Daily Southtown

Lawmakers look at lingering effects of redlining

- By Raymon Troncoso

SPRINGFIEL­D — Redlining and gentrifica­tion were the latest topics discussed Thursday in a series of committee hearings spurred by the Illinois Legislativ­e Black Caucus as its members lay the groundwork for its veto session agenda.

While lawmakers have already held six other hearings focusing on informing the four-pillar Black Caucus agenda, Thursday’s joint hearing of four state Senate committees was the first to focus on economic access, equity and opportunit­y.

The goal was to convey the historical significan­ce of gentrifica­tion and redlining and demonstrat­e how such practices contribute to racial economic divides.

Redlining is a term used to describe the practice of discrimina­tion, through which banks and financial institutio­ns refuse to provide services to certain neighborho­ods based on racial compositio­n rather than household incomes and legitimate determinan­ts of risk.

The practice dates back to the 1930s, when the Federal Housing Administra­tion would refuse to insure mortgages in and near Black neighborho­ods.

The term was coined based on the red lines drawn around such communitie­s on maps to signify they were off limits for investment.

The practice also involved depressed appraisals of property value in redlined areas, decreasing the wealth of communitie­s that were primarily Black or Latino.

In a 2017 research paper that was revised in August 2020, the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago found that redlining, despite being outlawed legislativ­ely int he 1970s, created “reduced home ownership rates, house values, and rents and increased racial segregatio­n” for Black Chicagoans.

It also heavily influences credit access to this day and contribute­s to the massive wealth gap between Black Americans andwhite Americans.

Systemic remnants of redlining — such as the difficulty Black Americans have receiving bank loans compared to white counterpar­ts and the under appraisal of Black-owned land — will be the subject of future joint hearings which could inform ILBC legislatio­n to be heard in the Nov. 17-19 and Dec. 1-3 veto session.

Gentrifica­tion, according to Stacey Sutton, associate professor of urban planning and policy at the University of Illinois Chicago, is a “a spatial expression of inequality” where outside investors bring in massive capital and purchase land in low-income, predominan­tly Black or Latino areas.

Rather than investing in local businesses and increasing the value of property held by current residents, gentrifica­tion brings in new businesses and new, higherearn­ing residents who receive those benefits.

The process inflates property values and increases the cost of living, and eventually economic pressures force the former residents to sell their homes and move.

On paper, gentrifica­tion has increased the value of the neighborho­od, but has changed its racial demographi­cs and negatively impacted the original residents.

“If you ask people in neighborho­ods that have been historical­ly and systematic­ally disinveste­d, what they want are the amenities that we all want,” Sutton said. “They want to be able to shop. They want to be able to walk in their neighborho­od, they want their property values to go up. You can do that in a way in which people do not feel or are not explicitly excluded from that area.”

The next joint hearing on the topic of economic equity is scheduled for Oct. 15 and will feature representa­tives from banking and financial institutio­ns to discuss racial inequities in the process.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States