Algorithm-Assisted Decision Making and Racial Disparities in Housing: A Study of the Allegheny Housing Assessment Tool
Lingwei Cheng, Cameron Drayton, Alexandra Chouldechova, Rhema, Vaithianathan

TL;DR
This study evaluates whether replacing the VI-SPDAT with the AHA algorithm reduces racial disparities in housing allocation, finding persistent disparities due to data quality issues and eligibility factors despite score alignment.
Contribution
It provides an empirical analysis of the impact of algorithmic tools on racial disparities in housing services, highlighting challenges in reducing bias.
Findings
VI-SPDAT favored white clients in risk scoring
AHA scores are racially balanced but disparities persist
Data quality and eligibility factors influence service disparities
Abstract
The demand for housing assistance across the United States far exceeds the supply, leaving housing providers the task of prioritizing clients for receipt of this limited resource. To be eligible for federal funding, local homelessness systems are required to implement assessment tools as part of their prioritization processes. The Vulnerability Index Service Prioritization Decision Assistance Tool (VI-SPDAT) is the most commonly used assessment tool nationwide. Recent studies have criticized the VI-SPDAT as exhibiting racial bias, which may lead to unwarranted racial disparities in housing provision. In response to these criticisms, some jurisdictions have developed alternative tools, such as the Allegheny Housing Assessment (AHA), which uses algorithms to assess clients' risk levels. Drawing on data from its deployment, we conduct descriptive and quantitative analyses to evaluate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsImpact of AI and Big Data on Business and Society · Smart Cities and Technologies · Human Mobility and Location-Based Analysis
