Posted on 08/17/2014 6:47:21 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
A local organizer in a town neighboring Ferguson, Mo., shows a typical porch.
On the surface, the unrest in Ferguson, Mo., was about local police using deadly force on an unarmed young man. But on a deeper level, it reflected the increasing poverty and economic decline that affects ethnic communities all over America.
Despite rosy reports in the media about the end of the national foreclosure crisis and the recession that followed, all is not well in our inner cities and suburbs with largely minority populations, like Ferguson.
The foreclosure crisis was hard on many Americans, but it was a disaster for communities of color, including the citizens of Ferguson.
Half of Ferguson Homes Underwater
In the zip code that encompasses Ferguson, half (49 percent) of homes were underwater in 2013, meaning the homes market value was below the mortgages outstanding balance. This condition (also called negative equity) is often a first step toward loan default or foreclosure, according to the recent report, Underwater America, from the Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society at the University of California, Berkeley.
Mortgage lenders targeted predominantly black and Hispanic areas for the highest-risk, highest-cost types of mortgage loans, such as adjustable-rate mortgages and loans with high prepayment penalties. This led to higher-than-average default rates, according to the Housing Commission established by the Bipartisan Policy Center in Washington, D.C.
Many of the families that were sold risky mortgages had good credit, decent incomes, and everything else necessary to qualify for traditional long-term, fixed-rate loans. Yet, they were not offered those kinds of loans, but instead steered into exotic and costly mortgages they did not fully understand and could not afford, the commission said.
This deliberate targeting of minority areas for the sale of risky and expensive loans, as the commission described it, wreaked havoc on the financial well-being of affected families and undermined the stability of entire neighborhoods.
African-American and Latino borrowers were almost twice as likely to have lost their homes to foreclosure as non-Hispanic whites, according to the Center for Responsible Lending (CRL).
Communities of color got the worst of everything. They were given the highest-risk, most expensive mortgages, they received the worst servicing from their mortgage lenders, and they have suffered the most damage from the nations long economic slump, said Liz Ryan Murray, policy director for National Peoples Action, a Chicago-based group that has been fighting against discriminatory home lending practices since the 1970s.
Black-White Housing Divide Historic
The homeownership rate for African-American households peaked at 49 percent in 2004, according to Harvards Joint Center for Housing Studies report, The State of the Nations Housing 2013. The rate of black home ownershipwith all the potential for upward mobility it offersfell to 43.9 percent in 2012. The homeownership rate among white households declined during that time, too, but remained at 73.5 percent.
The black-white gap [in homeownership rates] has reached historic proportions, Harvards report said.
There has also been a powerfully negative ripple effect on other property owners who never had a problem making their mortgage payments but owned property near people who did. The losses in household wealth that resulted from foreclosures and abandonment of nearby properties have disproportionately hurt communities of color, according to many sources that have studied the issue.
In ethnic neighborhoods, the average decline in home prices from 2006 to 2013 was 26 percent, according to Harvards 2014 report. Thats roughly three times the decline experienced in white areas.
Nationwide, about 27 percent of homeowners in minority areas had negative equity compared to about 15 percent of owners in white areas.
Little Prospect for Recovery
Lower-income areas have little prospect for home prices to recover soon, or for businesses or banks to start reinvesting in hard-hit neighborhoods.
In some communities with many foreclosed properties, the crisis threatens to doom the entire neighborhood to a cycle of disinvestment and decay, according to Chicagos Business and Professional People for the Public Interest.
Their report goes on, A cluster of vacant properties can destabilize a block. A cluster of troubled blocks can destabilize a neighborhood. The costs are substantial.
Cities affected the most by foreclosures cant afford to do very much to stimulate new investment or buy and fix abandoned properties. In many cases, they cant even afford to board up abandoned properties or clean up trash left by vagrants and vandals.
Adding to the impact of foreclosures is the ongoing economic slump and the high rate of black unemployment. As a consequence, poverty and the despair and anger that go with it, are increasing in suburbs like Ferguson.
Between 2000 and 2011, the impoverished population in suburbs grew by two-thirdsmore than twice the rate of growth in cities, according to Confronting Suburban Poverty in America, a 2013 book from the Brookings Institution Press.
50 Years Since Watts
The year 2015 will mark the 50th anniversary of the beginning of an explosive series of urban events in American history. An August 1965 traffic arrest in South Central Los Angeles lit the fuse on one of the most devastating civil upheavals in American history.
African-American residents of the Watts section of Los Angeles rebelled against a mayor and a police force many considered to be racist. The fires and the violence raged for six days, resulting in 34 deaths and the destruction, damage, or looting of 1,000 buildings.
After more rioting in 1966 and 1967, a presidential commission on urban problems was convened and Congress enacted programs to provide affordable housing and revitalize cities. In 1968, equal access to housing regardless of race became the law of the land.
To a very large extent, most of those programs worked as intended, improving conditions for millions of Americans, many of them ethnic families.
Unfortunately, the United States governments commitment to housing and cities has waned in recent years. The decline in funding and elimination of certain key programs could not have come at a worse time. Meanwhile, there has been a powerful backlash among mostly white communities against federal legal initiatives to enforce the fair housing and fair lending laws.
The U.S. Congress has been fixated on budget cuts, and with a contentious election coming up, much of the progress made since the 1960s is in jeopardy. President Barack Obamas 2015 proposed housing budget would restore some of the cuts in funding for housing programs made in recent years. However, even if Congress accepted his plan, it would not restore all the cuts or provide resources sufficient to address the nations housing and urban problems.
Arrested Progress Against Poverty
After the riots in 1965, 1966, and 1967, the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (known as the Kerner Commission) issued a report saying, Our nation is moving toward two societies, one black, one whiteseparate and unequal. Segregation and poverty have created in the racial ghetto a destructive environment totally unknown to most white Americans.
Today, ethnic communities are suffering setbacks again. Even as our population is becoming more diverse, our communities are becoming more segregated and income inequality is increasing.
Arrested progress in the fight against poverty and residential segregation has helped concentrate many African Americans in some of the least desirable housing in some of the lowest-resourced communities in America, according to a 2013 report from the Economic Policy Institute (EPI).
In addition to much higher poverty rates, African Americans suffer much more from the concentration of poverty. Nearly half (45 percent) of poor black children live in neighborhoods with concentrated poverty, but only one in eight low-income white children live in similar neighborhoods, EPI said.
If the recent trends continue, the unrest in Missouri may not be an isolated reaction to a tragic shooting, but a harbinger of things to come.
**********
Andre Shashaty is president of the nonprofit Partnership for Sustainable Communities and author of the forthcoming book, Rebuilding a Dream: Americas New Urban Crisis, the Housing Cost Explosion, and How We Can Reinvent the American Dream for All.
Don’t rob liquor stores.
Black-white housing gap,who are they trying to kid.Look at the porch in the picture.It was new maybe 15 years ago.In all that time,the owners were too lazy to put a coat of paint on it.So it decayed and now needs torn out and replaced.
There is another class of colored people who make a business of keeping the troubles, the wrongs, and the hardships of the Negro race before the public. Having learned that they are able to make a living out of their troubles, they have grown into the settled habit of advertising their wrongs partly because they want sympathy and partly because it pays. Some of these people do not want the Negro to lose his grievances, because they do do not want to lose their jobs. - Booker T. Washington circa 1901
It’s difficult to be wealthy when you are down with the struggle against Whitey unless one can profit off of it like Jesse Jackson or Al “Notso” Sharpton.
Well gosh, the answer is obvious. Toss whitey out of their homes and let the blacks move it.
The Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society
diversity.berkeley.edu/haas-institute
Director john a. powell
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_A._Powell
Race obsessed
Stop your whining and do something about it.
That guy has a much bigger porch than I have on my house.
I live in the county that had the highest percentage of foreclosures when the SHTF. We are still #4 on the current list.
I still have empty houses & foreclosures all around me. It is affecting my ability to sell & move closer to a family member with health issues.
My property is turn key & those homes were trashed by the people who lost them.
Every time I try to discuss a sales price on my house/horse property/fenced & cross-fenced, all I get is back talk about the ‘comps’ in my zip code.
Apples & oranges, but here I fume.
Also- those of us who worked all of our lives paid lots of taxes so that generations of blacks could sit & breed on welfare.
A poster here on FR last year did an analysis of all the freebies a ‘single mother’ with 3 kids gets & it came to more than $56,000 in various freebies.
In my entire working life, I made over $56,000 in only ONE year. I worked an average of 78 hours a week to make that money & I made it on my own, self employed.
For all of the above reasons, my sympathy meter is broken where the blacks who prefer to riot for no sensible reason are concerned.
In about a month, they will realize in Ferguson that they have no businesses to strong-arm. Any merchant worth his/her salt will be moving away-——FAR away.
If only they could be given more free stuff then all of this would blow over, right?
Betcha that the paint would not have cost as much as a month’s worth of booze.
The Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society at UC Berkeley brings together researchers, organizers, stakeholders, communicators, and policymakers to identify and eliminate the barriers to an inclusive, just, and sustainable society and to create transformative change toward a more equitable nation. - www.edibleschoolyard.org/node/11888
Ew boy.
My tiny town has one black family living in it. They aren’t rich and no one gave them the house. He works in a factory and his wife works at the grocery store. They chose to raise their kids here away from the devastating influences of the inner city.
They’re good honest people and they’re welcome here among us.
Buses, trains, ships, airplanes, taxi-cabs, boats and many other types of transportation are leaving the United States on a daily basis for just about every other location on Earth. If black people (or anyone else) doesn’t like the conditions here, I invite them to leave and never come back. Got it?
Commie libs cannot control their own......they create these thugs, from birth to adulthood with their vile social and economic policies.
Then blame it on others, no accountability whatsoever! No morality, no honor, no integrity!
This must end.
Are their no citizens of this town who will stand up to these voices and push back? Where is the local GOP or Tea Party?????
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