Study: Philly among leaders in gentrification, which has pushed out people of color

Joe Money

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Study: Philly among leaders in gentrification, which has pushed out people of color
by Alfred Lubrano and Jeff Gammage, Updated: March 20, 2019

MICHAEL BRYANT / STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
“A major transformation is occurring in the most prosperous American cities,” the authors of the study conducted by the National Community Reinvestment Coalition wrote, and that has disproportionately hurt African Americans and Latinos “who were pushed away before they could benefit from increased property values and opportunities in revitalized neighborhoods.”

In Philadelphia, gentrification has generated contention and controversy.

Recent local studies have found that homeowners here are not as threatened by displacement as in other places, due to the emergence of programs aimed at keeping people in their houses, and to relatively low property taxes, at least as compared with other locales.

But renters, who make up nearly half of all city residents, have faced an eviction crisis as neighborhood investment surges.

The new study identified more than 1,000 neighborhoods in 935 cities and towns where gentrification took place between 2000 and 2013. Rapidly rising rents, property values, and taxes forced more than 135,000 residents to move out.

In Washington, D.C., 20,000 black residents were forced out, and in Portland, Ore., 13 percent of the black community was displaced during a decade. Nearly 12,000 African Americans in Philadelphia moved out of gentrifying neighborhoods.

The study, “Shifting Neighborhoods: Gentrification and Cultural Displacement in American Cities,” relied on Census Bureau and economic data. The authors said it lent weight to what critics describe as a concentration of wealth and wealth-building investment in a handful of the nation’s biggest cities.

Meanwhile, other regions of the country languish, as poorer towns and rural areas starve for investment.

For Kensington resident Sandra Rivera-Colon, the endless hammering of construction crews on new apartment buildings is the staccato sound of trouble.

“You hear the noise and feel sad,” said Rivera-Colon, 22, a community organizer and single mother of a 4-year-old girl. “You can’t do anything about the changes.”

Gentrification in Kensington has raised the rents of existing apartments, making life that much harder.

She used to pay $500 a month for a two-bedroom place, Rivera-Colon said. Now she and a roommate split $900 for a same-size apartment. And that’s not including utilities.

In Kensington and other areas of the city, gentrification has churned with life-changing force, allowing people with means to move into a neighborhood that then changes in character and income.

For instance, the Graduate Hospital area, once a largely African American neighborhood, saw a huge influx of middle- and upper-middle-class renters and home buyers gentrify the neighborhood between 2006 and 2017, federal census figures show. During that period, average incomes rose from $60,424 to $91,445, making the area the highest-ranked in the city in terms of income.

Similarly, the Point Breeze area saw incomes jump from $29,342 to $37,879 in the same time frame. In Northern Liberties/Fishtown, incomes rocketed from $59,280 to $81,889.

For some who must scramble to find new places to live, activists say, the changes feel like discrimination.

Gentrification expert Emily Dowdall, policy director at the Reinvestment Fund, said that neighborhoods just outside Center City, as well as University City and part of North Philadelphia near Temple, have seen dramatic changes in the last 15 years.

She likened gentrification to water flow: Neighborhoods “downstream” from well-off areas keep changing.

“The high prices flow down from Rittenhouse Square to Washington Avenue and then, like a wave, flood over to Point Breeze,” Dowdall said.

While it seems that nearly every area of the city is gentrifying, that’s not so, she said. Philadelphia experiences nothing like the high-profile, large-scale displacement of a place like San Francisco.

The story of gentrification in Philadelphia has long been the tale of “African Americans not being able to choose where to live,” Dowdall said.

While it’s hard to compare eras, the 1960s may have been a time of even greater gentrification.

About 100 years ago, Society Hill was considered to be among the only places in Philadelphia where black people could live. But within 10 years in the 1960s, Dowdall said, hardly any African Americans lived there at all.

At the same time, largely black neighborhoods in University City were cleared as Drexel University and the University of Pennsylvania built up, she said.

Gentrification is a topic in which almost everyone has an interest or opinion but in which different studies focused on different areas have produced different findings.

For instance, a study published in 2018 by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia examined the connection between tax delinquency, homeowner mobility, and gentrification during the previous two years.

Researchers found that while tax delinquency is about 4 percentage points higher in gentrifying neighborhoods than in those that saw no steep rise in household income, homeowners are not moving out any more rapidly than in nongentrifying areas.

The new NCRC study defined gentrification as what occurs when lower-income neighborhoods receive massive new investments that raise home values and bring in new, higher-income residents.

Nationally, the new study said, gentrification and displacement are most intense in the nation’s biggest cities but rare elsewhere.

The Washington-based NCRC, an association of 600 community groups that promote access to affordable housing, banking, and jobs for working-class families, found that most low- to moderate-income neighborhoods did not gentrify or revitalize during the studied time. They remained impoverished, untouched by investments that occurred in major cities, the study said.

Washington was the most gentrified city, as judged by the percentage of eligible neighborhoods that experienced gentrification. New York City was the most gentrified city by sheer volume.

The study considered neighborhoods as “eligible” to become gentrified if in 2000 they were in the lower 40 percent of home values and family incomes in that metropolitan area.

New York, Los Angeles, Washington, Baltimore, San Diego, Chicago, and Philadelphia together accounted for nearly half of all gentrification, the report said.

Philadelphia's past is marred by decisions that pushed low-income people out of their neighborhoods, fostered residential segregation and stripped wealth and opportunity from low- and moderate-income neighborhoods,” Beth McConnell, policy director of the Philadelphia Association of Community Development Corporations, wrote in an essay accompanying the report. “These were deeply racialized decisions that had an outsize negative impact on people of color, and which resonate in the persistent poverty and inequality of today's Philadelphia.

Now, as wealth and opportunity flow back into the city, she wrote, it’s up to policymakers to embrace ideas that halt the deepening of inequality and begin to compensate for past errors. Philadelphia has taken steps but needs to move quicker amid growing development, she wrote.

McConnell wrote that Philadelphia policymakers have sought to help homeowners who face unaffordable property taxes that threaten their ability to stay in their homes.

Two programs let property owners freeze their real-estate taxes to prevent future increases. One is the Senior Freeze program for low-income homeowners older than 65. The other is the Longtime Owner Occupant Program, known as Loop, for those who have owned and lived in their home for at least 10 years and saw increases of at least 300 percent in tax assessments from one year to the next.

More than 29,000 Philadelphians have enrolled in these programs, earning them $21 million in property-tax relief, she wrote.

An additional 13,161 homeowners have enrolled in Owner Occupied Payment Agreement, known as OOPA. Property owners who face losing their homes to tax foreclosure can enter into monthly payment agreements, with the amount set at 10 percent or less of their monthly earnings.

“Unfortunately, Philadelphia has few programs to help renters who are facing displacement due to rising costs,” she wrote. “Resources are still inadequate to ensure housing stability for all low-income Philadelphians.”

https://www.philly.com/news/gentrif...-latino-investment-neighborhood-20190320.html
 
I know quite a few strippers that moved to Philly caused they bragged how cheap the rent was... I wonder how this affect them
 
I have 2 arab friends and about 4 cac friends that went Detroit style into North Philly and bought blocks. They told me a hyper train from philly to ny will be built soon and thats the reason they went in. So this all makes sense.

A question I dont see being asked is, as the Nigga Factories across America get shut down, what are we doing to be owners of places cacs wanna live. Owning the plaza they wanna put a chipotle. Owning the land nothing has been built on.
 
At some point they aren’t pushing us out; we aren’t owning enough property, or in many cases, not keeping up what we do own. I see huge old houses in historic districts around town that are falling apart. Near parks and downtown. Cacs buying them for pennies on the dollar. Any city I ever lived in it’s the same thing.
 
So becsuse income went from 29k to 37k it means gentrification

Music mogul turned philanthropist Kenny gamble is responsible for a lot of the turn around in the point breeze neighborhood
 
This is becoming a major problem

trust Me.. while we as a people do experience hardships as many dont really leave as much as they are unsurped...

but I see light at the end of that tunnel I see a blessing in disguise..sure there will be suffering but we already won..

most cant see it, because most have sight but cannot see..

anyway what I really wanted to state was that..

this shit right here scares the shit out of the cacs that run shit, you KNOW why..?

because all that rich money gentrifyin us out, are gonna need a service population...

especially since they are cracking down on latinos to improve the caucazoid numbers

they realized they put themselves in a hole..

new york city was losing tooo many bruhs and sis's to the south..

they put a stop to that shit with the quickness with the 15.00 dollar min wage....

I dont hear about so many folks headed down south like I used to..

and the ones that left love it, I guess places like nyc thought they would come running back.

they were sadly mistaken....
 
Hell, even BGOLiens still argue over renting vs owning.

In DC, shit is crazy how much it has changed. You give it a few more years and SE will be gone too. Shaw is unrecognizable to me. And the messed up part is that the surrounding 'burbs ain't cheap. Most of those displaced are being forced into PGC for affordable housing. No longer chocolate City.

Also, for those that do own, they're facing increased real estate taxes b/c of rising property values.
 
You want to own a piece of the city own your home..

yup under capitalism its really the only way to truly up your status..along with being political..

just having a lot of money wont do it, it gotta be in the right hands working for you

land and business ownership is a respected class in nyc with say in what goes on if they stay political of course and involved in what goes on in their communities.. but thats only if you give a fuck about shit like that tho..

most folks dont know it, but its business owners that have cops acting a certain way..

that whole Eric Garner situation who else would give a fuck about a dude selling cigarettes in front of a store but the owner of that store..

that pussy cop should fry for that tho..
 
I saw this philly boom coming especially in west Philly but I didn’t have the foresight to drop out of college in the late 90’s and take advantage of it
 
Let's see
Democrat Governor
Democrat mayor
9 out of 10 council members are Democrats, 6 of them are Black .

:hithead:

@Watcher keep telling us that the Republicans are the one fucking up everything and we need more dems that are Black

:idea:
Any position anywhere you think a white person is better than having a black person in there huh. There’s a reason you never speak negative about trump...

White republicans are about the only people you have never said anything negative about.

Black Democrat you trash them
Black republican you trash them
White democrat you trash them
White republican. Silence
 
Any position anywhere you think a white person is better than having a black person in there huh. There’s a reason you never speak negative about trump...

White republicans are about the only people you have never said anything negative about.

Black Democrat you trash them
Black republican you trash them
White democrat you trash them
White republican. Silence
:hmm:
 
At some point they aren’t pushing us out; we aren’t owning enough property, or in many cases, not keeping up what we do own. I see huge old houses in historic districts around town that are falling apart. Near parks and downtown. Cacs buying them for pennies on the dollar. Any city I ever lived in it’s the same thing.


Banks giving them loans plus they are moving in and getting higher wages than the people they are pushing out. Its part of the design.
 
I have 2 arab friends and about 4 cac friends that went Detroit style into North Philly and bought blocks. They told me a hyper train from philly to ny will be built soon and thats the reason they went in. So this all makes sense.

A question I dont see being asked is, as the Nigga Factories across America get shut down, what are we doing to be owners of places cacs wanna live. Owning the plaza they wanna put a chipotle. Owning the land nothing has been built on.


Looks like it


https://www.phillyvoice.com/elon-musk-hyperloop-approval-digging-washington-dc/
 
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At some point they aren’t pushing us out; we aren’t owning enough property, or in many cases, not keeping up what we do own. I see huge old houses in historic districts around town that are falling apart. Near parks and downtown. Cacs buying them for pennies on the dollar. Any city I ever lived in it’s the same thing.
It's musical chairs out here. Because I've seen the reverse of gentrification come to the suburbs. That's where folks actually own the homes but have put up with so much foolishness that property values have plummeted.
 
I never know what side to take on gentrification. Philly is my hometown and we as a collective black community in Philly didn't do shit to keep up neighborhoods, improve property or generally care for the surrounding areas. Philadelphia homes for the most part were inexpensive and yet we were generally more renters than owners except for my grandparents generation. 10-15 years ago... I viewed Philly as ugly and blighted as a city. Other cities had sprawling areas, new construction, better city amenities and just much more going for them.

Now Philadelphia is improving which in my opinion changing the perception of the city in a good way. Places like Northern Liberties and Brewery Town are nice spots to hang out in and have a great (albeit more white and hipster) vibe to them that Philly never had when I was growing up. Of course because of that... people are no longer able to afford the rent in these places and feel pushed out. The perception that homeowners are unable to afford the rising property taxes is very overstated because those who were able to afford to purchase homes in the last 15-20 years weren't broke and many of them had stable incomes and jobs. Those houses were never dirt cheap in the first place... just not overly expensive. The problem of being pushed out of these neighborhoods is largely a renter's issue. Once they were removed, especially around the Temple area near Diamond Ave, the area no longer had the blighted look and crime stopped being a problem.

So am I supposed to be upset or happy that this is taking place?
 
I never know what side to take on gentrification. Philly is my hometown and we as a collective black community in Philly didn't do shit to keep up neighborhoods, improve property or generally care for the surrounding areas. Philadelphia homes for the most part were inexpensive and yet we were generally more renters than owners except for my grandparents generation. 10-15 years ago... I viewed Philly as ugly and blighted as a city. Other cities had sprawling areas, new construction, better city amenities and just much more going for them.

Now Philadelphia is improving which in my opinion changing the perception of the city in a good way. Places like Northern Liberties and Brewery Town are nice spots to hang out in and have a great (albeit more white and hipster) vibe to them that Philly never had when I was growing up. Of course because of that... people are no longer able to afford the rent in these places and feel pushed out. The perception that homeowners are unable to afford the rising property taxes is very overstated because those who were able to afford to purchase homes in the last 15-20 years weren't broke and many of them had stable incomes and jobs. Those houses were never dirt cheap in the first place... just not overly expensive. The problem of being pushed out of these neighborhoods is largely a renter's issue. Once they were removed, especially around the Temple area near Diamond Ave, the area no longer had the blighted look and crime stopped being a problem.

So am I supposed to be upset or happy that this is taking place?

You say it's a "renter's issue", but are you aware of the difficulty black people have had with getting mortgage loans? There was a PBS expose last year where a black lesbian professor in Philly was unable to get a mortgage loan, but her white girlfriend who worked part-time at a grocery store was able to get one.
 
I can see it. I was in philly a lot last year and you can really see the difference. Plus philly got that bullshit where they take your houses over some bullshit drug charges. They been doing a lot of illegal shit to gentrify.
 
You say it's a "renter's issue", but are you aware of the difficulty black people have had with getting mortgage loans? There was a PBS expose last year where a black lesbian professor in Philly was unable to get a mortgage loan, but her white girlfriend who worked part-time at a grocery store was able to get one.

That all may be true but 20 years ago there were plenty of stable black homeowners in certain sections of the city. However, there were just far more renters. Philadelphia is one of those cities where the cities workers can work and almost double their salaries through overtime in a lot of blue collar jobs.
 
This is becoming a problem and no one's got a solution as to what should we do.It's happening all over the country where they are doing the opposite of what they did in the 70's/80's of using government funded programs to move to the suburbs,build up those communities,raise the cost of living,taxes,create all types of ordinances to keep blacks out but now they want to flock back to area's deemed unsafe,black,poor and whatever else that's bad you want to attach to it.Their helping them doing it.....I know by the time it reaches the news,it will be too late the damage would of been done.
 
This is becoming a problem and no one's got a solution as to what should we do.It's happening all over the country where they are doing the opposite of what they did in the 70's/80's of using government funded programs to move to the suburbs,build up those communities,raise the cost of living,taxes,create all types of ordinances to keep blacks out but now they want to flock back to area's deemed unsafe,black,poor and whatever else that's bad you want to attach to it.Their helping them doing it.....I know by the time it reaches the news,it will be too late the damage would of been done.

I think we have to make a push off using governmental programs that hinder upward mobility.... theres a study that around 1970s is where black people plateau'd economically and we haven't done that much better for over 40 years! I can't be mad that we didnt keep the trends leading up 1970s where we had better unemployment than other races when the country had way more systematic and oppressive forces working against us. We should only be angry with ourselves that we devalued our communities and people came in seeing economic opportunities. Its a capitalistic society. If the ball was in our court we would be doing the same. We should hold our leaders more accountable because in a lot of these gentrified cities I cant understand how we had representation in public offices but still come up on the short end of the stick.
 
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