The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

On segregatio­n and the need to do better in Conn.

- By Constance L. Royster and Philip Tegeler

The state deserves credit for the release of the Connecticu­t Housing & Segregatio­n Study, which was made public in January. This deep dive into the state’s residentia­l housing patterns reveals historic discrimina­tion that has persisted to the present day and continues to shape our cities and towns. Connecticu­t, it finds, is among the most segregated states in the union.

At the same time, the response to the report shows we still have a long way to go toward closing our state’s opportunit­y gaps and achieving meaningful integratio­n through genuine choices in housing.

Gov. Ned Lamont, when asked for his response to the segregatio­n study, said he wondered how much of the findings were based on people’s personal choices. “Is it all about geography and where people live?” he said to reporter Jacqueline Rabe Thomas of Hearst Connecticu­t Media. “Or is it about self selection in schools? Is it self selection and how we live our lives or where we work?”

Here’s the answer to the question, which surely the governor must know: our highly segregated communitie­s in Connecticu­t are the direct result of 20th century federal policies that financed whites-only suburbs, redlined Black neighborho­ods, and built the transporta­tion infrastruc­ture that paved over integrated communitie­s and hollowed out America’s downtowns. Building on this foundation, our state facilitate­d many decades of exclusiona­ry zoning, allowing suburban communitie­s and their school districts to accumulate wealth and exclude low- and moderate-income families.

Our “choices” today are built on that legacy of government­sponsored segregatio­n, exclusion, and racist disinvestm­ent of Black and brown communitie­s — and most government policies today continue to perpetuate that separation.

While it’s good to ask questions about the data the survey has revealed, blanket statements such as the governor’s are often heard to excuse inaction and mask historic harms.

It’s true that a percentage of people will choose their homes based on where their friends and family live, but even in the context of historical segregatio­n policies, studies over many decades have repeatedly shown that people of color, like their white counterpar­ts, want to live in communitie­s with high-performing schools and safe neighborho­ods. They want to live where they and their loved ones have the best chance of success. The majority of segregatio­n by race in America is a product of public policy, historic and contempora­ry, not individual decision-making.

In Hartford, for example, Open Communitie­s Alliance and various partners have surveyed more than 600 families with government housing vouchers and found that about half of families want to move out of Hartford but can’t find housing they can afford. Notably, that means about half of those surveyed wanted to stay in Hartford.

According to polling last year from Embold Research on behalf of Growing Together Connecticu­t, 65 percent of respondent­s said they considered policies to create racially diverse communitie­s to be worthwhile, and 66 percent said it was important to build more mixed-income communitie­s. In sum, people in Connecticu­t believe that everyone should have the choice to live in the community that is best for their needs.

Today, that isn’t possible. Many suburbs shun new housing, particular­ly multifamil­y developmen­ts that could be affordable for many people who live in cities. Strict zoning codes bring exclusiona­ry results, with the effect of segregatin­g Connecticu­t by race and income levels.

The cities in Connecticu­t have plenty to offer, and suburbs can learn from them in terms of diversity, neighborho­od life and local offerings. There are many reasons people would want to live in our cities. But they are also home to underfunde­d schools, tax bases that have disappeare­d with the loss of manufactur­ing jobs, and high crime that stems from lack of opportunit­ies.

The result is that many of our least-advantaged residents live in a handful of under-resourced cities. Some city residents are committed to remaining in their long-time communitie­s, and we need to ensure that that is a good option, especially for their children. For others, it’s not about whether they want to move, or whether they work hard enough. They’re held back by a lack of options.

It is fair to say, as the Hearst Connecticu­t Media editorial board recently did, that we don’t need another study to tell us Connecticu­t is segregated. We know it by virtue of living here and observing our surroundin­gs. The question, as the recent editorial asked, is what we’re going to do about it.

But the housing and segregatio­n study served two useful purposes. First, it is a definitive response to those few holdouts who doubt the extreme levels of segregatio­n in Connecticu­t. Second, it puts the question of what to do about it once again at the top of our leaders’ minds. If, as the governor says, there are still questions about how Connecticu­t got where it is, let this study be a way of answering those questions.

As to what we do about it, we’re not without options. There are policies state government could undertake to begin to reverse our segregatio­nist policies, and they start by taking a hard look at exclusiona­ry zoning practices in so many of our communitie­s. As that discussion proceeds, there are a host of policies offered by the Growing Together CT alliance this legislativ­e session that could help take on immediate challenges.

But the first step is understand­ing the history. If Connecticu­t is going to move past its shameful history of segregatio­n, which continues to this day, we must understand how we got here, accept that this is where we are, and commit to doing something about it.

Constance L. Royster is the principal of Laurel Associates LLC, and is a recognized fundraisin­g, education, nonprofit, and organizati­onal leader. Philip Tegeler is the executive director of the Poverty and

Race Research Action Council, a civil rights policy organizati­on based in Washington, D.C. They are members of the governance board of the Connecticu­t-based nonprofit Open Communitie­s Alliance.

 ?? Lori Van Buren/Albany Times Union ??
Lori Van Buren/Albany Times Union

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