Suburbs Are Home To The Largest and Fastest-Growing Poor Population In The Country

El Bombi

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I saw this coming in Dallas a long time ago. It was way too many houses being build around the area from 2001-2005. And now Dallas County are giving away a lot of section 8 vouchers for ghetto nikkaz in me place like Cedar Hill and Desoto which is quickly turning into the new Oak Cliff.

Poverty surging in Dallas-Fort Worth suburbs more than inner cities, study finds | Dallasnews.com - News for Dallas, Texas - The Dallas Morning News

Poverty surging in Dallas-Fort Worth suburbs more than inner cities, study finds

Over the last decade, people living below the poverty level — $22,000 for a family of four — have surged into suburban neighborhoods in most major metropolitan areas, including Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, at a rate more than twice that of urban centers.

According to “Confronting Suburban Poverty in America,” a report released Monday by the Brookings Institution Metropolitan Policy Program, the poor population in the nation’s suburbs increased by 64 percent over the last decade, with 3 million more poor residents in the suburbs than in the big cities.

In Dallas-Fort Worth, the number of poor people living in the suburbs more than doubled between 2000 and 2011. The number went from 224,443 to 474,023, an increase of 111.2 percent and the 12{+t}{+h}-highest rate of the 95 metropolitan areas in the survey. The growth rate in the region’s cities was far lower — 67.9 percent — though poverty rates remain higher in the cities — 23.3 percent — compared with 11.5 percent in the North Texas suburbs.
The numbers signal a geographic shift for people living in poverty or slightly above, one that isn’t likely to change, the authors of the report say.
“When people think of poverty in America, they tend to think of inner-city neighborhoods or isolated rural communities,” said Elizabeth Kneebone, who co-authored the report with Alan Berube. “But today, suburbs are home to the largest and fastest-growing poor population in the country.”

The lure is the same that draws other suburbanites — with the perception of better schools and safer neighborhoods high on the list, said Berube, a senior fellow at Brookings. “But the long-term things you need to succeed — like proximity to work — you tend to lose.”

The move to the suburbs is largely the result of decades of change and growth, the authors say. The suburbs became the fastest-growing and largest centers for impoverished residents even before the latest recession.
But that certainly added to the impact, mostly by providing a huge pool of available housing for those eager to accept government vouchers to help pay their mortgages.

“There were a lot of suburbs that were at the forefront of the recession, places that built too much housing. And when prices fell and people couldn’t buy because of the mortgage crisis, employment and the economy in those places dried up quickly,” Berube said.

“These were the 2000 version of the 1970 suburbs, before those places grew an economy of their own. You had a lot of property investors who bought these places to hold while prices went up and up, and they were looking for a steady source of income: housing vouchers.”
But in the shift to the suburbs, much was left behind, like easy access to public transit and the social agencies that could “help point you in the right direction, if not to get ahead, at least get by in emergency circumstances,” Berube said.

Meeting the needs of the suburban poor requires a different approach than that of the past.

The War on Poverty programs from the 1960s provided resources to neighborhood-level organizations that they could use to counter the one or two things those residents thought would most help in alleviating poverty, Berube said.
“But it’s clear we can’t replicate that for suburbia,” he said. “Those can’t be the models because this isn’t an inner-city issue or a suburban issue. It’s really a regional issue.”

In the Dallas area, the number of poor people quadrupled between 1970 and 2011, from 268,585 to more than 1 million, the study states.
“And when you look at the wider economy, I’m guessing you have about a third of the total population with income less than twice the poverty level,” or about 2.2 million people in the metropolitan area, Berube said. “If you think you can leave it to the local jurisdictions to create a future of opportunity for a third of the population, that’s kind of ridiculous.”

For a possible approach, he points to Houston, where a program called Neighborhood Centers provides resources and education to more than 236,000 people at 60 locations in Houston and adjacent Gulf Coast areas.
“It does more than one thing at a time and in more than one place at a time,” he said.

“One of the successes of social policy over the last three or four decades is helping the poor in ways that give them a choice by giving them a voucher,” Berube said. “That’s great.

“It’s a shame, though, that with a little more money and a little more time, we could have helped those families find the place that will give the best chance for the success for their kids, success in the job market,” he said. “We kind of leave that out.”

With the nation’s economy showing signs of improvement, Berube said, he hopes unemployment rates fall and people find work and rising incomes.
“But that isn’t going to change the shape of where poverty is taking place,” he said. “That’s a structural phenomenon, and that isn’t going to change.”
 

cleanface coney

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living in the suburbs is stupid unless you building a crib from the ground up or stay in a historical neighborhood

esp for black people i smh at people that get a lil money then wanna move to the middle of nowhere lolol like they want you out there...stay with yo people... build wit yo people
 

ThugLife

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living in the suburbs is stupid unless you building a crib from the ground up or stay in a historical neighborhood

esp for black people i smh at people that get a lil money then wanna move to the middle of nowhere lolol like they want you out there...stay with yo people... build wit yo people

fukk the hood :childplease:
 

ThiefyPoo

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living in the suburbs is stupid unless you building a crib from the ground up or stay in a historical neighborhood

esp for black people i smh at people that get a lil money then wanna move to the middle of nowhere lolol like they want you out there...stay with yo people... build wit yo people

Nahh we just don't like living around nikkas like u.

Plus manicured lawns and no noise :noah:




People actually turn music down when they enter their communities :pachaha:
 

Rawtid

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living in the suburbs is stupid unless you building a crib from the ground up or stay in a historical neighborhood

esp for black people i smh at people that get a lil money then wanna move to the middle of nowhere lolol like they want you out there...stay with yo people... build wit yo people

There are other black people in the suburbs, I'll build with them.
 

john goodman

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Black people moving to the suburbs just as they are going downhill

Lol at history repeating itself

If theyre smart theyd stay in the city and build it up... buy the reql estate and create a sustainable community... but nooo its the white mans fault for 'gentrifying' a hood that every black person with 2 pennies abandoned


Cool with me... rebuilding old urban ghettks is how I will make my millions...
 

cleanface coney

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Black people moving to the suburbs just as they are going downhill

Lol at history repeating itself

If theyre smart theyd stay in the city and build it up... buy the reql estate and create a sustainable community... but nooo its the white mans fault for 'gentrifying' a hood that every black person with 2 pennies abandoned

lol perfect
 

ThiefyPoo

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whats a nikka like me?

please tell me please do lolol


U gotta be a hood nikka cause if u lived in the burbs u wouldn't talk like that.

There are other black people in the suburbs, I'll build with them.

Exactly I live in the wealthiest county for blks in the country.

I live in a upidity ass neighborhood with nothing but blk people.

People need to think before typing.


I'm not a city life person anyway.

I live close enough to hit the city in 20 mins.
 
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