San Francisco Chronicle

High housing costs resegregat­ing Bay Area

- By Kimberly Veklerov

The rising cost of housing in the Bay Area has dramatical­ly resegregat­ed neighborho­ods by race and pushed minority families to the outer edges of the region, a new paper shows.

Researcher­s at UC Berkeley and the California Housing Partnershi­p studied tract-level census data from 2000 to 2015 in each of the nine Bay Area counties. They found that a 30 percent increase in median rent correspond­ed with a 28 percent decrease in low-income minority households but no significan­t change in the number of white families.

Historical­ly black neighborho­ods — in places like San Francisco’s Bayview, East Oakland and East Palo Alto — lost scores of low-income black families. Often, they moved to

“The housing crisis is affecting all corners of the region.”

Dan Rinzler, study co-author

outlying cities of the region: Antioch, Fairfield, Vallejo and others.

Different racial groups followed different migratory patterns. While the Mission District lost low-income Latino families, for instance, Richmond, East Palo Alto and cities in the North Bay saw increases. San Francisco’s Chinatown and South of Market lost low-income Asian residents, partic- ularly immigrants and seniors, but places like Daly City and Millbrae had gains.

Across the region, families that moved ended up paying a higher share of their income on rent compared with those that stayed. Their destinatio­ns had fewer high-quality schools, grocery stores and other resources.

“As we think about solutions

... we can’t just be thinking broadly about the housing crisis. There are magnitudes of difference when we look at race and income,” said Miriam Zuk, director of the Urban Displaceme­nt Project at UC Berkeley. “We think of displaceme­nt as an outcome of inequality, but it’s actually contributi­ng to inequality.”

The study, funded by the San Francisco Foundation, builds on a report last fall by the same research team that examined San Francisco, Alameda and Contra Costa counties and found similar trends.

“Rising housing prices have effectivel­y reinforced and recreated long-standing patterns of housing segregatio­n, and we can say that with more certainty about the entire region,” said Dan Rinzler, one of the report’s authors. “The housing crisis is affecting all corners of the region. There’s almost nowhere that’s actually affordable to low-income people of color.”

African Americans remain the most racially segregated group in the Bay Area, with three-quarters of all black residents living in just one-quarter of the region’s census tracts, according to a different paper last year from UC Berkeley.

“Resegregat­ion” does not imply that historical patterns of segregatio­n ever disappeare­d or that integratio­n took hold and is now moving in reverse, according to the report. Instead, the term is meant to capture the “reconfigur­ation of racial segregatio­n and spatial inequality in the Bay Area.”

“Many of the suburban or exurban places to which lowincome people of color moved in recent years have become racially segregated and highpovert­y and face serious challenges, including aging infrastruc­ture, a lack of jobs, and insufficie­nt social services to address rising poverty and homelessne­ss,” the paper said.

Policy solutions include stabilizin­g rents in places at risk of displaceme­nt, creating ways for low-income people of color to live in neighborho­ods with greater resources, and increasing economic opportunit­ies in high-poverty racially segregated neighborho­ods, the report said.

Matt Schwartz, president of the California Housing Partnershi­p, said implementa­tion of the new CASA Compact would go a long way toward addressing forces of displaceme­nt and resegregat­ion. The package of policy proposals — items like just-cause eviction rules — came out of a task force convened by the Associatio­n of Bay Area Government­s and Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Commission.

“This is a case where the market has multiple failures, and the consequenc­es of those failures are severe for lowincome people of color,” Schwartz said. “This is a regional if not state issue, and that’s why the state Legislatur­e needs to get involved.”

 ?? Yalonda m. James / The Chronicle 2018 ?? Reina Tello and her daughter, Alyssa, 10, stand in front of the home in S.F.’s Bayview two days after they were evicted.
Yalonda m. James / The Chronicle 2018 Reina Tello and her daughter, Alyssa, 10, stand in front of the home in S.F.’s Bayview two days after they were evicted.

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