RI ACLU Appeals Court Ruling in Prov Student Housing Case

GoLocalProv News Team

RI ACLU Appeals Court Ruling in Prov Student Housing Case

Steven Brown
The ACLU of RI has appealed to the Rhode Island Supreme Court, a Superior Court ruling that upheld a Providence housing ordinance that prohibits more than three “college students” from living together in certain areas of the city.

In her February 2018 decision, Superior Court Judge Maureen Keough acknowledged “strong reservations concerning the effectiveness” of the ordinance, but ultimately ruled against the students and found the ordinance constitutional. 

“The Court’s decision clearly recognized the questionable utility of this ordinance. From our perspective, the ordinance’s failure to effectuate its goal demonstrates that it is arbitrary and unnecessarily infringes on individuals’ constitutional right to choose where they live, and with whom,” said Steven Brown, executive director of the ACLU of RI.

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Original Lawsuit

In 2016, ACLU of RI cooperating attorneys Jeffrey L. Levy and Charles D. Blackman filed the lawsuit on behalf of the owner and tenants – four Johnson & Wales undergraduate students – of a house in the Elmhurst section of Providence.

Click here to see the Lawsuit 

The City ordinance makes it illegal for more than three “college students” to live together in a non-owner-occupied single family home in certain residential areas.

The lawsuit argues that the ordinance is discriminatory and ineffective in its stated purpose of improving neighborhoods, and violates the plaintiffs’ rights to due process and equal protection of the law.


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