My NYC Black Folk......Gentrification

Francis White

i been away to long, my feeling died.
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I wouldn't worry.

Black people will always find another place to settle and make it fly...we always do.

Then the Cac's come.

My question is if they don't want us in their neighboorhoods why come to ours everytime?
Well since we don't own it's not really our neighborhood.
 

Drake's Tan

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http://www.theroot.com/30-percent-of-black-owned-businesses-in-new-york-city-v-1794889506

30 Percent of Black-Owned Businesses in NYC Vanished Between 2007 and 2012: Report

Breanna Edwards

The Big Apple has been seeing a huge economic boom in the past 15 years or so because of its rapidly gentrifying neighborhoods, with the number of new storefronts and companies bumping up by some 45 percent. However, that good fortune has not extended to everyone, with black-owned businesses seeing a significant decline over the past few years.


According to a report by BuzzFeed, from 2007 to 2012, the number of black-owned businesses in New York City declined by more than 30 percent even while the number of black-owned businesses in other big cities across the country increased. As the site notes, New York, Detroit and Jacksonville, Fla., are the only cities with more than 500 black-owned business that have seen such a decline.

“When black-owned businesses decline, I’m alarmed. When local residents are priced out of their neighborhoods, I’m frustrated. We have to do better,” New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer told BuzzFeed. “We need to focus on real, community-level wealth creation. When we talk about gentrification, we can’t just focus on rising rents or increased cost of living—we also need to ensure that local residents gain access to new, local jobs.”



Some reasons cited for the decline include the fact that the black community is becoming a smaller percentage of New York City’s population, as well as the exposure of black business owners to the retail sector, which suffered a major hit during the financial crisis and continues to face other stress factors.

Black New Yorkers make up some 22 percent of the city’s population but own only 3 percent of local business, with the numbers becoming more and more dismal in the past five years; the only exception is in the health care and social-assistance industries.

Ownership in construction, accommodation and food services, as well as in professional, scientific and technical services, has taken a major hit.

“The decline in black-owned companies demonstrates that the benefits of economic growth aren’t broadly distributed,” Stringer said.
 
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Your spelling is sadder. It's even worse that you view a Starbucks in Harlem as the end times. You in jail for the last 15 years or so?

Did you had a bad day yesterday, bro?
To see a Starbucks around a black/latinos majority neighborhood area is a sign of gentrification not as an end of times. Oh and by the way its 'Were you in jail....' not 'You in jail...' since you asking me a question...
 

ogc163

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They probably should have had someone other than Baratunde on there, dude brought nothing to the show. I really want to hear some good solid arguments against gentrification divorced from moral grandstanding filled with angst against stereotypical white midwesterners. I sure as hell didn't get it in this episode.
 

hashmander

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Well since we don't own it's not really our neighborhood.
when i saw his post i was going to say something similar.

none of my family members who bought homes in the late 70's/early 80's in brooklyn in the $50k range were "forced" out by cacs. they chose not to sell and those same homes are now worth $600k.
 

mson

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Harlem Residents Fuming Over Push to Rename the Area


Developers Using Made-Up 'SoHa' Neighborhood to Profit Off Harlem, Pols Say

By
Dartunorro Clark
May 24, 2017 5:59pm | Updated May 24, 2017 5:59pm
Community leaders and residents spoke at a rally on Wednesday, May 25.
DNAINFO/DARTUNORRO CLARK

HARLEM — Real estate professionals greedily branding a slice of Harlem as "SoHa" — short for South Harlem — are eroding the neighborhood's legacy while trying to profit off the area, advocates and politicians say.

Several elected officials, local clergy, community board members and residents rallied at the corner of West 115th Street and Frederick Douglass Boulevard to deliver two stern messages: "SoHa" doesn’t exist, and it’s not welcome in Harlem.

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“You can sell without using the word 'SoHa.' This is Harlem — a wonderful brand, a brand that is known all over this world," said Danni Tyson, a local real estate broker and a member of Manhattan Community Board 10, which covers the area.

“No real estate company, no coffee shop, no business should be using the term 'SoHa' to refer to Harlem. This is a home, this is a culture, this is a place that people visit."

While neither 'SoHa' nor South Harlem are official demarcations, the moniker is supposed to identify a part of Central Harlem spanning from West 110th to 125th streets.

Online real estate listings agencyStreetEasy features hundreds of listings for rentals, condos, co-ops and sales using the name.

Even realtor Keller Williams has a dedicated “SoHa” team of realtors in the neighborhood. (A representative did not immediately respond to a request for comment).

“We’re not going to let people who just got here change the name of our community for their profit,” said Harlem District Leader and City Council candidate Cordell Cleare. “This is about greed and lust.”

Although the nickname has beenlingering in the neighborhood for about a decade, Tyson has been at the forefront of a recent push to mobilize local leaders against the name, getting the community board to adopt a resolution earlier this year condemning it.

Comptroller Scott Stringer, who attended the rally, recalled when he brought up the issue in 2007 as Manhattan borough president.

“What we realized 10 years ago was this was not about Harlem, this was about real estate speculators taking advantage of a community — the gentrification of a community,” he said.

Now, the community board and politicians are planning to find ways to push back at any continued plans to re-label the neighborhood.

Just-elected state Sen. Brian Benjamin, the outgoing chairman of Community Board 10, said he’s even working on a proposal to legislate the renaming of neighborhoods.

He said he wants to propose a law that would push for a community review of any development project that plans to use a provocative new name for an area while also receiving local or state subsidies.

Benjamin recalled longtime residents telling him, "How dare someone try to rob our culture and try to act as if we were not here and create a new name and a new reality as if the clock started when other people showed up?’” he said. “That is unfair.”

He admitted that it’s a premature proposal, noting that the community can only protest private companies, but he’s “trying to make a statement” and will work with his new colleagues in Albany to flesh out the proposal
 
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