Can DC Develop Without Displacement?

You like living near good schools, parks, well-stocked grocery stores, bars, restaurants, etc., but you believe that if one more high-rise condominium goes up in your neighborhood you’ll get priced out. Is it possible to have development without displacement?

Are you concerned about how the DC Zoning Regulations Rewrite is going down and will affect you and your neighborhood for the next 100 years?

Are you upset by the fact that DC Library officials are considering putting luxury condos on top of our central public library downtown?

Are you outraged by the purposely poor planning happening around our City because City officials have put a major corporate welfare program in place which gives away public property for pennies, offers tax gifts to mega corporations, and grants significant zoning entitlements to corporate developers without proof of need?

Are you shocked by the ever-widening income gap between the wealthiest and poorest DC residents?

Are you worried that you will be priced out of your DC neighborhood because rents and housing costs are skyrocketing?

If the answer is yes to any of these issues, and you want to find solutions together, please join the next gathering of

DC FOR REASONABLE DEVELOPMENT Saturday April 12, 2014 1:30 PM to 3:00 PM Meet at MLK Library Great Hall

Please RSVP by email: dc4reality@gmail.com or call 202-810-2768 For more information go to http://www.dc4reality.org

Confronting Gentrification: Part One

On February 18, a panel discussion on the critical implications of “urban renewal” in DC communities took place at American University. The first speaker was Johanna Bockman. An Associate Professor of Sociology and Global Affairs at George Mason University, Bockman also runs the blog Sociology in My Neighborhood: DC Ward Six. In the video below, she gives a brief history of gentrification, dissecting it along the way. Worth taking a listen, even as you do other things.

Shout out to Sophia YoshiMi and Luis Enrique Salazar for putting together what was an amazing panel discussion and posting the video. Watch this space for more video from the Confronting Gentrification Panel Discussion.

SAVING PUBLIC HOUSING. The Truth about “New Communities” & “Choice”

 

Posted on Behalf of Empower DC

Tenant Summit 2013

 

Tenant Summit 2013! A great opportunity to become acquainted with people and nonprofit organizations throughout the city that work with tenants and tenant groups on a number of issues providing legal advice, administering rental assistance programs, working to improve housing conditions, and otherwise seeking to prevent displacement in all of DC. Come to find out what services are available to you, and learn about your rights as a DC tenant! Free registration here.

18 Gentrifying D.C. Neighborhoods Identified

Cross-Post from the Washington Business Journal by Michael Neibauer

From Chillum to Petworth to Congress Heights, new research reveals 18 D.C. neighborhoods whose median property value and federal adjusted gross income fell below the citywide average in 2001, and rose most significantly over the next decade.

In other words, they are gentrifying, or “transitioning” as termed by four experts behind a report recently submitted to the D.C. Tax Revision Commission. Many are not what, or where, you’d think.

A map of D.C.’s gentrifying neighborhoods, as defined by four researchers in a report recently submitted to the D.C. Tax Revision Commission.

The list, in alphabetical order:

Anacostia Barry Farms Brentwood Brookland Chillum Columbia Heights Congress Heights Deanwood Eckington Fort Dupont Park Ledroit Park Lily Ponds Marshall Heights Old City I (H Street NE) Petworth Randle Heights 16th Street Heights Trinidad

New residents of these neighborhoods are younger. They are strong earners. They are condo dwellers. They are single. And as they’ve arrived, older residents and married couples have left in droves, according to the research, leaving a vast gap between the have and have-nots.

We use “gentrifying” or “transitioning” to define communities in flux — those that have shifted wealthier or whiter or younger, usually at the expense of longtime, poorer residents. But how do we know what specific neighborhoods are in the throes of gentrification? In many cases, it’s purely perception, often based simply on who’s moving in down the block.

Researchers LaTanya Brown-Robertson of Bowie State University, Daniel Muhammad and Marvin Ward of the D.C. Office of the Chief Financial Officer and Michael Bell of George Washington University take a more scientific tact — a deep dive into demographic, fiscal and economic statistics.

Over the last decade, according to the report, the District experienced a net loss of 15,120 people under the age of 14 or over the age of 65 — 88.7 percent of whom originated from a transitioning neighborhood. At the same time, those 18 neighborhoods gained 26,362 residents ages 15-64, or “working age.”

The number of married income tax filers fell 20.1 percent in transitioning neighborhoods over the study period, while the number of single filers soared by 66.5 percent. Of the 20,451 new individual income filers gained by the transitioning neighborhoods over the study period, 93 percent were single.

There was a 275 percent surge in condominium construction in the 18 listed neighborhoods, a 100 percent increase in the number of large commercial office properties, and a $76.6 million boost to the District’s tax collections “due to the demographic and economic trends that have occurred in the city’s transitioning neighborhoods.”

The burden of these trends falls on the “bottom 80 percent,” said Brown-Robertson, a lifelong D.C. resident. Testifying before the Tax Revision Commission in early June, Brown-Robertson suggested the District may want to offer additional tax deductions for poorer residents in gentrifying neighborhoods.

“It should be more equitable for residents that have basically lived in the city throughout this whole transition, so they could afford it,” she said.

My immediate takeaway from this list: how little race plays a role in gentrification. We know Petworth, Columbia Heights and Trinidad have transitioned over the past decade as a younger, diverse set has moved in. And yes, many of those new residents are white.

But Barry Farms? Marshall Heights? Deanwood? Those east of the river communities were 90-plus percent black in 2000, and they’re 90-plus percent black today. Their gentrification, or “transition,” as the authors write, is not tied to the racial make-up of their new residents, but by their earning power.

The Tax Revision Commission, a panel led by former Mayor Anthony Williams, has accepted nearly two dozen research papers in the last six months as part of its all-encompassing review of the District’s tax code. Its recommendations are scheduled for release in January.