Title: Race, Place and Social Equity
1Race, Place and Social Equity
Presentation to Geography 240 Urban Economic
Geography October 18, 2007
Jason Reece, AICP Senior Researcher
Reece.35_at_osu.edu
- Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race
Ethnicity - The Ohio State University
2Todays Discussion
- Introduction
- Race, Place Opportunity
- Understanding the cause and impacts of
racial/social inequality - How can we intervene
- Regional equity, cooperation and opportunity
- These principles in action
- Baltimore
3Race, Place Opportunity Understanding the
causes and impacts of racial/social inequality
4Land Use and Inequity
- What is sprawl?
- Uncoordinated, disjointed, low density and
inefficient development/land use policy - Sprawl is not natural but a reflection of poor
and outdated policy - A disorganized movement of the states investment
from existing communities to a few select
communities - The favored quarter
- A government subsidized/supported redistribution
of Ohios wealth and resources
5Segregation, Inequity Sprawl
- Sprawl actively works to disconnect marginalized
communities from opportunity - Pushing limited resources away from existing
communities - Segregating people from opportunity
- 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 - This is not a natural phenomena or just the free
market in action, it is a result of policy
6Policies Enforcing InequityHistorical
Government Role
- 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
7Historical Contemporary Racial Dynamics in
Housing
- Public and private practices supported the
creation and maintenance of segregated
neighborhoods - FHA lending restrictions disallowed integrated
neighborhoods, which restricted equity-building
in suburbs largely to whites - Privately maintained racially restrictive
covenants - Mid-century Urban Renewal replaced poor
neighborhoods with commercial development or
housing for whites poor people of color moved to
high-density, high-rise public housing utilized
eminent domain - Highway building facilitated moves from city to
suburb and movement between suburbs gas/auto
subsidies - New infrastructure prioritized over existing
repair and updates
8Urban Renewal in Boston
9The Rise of SuburbiaBut not accessible to
everyone
In the suburb-shaping years (1930-1960), less
than one-percent of all African Americans were
able to obtain a mortgage.
10Pruitt-Igoe in St. Louis
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16Policies Enforcing Inequity Contemporary
Government Role
- The exclusion and segregation produced by sprawl
is not natural or neutral it results from
government policies, such as - Zoning laws prevent affordable housing in many
growth areas - Housing policies concentrate subsidized housing
- Municipalities subsidize the relocation of
businesses out of the city - Transportation and infrastructure spending
favoring highways, metropolitan expansion and
urban sprawl - Court decisions prevent metropolitan school
desegregation - School funding is tied to property taxes
- These factors support racial/social segregation
and isolation from opportunity
17Why Care About Segregation?
- Because neighborhoods conditions impact our lives
in significant ways - Where you live is more important than what you
live in - Housing, in particular its location, is the
primary mechanism for accessing opportunity in
our society - Housing location determines the quality of
schools children attend, the quality of public
services, access to employment and
transportation, health risks, access to health
care and public safety - For those living in high poverty neighborhoods
these factors can significantly inhibit life
outcomes
18The Cumulative Impacts of Racial and Opportunity
Segregation
Segregation impacts a number of life-opportunities
Impacts on Health
School Segregation
Impacts on Educational Achievement
Exposure to crime arrest
Transportation limitations and other inequitable
public services
Job segregation
Neighborhood Segregation
Racial stigma, other psychological impacts
Impacts on community power and individual assets
Adapted from figure by Barbara Reskin at
http//faculty.washington.edu/reskin/
19Who Lives in High Poverty Neighborhoods?
- Over 3.1 million African Americans lived in High
Poverty Neighborhoods in 2000 - Whites only make 30 of people living in high
poverty neighborhoods, although they represent
55 of the total population living in poverty
Source Stunning Progress, Hidden Problems The
Dramatic Decline of Concentrated Poverty in the
1990s. The Brookings Institute (2003)
20Segregation from Opportunity Neighborhood Poverty
- In all three of Ohios largest metropolitan
areas, African Americans live in neighborhoods
with 2 to 3 times the poverty rate experienced in
White Neighborhoods - In the City of Cleveland, 1/3 of African
Americans live in concentrated poverty
(neighborhoods with more than a 40 poverty rate)
21Housing location determines access to schools.
22jobs
23neighborhood amenities
24How Does Sprawl and Segregation Impact
Marginalized Populations?
- Sprawl and segregation cause detrimental impacts
to urban marginalized communities in multiple
ways - Education
- Disinvestment neighborhood quality
- Economic opportunity
- Housing opportunity
- Producing opportunity deprived neighborhoods
25Sprawl, Inequity Education
Produces Dysfunctional Schools
Sprawl
Segregation
50 years after the Brown Decision, Americas
schools have re-segregated into affluent white
districts and poor under-funded African American
and Hispanic districts
26Economic Segregation and Racial Segregation in
Public Schools Cleveland and Akron High Poverty
Schools (Red and Yellow) are Concentrated in
African American Neighborhoods (Areas in Gray)
27Cycle of School Segregation
28Sprawl and Disinvestment in Urban Communities
- Decades of suburban flight have drained low
income inner city neighborhoods of people,
business and investment - High vacancy rates and poor investment harms the
quality of life for inner city residents and
limits the resources (tax base) for low income
communities
29Sprawl, Inequity and Economic Opportunity
- Jobs have moved away from the labor pool in many
metropolitan areas, making connecting job-seekers
with jobs a challenge (compounded by poor public
transportation) - 40 of all suburban jobs cannot be reached by
public transportation - Public investment disproportionately favors
highways over public transportation - Over half of the African American population is
physically segregated from employment
opportunities
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31What is the Critical Issue Supporting Continuing
Segregation? Housing
Housing Challenges
32Impacts on Housing Opportunity
- Sprawl, subsidized housing policy and
exclusionary zoning reduce access to the housing
market for low income residents (especially
people of color) - Suburban zoning regulations artificially drive up
the cost of housing and do not allow enough
rental housing - New housing is unaffordable to low income
residents and most people of color - Subsidized housing policy is still concentrating
most public subsidized affordable housing - Disinvestment in the inner city reduces the asset
value (wealth) of homeowners in inner city
neighborhoods
33Growing Affordability Problems (in Many Markets)
- The nation has a growing affordability problem
- Appreciation in coastal markets and lagging
incomes in other markets are contributing to this
trend - Even for markets like Columbus
- Columbus is now the 3rd least affordable housing
market in the Midwest
34Exclusionary Land Use Policy
35Racial Steering and Discrimination
- Recent studies by researchers and the federal
government (HUD) found that racial steering,
discrimination and exclusion are still prevalent
in the housing market - Creating barriers to housing access outside of
cost impediment - Orfield and Luce (2005) Iceland, Sharpe and
Steinmetz (2005) Dawkins (2004) Pendall (2000)
HUD HDS (2000) Galster (1998) Schill and Wachter
(1995) Massey, Gross and Shibuya (1994) HUD HDS
(1989)
36Racial Steering in Detroit
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38Inequities Impact Everyone
- How do disparities harm our State?
- Wasted Creative Capacity. The wasted creative
capacity associated with a lack of social,
economic and educational opportunity drags down
the competitive strength of the entire State - Fragmented Economic Voice. To attract investment
in the global economy, regions/States must act
collectively to promote themselves, and they must
align key infrastructure and assets to be more
innovative, efficient and competitive - Disparities also reinforce sprawl and increase
housing cost for everyone (the segregation tax)
39How can we intervene?Regional equity,
cooperation and access to opportunity
40Principles for Equitable Regionalism
- The success of equitable regionalism rests on the
following principles - Create and grow communities of opportunity in
distressed areas - Work to reduce the destructive, inefficient
competition among communities in the State - Cooperatively manage sprawling development so as
not to subsidize dysfunctional growth patterns - Improve the educational outlook for all of the
States children - Regionalism does not require regional government
(municipal consolidation) but requires regional
foresight and cooperation
41Examples of Smart Growth or Regionalism that
Promote Racial and Regional Equity (1)
- Housing Initiatives
- Inclusionary zoning, opportunity based housing,
workforce housing - Growth Control Initiatives
- Growth management (that preserves affordable
housing in areas of opportunity) - Tax Sharing Initiatives
- Tax base sharing, income tax strategies
- Public Infrastructure Initiatives
- Reinvestment in existing communities
- Removing subsidies associated with sprawl
42Examples of Smart Growth or Regionalism that
Promote Racial and Regional Equity (2)
- Transportation Initiatives
- Equitable transportation spending, expanding
public transit investments - Public Education Initiatives
- Regionalized school districts, economic
integration, magnet schools, school mobility,
targeting highly qualified teachers, day long
year long schooling - Inner City Redevelopment
- Land bank programs, increasing homeownership,
minority and small business development,
leveraging public investments to attract private
investment, investing in people (work force
development)
43Putting these principles in actionBaltimore,
Austin Cleveland
44The Communities of Opportunity Approach in Fair
Housing
- Thompson v. HUD
- Lawsuit filed on behalf of 14,000 African
American public housing residents in the City of
Baltimore - Plaintiffs representatives include the Maryland
ACLU and NAACP Legal Defense Fund - In January 2005, US District Court Judge Garbis
found HUD liable for violating the federal Fair
Housing Act, for not providing fair housing
opportunities to Baltimores African American
public housing residents - The current remedial phase involves designing a
court ordered remedy to address HUDs fair
housing violation
45Conditions in Baltimore
- Subsidized housing opportunities in Baltimore are
generally clustered in the regions predominately
African American neighborhoods
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47Ruling remedy must be regional
- Baltimore City should not be viewed as an island
reservation for use as a container for all of the
poor of a contiguous region. - The Court finds an approach of regionalization
to be integral to desegregation in the Baltimore
Regionby the term regionalization the Court
refers to policies whereby the effects of past
segregation in Baltimore City public housing may
be ameliorated by the provision of public housing
opportunities beyond the boundaries of Baltimore
City
48Plaintiffs proposed remedy
- The remedy should connect subsidized housing
residents to communities of opportunity - The remedy must be sensitive to opportunity
- The remedy must be metropolitan-wide
- The remedy must be race-conscious
- The remedy must not force dispersal of public
housing residents - The remedy must be goal-driven
- The remedy should make use of a variety of tools
available to HUD
49Proposed remedy identifies Communities of
Opportunity
- Used 14 indicators of neighborhood opportunity to
designate high and low opportunity neighborhoods
in the region - Neighborhood Quality/Health
- Poverty, Crime, Vacancy, Property Values,
Population Trends - Economic Opportunity
- Proximity to Jobs and Job Changes, Public Transit
- Educational Opportunity
- School Poverty, School Test Scores, Teacher
Qualifications
50Plaintiffs Proposed Remedy
- Plaintiffs propose providing desegregative
housing opportunities in the regions high
opportunity neighborhoods to remedy HUDs fair
housing violations - With the goal of providing nearly 7,000
affordable housing opportunities in high
opportunity communities to public housing
residents who volunteer to relocate in ten years - Aligned with proposals to provide support
services for residents who volunteer for the
program
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