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Message
The Gentrification of New Orleans
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:08 pm
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:08 pm
quote:
Baratunde @baratunde "No one ever moved to New Orleans to watch a middle-aged white guy practice law." #NOLA #Gentrification
LINK …
Gentrification is spreading across the country with mixed results. In regards to New Orleans thought, outside of the French Quarter area how much of a threat is it to maintaining the essence of the city?
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:10 pm to undecided
quote:
how much of a threat is it
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:10 pm to undecided
There is no gentrification happening in New Orleans
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:11 pm to undecided
quote:
area how much of a threat is it to maintaining the essence of the city?
I thought Houston got all the essence after Katrina
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:14 pm to undecided
What would you say makes up this "essence" and why would gentrification be bad for its essence?
This post was edited on 8/3/15 at 4:15 pm
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:15 pm to undecided
quote:
Historically, the lion's share of New Orleans renters lived in singles, doubles and small apartment buildings owned by mom-and-pop landlords, said Daniels. After the storm, many of these owners lacked the capacity to bring their units back online. A federally funded program was meant to help them rebuild affordable rental units, but it only ended up awarding grants to 4,500 landlords, a quarter of the number originally hoped for.
That was part of a larger failure by federal authorities, who had no disaster housing plan before Katrina struck, leading to widespread, and sometimes permanent, displacement, said Cashauna Hill, director of the Fair Housing Action Center.
Supply has also been dampened by the many properties that remain in government hands.
2,000-3,000 properties, depending on how you count them, are effectively owned by the city, forfeited to the government for long-term failure to pay property taxes. ?
1,872 are owned by the New Orleans Redevelopment Authority, which took over many of the properties sold to the state by owners who took the Road Home's buyout options.?
700 potential rental units on 230 properties rendered uninhabitable by the storm are owned by the Housing Authority of New Orleans and have yet to be developed.?
Appears to be a supply and demand issue as much as anything. Why is the government just sitting on property that could be generating revenue for the city?
This post was edited on 8/3/15 at 4:16 pm
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:15 pm to fightin tigers
quote:
I thought Houston got all the essence after Katrina
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:16 pm to Purple Spoon
quote:
What would you say wake up this "essence" and why would gentrification be bad for its essence?
Did someone say, 'essence'?
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:17 pm to undecided
quote:
how much of a threat is it to maintaining the essence of the city?
The culture will continue to murder one another, just in smaller pockets. Looks like the Central City culture will be pushed into the East and Lower Ninth culture.
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:22 pm to undecided
I do enjoy the not well hidden implication that white people don't contribute anything to culture.
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:25 pm to Teddy Ruxpin
Anyone else think the "still affordable" versus "priced out" here appear flip-flopped?
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:25 pm to undecided
Why is gentrification bad? Are we supposed to want a city that looks like a shite hole?
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:26 pm to Y.A. Tittle
Looks like the bums in City Park still have it made.
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:28 pm to lsuwontonwrap
quote:
Why is gentrification bad? Are we supposed to want a city that looks like a shite hole?
The first level of gentrification is good. Where houses and rent are cheap.
When it progresses, rent goes up and those that did the inital gentrification are mad they can no longer afford what they started.
They do not care that they screwed over the people before them by raising prices, but they will still bitch.
ETA: they should have bought the houses when they were cheap as shite, but didn't want to invest in the neighborhood with actual dollars, just culture.
This post was edited on 8/3/15 at 4:30 pm
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:32 pm to undecided
In the 50's and 60's, white people leaving New Orleans for the suburbs = bad.
Today, white people moving into New Orleans = bad.
I get the guy that's struggling at a poorly paying job in the back of a restaurant. I really get that. Feel for the guy.
But this idea that there's some secret white agenda to "push out the poor folks" is disingenuous at best, and retarded at worst.
In New Orleans' entire history, it has been a majority white city. But there's some revisionist history going on that it's always been 68% black.... and needs to stay that way. And that every black person in New Orleans is a kid who plays a horn.
LaToya Cantrell's thoughts on the issue was that, basically, don't come into a black neighborhood and complain about the kids playing horns in the streets. In other words, if you're white and you move into a neighborhood that's not currently all-white, disturbing the peace and noise ordinances don't apply. Don't be coming in here with all your laws and civil expectations and stuff.
Today, white people moving into New Orleans = bad.
I get the guy that's struggling at a poorly paying job in the back of a restaurant. I really get that. Feel for the guy.
But this idea that there's some secret white agenda to "push out the poor folks" is disingenuous at best, and retarded at worst.
In New Orleans' entire history, it has been a majority white city. But there's some revisionist history going on that it's always been 68% black.... and needs to stay that way. And that every black person in New Orleans is a kid who plays a horn.
LaToya Cantrell's thoughts on the issue was that, basically, don't come into a black neighborhood and complain about the kids playing horns in the streets. In other words, if you're white and you move into a neighborhood that's not currently all-white, disturbing the peace and noise ordinances don't apply. Don't be coming in here with all your laws and civil expectations and stuff.
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:33 pm to undecided
I love it when the blacks get all confused about what to bitch about. "Not enough white people live in our city destroying the schools and neighborhoods." "Too many white people live in our city causing home prices to be too high." frick them.
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:35 pm to Fontainebleau Dr.
quote:
But there's some revisionist history going on that it's always been 68% black.
We should keep with this and ask why they financed a huge project of all the Confederate statues.
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:35 pm to fightin tigers
Gentrification is a loaded word, but there are definitely affordability problems. Housing stock is obviously not what it was pre-K.
I think an underrated aspect is the number of doubles that have been changed to singles. I tried to get my wife to move into a double and she looked at me like I was literally insane. 50 years ago it was nbd for middle-class people to live in doubles; that's just no longer true.
I think an underrated aspect is the number of doubles that have been changed to singles. I tried to get my wife to move into a double and she looked at me like I was literally insane. 50 years ago it was nbd for middle-class people to live in doubles; that's just no longer true.
Posted on 8/3/15 at 4:36 pm to fightin tigers
How the hell do neighborhoods like the lower 9th get labeled as historically black? That area was all white for longer than it's been black.
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