From: | Career/Pro <cpro@igc.apc.org> |
Date: | Mon, 23 Mar 1998 13:26:05 -0800 (PST) |
Reply: | cpeo-brownfields |
Subject: | Portland, Oregon Showcase Community Comments |
>> From: Willamette Riverkeeper <wrkeeper@teleport.com> >> Subject: Re: HUD APPLAUDS 16 SHOWCASE COMMUNITIES(fwd) >> >> Here we go again. The efforts to redevelop Portland's brownfields look more >> like tools of genetrification that will displace (via skyrocketing housing >> costs) the very people that the money is supposed to help. >> >> Subject: Re: Could you please elaborate? >> Date: Fri, 20 Mar 1998 11:59:39 -0800 (PST) >> From: Willamette Riverkeeper <wrkeeper@teleport.com> >> To: CAREER/PRO <cpro@igc.apc.org> > > >>From the beginning Portland's brownfields grant applications have been written as projects that would target and benefit low income and/or communities of color. Yet, most everytime the city holds a news confrence, such as accepting the check from EPA, the neighborhood that is chosen is NOT in these neighborhoods. I suspect that the bottom line is that Portland's officials think that success looks like pretty tree-lined streets with lots of shops and pedestrian traffic. This image is great (I suppose), except that in Portland the neighborhoods that look like are or are becoming mini-malls composed largely of local and national chains, e.g. Starbucks, Coffee People, GAP, etc. The rents have gone through the roof for retail, commercial and housing. I grew up in whjat is now Portland's most getrified neighborhood, Northwest. Yes, the biker bars are gone, but so to are the true artists, the senior citizens, the locally owned shops, and the types of stores that serviced the community -- hardware, drug stores, shoe repair -- all replaced by chic cafes, etc. So, I think this is what City officials think success looks like. I don't. I was told that the city highlighted used a NE brownfield (old Texeco station) on the corner of 15th and Fremont as an example of the type of property that will be helped through the showcase project. Granted, this example is closer to the poor side of town. The problem is that the store that is developing the area is an out of state chain that is constructing a large organic foods super market. This doesn't help the local small business owners. It does say "white safe," as does Portland's Kennedy School brew pub (which I understand has driven up nearby retail rents and spawned a development effort that will displace the local Black owned BBQ stand that has been there for decades). In the final analysis, I think these types of projects largely benefit the bigger developers at the exclusion & cost of existing neighborhood businesses. They also spawn huge increases in housing costs (my house cost $75,000 two years ago and is worth $115,000 today --- and going up rapidly). I think this is wrong...especially when the money is aquired for the stated purpose of helping the poor. Portland has some different challenges than most other communities. True help for inner-N/NE Portland would be job training for good jobs, information and assistance for home purchases by people from these neighborhoods, land trusts (which some call urban share cropping), support and training and economic assistance for existing and new small business owners from the neighborhoods etc. Frankly, I think that the neighborhood associations need to approach the chains and ask them to kindly stay out. Once Starbucks anchors...well there goes the complexion and diversity of the neighborhood. I will stop here, but I think the city has the wrong final product vision. Unless this changes, Portland's poor, African-American and others will be economically exiled from their solid older homes to cracker box apartments in the fringes of the suburbs. >> >> 408 SW Second Avenue Suite 210 >> Portland, Oregon 97204 >> 503.223.6418 >> 1-888-4-4-WILLY (outside Portland) >> www.willamette-riverkeeper.org |
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