Title: Equity, Sustainability and Neighborhood Planning
1Equity, Sustainability and Neighborhood Planning
- Bringing equity into planning for sustainability
- in Weinland Park.
- Jason Reece AICP
- Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race
Ethnicity - The Ohio State University
- October 12th, 2004
2About the Kirwan Institute (KI)
- Under the leadership of john powell
- Multidisciplinary institute with a mission of
working to eliminate racial disparity and racial
hierarchy - Analyze racial disparity and inequity using a
structural and institutional framework - Structural Racism
- Policy oriented
- Conduct work in many areas
- Education, Affirmative Action, Diversity,
Community Development, Housing Policy - Particular focus on issues of regionalism, smart
growth and equity as vehicles to address racial
disparity in America
3Todays Presentation
- The sustainability movementwhere is social
equity? - How can you adopt an equity-oriented approach?
- How does this apply to neighborhood planning?
- How can we apply this to Weinland Park?
4The Three Es of Sustainability
5Where is the third E (Equity)?
- Many social equity advocates are critical of the
sustainability movement (and the smart growth
movement) for ignoring issues of equity. - Policy example State Smart Growth Reforms
- Throughout the 1990s (and today) many states
have embraced smart growth measures to better
control development. - A study by the American Planning Association in
1999, identified areas lacking attention in
updated state land use statutes. The APA found
that urban redevelopment was lacking from most
state land use reforms and that planning laws
generally focused on conservation goals more than
redevelopment. - In addition, only half of the state planning laws
addressed housing issues, affordable housing
received little attention from most state land
use reform. - Source American Planning Association (1999)
Planning Communities for the 21st Century found
on-line at http//www.planning.org/growingsmart/p
df/planningcommunities21st.pdf
6How can equity and environmental principles
conflict with each other?
- Conflict between the principles of sustainable
development is not inherent. - But, principles such as the environment and
equity can work in concert or conflict with one
another depending on the impact. - Environment and Equity Working in Concert
- Urban growth boundaries in Portland (spurring
inner city redevelopment), revenue sharing in
Minneapolis (helping control growth). - Environment and Equity Working in Conflict
- South Carolina Example
7High Rural Poverty by Race in America 1999
8How can equity and environmental principles
conflict with each other?
- Conflict over smart growth and equity in Richland
County, SC - Concerns over smart growth policies in Richland
County, South Carolina - Economically depressed South Richland has one of
the highest rates of African American land
ownership in the nation - Concern that smart growth policies are being used
to dispossess the African American community
9Background on Lower Richland
Sewer Lines in Richland County
- Historical discriminatory infrastructure
policies have curtailed growth in Lower Richland,
while other areas have sprawled. - Residents cannot gain financing for homes so
their land holdings are their primary asset.
10How can equity and environmental principles
conflict with each other?
- After analyzing the impact of the master plan for
the County (which has received national praise)
our Institute and the Center for Social Inclusion
found the plan to produce inequitable outcomes. - Growth restrictions were placed (large lot
zoning) primarily into economically depressed
Lower Richland. - Impacting wealth building for the community.
- Strategies to promote community development in
Lower Richland were infeasible. - Attempts to open the housing market were
relocating subsidized housing into Lower
Richland. - Currently working with the community to introduce
more equity into the planning process.
11How do we fix this dilemma?
- Make equity a primary goal in all your planning
decisions. - Consider the equity impact of all decisions.
- Make the principles (economy, environment,
equity) work in concert not conflict. - Adopt an equity oriented approach to planning.
12How to Adopt and Equity Oriented Approach to
Planning/Development.
- Background What is Equity?
- Social Equity is equivalent to social justice
- Equity is not equality or treating each person
in exactly the same way - Equity brings society into balance
- Equity requires investment in all our human and
communal resources to maximize our potential as
individuals, families, communities and a nation - Source Ford Foundations Initiative on Race,
Equity, Community Philanthropy in the American
South
13Promoting Social Equity
- Equity requires us to restructure systems and
institutions that result in racial disparities
(and class/gender disparity) - Equity requires us to take the particular
racialization of space into account when
fashioning remedies - Equity requires us to link the creation of
opportunities to disenfranchised residents
14How to Adopt and Equity Oriented Approach to
Planning/Development.
- Equity requires looking at structures and race
(also class and gender) - We have seen a move away from explicit legal
racism and personal prejudice to a racial
hierarchy that is enforced through
institutional/structural means. - Structures are not as refined and explicit (or
perfect in blocking access) as de jure
segregation - They act as filters (creating cumulative
barriers) - de jure segregation ? de facto segregation
15Spatial racism The Civil Rights Agenda for the
21st Century
- 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 - Spatial Racism and Inequity
- The government plays a central role in the
arrangement of space and opportunities - These arrangements are not neutral or natural
or colorblind - 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 - Concentrated Poverty and Concentrated Wealth
16Structures and Equity Historical 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.
17Structures and Equity Contemporary Government
Role
- Spatial Racism is not natural or neutral,
produces cumulative impacts for people of color - Municipalities subsidize the relocation of
businesses out of the city - Transportation spending favors highways,
metropolitan expansion and urban sprawl - Court decisions prevent metropolitan school
desegregation - School funding is tied to property taxes
- Housing policies.
- Zoning laws prevent affordable housing
development in many suburbs - Housing policies concentrate subsidized housing
18Subsidized Housing in Cleveland
- The Low Income Housing Tax Credit is the primary
new low income housing construction program in
the nation. - The placement of many LIHTC projects in Cleveland
has further concentrated poverty and increased
segregation. (see map) - In 2000, LIHTC neighborhoods in the Cleveland
region had 23 poverty rate and were 50 African
American.
Source Brookings Institute Siting Affordable
Housing March 2004 and the Department of Housing
and Urban Development
19Subsidized Housing in Columbus
- Poverty in Columbus is a spatial phenomenon,
generally concentrated in the central city - The placement of Low Income Housing Tax Credit
Projects in high poverty areas further compounds
this phenomenon
20Population in Poverty and Low Income Housing Tax
Credit Projects in the Baltimore Area (Dark
Colors Highest Distribution) (Blue Dots LITC
projects)
21Land Use Policy/Zoning
- Exclusionary Zoning in Columbus
- Exclusionary zoning exists in Central Ohio
- The 2001-2003 Fair Housing Plan for the region
identified impediments to affordable housing
production in 2000 - While Columbus allowed single family homes to
exist on lots of 5,000 square feet, the
surrounding suburban communities required 8,000
to 11,000 square feet - Square footage requirements for structures in
suburban communities were approximately twice as
large as the 740 square feet required in Columbus - Zoning restrictions and site development
restrictions prohibit affordable housing
development in suburban areas - Zoning which restricts multi-family use
- Large minimum lot sizes
- Large building set backs
22The Impacts of Exclusionary Zoning
- The majority of new homes are built outside of
the city of Columbus - The number of new homes sold in the Columbus
Metropolitan Area that are affordable to moderate
income households has declined from 1,145 in 1998
to 268 in 2001. - Almost 90 of new single family homes built
between 2000 and 2002 in Franklin County cost
more than 120,000. These homes were not
affordable to over 70 of Franklin Countys
African American households and 74 of Hispanic
households (over 60,000 households). - Source Community Indicator Database Report,
Community Research Partners 2001 and analysis of
income and property sales transactions for
Franklin County Auditor and U.S. Census data by
the Kirwan Institute.
23Sprawl and Fragmentation Magnify Racial Inequity
- Two factors are instrumental in magnifying racial
inequity - Sprawl
- The continual movement of opportunity from the
central city to the urban periphery - Fragmentation and localism
- Political fragmentation and localism exasperates
the flow of resources to the urban periphery as
communities compete over commercial investment
and high income population (the favored quarter) - Fragmentation allows communities to sort what
people and business they wish to attract
(strengthen economic and social isolation)
24Effects of Sprawl
By pushing good jobs, stable housing, and
educational opportunities further into the
suburbs, sprawl creates segregated, impoverished
areas of the central city and inner-ring suburbs
that are locked off from access to meaningful
opportunities.
Source University of Boston Geography Dept.
25How to Counteract and Promote More Equitable
Development
- What are we working against
- A long history of inequitable patterns of
development which have created - Concentrated poverty
- Segregation
- Inequitable infrastructure
- Residents disconnected from opportunity
structures - Jobs, Education, Stable/Safe Neighborhoods,
Wealth Creation,
26How to Counteract and Promote More Equitable
Development
- What should we promote?
- Ensure that investment benefits current
residents, businesses, and cultural institutions
- Link residents to regional economic
opportunities - Secure the equitable distribution of affordable
housing throughout metropolitan regions - Foster participation of low-income communities
and communities of color in local and regional
planning decisions and - Address gentrification to avoid residential
displacement.
Source Taken from the Policy Link web site,
http//www.policylink.org
27How to Apply These Principles
- Applying equitable development principles works
differently at different geographic scales - Example Region vs. Neighborhood
28Promoting Equity at the Regional Level
- At the regional level we would be focusing on
more large scale solutions - Revenue sharing models
- Opportunity based housing models
- Inclusionary zoning
- Growth management strategies
- Equitable infrastructure policies
- Large scale infill development strategies
- Public school disparity/inequity
- More able to address the larger structures and
regional forces creating inequity
29Promoting Equity at the Neighborhood Level
- Working at the neighborhood level requires a
different orientation. - Should be aware of regional forces/structures
impacting the neighborhood, but less control over
mitigating these. - Consider coalitions to address these macro-level
issues - More concerned with promoting reinvestment while
avoiding gentrification - Neighborhood revitalization instead of
gentrification.
30More on Gentrification
- Viewpoints on what gentrification is may vary
significantly, and based on these misconstrued
definitions conflict over gentrification in
unavoidable. - The term is often mistakenly intermixed with
urban revitalization or is used to describe any
physical investment within a neighborhood. These
definitions are flawed and miss an important
distinction. - Gentrification is not simply reinvestment into
the neighborhood, gentrification is a process
that extensively dislocates traditional low
income residents (usually residents of color) and
extensively changes the social fabric of the
neighborhood.
31More on Gentrification
- Gentrification is not occurring
- If higher income residents move into a
neighborhood at a scale that is too small to
displace existing residents, - Or redevelopment is targeted toward abandoned or
vacant structures or lots. - Also, the existence of economic development
activity (revitalization) does not automatically
provide for gentrification. - Gentrification is the process of permanently
changing a distressed community into an exclusive
upper income community and does not simply equate
with community reinvestment.
32Gentrification vs. Revitalization
- Important to understand the difference between
gentrification and revitalization - Gentrification Neighborhood in transition to
exclusive upper income white community - Large scale displacement of low income residents
by influx of high income residents - Disruption of social networks and services for
traditional residents - Revitalization Neighborhood in transition to
mixed income, mixed wealth, multi-racial
community - A community of choice available to a wide range
of households - Social networks and services for traditional
residents maintained and improved
33A Revitalization Model of Neighborhood Development
- The distressed community transitions into a mixed
income, mixed wealth and diverse community. - The social networks and services utilized by
traditional residents are maintained and
improved. - Existing neighborhood businesses are supported
while additional viable businesses are created in
the community. - Neighborhood improvement not only focuses on
improving the physical environment but focuses on
creating wealth and opening opportunities (such
as employment) to existing residents.
34Comparing Gentrification with Revitalization
35Promoting Equitable Development at the
Neighborhood Level
- Understand the economic, political, and social
forces at work - Assess, map, and analyze the potential for
displacement - Support resident participation in land use
planning that envisions community-wide economic
improvement - Stabilize current residents
- Build public awareness of the issues and proposed
solutions among key players - Advocate mixed-income development at every turn
and across jurisdictions - Expand the range of housing not susceptible to
the commercial market through permanent
affordability mechanisms
Source Taken from the Policy Link web site,
http//www.policylink.org
36Promoting Equitable Development at the
Neighborhood Level
- Promote diverse homeownership opportunities for
current residents - Target income and asset strategies to stabilize
current residents - Utilize equity criteria to guide new investment
- Anchor culturally-rooted commercial, nonprofit
and arts organizations - Tie housing production to commercial growth
- Plan for newcomers to promote a diverse community
mix and ensure affordability - Strengthen regional cooperation in community and
economic development planning - Craft policies to engage local, regional, state
and federal governments in addressing
gentrification pressures
Source Taken from the Policy Link web site,
http//www.policylink.org
37Applying Equitable Development (and
Sustainability) to Weinland Park
- SWOT analysis
- Know your neighborhood.what are the major
concerns and opportunities - Also consider the regional forces impacting the
neighborhood - Revitalize the neighborhood but avoid
gentrification - Develop policies/recommendations that work in
concert with the principles of sustainability - (equity, environment, economy)
38Weinland Park Selected Characteristics
- Disinvestment
- Poverty
- Subsidized Housing
- Crime and Public Safety
- Vacancy
- Proximity.
- Potential for Revitalization or Gentrification
- Tremendous investment in close proximity
- Good access to public transit, employment
- Many stakeholders working to improve the
neighborhood
39Disinvestment and Poverty
- Population has decreased in Weinland Park by
almost 30 in the past 30 years - Median household income in 2000 was less than
16K, while 50 of households were in poverty - Concentrated poverty is considered any
neighborhood with a poverty rate higher than 40 - Studies have shown concentrated poverty to have
adverse effects on many facets of life, some of
these include - Employment
- Education
- Health
- Criminal Behavior
Source Taken from the 2004 Weinland Park Market
Study, Northside CDC
40Subsidized Housing and Concentrated Poverty
- The high concentration of subsidized housing in
Weinland Park further concentrates poverty in the
community - Recent efforts to reduce the over supply of
subsidized housing are important, must also
consider the fate of subsidized housing
residents.where will they relocate - Into a better opportunity area or another
distressed poor community?
41Crime Public Safety
- High crime rates
- Public safety impacting the neighborhoods image
- A combination of factors creates ideal conditions
for crime in the University District (and
Weinland Park)
Public Safety Problems
42Crime in the University District
- Analysis of Crime Rates in 2002, indicate crime
is concentrated in the eastern and southeastern
portion of the University District
Source City of Columbus Police Department
Census 2000
43Crime in the University District
- Analysis of Crime Rates in 2002, indicate violent
crime is concentrated in the southeast portion of
the University District
Source City of Columbus Police Department
Census 2000
44Vacancy
- Recent market study found 18 of the area to
consist of vacant buildings and lots - Vacant properties cause significant public safety
hazards and discourage new investment, reduce
nearby property values - Direct links between vacancy and crime
Source Taken from the 2004 Weinland Park Market
Study, Northside CDC
45Proximity
- Weinland Park is centrally located with multiple
redeveloping neighborhoods bordering it.. - In addition, large scale public investments in
close proximity will increase investment into the
community. - The challenge will be to promote this investment
(revitalization) while avoiding gentrification of
the community.
Source Map from the 2004 Weinland Park Market
Study, Northside CDC
46Promoting Equity in Weinland Park Example
Improve Access to Opportunity
- Understand what critical impediments are blocking
residents from key regional opportunity
structures - Is it proximity to employment, lack of
education/job training, child care, crime? - Must draft policies to address these critical
levers to promoting opportunity - Example Crime and Employment
- Example Child Care and Employment
- How to do this?
- Survey, talk to residents, obtain input, work
with stakeholders that know the neighborhood and
the its residents
47Promoting Equity in Weinland Park Example
Build Wealth for Residents
- What is wealth?
- Income is what people get paid, wealth is what
people own (investments, equity, assets) - Wealth is a surplus, resources that may be relied
upon in time of need - Wealth is what we use to buy opportunity and it
allows us to take risk which also creates new
wealth - Wealth changes your time frame
- A welfare recipient lives on a day to day, week
to week basis a wealthy person can plan in the
long-term (years or decades)
48Racial Disparity in Wealth
- Why is wealth important?
- Wealth is concentrated opportunity that is often
intergenerational - Wealth provides opportunity and provides access
to the political process - Wealth broadens the playing field in terms of
time and reach - Wealth is realized at the individual and
community level
49Racial Inequity in Wealth
- Government action to promote wealth
- The role of the nation state is to create a
structure that supports the wealth creation and
welfare of its members - Blacks and other have not been full members
- Two major national policies to drive wealth
creation - 19th century policies for land grants
- 20th century housing policies (primarily the
extension of mortgage insurance for housing, tax
policies benefiting home owners) - These policies benefited White Americans but not
people of color - Housing assets (home equity) are the primary
source of wealth for middle class White Americans
(accounting for approximately 70 of White
household net worth)
50Racial Inequity in Wealth
- Wealth disparity in America
- In 2000
- The median asset value for a white household was
79,400, for African American households this was
7,500 (a disparity of 900) - For every 1 in assets held by the average
African American family, the average white family
has 9 in assets - The additional assets held by White Americans
open doors to more opportunity
Source U.S. Census Bureau
51Wealth Building Strategies
- Neighborhood policies to build wealth
- Improve access to homeownership to existing
residents in the neighborhood. (CRITICAL) - Explore alternative models of ownershipcooperati
ve ownership for business. - Expand the access to income for existing
residents (tax policies, living wage). - Explore alternative community based financial
institutions.
For More Information Visit the Policy Link Web
Site at http//www.policylink.org
52Promoting Equity in Weinland Park Example
Avoiding Gentrification
- Working to avoid gentrification while promoting
revitalization - Know the risk for gentrification in the
neighborhood - Characteristics of neighborhood with the
potential to gentrify (does Weinland Park exhibit
these?) - The neighborhood contains a high proportion of
renters (population most sensitive to
displacement pressure). - Easy access to job centers and regional
amenities. - Comparatively low housing values in the context
of the regional and local market, particularly
for housing stock with architectural merit.
53Promoting Equity in Weinland Park Example
Avoiding Gentrification
- Monitoring for gentrification is critical
(consider an early warning monitoring system for
the neighborhood) - Perhaps the most important task for neighborhood
residents, local and regional government
officials and other stakeholders is to identify
gentrification pressures early, and to understand
how gentrification dynamics are to unfold.
Brookings Institute. Dealing with Neighborhood
Change. Page 30.
54Monitoring for Gentrification
- One of the recommendations widely supported for
addressing gentrification pressure is
neighborhood monitoring and assessment. - Establishing a diagnostic system for monitoring
investment and property ownership enables
intervention before gentrification occurs. - Case studies have shown too many communities have
organized to mitigate gentrification after
significant displacement has altered the
neighborhood. - Conversely, this system enables a community to
analyze if reinvestment in the community poses
little threat of gentrification, thus resources
can be targeted toward other neighborhood
concerns.
55How to Monitor
- The tools to monitor for gentrification depend on
the housing market and size of the area of
concern. - Diagnostic systems may be city wide (measuring
all neighborhoods) such as systems found in
Philadelphia and Providence RI. - The Providence, RI monitoring system analyzes the
property sales and abandonment to identify areas
of potential land speculation.
56Monitoring at the Neighborhood Level
- At the neighborhood level, diagnostic systems can
be more proactive, specific and accurate. - Indicators to consider monitoring include
- Property appreciation rates, how fast are they
growing, compare rates with the region, the city
or other urban neighborhoods. - Analyze the rental market in the community.
Determine if rents are changing and how they
compare the change in rents in the region, the
city or other urban neighborhoods - Are critical neighborhood social services under
pressure to relocate? - Determine if any displacement is occurring in the
neighborhood. Are other local (neighborhood)
housing opportunities available to displaced
residents? - Are traditional residents able to maintain
properties, monitor if code violations are
threatening to cause displacement.
57Identify Mitigation Strategies
- Many strategies/policies exist to counter
gentrification (displacement) - Ranging from maintaining the base of affordable
housing units to stabilizing local businesses or
offering financing/loans/grants to existing
residents - Identify these early (before problems occur)
- Be prepared to implement if necessary
58Other Gentrification Issues
- Preserve key social services and neighborhood
institutions - The removal of one key social service or
neighborhood service can be more detrimental than
multiple residential displacements - Consider subsidies/support to stabilize
- Avoid property speculation (flipping)
- Target code enforcement
- Align subsidies and other redevelopment policies
to avoid speculation.land bank, do not allow
speculators to benefit from subsidies - Consider real estate transaction fees if the
problem becomes severe - Attempt to balance access to opportunity for
existing residents and higher income residents - Financing for home improvements
- Assistance in code compliance
- Access to the buyers market
59Concluding Thoughts
- Keep Equity a Priority
- Plan for the neighborhood not just the physical
environment - Consider Equity in all Development Decisions
- Be strategic and balance priorities, look for the
turning point - Promote Revitalization not Gentrification
- For More Information http//www.kirwaninstitute.o
rg
60Discussion Questions
- What policies/strategies can you think of that
promote both social equity, environmental quality
and economic health? - Examples??????
- What regional factors/structures do you think are
impacting Weinland Park? - Examples?
- What can be done about this?
61Discussion Questions
- How do you address the over-concentration of
subsidized housing in Weinland Park? - How could you address Gentrification in different
neighborhoods? - Olde Town East
- Gentrification underway
- Weinland Park
- Potential for gentrification