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The Slumming of Suburbia
Miller -McCune ^ | February 14, 2009 | David Villano

Posted on 02/19/2009 4:16:58 PM PST by Lorianne

The financial meltdown has produced a vast patchwork of foreclosed and abandoned single-family homes across America, accelerating the decades-long migration of our nation's poor from cities to the suburban fringe. In 2005, as rising property values reduced affordable-housing stock in inner-city neighborhoods, suburban poverty, in raw numbers, topped urban poverty for the first time.

The trend will continue. By 2025, predicts planning expert Arthur C. Nelson, America will face a market surplus of 22 million large-lot homes (a sixth of an acre or more), attracting millions of low-income residents deeper into suburbia where decay and social and geographic isolation will pose challenges few see coming.

"As a society, we have fundamentally failed to address our housing policy," said Nelson, director of metropolitan research at the University of Utah. "Suburbia is overbuilt and yet we will keep on building there. Most policymakers don't see the consequences, and those who do are denying reality."

Nelson and others warn that suburbia's least desirable neighborhoods - aging, middle-class tract-home developments far from city centers and mass transit lines — are America's emerging slums, characterized by poverty, crime and other social ills. Treating those ills is complicated by the same qualities that once defined suburbia's appeal — seclusion, homogeneity and low population density. "We built too much of the suburban dream, and now it's coming back to haunt us," Nelson said.

To be sure, the low-income drift to suburbia has less to do with bucolic appeal and more to do with economics. Over the past two decades, the gospel of urbanism has spread though the American mainstream, Nelson and others argue. The young, the affluent, the professional class and empty-nesters are reclaiming the urban living experience — dense, walkable, diverse, mixed-use neighborhoods in and around city centers — while the poor disperse outward in search of cheap rent. Low-income residents often subdivide suburban homes, sharing them with multiple families. Studies reveal that population densities in suburban neighborhoods increase two to four times when low-income families replace the middle-class, Nelson said.

Meanwhile, layoffs and other effects of the economic crisis are contributing to higher poverty levels in once-solidly middle-class communities.

Most experts believe the market-driven migration of the poor to suburbs and the affluent to urban zones — sometimes called "demographic inversion" — will continue for decades.

"Americans are disillusioned with sprawl, they're tired of driving, they recognize the soullessness of suburban life, and yet we keep on adding more suburban communities," said Christopher B. Leinberger, a land-use expert at the University of Michigan. He said consumer preference is reflected by Hollywood: "People identify with Sex and the City and Seinfeld. So why are we still building like Leave it to Beaver?"

Leinberger is an unabashed urbanist who preaches the gospel of dense, mixed-use communities like a missionary saving souls in the jungle. As a visiting fellow this year at the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C., he walks to his office and to appointments around the city. He argues, with few dissenters, that suburbs are losing favor because they make little sense, forcing people into their cars, limiting social interaction and discouraging racial and socio-economic diversity. Enlightened planners across the country are promoting compact "24/7" urban centers were people live, work and play in close proximity. Virtually every major U.S. city is targeting once-gritty urban neighborhoods for revitalization and, inevitably, gentrification.

The displaced poor find value in the aging, outer-ring tract-home developments that once promised easy living far from the city's hustle and bustle. And housing officials, resolved to breaking up pockets of concentrated poverty (where at least 40 percent of the families are living below the poverty line), are thrilled. The federal Section 8 housing program, which allows recipients to negotiate government-subsidized rentals anywhere, is grounded in the belief that a safe, stable neighborhood can help unbuckle the straps of poverty.

But the positive benefits of moving to a neighborhood of less poverty diminish as the number of poor relocating there increases, new research suggests. In other words, families are far less likely to pull themselves out of poverty when their exposure to other poor families reaches a kind of tipping point. George C. Galster, a professor of urban affairs at Wayne State University, has quantified this poverty threshold as roughly 15 to 20 percent of a neighborhood. If the poverty rate exceeds that, Galster said, "All hell breaks loose" in the form of crime, drop-out rates, teen pregnancies, drug use and, in turn, declining property values.

Galster's working paper for the National Poverty Center, Consequences from the Redistribution of Urban Poverty During the 1990s: A Cautionary Tale, warns that polices to break up concentrated poverty may be backfiring. While the number of Americans living in the poorest neighborhoods has notably declined since 1990, by about 25 percent, poverty elsewhere has inched up. Galster worries that the rush to relocate the urban poor, through Section 8 and other poverty redistribution programs, has pushed many less-desirable suburban neighborhoods to this tipping point.

And when they tip, he added, neighborhoods tend to spiral deeper into poverty: Declining property values attract more poor residents, gradually displacing the middle-class families that provide stability, further depressing prices.

Miami real estate broker Adrian Salgado said he's witnessing the spiral, even within newer tract-home development in the region's southern and western fringes. With many areas overbuilt, and foreclosure rates high, Section 8 tenants and other low-income renters are finding deals too good to pass up. "I know everybody needs a place to live, but we're creating a social disaster," said Salgado, noting that many early middle-class buyers in these transition neighborhoods are desperate to sell but can't.

Although national data is thin, local officials across the country are reporting an increase in violent crime, gang activity, drug use and other social breakdowns within suburban neighborhoods. In places like New York City, Atlanta and Chicago, urban crime rates are dropping while rising on the outskirts of town. Crime is also rising in the fast-growing sunbelt communities hit hard with foreclosures. Leinberger noted that in Lee County Fla., where nearly 25 percent of the homes stand empty, robberies were up nearly 50 percent last year.

Indeed, police in some cities are monitoring suburban foreclosures to identify neighborhoods at risk for increased crime, while others look at Section 8 relocations, arguing that a sudden rise in low-income rental densities is among their most reliable indicators of a coming crime spike.

Such tactics rankle some anti-poverty advocates, but a growing body of research is challenging suburban relocation as a remedy for poverty. Ed Goetz, a housing policy specialist at the University of Minnesota, said the suburban dream often fades for poor families because old support systems are severed, and access to programs and services — day care, after-school programs, job training, drug treatment and counseling — are greatly hampered by shear distance.

"The isolation can be both physical and emotional," Goetz said. "The frequency of interaction with neighbors declines, social networks break down. We haven't considered that carefully enough." Goetz said studies show a surprising willingness among the suburban poor to return to urban, high-poverty neighborhoods where services are more accessible and mass transit more convenient.

But the suburban diaspora of America's poor is unlikely to subside, most experts agree, posing complex challenges for policymakers. If anything, added Alan Berube, a housing expert at the Brookings Institution, suburban poverty will grow not just from in-migration of the poor but from within as the financial crisis "pushes middle-class families down the economic ladder."

With that in mind, Galster recommends strict monitoring of suburban poverty rates to prevent neighborhoods from reaching the so-called tipping point. Such data would allow housing officials to push for laws requiring property owners in low-poverty neighborhoods to accept Section 8 tenants (the existing program is voluntary), something he recommends. Conversely, he argued, laws should prevent landlords from accepting low-income tenants when neighborhood poverty rates exceed designated levels. He also supports "inclusionary zoning" rules that mandate a small number of low-income housing units in new single-family developments.

But Nelson, whose research predicts the vast oversupply of large-lot homes in the coming decades — and the growing "suburbanization of poverty" — said much can be done today to reshape the residential landscape. Most of the homes he expects to exist in 2025 have yet to be built. He said planners can reduce that oversupply by crafting long-term growth policies that reflect a careful assessment of regional demands for all housing types over a generation or more. What they will find, he said, is a preference among all income groups for denser, mixed-use communities with access to mass transit.

Leinberger agreed, arguing that planners should acknowledge that the suburban experiment has failed. "I wouldn't add another new road in American today," he said. "The changing geograph y of poverty is another reminder that our housing policies today will be felt for years to come, and in ways nobody ever imagined."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government
KEYWORDS: castledoctrine; crimerates; fha; foreclosures; housing; infrastructure; kelo; landuse; poverty; propertyrights; propertytaxes; rentcontrol; section8
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To: Graybeard58

Yep, you knew it HAD to include a big government ‘solution’ didn’t you?


21 posted on 02/19/2009 5:03:53 PM PST by Lorianne
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To: NativeNewYorker

That is the trend here now. Back to the medieval days all that is needed is the ramparts.


22 posted on 02/19/2009 5:04:49 PM PST by Lorianne
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To: Veto!

Sure glad you don’t speak for me!!
Jack


23 posted on 02/19/2009 5:13:56 PM PST by btcusn
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To: IYAS9YAS
(nobody checking the properties), whether one could get away with squatting to own

they already are in some areas, but once the house goes into formal foreclosure (which can be delayed up to a year now), the bank assigns a realtor, who sticks a for-sale sign in the window/yard, and is able to report back to the bank that squatters are occupying same, and is a contact point for locals to report midnight move-ins. That said, ACORN's new civil unrest program to hit 22 cities is pushing homeowners to move back into 'their' homes, and ACORN is promising to show up en masse if an eviction is attempted by local police.

I do, however, like this part, of all said in the article:

Conversely, he argued, laws should prevent landlords from accepting low-income tenants when neighborhood poverty rates exceed designated levels.

24 posted on 02/19/2009 5:15:25 PM PST by blueplum
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To: Lorianne
That’s already happening a lot in the suburbs. There are even people who will find you a house to squat in ... for a finders fee.

I don't think these folks are charging fees but they're definitely helping squatters occupy vacated homes.

Neighbors Helping Neighbors—to Break Into Vacant Houses

25 posted on 02/19/2009 5:25:49 PM PST by Drew68
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To: oyez
Americans are disillusioned with sprawl, they're tired of driving, they recognize the soullessness of suburban life, and yet we keep on adding more suburban communities," said Christopher B. Leinberger, a land-use expert at the University of Michigan.

What a putz !

We all recognize it's horrible, yet people keep buying there ! I wonder why ? It's so easy, even a college professor ought to be able to figure it out: They want to live there !

26 posted on 02/19/2009 5:27:35 PM PST by Red Boots
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To: Lorianne
all that is needed is the ramparts.

That's why we have the East and Hudson Rivers. ;)

27 posted on 02/19/2009 5:29:01 PM PST by NativeNewYorker (Freepin' Jew Boy)
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To: Dr. Scarpetta; RedMonqey
I really think there's too much in play at the moment to make any sort of meaningful projections on this.

The economy, transportation, energy, technology, demographics; It's to difficult to know how this will go.

RedMonqey makes a good point. My wife and I are raising our children in the city, and while it has some advantages and major conveniences, there's still that desire to have a backyard for them to play in, and maybe, possibly, somehow, “neighborhood” kids to play with?

My two kids are the only kids on our block, and the Sex in the City/Seinfeld point is spot on. A bunch of 20-30 something unmarried hipsters are the main demographic.

28 posted on 02/19/2009 5:30:03 PM PST by End Times Sentinel (In Memory of my Dear Friend Henry Lee II)
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To: Lorianne
"As a society, we have fundamentally failed to address our housing policy," said Nelson, director of metropolitan research at the University of Utah.

College guy talking about what we "as a society" need to do. Translated, this means, "give me money and follow my orders." For the last ten years the US Government has spent money faster than any other entity in the history of the world, but IT'S STILL NOT ENOUGH!"

29 posted on 02/19/2009 5:32:16 PM PST by Richard Kimball (We're all criminals. They just haven't figured out what some of us have done yet.)
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To: Lorianne
Ed Goetz, a housing policy specialist at the University of Minnesota, said the suburban dream often fades for poor families because old support systems are severed, and access to programs and services — day care, after-school programs, job training, drug treatment and counseling — are greatly hampered by shear distance.

Never trust an article written by someone too stupid to know the correct spelling of "sheer".

30 posted on 02/19/2009 5:35:49 PM PST by SnuffaBolshevik
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To: Lorianne

Gee, maybe if we didn’t have so many experts telling us where we should live and government money going towards real estate bubbles, people would just live where they damn well pleased for whatever price they found agreeable.


31 posted on 02/19/2009 5:40:41 PM PST by dr_who
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To: Veto!

Rubbish.


32 posted on 02/19/2009 5:41:08 PM PST by dr_who
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To: oyez

Exactly. That’s the wonderful thing about journalism today. You come up with your own story and find some muckity-muck to tell you whatever you want to hear.


33 posted on 02/19/2009 5:43:59 PM PST by dr_who
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To: Lorianne

“Slowly, as the pieces fit together, we shared a horrifying epiphany: the banks, corporations and investors acting in each global region were the exact same players. They were a relatively small group that reappeared again and again in Russia, Eastern Europe, and Asia accompanied by the same well-known accounting firms and law firms.

Clearly, there was a global financial coup d’etat underway.

The magnitude of what was happening was overwhelming. In the 1990’s, millions of people in Russia had woken up to find their bank accounts and pension funds simply gone – eradicated by a falling currency or stolen by mobsters who laundered money back into big New York Fed member banks for reinvestment to fuel the debt bubble.

Reports of politicians, government officials, academics, and intelligence agencies facilitating the racketeering and theft were compelling. One lawyer in Russia, living without electricity and growing food to prevent starvation, was quoted as saying, “We are being de-modernized.”

http://solari.com/blog/?p=2058


34 posted on 02/19/2009 6:10:31 PM PST by mo
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To: Dr. Scarpetta

My home in an upscale suburb of Seattle was burglarized and of course the paper did not report it. Then 50 other homes were burglarized in my neighborhood. Still no reporting. Worse, the real estate people never told new buyers. I met a couple of those buyers in the dog-walking park. Having shelled out close to a mil, they were livid.

Of course, the Seattle area is run by liberals and they really don’t want to upset those poor downtrodden burglars’ only means of supporting their families. Downtown Seattle has running gun battles at midday in front of Nordstrom. But police do not go into the areas where criminals live and pick them up. Wouldn’t want to appear racist, you know.

Going into those areas and arresting people is what Giulianni did to turn NYC into a low-crime area. But Seattle officials don’t have the will to get tough.

I live near Miami now. At least here people take steps to protect themselves instead of living with the fiction that nothing bad happens here.


35 posted on 02/21/2009 4:31:27 PM PST by Veto! (Opinions freely dispensed as advice)
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To: btcusn

Hey Jack, I’m happy that you think defensively and have the wherewithall to back it up. I’m just a spoiled little ole girl who never learned to be tough and don’t have anyone in my life to protect me. I rely on big dogs (she just died) and safe neighborhoods, am appalled that there are none any more. I should go to self-defense classes but I’d probably flunk the course.


36 posted on 02/21/2009 4:38:10 PM PST by Veto! (Opinions freely dispensed as advice)
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To: Veto!

Big dogs are good!! Buy a gun and learn how to use it.
jack


37 posted on 02/21/2009 6:55:29 PM PST by btcusn
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To: DB
Leinberger is an ass. I’ll make my own housing choices thank you very much.

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Oh no you won't. In more and more jurisdictions, Leinberger's ilk control zoning decisions, such that land use is restricted and development effectively limited to an urban core, a/k/a "transit village." Outlying development is restricted, as it encourages "sprawl."

Further, even if you do nothing, the Section 8 program will bring the slums right next door to you, so you can share the joy of "economic diversification."

38 posted on 02/21/2009 7:20:42 PM PST by stillonaroll (Nominate a non-RINO in 2012!)
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To: dr_who
That’s the wonderful thing about journalism today. You come up with your own story and find some muckity-muck to tell you whatever you want to hear.

--------------------------------------------------------------

Yup. It should have been labeled as an editorial. It's the author's opinion, thinly disguised as reporting.

39 posted on 02/21/2009 7:24:51 PM PST by stillonaroll (Nominate a non-RINO in 2012!)
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To: Lorianne
" What they will find, he said, is a preference among all income groups for denser, mixed-use communities with access to mass transit."

------------------------------------------------------------

Absolute bunk! I cannot imagine that "all" income groups have a "preference" to live in "denser" (i.e., crowded), "mixed-use" (i.e., living right upstairs from a smelly restaurant or noisy nightclub) with "access to mass transit" (so you can share space daily with thugs and homeless psychopaths).

I'm sure you meant well, but this article deserves a barf alert. :)

40 posted on 02/21/2009 7:33:44 PM PST by stillonaroll (Nominate a non-RINO in 2012!)
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