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Author: mariam traore (Page 4 of 9)

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Why I wrote it well, gentrification whether you could see or not is all around us. Especially us individuals who live in cities with populations over a million. While we sleep there are people just thinking up ideas on how they are going to transform a community. Their intention might be to help the community but the outcome is favorable to people who never even stepped foot into the neighborhood. Well I was hoping that it would get people to realize that the place that they call home may one day be gone and torn down and transformed into a high rise luxury apartment complex. So far I think I’m doing okay. The issue that I’m having is that I’m begging to talk about my standpoint on the issue. I’m proud that I don’t have to go far to look for information. I need help with tying all my evidence together to support my question.

 

Clean Up Your Mess

One of my pet peeves of reading online is when the words are all bunched up together or the spacing between the two lines are too close. Things that make a website messy is one the font and its size. When you’re on a web site and the title and text are all the same size and the same font it can be quite confusing.

Well it will help me as a  writer because I am actually willing to read my writing. For example when you are sent a text and you see a whole bunch of words it will discourage you from reading “all of that”. For unit two I would like to write less but I really can’t because I have so much to talk about. 

 

2nd source entry

“Displacement of Black and [Latinx] residents accompanied gentrification in many places and impacted at least 135,000 people in our study period. In Washington, DC, 20,000 black residents were displaced, and in Portland, Oregon, 13 percent of the Black community was displaced over the decade.Seven cities accounted for nearly half of the gentrification nationally: New York City, Los Angeles, D.C., Philadelphia, Baltimore, San Diego, and Chicago.79 percent of gentrifying tracts are within cities with one million or more residents.The displacement numbers seem low, but the authors used fairly narrow definitions of gentrification and displacement.”–Black and Hispanic minorities have the biggest percentiles when it comes to displacement. Studies have shown that the tourist attraction cities such as New York City and Los Angeles have become some of the nations hotspot for gentrification. For example 79 percent of gentrification in cities are cities with a population of one million or more. With these cities being tourist attraction cities, prices increase on one side of town while the other is more moderate. This leads to people moving into these more moderate neighborhoods, yet these moderate neighborhoods are filled with minorities. With these new guests in the neighborhood prices begin to increase, rent, groceries and bills. Although the prices are increasing it doesn’t affect the new guest because they have the means for, on the other hand the minorities who were originally in the neighborhood are no longer able to afford their homes and the food they put on the table. Leading these minorities out the neighborhood. Yet what’s most shocking about this is that the studies and the data collected aren’t even as accurate as they seem. The definition of gentrification gets manipulated and data is based off of that definition. 

 

https://cityobservatory.org/how-gentrification-benefits-long-time-residents-of-low-income-neighborhoods/

“an important innovation of their work is linking data for individuals across the two time periods, to measure in detail what happened to a neighborhood’s original residents. The study uses a definition based on changes in the relative educational attainment of adults in Census tracts; gentrifying neighborhoods are the low income census tracts in central cities of the nation’s 100 largest metro areas that recorded the highest rates of increase in adult educational attainment over the past decade or so.  …The most common critique of gentrification is the notion that it forces long-term residents, especially low income renters, out of the neighborhood. Brummet and Reed stratify households by education level (which is a good proxy for income levels).  They find that gentrification has a very small impact on the tendency of less educated renter households to move away from the neighborhood.  Over a ten-year period, about 60 percent of less educated renters moved out of their neighborhood, regardless of whether it gentrified.”This article states that the data collected is from the census from educational attainment. Meaning that folks that have some educational background data is being collected. Well the less educated were almost naturally placed into the neighborhoods they live in, it’s usually NYCHA public housing or Section 8 funded apartments, which is affordable to the “less” educated”. In the neighborhoods with low income people there’s a huge population of immigrants.These immigrants go to work and do 8,12 and 16 hour shifts just to be able to put food on the table, keep up with rent and send money back home to their struggling families. Having to bear with all of this, living check to check and then to find out you soon won’t be able to keep up with going on around you because of weather people. The article also says that the less educated don’t receive that much impact when it comes to moving out of a neighborhood. Definitely, I mean 100% disagree with this. Times have changed back in the day there were things like section 8 which was a program with low income people and ( keep writing)…..

The article states that the less educated leave wither their neighborhood has not gone through gentrification.Yet that’s the thing, one of the main things that happen right before a neighborhood could go through the gentrification process is rent increase. Which is the leading factor for people departing their homes. Not being able to keep up with rent, landlords are forced to kick people out because that’s also their source of income. Landlords also up the price of rent when the property’s value goes up. Of course people dont leave after gentrification as much but leading to people beginning to pack their bags, things like grocery start increasing, stores that you would find in the higher upscale neighborhoods are slowly making their way to your low income neighborhood.  

 

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