Dear Senate President Peter Courtney, I live in Salem, Oregon and have been a resident of both Oregon and Salem my entire life. Over the last one to three years I have witnessed increases in rent and lack of affordable housing become a major issue among my friends, peers, and coworkers. It is almost daily that I hear about outrageous rent increases or multiple increases in a year – one hit close to home – my friend who’s living in a single occupant residency had their rent raised by over one hundred dollars. The second rent raise in the last year. For those like my friend who are part of Oregon’s working poor even a lower increase of one hundred dollars can be detrimental.…
His arguments, as well as his cited source’s arguments, offer enough information and contrary claims to grant me the certainty that this topic is appropriate for discourse, and I look forward to pursuing these arguments in an attempt to gain a better understanding of gentrification and the reasoning behind…
San Francisco is one of the country’s most expensive cities to live. Its high standard of living only increases as the years go by because of the ongoing gentrification. This gentrification transformed the city into being a place for those of middle class or higher and caused struggle for low-income families. By creating the piece, Victorion, Sirron Norris strives to visually express gentrification going on in the Mission District within terms of marginalized groups within Western societies through the use of text, exhibiting a futuristic style, and the exaggeration of scale. Sirron Norris’ Victorion is located in Balmy Alley of San Francisco’s Mission District amongst other ever-changing Chicano murals.…
“Gentrification is a trend in urban neighborhoods, which results in increased property values and the displacing of lower-income families and small businesses.” I don’t think gentrification should spread through communities. Both author’s Jeremiah Moss and Ray Oldenburg show good examples why gentrification will hurt communities and not help them. I don’t gentrification is the right thing to do right now for communities because it wouldn’t help all people in the situation. In “ New Yorkers Need to Take Back Their City” by Jeremiah Moss he explains why gentrification wouldn’t help the communities.…
Gentrification is a controversial topic where the urban areas have been affected in. It is the term used for the upper-class men to arrive in what they believe is a degenerating area and take over by buying and increasing rent and property values, which affects the low-income families and small businesses. My classmates and I were assigned to go investigate small shops that were in process of gentrification in the documentary “My Brooklyn” by Kelly Anderson and interview them on what is like to be transferred from where their business was going well.…
Despite gentrification being able to provide positive effects in Pilsen it is too late. In the case of Pilsen gentrification and its effects are not a good thing. It displaced families, pushed out family owned businesses, and further increased the housing crisis in Chicago. Pilsen if used as an example can be important. It can show and help facilitate this change in the renewal of urban spaces and creating affordable homes without displacing its residents, or taking advantage of those new…
The economic advantages of gentrification cause city officials to embrace the process. The disadvantages of gentrification make it a dreaded experience for displaced residents. Gentrification in Washington, D.C. often shows an increase of white residents, decrease in black and senior citizen populations, more educated individuals with higher incomes, and higher housing and rental prices. The low-income and minority groups are most affected by gentrification. They become displaced residents by way of the increased cost of housing and the subsequent increase in property taxes.…
Gentrification is adding to inequalities and misfortunes within Bay Area communities. Gentrification is the purchasing of deteriorated urban areas and renovating by higher-end and middle class communities. An abundance of high-end communities come into the Bay Area and purchase up the real estate. Incoming middle and higher class take the Bay Area real estate and revitalise it into up-and-coming neighborhoods. The Bay Area residents, who have been living there for decades, are being pushed out of their homes.…
Gentrification is occurring right before our eyes. The government is rebuilding neighborhoods and as they rebuild them the cost of living in area is increasing. Although, rebuilding communities may seem like a great idea the increase cost of living is driving families out of their neighborhoods and forcing them to leave. Many families have nowhere to go and sometimes end up in the shelter system. Working in a shelter I get to experience firsthand what these families go through.…
A range of studies done by the University of Chicago’s American Journal of Sociology have found that living in poor neighborhoods negatively impacts residents— particularly low-income, people of color— due to the lack of high quality housing, jobs, and schools. These individuals are more likely than their counterparts in wealthier neighborhoods to “participate in and be victims of criminal activity, experience teen pregnancy, drop out of high school, and perform poorly in school among a multitude of other negative outcomes” (“Gentrification, Displacement, and the Role”). The Mission District, for decades, had a higher concentration of poverty than the rest of San Francisco, until the dot-com boom in the late 1990’s. Gentrification helps alleviate residents of potentially destroying their lives by providing higher quality services and amenities that will help residents lead successful. With the newfound affluence arriving in the Mission District, fewer people are living in poverty, and the median income nearly mirrors the rest of the city, at about $70,000 (“To Whom Does”?) .…
At first it could seem like the conversion of industrial spaces in Williamsburg to housing would bring down prices in the area because it is creating more housing. However, the reality is that since the rezoning was approved, the rent in Williamsburg has continued to rise. The primary for this increase is that the majority of new housing that is being built is for wealthy residents and the rents on these units reflect that (Martucci, 2013). These luxury units have brought up the average rent rates in Williamsburg and therefore made it easier for landlords to increase rents even on units that are not considered to be luxury. This increase in rents can be explained by Neil Smith’s rent gap theory, which focuses on how landlord and investors will…
The current affordable housing issue in California, especially in large cities is an issue that many Californians can relate to. In Sacramento the influx of Bay Area residents migrating to the region has effected housing cost. After reviewing some of the housing bills, there seems to be a number of good intended proposals, but there also concerning issues. As well-meaning as these bills are, there is always issues with the State asserting authority over responsibilities that have traditionally been regulated by local government. With that being said, there could be some unforeseen issues such as oppositions from the local government, contractors, and residents.…
The third layer primarily deals with the construction of identity based on gender and sexual preference, and is closely related to Quentin Crisp, whose character is of enormous relevance to the art piece’s message despite the fact that he only appears explicitly in the music video. Having already made the acquaintance of Crisp in 1985 during the filming of The Bride, Sting and he met several times in New York over the course of the production of “… Nothing like the sun” (Erwe 2011). One really has to take a second look to recognize that the elder person with long grey hair and in woman’s clothes is actually Quentin Crisp, who regularly partakes in cross-dressing. Interestingly, the presence of Crisp, an Englishman himself and among the first…
When thinking of the most expensive city to live in the United States, the common answer is typically New York City, but recently passing this notoriously pricey city for the first time is a city right here in the Bay Area, San Francisco. According to NBC Bay Area, the Bay Area’s “affordable housing crisis has reached an epidemic level, with rents at an all-time high and home ownership rates at their lowest since the 1940’s.” Decent listings and rentals are hard to find. If you are even lucky enough to find a suitable apartment to your liking the rent is too high. Buying a home is not practical either because those prices are even more higher.…
New developments and businesses, large corporations, and private institutions are what gentrifying neighborhoods attract. For these reasons, housing demand goes up in the area. This denotes that affordable housing would be hard to achieve since property value rises. Richard Florida explains in his article, “This Is What Happens After A Neighborhood Gets Gentrified,” how local residents “may feel pressured to move to more affordable locations,” (Florida 9). Usually, these businesses will bring in some conveniences such as beautified environment, more security, and money to the community, but they will also drive away the neighborhood’s local inhabitants.…