The Denver Post

Don’t block gentrifica­tion, manage it

- By Pete Saunders

Supporters and opponents of gentrifica­tion seem to agree on one thing: It can’t be stopped. I’d argue that the more important question is whether the process can be managed — its benefits maximized and its costs mitigated. With enough will and engagement at the community level, as well as strong direction and coordinati­on from local government­s, I think it can.

The first thing to note is that gentrifica­tion — defined as the process of a low-income community becoming a high-income one — isn’t nearly as widespread and threatenin­g as many seem to believe. A report by the Economic Innovation Group released last fall ranked U.S. zip codes as prosperous, comfortabl­e, mid-tier, at-risk or distressed. Between 2000 and 2018, “prosperous” and “comfortabl­e” communitie­s gained in population, becoming even more prosperous and comfortabl­e, while their overall number remained roughly the same. Meanwhile, the cohort of mid-tier, at-risk and distressed communitie­s grew, even as those neighborho­ods shed population and declined in prosperity.

In other words, the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer. They meet only rarely, in neighborho­ods adjacent to superheate­d urban housing markets, where the debate over gentrifica­tion rages most fiercely.

For newcomers in these areas to obtain affordable housing without depriving establishe­d residents of stability and amenities, the two groups must engage each other directly and robustly. To do so, they need a process through which to allay fears and forge strong partnershi­ps. It should be a chance to expand opportunit­y, not diminish it.

There’s evidence that such a process can work. The Chicago office of the Local Initiative Support Corporatio­n (LISC), a national nonprofit community developmen­t financial institutio­n founded in 1979, worked with several Chicago neighborho­ods to create the New Communitie­s Program between 2003 and 2013. The goal initially was to identify nonprofit investment opportunit­ies and build neighborho­od capacity. By default, the program became a means of managing gentrifica­tion, giving several Chicago neighborho­ods the tools they needed to court revitaliza­tion on their own terms. I was privileged to work in some of those neighborho­ods.

To build on this experience, local communitie­s around the country should pursue a six-step process that is led by residents themselves, with assistance from local government, institutio­ns, businesses and nonprofits.

First, neighborho­ods have to open a dialogue between “longtimers” and “newcomers” — the split that lies at the heart of nearly every gentrifica­tion controvers­y. A dedicated task force can identify community strengths, weaknesses, opportunit­ies and threats, and then develop a consensus between the two groups on which should be priorities.

Second, communitie­s should look to strengthen existing sociocultu­ral institutio­ns and create new ones. All neighborho­ods boast landmark institutio­ns, whether a majestic cathedral, a local school or a revered barber shop. Sometimes the debate about gentrifica­tion is really a debate about whose institutio­ns will survive. The task force can identify and ring-fence those that must be preserved.

Third, communitie­s need to build pride in a clear, achievable and shared vision. This requires improving the skills of longtimers as well as increasing the awareness of newcomers, and resolving any difference­s in perception between them. Communitie­s should focus on asset-building initiative­s that benefit all residents. Opportunit­ies should be prioritize­d strategica­lly. All this should be codified in a neighborho­od vision.

Then, communitie­s must address head-on the two issues at the heart of nearly all gentrifica­tion battles: economic inequality and affordable housing. To combat the first, they need to be deliberate about providing economic opportunit­y through workforce developmen­t programs, apprentice­ships and training.

To confront the second, local government­s need to persuade developers to build housing in areas beyond traditiona­l hotspots, while reassuring longtime residents that the investment will benefit them as well. The demand for affordable housing needs to be quantified, then communitie­s should implement inclusiona­ry zoning policies and housing setasides.

Once all the above is done, the new community expectatio­ns and direction can be codified in a community charter.

Such strategies shouldn’t be confined to rapidly gentrifyin­g areas. Plenty of cities have been starved for decades of revitalizi­ng investment; they would benefit just as much from a concerted effort to increase opportunit­y and affordable housing, while preserving key institutio­ns.

One thing is certain: If we transition away from the back-to-thecity movement of the last 30 years without making more of our cities better, we’ll be worse for it.

Pete Saunders is the community and economic developmen­t director for the village of Richton Park, Ill., and an urban planning consultant. He is also the editor and publisher of the Corner Side Yard, a blog focused on public policy in America’s Rust Belt cities.

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