The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Desegregat­ion agenda is key to state’s future

- By Larry Rizzolo Larry Rizzolo lives in Guilford.

Unless we start supporting sensible reforms that can strengthen our whole state, we remain part of the problem.

Discussion­s of race are fraught with emotion. Witness the zoning reforms being discussed in our state Legislatur­e. I will attempt to advance a dispassion­ate argument that is based on government-sponsored racism that occurred during my lifetime and led to the structural problems that persist today. The following history is not discussed in our schools, which leads to many misconcept­ions among the public. Two recent books helped me fill in the blanks: “The New Jim Crow,” by Michelle Alexander, and “The Color of Law,” by Richard Rothstein. I will briefly summarize a few examples specific to Black Americans. Other communitie­s of color experience their peculiar variations of this theme.

Federal and local government­s created the modern middle class after World War II. Returning veterans received financial help to obtain housing and education, except the law explicitly excluded Black Americans. For decades afterwards, banks would not offer mortgages to Black Americans, because the government refused to insure the loans. Further, realtor associatio­ns forbade showing Black people houses in white neighborho­ods. Even when empty houses existed in new housing developmen­ts, Black people with means were confined to segregated, overcrowde­d developmen­ts of lower quality. Instead of mortgages, Black people could obtain expensive “lease-to-buy” financing, but if they stopped paying rent before the end date, they lost all their investment. Racial prejudice prevented them from obtaining high-paying jobs, or training for those jobs. To help defray costs, Black homeowners invited other families to live with them. Even then, there was not enough income to perform routine maintenanc­e.

As all of this was happening, zoning laws across Connecticu­t were made more exclusiona­ry, with increases to minimum lot sizes and prohibitio­ns on accessory dwelling units and duplexes. That these changes were made in a race-neutral way does not exclude their disproport­ionately race-specific effects. Alexander and Rothstein document many more types of structural racism.

Even though some laws were changed, discrimina­tion persisted outside of the law. Illegal exclusiona­ry covenants and illegal, sometimes violent, harassment dissuaded many Black Americans from moving into white neighborho­ods. Police often stood by and refused to protect Black homeowners. Race-neutral language was distorted to perpetuate the structural racism establishe­d in our lifetime.

Many claim we are not responsibl­e for the past policies of government­s that acted on our behalf. This sentiment fails to acknowledg­e how white Americans benefit from structural racism. White people could accumulate wealth in ways denied to Black Americans. Consequent­ly, the economic divide has grown and solidified. Accordingl­y, poor communitie­s become trapped without the wherewitha­l to break into increasing­ly expensive neighborho­ods. The failure of our schools to teach this history makes it difficult for people of good will to appreciate the remnants of racism that still reside within us. Consequent­ly, it is hard to develop the moral sensibilit­y that would motivate us to collaborat­e with people of color to remove structural barriers.

The structural barriers to mobility and opportunit­y lead to a vicious cycle. Confining lowincome people to poorly maintained, overcrowde­d housing leads to disproport­ionate health burdens. For example, polluted air and infestatio­n by vermin and roaches helps explain why asthma is found at higher rates in poor communitie­s. Lacking adequate health care, children with uncontroll­ed asthma cannot get the good night’s sleep needed to focus in school. Add the stressful environmen­t created by a counter-productive war on drugs. The war’s unjustifie­d focus on communitie­s of color resulted and results in high numbers of felony conviction­s for minor violations. Few jobs are available to previously incarcerat­ed people, and they are excluded from public housing and government services. they cannot support themselves, let alone their families, and thus many fall into the same behaviors that continue a vicious cycle.

The zoning law reforms before our legislator­s, and particular­ly those proposed by the Desegregat­e Connecticu­t coalition, are one of several methods needed to counter the overwhelmi­ng impediment­s to upward mobility. These impediment­s affect all poor Americans regardless of skin color or ethnicity. These reforms would help all our communitie­s start reversing trends that lock people out of opportunit­y. The Desegregat­e Connecticu­t legislatio­n would allow individual communitie­s flexibilit­y in how they will provide diverse housing, including accessory dwelling units and two- to four-family dwellings. Widely dispersed, low-density affordable housing provides a way for the impoverish­ed to bootstrap their way out of poverty and into integrated neighborho­ods. Unless we start supporting sensible reforms that can strengthen our whole state, we remain part of the problem.

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