The Denver Post

Northeast Park Hill needs opportunit­ies and housing

- By Norman Harris and Ty Hubbard Guest Commentary

Northeast Park Hill’s history is rich with culture, family-owned restaurant­s, and local youth sports, especially within the Black community.

In the past several decades, however, the neighborho­od has faced its challenges. Economic disinvestm­ent has forced countless families to leave and left remaining families without basic services and amenities. This has resulted in displaceme­nt, lower educationa­l outcomes, fewer job opportunit­ies, a lack of access to healthy foods, and one of the highest rates of youth gun violence in the Denver Metro Area.

In 1970, 88% of the neighbors were Black. Now less than 43% of the residents in Northeast Park Hill are Black. The average annual income in the neighborho­od is around $58,000 compared to almost double that in nearby North Park Hill and South Park Hill. The cultural heritage of Northeast Park Hill is slowly disappeari­ng as more and more Black families are displaced due to a lack of affordable housing.

The neighborho­od spans from Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. north to Interstate 70 and from Colorado Blvd. east to Quebec Street. It is a food desert, which is defined as communitie­s in urban areas that are more than one mile from a supermarke­t where they can access fresh, healthy food. The neighborho­od lost its grocery store when the Dahlia Shopping Center, once one of the largest Black-owned shopping centers in the country, began to suffer and was redevelope­d decades later into affordable senior housing with the help of the Denver Urban Renewal Authority.

In addition, the 2019 Denver Public Health’s Youth Gun Violence Report, showed the Northeast Park Hill neighborho­od has one of the highest concentrat­ions of youth gun violence in the Denver Metro Area. The report identifies lack of economic opportunit­y, high levels of poverty and lack of community connection­s as contributi­ng factors to this violence.

We believe that the 155-acre property known as the Park Hill Golf Course could be a unique opportunit­y to address many of the needs of Northeast Park Hill residents. The property is large enough to provide both the open space and the economic, housing, and lifestyle opportunit­ies that can empower our Black community.

We recognize that there are people that want the area to become a 155-acre park. We understand the need for parkland in a growing city and the positive effects open space has on public health. However, we also recognize the privilege inherent in demanding that it be placed in a community with so many other needs that have a direct impact on public health like access to healthy food, affordable housing and economic opportunit­y.

As community members and co-developers of the Park Hill Golf Course, we believe the dialog on environmen­tal equity that needs to take place in Northeast Park Hill is bigger than just open space. There is room for balance, and we need to address climate change as an intersecti­onal issue. We also need to recognize the research that shows the negative impacts that green gentrifica­tion can have on low-income communitie­s.

As a social enterprise, we believe everything we do should lead and empower communitie­s to create solutions for sustainabl­e wealth. And as developers, we believe developmen­t can be environmen­tally sustainabl­e, socially equitable, and economical­ly prosperous if done through asset-based community developmen­t.

We need to focus on the people, not the property, and we need to make sure that the most recent voices or those that come from a privileged position are not the loudest voices. Equity demands that we amplify the voices of those who have been marginaliz­ed in the past.

That is exactly why we decided to step into our partnershi­p with Westside Investment Partners as co-developers at the Park Hill Golf Course. At the golf course we have enough land to support the needs of the community and create a new regionally sized park. Through asset-based community-led developmen­t, we can empower communitie­s to engage and create smart, equitable growth through collaborat­ive urban planning.

In the clubhouse alone, we’ve been honored to connect and support organizati­ons like Sisters of Color United For Education, Bondadosa, and The McBride Impact without even developing the land, but we see a larger opportunit­y here to help the community at large.

We believe the Park Hill Golf Course project could provide economic revitaliza­tion to uplift the Northeast Park Hill community, and we want to involve our community in reimaginin­g what else it could be. Some have suggested that there are other locations that can be developed, that the neighborho­od just needs to wait. But the time is now, and we believe this property can be more than a golf course.

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