Title: Housing Development, Equity and Civil Rights
1Housing Development, Equity and Civil Rights
- Professor john powell
- Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and
Ethnicity - Moritz College of Law
- Ohio State University
- 3 December 2003
http//www.kirwaninstitute.org
2Presentation Overview
- Race and Racism
- What is Structural Racism?
- Spatial Racism
- Housing and Opportunity
- Why are current incentives inadequate?
- Looking Ahead
3Race and Racism
- Race
- Biological determinism vs social construction
- Constituted through racism
- Race is a biological fiction, but a social fact
4Race and Racism
- We have seen a move away from legal racism and
personal prejudice to a racial hierarchy that is
enforced through institutional/structural means - de jure segregation ? de facto segregation
5Race and Racism
- Although racial attitudes and personal prejudice
is improving steadily, racial disparities persist
on every level. - A characteristic feature of structural racism is
its ability to conceal and disguise its true
nature.
6Median Household incomes of racial and ethnic
groups (national)
SOURCE LEWIS MUMFORD CENTER 1990, 2000 CENSUS
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10Understanding Structural Racism
- Theoretically neutral policies and practices can
function to produce/maintain racial hierarchies.
Laws and institutions need not be explicitly
racist in order to disempower communities of
color they need only to perpetuate unequal
historic conditions. - These policies and practices are not neutral
however, and as a result the burdens are
distributed unevenly.
11Effects of Structural Racism
- Simply recognizing disparities is not enough, we
need to examine our assumptions surrounding them.
- Disparities reproduce themselves because of
access to opportunity. The present arrangement
will continue to increasingly perpetuate
disparities if left unchecked. - The damages of structural racism can be seen in
our most persistent and pressing social problems
educational attainment, crime, segregation,
homelessness, etc.
12ExampleWealth and African-Americans
- Income is what people get paid.
- Wealth is what people own.
- Regardless of educational, occupational, and
demographic characteristics, wealth is racially
disparate. - White Americans median net worth is twelve
times that of black Americans.
13Homeownership in Wisconsin
SOURCE LEWIS MUMFORD CENTER (2000 CENSUS)
14The face of racism looks different today than it
did thirty years ago.Overt racism is easily
condemned, but the sin is often with us in more
subtle formsof spatial racismSpatial racism
refers to patterns of metropolitan development in
which some affluent whites create racially and
economically segregated suburbs or gentrified
areas of cities, leaving the poor -- mainly
African Americans, Hispanics and some newly
arrived immigrants -- isolated in deteriorating
areas of the cities and older suburbs.
Francis Cardinal George, OMI Archbishop of Chicago
15Spatial Racism The Civil Rights Agenda for the
21st Century
Space is how race plays out in American
society-and the key to solving inequities in
housing, transportation, education, and health
careSprawl is the new face of Jim
Crow. john powell
16Spatial Racism a Civil Rights issue
- The government plays a central role in the
arrangement of space and opportunities. - Not neutral or natural
- Social and racial inequities are geographically
inscribed - There is a polarization between the rich and the
poor that is directly related to the areas in
which they live.
17Spatial Racism not neutral or natural
- Civil Rights movement and the urbanization of
people of color occurred in tandem during
post-WWII America. - While very real gains were being made against
blatant exclusionary practices and a culture of
discrimination, groundwork was being laid for
persistent structural racism. - Blacks moving to cities for opportunities, while
opportunities leave the cities to the suburbs - Same pattern beginning to repeat in first-ring
suburbs today
18- If a neighborhood is to retain stability, it is
necessary that properties shall continue to be
occupied by the same social and racial classes.
A change in social or racial occupancy generally
contributes to instability and a decline in
values. -
- Excerpt from the 1947 FHA underwriting manual.
19Segregation Today
- Persists at very high levels for
African-Americans - At 65 (75 in many major metropolitan areas)
- Improving at an extremely slow pace
- Worst in Northern cities
- Detroit, Milwaukee, New York, Chicago
- Southern cities more likely to be organized on
county level
20Segregation in Wisconsin
- Milwaukee is one of the most segregated cities in
the country - Central City has lost almost 35 of its White
population in the past 20 years - Blacks, Hispanics and Asians combined account for
less than 6 of the suburban population - Madison is moderately segregated
- Benefits from being a college town
- Green Bay is still very white, but rapidly
changing - Growing Hispanic population, mostly in the
central city - Eau Claire is substantially integrated, but has a
very low number of minority residents - Less than 1 Black or Hispanic
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26City-Suburban Disparity
- The economic advantages enjoyed by suburban
regions over the last four decades continue to
outpace those of cities. - The income gap between city and suburban dwellers
persists increases in median income were twice
as large in the suburbs than in the cities and
per capita income increased by about 1,000 more
for the suburbanite than the city dweller. - Cities have over a third more unemployment than
suburbs. - The poverty rate is twice as high in the cities
than in the suburbs, remaining relatively
unchanged since 1990.
Source Lewis Mumford Center
27City-Suburban Disparity
- Milwaukee has one of the highest disparities
between its central city and its suburbs in the
nation (ranked 307/326) - Madison actually has a more educated central
city than its suburbs, but the city still has
much higher poverty rates -
Source Lewis Mumford Center
28Separate and Unequal
All data represented as a ratio minoritywhite
values Source Lewis Mumford Center (Census 2000)
29Opportunity-Based Housing
- Affordable housing must be deliberately and
intelligently connected to high performing
school, sustaining employment, necessary
transportation infrastructure, childcare, and
institutions that facilitate civic and political
activity - Housing is a component of a larger set of
interrelated structures that are both affected by
housing and have impacts for the attainment of
safe, stable housing.
30The Need to Think in Terms of Opportunity
- Opportunity structures are the resources and
services that contribute to stability and
advancement - Fair access to opportunity structures is limited
by segregation, concentration of poverty,
fragmentation, and sprawl in our regions for
low-income households and families of color - Because opportunity structures exist as a web a
multi-faceted, equity-centered approach is needed - Opportunities created by public and private
policies - Housing is the core factor in access to
opportunity
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32Housing and Opportunity Questions to Answer
- 1.  Is the housing affordable?
- Â
- 2.  Does it create access to employment?
- Â
- 3.  Is the housing situated in proximity to
transportation options? - Â
- 4.  Does the housing support school readiness,
school stability, and educational enhancement? - Â
- 5.  Does the housing support the health of
occupants? - Â
- 6.  How is wealth limited or advanced by the
housing?
33Housing and Opportunity
- The current paradigm regarding low-income housing
is failing to provide occupants with access to
opportunity, wherever that is located in a region
(the city, the inner-ring, the outer-ring). - Where you live is as important as what you live
in.
34WI smart growth plan
- By 2010, virtually all communities in Wisconsin
will need to adopt a comprehensive plan. The law
requires that the plan, "provide a range of
housing choices that meet the needs of persons of
all income levels and of all age groups and
persons with special needs, (provide) policies
and programs that promote the availability of
land for the development or redevelopment of
low-income and moderate-income housing, and
(provide) policies and programs to maintain or
rehabilitate the local governmental unit's
existing housing stock." Because the law requires
that, beginning in 2010, any land use decision
must be based on a complete comprehensive plan,
communities must plan for affordable housing or
risk legal challenge to their land use decisions.
- Starting in 2005, the state will reward
communities that create affordable housing with a
new state aid payment. The "Smart Growth
Dividend" will provide an aid credit for each
unit of new housing that is sold at 80 or less
of the county median sales price. The program
also rewards small lot development, which is
generally less expensive than large lot
subdivisions.
SOURCE 1000 Friends of Wisconsin
35WI smart growth planpossible problems
- Not a legal mandate, could prove to be a problem
with enforcement - Does not create affordable housing in and of
itself - May require litigation and court challenges to
proposed comprehensive plans could be costly and
time-consuming
36Current Housing Paradigm LIHTC
- Programs such as the Low Income Housing Tax
Credit plan have not desegregated our
neighborhoods or provided occupants access to
opportunity - In a national survey conducted by the Fannie Mae
Foundation, 39 percent of the central-city
neighborhoods where LIHTC units were built are at
least 90 percent nonwhite, and 51 percent are at
least 80 percent nonwhite. - Newman and Schnare (1997) found that LIHTC
housing is concentrated in low-income
neighborhoods. In major central cities the
program is used much more often to provide better
housing in poor neighborhoods than to provide
affordable housing in higher-income
neighborhoods. - However, LIHTC siting in WI appears to be better
than in many metro areas
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39The Turning Point
- Instead of focusing on the tipping point, we need
to better define what neighborhoods require to
reach the turning point. - Pushing development beyond the turning point
threshold requires an intervention strategy to
positively transform the neighborhoods physical,
social, economic, and political environment.
40National Initiatives Resources
- Policy Link (www.policylink.org)
- Several initiatives aimed at creating and
increasing economic opportunities for low-income
neighborhoods such as Saving the Community
Reinvestment Act. - Advocacy for equity in the smart growth movement
through an approach called Regional Equity. - Institute on Race and Poverty (http//www1.umn.edu
/irp/) - The Racial Justice Regional Equity Project
(RJRE) examines the impact urban sprawl has on
people of color who live in central cities and
inner-ring suburbs. Through this project, they
seek to highlight and analyze regional strategies
in affordable housing, quality education,
employment opportunities, and other initiatives.
41Looking Forward
- Scrutinize our process and approach consider the
structures that are creating and perpetuating
inequalities. - Identify possible allies
- We need transformative thinking to make lasting
change. - Where does housing fit in the larger picture?
- Start with what we are trying to achieve, and
work back through the process to see how this can
be accomplished.
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