Public Housing

Legislation to Ban Facial Recognition & Biometric Identification Technology in Public Housing

Published on

Washington, D.C. — Congresswoman Yvette D. Clarke (D-NY), along with Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley (D-MA) and Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), introduced the No Biometric Barriers Housing Act of 2023 to prohibit the usage of facial and biometric recognition technology in most federally funded public housing and require the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to submit a comprehensive report to Congress about how this emerging technology impacts the public housing sector and its tenants.
“In its current state, facial recognition technology is undeniably flawed – we know the accuracy of facial recognition technology significantly decreases when screening people of color and women, just as we know real harms and hardships have come to individuals from these groups when victimized by false identification. It’s vital that safeguards and regulations are implemented to address these rampant biases and serious privacy concerns before we allow this technology with proven harmful consequences to become ubiquitous in our communities,” said Congresswoman Clarke.

From left to right: Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), Yvette D. Clarke (D-NY), Ayanna Pressley (D-MA)


“Facial recognition technology is flawed, biased and exacerbates the surveillance and criminalization people of color already face,” said Congresswoman Pressley. “I am proud to reintroduce the No Biometric Barriers to Housing Act with Representatives Clarke and Tlaib to ban the use of facial recognition and other biometric technologies in HUD-funded properties. Tenants in public housing deserve to have their civil rights and liberties protected, and this bill would help to do just that.”
“Biometric and facial recognition technology perpetuates systemic racism and is known to be inaccurate and deeply flawed—disproportionately targeting and misidentifying our Black neighbors. We have already seen the impact in Metro Detroit with false arrests including a Black woman who was eight months pregnant. HUD resources should be spent on providing safe, stable, and affordable housing to every resident who needs it — not fueling the overcriminalization of marginalized communities. Biometric surveillance has no place in public housing,” said Congresswoman Tlaib.

Latest articles

Brooklyn Supports Harlem in a ‘Moment of Commercial Silence,’ for Malcolm X 101st Birthday

By Nayaba ArindeEditor-at-LargeMalcolm X would have been 101 years old on Tuesday, May 19th,...

Dr. Lisa Scott-McKenzie, NYC Aging Commissioner: Caring for Caregivers

Fern GillespieCaregiving has become a way of life for millions of people. They are...

Book Review- Our Time Press

Sasha Bonét’s The Waterbearers: A Memoir of Mothers and Daughters By Dr. Brenda M. Greene “Stories...

One Brooklyn Health Marketing, Comms & PR Team, Wins Gold at the 5th Annual Anthem Awards for Community Impact

BROOKLYN, NY — One Brooklyn Health's Marketing, Comms & PR Team has been named...

More like this

Justice Leaders Championed

From Exclusion to Leadership: Black Women Lawyers and the Legal Organizations they Established By Hon....

New York State Legislators Propose Change to Law that Allows Predatory Vulture Funds to Target Developing Countries

By Mary Alice MillerWhen Puerto Rico defaulted on its debt a few years ago...

L.A. and D.C. Grand Juries: More Than One Way to Protest

By Mary Alice MillerWhen ICE commenced its June sweep of undocumented immigrants in Los...