Detroit Gentrification Means "Forced Relocation" of Black Seniors
Detroit Gentrification Means "Forced Relocation" of Black Seniors
Saturday, 13 June 2015 00:00
By Paul Kleyman,
New America Media | Report
Many Detroit residents are celebrating a new era of revitalization, as the citys thriving Midtown is now dotted with upscale shops, restaurants and new construction. But Motor City, blighted with 83,000 abandoned homes, is also seeing the forced relocation of low-income seniors, most of them African American.
Theres a national trope about Detroit, the idea that its empty in a lot of ways, said Tam E. Perry, a researcher at the Michigan Center for Urban African American Aging Research and assistant professor at Wayne State University, where she heads The Relocation Lab.
Phrases like, Detroit is on the move have taken hold, she said, promoting the notion that anything can happen there, that you can start a new business, be an artist--see the city as a blank slate just waiting for you to make your mark on it.
But when you think a community is a blank slate, she said, youre also overlooking very vulnerable populations that have been part of the fabric of Detroit and want to remain part of that fabric. As development is occurring in various parts of the city, senior relocationor I would say forced relocation--is an unintended consequence.
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Detroit, Perry noted, is a city of about 700,000 people, 82.7 percent of them black. More than one in 10 residents (11.5 percent) are 65 or older. As one recent Associated Press story declared, Whites Moving to Detroit, City That Epitomized White Flight: Residents are taking advantage of cheaper housing. ...................(more)
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