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Tag: poverty

Racial Inequality, Gentrification, and Poverty: The History and Context of Durham’s Affordability Crisis

On any given night in Durham, young people mill about on Rigsbee Avenue, ducking into the bars and restaurants that have cropped up there. Liberty Warehouse, an upscale condominium complex that once was a tobacco auction warehouse, looms farther up the street. The transformation of this street is emblematic of Durham’s transition from a working-class tobacco town to a hip city known for its food scene. But along with the economic revitalization of downtown has come an increase in rents and housing prices in nearby neighborhoods, pushing longtime black residents out.

A recent study from the North Carolina Poverty Research Fund identified three downtown neighborhoods – East Durham, Old North Durham and Southside – as particularly susceptible to gentrification, a term describing the influx of higher income residents into underinvested and predominantly poor communities. According to this study, median housing prices in the downtown area have nearly doubled, from $180,000 in 2012 to $350,000 in 2016. The location, affordability and diversity make these neighborhoods appealing to home buyers, while poverty and high rents make them prone to gentrification. Many neighborhoods that were home to long-time black residents are now seeing a demographic shift; the study found that the majority of home loan applicants in 2016 were white.

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The transitional nature of gentrification. Source: North Carolina Poverty Research Fund

As one interviewee in the study put it, “Yuppies are living next to low-income families. They have fixed up a house to be worth $300,000 right next to a house worth $20,000. Buyers are also squatting on houses—buying them up and then sitting on them until the black folks leave.”

To understand how and why gentrification is happening, the authors of the study, Heather Hunt and Allison De Marco, looked to the past at the effects of redlining and urban renewal. In the 1930s, the Home Owner’s Loan Corporation evaluated the creditworthiness of neighborhoods using race as one of the criteria. Thus, neighborhoods that were majority black or poor were graded red and consider “hazardous” for lending. This practice prevented many African American residents from borrowing money and becoming homeowners, which meant they were unable to build wealth and establish financial security. Red-lined neighborhoods were systematically disinvested, receiving fewer services and resources than wealthier, white neighborhoods.

In spite of redlining, the African American community in Durham thrived in neighborhoods like Hayti and the West End. Earning the moniker “Capital of the Black Middle Class,” Durham was nationally recognized for its black businesses, particularly the North Carolina Mutual Insurance Company. However, by the 1950s, Hayti and other African American neighborhoods became targets for urban renewal, part of a federally subsidized program to clear areas designated as “slums,” which in practice meant neighborhoods that were majority black. According to the study, more than 4,000 households and 500 businesses were forced to relocate to make way for Highway 147, and promises made to restore the community went largely unfulfilled.

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White flight and gentrification in Durham, NC, 1970-2016. Source: North Carolina Poverty Research Fund

 

By the 70 and 80s, downtown Durham had been largely abandoned due white flight and disinvestment, which set the stage for developers and investors to capitalize on cheap properties when the city started to turn around in 2010. The same neighborhoods that were previously subject to redlining and urban renewal are now experiencing gentrification. “The search for the next up and coming neighborhoods has pushed developers and prospective home buyers toward formerly overlooked neighborhoods bordering downtown,” the study says.

In the case of Southside, which was formerly part of the Hayti neighborhood,  gentrification was a “self-fulfilling prophesy” according to Hunt. The city invested millions to subsidize construction, renovation and purchase of homes with the intent of making them affordable to existing residents. That did not happen. Instead, median sale price rose from $20,000 in 2012 to $216,000 in 2016, with private market construction homes selling for $450,000 or more. As the study puts it, “the revitalization and subsequent gentrification shows how tricky it can be to break the bonds of history and race.”

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Soaring housing prices and demand in Durham, NC from 2012-2016. Source: North Carolina Poverty Research Fund

Growing by an estimated 10,000 new inhabitants each year, Durham faces soaring demand and a limited housing supply that has created an affordability crisis. Local officials are aware of the issues but unsure how to address it. Unlike other cities, Durham doesn’t have tenant protections or inclusionary zoning laws, which would require developers to dedicate a portion of new construction or rehabilitation to affordable units. Local housing organizations like Habitat for Humanity and the Durham Community Land Trust help low-income residents become homeowners but they can’t keep up with the need.

The report does not offer any policy solutions but Hunt recognizes that city officials are “wrestling with the idea that it’s hard to do economic development without exacerbating inequalities that exist in the place already. Even in a place like Durham which prides itself on diversity and inclusivity, it’s still really struggling with these issues.”

About the Author: Lucia Constantine is a second-year master’s student in the Department of City and Regional Planning. Her planning interests include immigrant integration into cities and inclusive economic development. Prior to coming to UNC, Lucia worked in higher education and nonprofits. She likes listening to podcasts, baking with alternative grains, and taking unreasonable walks.

Featured Image: A redlining map of Durham, NC, 1937. Source: Mapping Inequality

Charm City Grit: Change in Baltimore Starts with the Community

Baltimore is a city of contradictions. Within its boundaries, one can find self-avowed social justice warriors who are determined to undo centuries of injustice in the city. One can also find people who have never left the sanctuary of whiteness of the Inner Harbor. I could not help but laugh cynically when I saw a bumper sticker that read “Baltimore: Actually, I like It” plastered on a Toyota Prius as the driver whizzed around the fare-free city circulator bus. For the three months I lived in Baltimore, the social tension was palpable from day one. However, the city is as unapologetically gritty as the people who live there. With recognizing its grittiness comes an awareness of just how much this city has overcome and how far it still has to go. Luckily, Baltimore is home to a pulsating community of unapologetic radicals and free-thinkers who, from the bottom up, are attempting to shift the tides in the favor of the disadvantaged groups in the city by providing safe spaces, inclusive services, and good old-fashioned community organizing. Whether this is enough to undo the historic segregation and disenfranchisement of the Black and impoverished communities is yet unclear.

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Red Emma’s Coffee Shop and Bookstore. Source: New York Times

One prime example of a community of radical thinkers that I had the privilege of interacting with in the city is Red Emma’s Coffee Shop and Bookstore: a worker-owned cooperative governed by consensus. Red Emma’s makes its space, wi-fi, bathrooms, and extensive anarchist book collection available to all in the community, regardless of ability to pay. The shop regularly hosts speakers to discuss issues of gender, sexuality, and/or race and encourages all to participate. The shop is also home to the Baltimore Free School: a community-funded learning center whose mission is empowerment of people of all ages and backgrounds. The location of the shop in the Station North neighborhood is integral to its mission of providing a safe space for the community. The neighborhood is marred by frequent homicides and substance abuse. It is also home to many trans sex workers. The shop is typically a tranquil haven where people of all types meet, mingle, and converse. However, earlier this year a man was shot inside Red Emma’s in a non-politically motivated dispute, calling to mind the all-too frequent injection of violence into these vocally pacifist spaces. In response, Red Emma’s joined the legions of other Baltimorean organizations vehemently advocating for policy and programming to address the record levels of violence in the city. The incident reinvigorated the community as a reminder of exactly what so many Baltimoreans are striving for: peace and justice.

Another organization providing much-needed services to the people of Baltimore is Gather: a volunteer-run service that collects surplus food to redistribute in underserved neighborhoods. Food injustice and inequality is extreme in Baltimore: 1 in 4 people live in a food desert. Additionally, 30% of people do not have access to a vehicle which limits ability to drive to a grocery store or transport groceries. Gather Baltimore is increasing access to healthy foods in food desert communities as well as tackling food waste in the city. The organization relies on a volunteer fleet to collect produce from farms, farmers markets, and grocery stores, and the food is then distributed to local shelters and community organizations. One of my personal favorite programs of Gather’s is their Blue Bag program through which  they hand out 30-pound bags of fruits and vegetables from their brick-and-mortar location in Remington for a suggested donation of $7. Whether or not people can pay, they are still able to access this program – assuming they can manage to lift a 30-pound bag of produce (I could not)! Of course, the Blue Bag program has questions of accessibility for people without a car, but the produce for the Blue Bag program is distributed only after all the community sites have been taken care of. While services like these are not necessarily finding a solution to the reason for food deserts, Gather is providing much-needed services in the meantime and raising awareness of hunger and food waste in the city.

 

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Gather Baltimore. Source: Gather Baltimore.

Possibly the most omnipresent groups calling for change in Baltimore are grassroots community coalitions. One of the more recent examples of Baltimore’s community organizing that received national coverage is the Baltimore Ceasefire campaign which challenged Baltimore to a 72-hour period without any murders. While the 72-hour period saw 2 people shot and killed, the campaign brought awareness back to the ubiquity of violence in the city with the rallying call “Don’t Be Numb”. Another grassroots group in the city with a planning and development focus is the Baltimore Housing Roundtable: an organized group advocating for fair and just development in Baltimore. Their “United Not Blighted” campaign has gained significant traction in the city and calls for an end to private real estate development and property speculation. The campaign calls for the creation of permanently affordable housing and deconstruction of vacant houses that have been abandoned and neglected. The campaign has gained the support of many members of City Council as well as organizations across the city. These are just two examples of Baltimore’s propensity for community organizing, but the city has numerous similar groups individually tackling specific issues in the city.

Despite the seemingly large number of community groups and organizations seeking to actively promote change and investment in Baltimore, the city still wades through the messy fallout of segregation and inequitable development. The community groups are starting conversations and making noticeable change, but widespread dismantling of the current unjust social and geographic structure of Baltimore will not come without a public policy and planning agenda. Baltimore’s Planning and Public Health Departments, both of whom I was able to interact with, have a lens of social justice in many of their undertakings. Specifically, the 2017 Sustainability Plan, which is still in the works, focuses specifically on issues of equity in the city; the plan reaches past the traditional tenets of sustainability to include healthcare, poverty, environmental justice, and more. However, the city has also recently had some tone-deaf planning blunders, such as the Governor’s cancellation of the Red Line rail project which would have connected predominantly Black neighborhoods that were lacking transit access. Unfortunately, economic investment has almost entirely benefitted the North-South corridor of Baltimore known as the “White L” but has bypassed poor, Black neighborhoods to the East or West. Even most of the organizations discussed above, such as Red Emma’s and Gather Baltimore, are located in the White L. The spatial disparities in Baltimore continue to be a driving force in the systemic racism and disenfranchisement in the city.

Baltimore will be a city to watch over the next decade. Baltimore is one of the most systematically segregated city in the United States with a documented history of racist and classist housing policies and zoning ordinances. There are a plethora of businesses, nonprofits, and coalitions who are fighting to undo the wrongs of the past. While these organizations have made great strides, Baltimore is still in need of a significant and rigorous public policy and planning agenda that puts social equity first. I contend this is the only permanent and lasting way to address the poverty, crime, and homelessness that has left the city restless and eager for change. Baltimore will continue to address its issues in imaginative ways from the bottom-up.

 

About the Author: Ally Clonch is a North Carolina native and second year graduate student in City & Regional Planning and the Gillings School of Global Public Health at UNC. She is interested in researching the effects of the built environment on population health outcomes, especially as they relate to health disparities in low-income and minority populations. Outside of school, Ally spends her time perusing thrift stores, getting coffee with friends, or reliving her glory days by watching 90s television shows.

Featured Image: Baltimore. Credit: Business Insider