The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Demographi­cs shift in city’s neighborho­ods

Atlanta’s areas with public investment see more economic growth.

- By Stephen Deere stephen.deere@ajc.com

Report: Black Atlanta residents, impoverish­ed residents and the rent-burdened increasing­ly live in areas of economic decline.

A report released Tuesday about Atlanta’s changing neighborho­ods tells a seemingly obvious story: Black residents, impoverish­ed residents and those defined as rent-burdened increasing­ly live in areas of economic decline; white residents, those with higher educations and high median incomes have proliferat­ed in places of economic expansion.

The City of Atlanta’s 2021 Neighborho­od Change Report tracked population­s and demographi­cs from 2010 through 2018 using data from the American Community Survey, a program of the U.S. Census Bureau.

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, who campaigned in 2017 on a $1 billion affordable housing plan to keep longtime residents in the city, said the report would help her carry out that promise.

“This report is a key step in advancing our goals of launching initiative­s that are designed to protect legacy residents and create housing that is affordable and accessible for all Atlantans,” Bottoms said in a statement.

The report found that roughly a third of Atlanta’s 103 neighborho­ods saw substantia­l change in the two most common categories, dubbed Growth and the

Low Income Displaceme­nt.

The report defines Low Income Displaceme­nt neighborho­ods as those with an increase in non-low-income residents and a decline among those with low incomes, accounting for 16 neighborho­ods identified in the report. There were 12 Growth neighborho­ods, with a rise in non-low-income residents and low-income residents.

Neighborho­ods in both categories saw significan­t economic expansion.

“I see it all around,” said Joann Hardy, a resident of the Grove Park neighborho­od, which the report mentions as one with a sharp drop in the number of low-income residents. “I see the houses going up and the people coming out of those houses.”

According to the report, five neighborho­ods — one in west Atlanta and four in south Atlanta — fell into a third category: Low Income Concentrat­ion. One-third of residents in these neighborho­ods were in poverty, a 39% increase since 2010.

One neighborho­od, Center Hill in west Atlanta, saw economic decline and a drop in both low-income and non-low-income residents.

Councilman Antonio Brown said the findings did not surprise him, as they were all too evident in the lives of people who call his Westside council district home. He said generation­al poverty had afflicted the city for decades.

“I don’t need to a report to tell me what I already know,” Brown said.

The report also drew a direct connection between public investment and economic expansion. Neighborho­ods with substantia­l growth and those that saw low-income residents displaced had larger areas of public investment, including new parks and portions of the Atlanta Beltline.

Center Hill and the five Low Income Concentrat­ion neighborho­ods “had no areas of major public infrastruc­ture investment,” the report said.

Councilman Matt Westmorela­nd, chair of the council’s Community Developmen­t and Human Services Committee, said the report echoes discussion­s among council members during the past 18 months.

“The city’s own public infrastruc­ture investment­s are contributi­ng to the displaceme­nt of our residents,” he said.

Westmorela­nd added that he appreciate­d the candor in some of the statements he read.

“There’s nothing to be gained by hiding the truth.”

 ?? AJC 2018 ?? Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms (left) ran on a platform promoting more affordable housing. She said in a statement that this latest report will help advance initiative­s designed to protect Atlanta’s legacy residents.
AJC 2018 Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms (left) ran on a platform promoting more affordable housing. She said in a statement that this latest report will help advance initiative­s designed to protect Atlanta’s legacy residents.

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