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Topic: Do Urban farms equate to segregation and gentrification?

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untanglingwebs
El Supremo

There has already been discussion about urban farms in Flint, one of the most racially segregated cities in Michigan. While talking to family members from Detroit, they stated the proposed urban farms in detroit will serve to divide and segregate Detroit. They spoke about proposed new developments of upscale housing planned for one side only of the urban farms.

When I first heard Reverend Flynn speak about Flint's administrators wanting to make the north end urban farmland, I was somewhat confused and I wished he had laborated. This morning I entered detroit urban farma and gentrification and found more who share this view.

So does some gentrification equate to further segregation? Some proposals speak of seeking an upper scale new class of residents for downtown and in a 2 mile radius of downtown. So what does this forecast for future development plans?

Belief equals a sort of reality. I keep being told that the minority and poor are being pushed out of Flint to accomadate gentrification. That belief is firmly entrenched in the north end. Increased taxes and water rates are forcing citizens to consider a move they can't affford to make.


However, the misuse of the federal funding and the inability of state and local leaders to ensure citizen safety is making even some middle class and more affluent citizens leave. An example is the large number of homes for sale and recently sold homes that are a fraction of their value four years ago.

I spoke to a former Mott Park resident at a store yesterday. He moved to Burton and is trying to rent his home in Mott Park. he purchased the home in 2001 and can't begin to get his money out of the house. His Burton water bill is under $35 a month compared to the $105 plus in Flint.
Post Tue Dec 25, 2012 9:59 am 
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untanglingwebs
El Supremo

Grand Rapids Institute for Information Democracy

The Gentrification of Detroit—Again

April 25, 2011


Kay kswheeler
.

The American branch of my family has deep roots—five generations—in Detroit, a city that has been sitting on the narrows of the Detroit River since 1701. Now a comparative ghost town, there are hints of another new cycle of interest in downtown development in the city, and God knows that property there can currently be had for a song.



In 2002, Wayne State University sponsored a symposium on gentrification. Disagreement existed among the participants about whether Detroit could be “revitalized” without driving the current population out, but many admitted, looking at the arc of history in Detroit, that if the capitalists came back, eventually the poor would be displaced.

While a Cass Corridor resident called for change in which “there’s a place for decay,” one Wayne State professor commented, “The dynamics of gentrification, unfortunately, is that housing prices go up…taxes go up. I don’t see how you can avoid the dynamic of the market.”

Recently, Rapid Growth Grand Rapids, an online publication with a parent-company mission “to focus on growth, investment and remarkable people leading communities into the new economy,” put together a road trip. Young Grand Rapidians from a variety of professions, some of whom had never set foot in the state’s largest city, took a look at its “revitalization” efforts. The purpose of the trip, said Rapid Growth’s Tommy Allen, was for attendees to look for ways to “partner on projects to change the face and reality of our state.”

They visited a bakery, a few bars, the College for Creative Studies, the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, a pet grooming and day care facility, and an urban farm, among other sites. They were wined and dined at one of downtown Detroit’s best restaurants. And judging from their comments, the attendees did seem to gain a different perspective from their encounters with entrepreneurs they met on the trip.



What was less clear was how much context the visitors had of Detroit’s cycles of gentrification, which have occurred many times since its founding.

Detroit’s history shows population shifts and forced neighborhood changes happening over and over: the ribbon farms of the French settlers being seized up by lumber barons for their huge riverfront mansions, as the farmers are driven out of the city (only to be driven out again by people building summer homes in the Grosse Pointes). Woodward Avenue turning from a collection of workers’ homes and small, owner-run businesses into a Fifth Avenue of large stores, posh churches, and upscale restaurants. The Cultural Center changing from a working class neighborhood to streets with large, upper-class homes, a museum, a library. Improvements? Yes, for those with money. For the workers, it represented a constant challenge—where to live so that one could still be close to one’s work, when neighborhoods became too expensive for them? Where to shop, when affordable greengrocers’, bakeries, and clothing shops transmogrified into lavish department stores filled with furs, pigskin gloves, imported pâté, and French perfumes?

And every time the rich tired of a neighborhood, moving on to places more fashionable, then it was the working class who faced slum landlords, the disappearance of jobs, the increase of crime that occurred in their formerly stable neighborhoods.

Of course, some of this change was inevitable—after all, what major city still has farms within its limits? But what’s significant is that in every case, in every cycle of change, it’s the elite who decided what neighborhood to co-opt and alter, and the workers and poor simply had to accept and somehow adapt, often without the resources to do so successfully.

There were periods when it worked for a short time. A balance was struck, not too many people seemed to be disenfranchised, and uneasy peace was declared. We can see this kind of teetering balance in some Grand Rapids neighborhoods today. But the balance never seems to hold for long, as Detroit’s history proves again and again.



People today are most familiar with the highlights of Detroit’s 20th century transformations—the arrival of immigrant and minority workers, many finding jobs in the car industry; the White flight to the suburbs; and the hilarious early attempts at “renaissance.” When the Renaissance Center was completed, the opening gala in 1977 was attended by 650 people so terrified of being downtown that they only attended on assurances that they would be able to step right from their cars into the security-guarded building, without having to go into the parking lot or set a foot on a Detroit city sidewalk. My cousin, a Detroit activist, later commented, “And these were the people who were going to bring positive change to the city, with that attitude?”

Advertised as a “city within a city,” the tacit message of the Renaissance Center was, “It’s OK, White people—you don’t have to actually go into Detroit itself to work here. You can spend all your time inside a safe, secure, guarded fortress.” The concept was to have the building contain offices, restaurants, hotels, a shopping center. But business after business fled the building and Detroit. The entire complex was finally sold to General Motors for pennies on the dollar. It now serves as GM’s headquarters.

Even the Mackinac Center has admitted that the whole idea was a failure. But not the failure of the business movers and shakers who conceived it—oh, no. Rather, it was the city’s failure—for not having a better school system, better municipal services, and for putting “crushing taxes and regulations” on businesses, all of which hampered the largesse that generous capitalists were willing to rain down upon Detroit.

In a smaller way, we see similar scenarios in Grand Rapids’ history. One example: shortly before the Amway Grand was completed, the leading power brokers on this side of the state insisted on a change with similar economic results as the Detroit Renaissance Center. They deemed it was crucial for the struggling retail presence in Grand Rapids’ city center to take out Monroe Avenue and turn it into a pedestrian mall. This would supposedly let downtown “compete” with suburban malls that were pulling shoppers away. Some long-time, small business owners downtown who had survived the shifts in retail traffic saw that they would lose their car-door-to-store-door advantage in this redesign. But the street was mall-ified in 1980 despite their objections. One by one, the remaining businesses failed.

Did anyone benefit from this Titanic of a decision? Yes, the people who always benefit: those with the economic means to buy properties at fire-sale prices. Later, Monroe Avenue was re-opened and the downtown was “revitalized.”

In the Detroit toured by the Rapid Growth road trip attendees, a number of residents are wearily aware that any improvements they make could, at any moment, be co-opted by capitalists looking to make yet another buck off the backs of the poor, the unemployed, and the low-wage workers left in their largely broken urban landscape. Commenting on a similar scenario in Washington D.C., Natalie Hopkinson wrote,

“In the fanfare over the ‘new D.C.’ and drooling over retail, it’s almost as if poor people and their grievances have been put on mute. That was the problem with [Mayor] Fenty and some of his more strident ‘creative class’ supporters; many of them went about their business as though the poor were invisible or, worse, already gone.”

Rayfield Waller wrote in a Michigan Citizen article that the “creative class” working to reinvent Detroit today are “white elites reoccupying inner cities that have crumbled in the wake of federal abandonment, infrastructure collapse, police brutality, loss of worker rights, government corruption, and joblessness.” He goes on to state that in his opinion, urban or neighborhood collapses like the one in Detroit are engineered economic ploys: “America’s response to rebellion, protest and riots by urban Americans objecting to the same corporate and government elites now funding what is essentially a ‘cool’ class war of ‘creative’ elites against urban have-nots.”

Let’s face it. It’s not Detroit’s recent capitalist ventures—from the redo of the Book-Cadillac Hotel with its spa and $60-per-porterhouse-steak restaurant to the peppering of renovated “hipster” bars and Twitterati-approved coffeehouses—which are going to address the reality that Waller describes. But there are organizations in Detroit that are working for justice for the residents who are there, rather than campaigning to lure “urban pioneers” (read: customers with ready cash) from the suburbs to the city.



One of these is the Garden Resource Program Collaborative, which brings together 189 different organizations to support urban gardening and farming. The collective provides education for people who have never grown gardens before; it teaches beekeeping; it offers seed exchanges and lessons in canning and preserving food. According to its website, this food justice organization provided help and advice to nearly 900 community, school, and family gardens,

The Detroit chapter of the Michigan Welfare Organization is another group working to improve the lives of the city’s residents. The group acts as an advocate between low-income citizens and service organizations that stand in the way of people receiving the Medicaid, food stamps, and other assistance that is rightfully theirs. The chapter also intervenes in landlord-tenant disputes and utility company threats. In addition to fighting poverty, the group’s mission statement says it is building “an army prepared to battle for the economic and human rights of millions of disenfranchised Americans.”

Equally important is Moratorium Now!, a grassroots coalition of activists committed to stopping foreclosures, evictions, and utility shutoffs in the city’s metropolitan area as well as across the state. In a city where foreclosures still number approximately 4.5 the national average, this group is crucial to Detroit’s future. In 2010 alone, over 43,500 people in Detroit lost their homes to foreclosure.

The cost of gentrification—again—in Detroit will come at the expense of its already beleaguered population. At GRIID, we believe that a statement circulated in the city several years ago, printed on flyers and posted everywhere downtown, sums up the issue perfectly. It was titled “Detroit Artists Against Gentrification.” Unlike many observations on this topic, it is untainted by an agenda of promoting capitalist interests. It says, in part:

“vulgar language ‘Cool Cities.’ We don’t want our art turning into someone else’s eviction notice….We recognize that the city must develop, the nature of things is change…But we don’t think just any development is good development, and we don’t think the end justifies just any means.

“We have seen what gentrification has done to other cities, displacing working class and poor people…In Detroit, it has faked progress, pretending to cure real issues of racism and poverty with fancy new buildings. Frankly we think it is boring and stupid. It is a cycle of destruction and reconstruction that could go on forever, but only benefits those who already have money. They say a rising tide lifts all boats, but that assumes that you have a boat.

“…We need to know that our voices are heard about the din created by all the bulldozers and the local shuffle of money changing hands. All the people in the city must have a say in what’s going on.”
Post Tue Dec 25, 2012 10:06 am 
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untanglingwebs
El Supremo

Gentrification, the new form of segregation

July 9, 2009

Joe Debro
by Joe Debro

From San Francisco’s Fillmore, Hayes Valley and Western Addition, Black people and other members of the community of the poor were removed. The removal was a new form of segregation and discrimination. The government unit that led the charge was the Redevelopment Agency. The sociological name for this removal was and is gentrification.

San Franciscans, indeed Californians, will oppose segregation and discrimination in any form. Therefore, to succeed, it must be practiced below the radar. In our recent history, restrictive covenants were used to discriminate. The voters eliminated that practice once it was exposed.

Gentrification, the new form of segregation, works because the people are unaware of its pathology. News media will not publish any description of its practice. The mainstream media conspire to keep it hidden from the fair-minded voters of San Francisco.

Under the current San Francisco mayor, gentrification is being accelerated. The geography has changed. The only sites left for massive development are Hunters Point and Visitacion Valley. The removal of poor people has become high tech. The process for removal is more convoluted.

Public housing is under attack. Unfortunately, public housing occupies prime real estate. The Housing Authority, the Redevelopment Agency and the Mayor’s Office of Community Development are big players in the new gentrification. They all spend their discretionary money co-opting what might otherwise develop into leadership for real change.

In the 1970s, when gentrification was first introduced to San Francisco, the Redevelopment Agency was run by a White man named Justin Herman. Justin employed educated Blacks to stand between him and the community. These men were called area directors. They were the people who made the hollow promises. They actually believed that the displaced homeowners would be allowed to come back.

The agency allowed sham construction contracts to simulate community participation. Neither the Mayor’s Office nor other agencies funded CBOs (community based organizations). The building trade unions did not pretend to admit Black and unconnected whites into their hiring halls. There was no pretense at what is now called work force development.

Black contractors and other contractors of color were the only vehicles for community employment. The hiring halls were openly segregated.


Gentrification ... Just say No
The game has changed. Those who run the city have become more sophisticated. The skilled craft unions have found many new ways to exclude the unemployed from earning a union card.

When construction was booming, hiring halls invited nonunion workers from other jurisdictions to work here, rather than train our unemployed. Workers poured in from right-to-work states. They were given traveling cards and allowed to work while our young people, deliberately excluded from the workforce, consumed dope and alcohol while watching others work. Now that work is slow, our young people are still not working.

Building trade unions in the electrical, plumbing, sheet metal, operating engineer and a few other fields have sold our politicians an employment deferment program. In addition they have and are selling a joke called the project labor agreement. Those who otherwise could and would help the unemployed have bought the pre-apprenticeship program.

The price that the unions paid was a promise to the politicians of reelection. It now takes longer to earn an electrical union card from Local 6 than it does to become a surgeon through medical school at the University of California at San Francisco. The union card is more rewarding. No student loans to repay. The starting wage is $85 per hour. With overtime and a leadership role, an electrician can make north of $200,000 per year.

Programs are the new ways to co-opt those who would be advocates for community-based change. Programs also give some hope to the hopeless. The city chooses who to support and whom to ignore. It supports those programs that show best.

Those programs that empower the community are starved. The workforce development programs are marginal. A few provide a path to a living wage. Most provide hope and promise.

Young people who dropped out of school without skill or education commit most of the crime in San Francisco and other urban cities. Rather than teach skills, we prepare them to learn a skill. Without skills and without education, they turn to crime and provide fodder for our criminal injustice system.

For the next few weeks this column will name and cite specific examples of the corruption involved in pushing the poor out of the city. Because this is a statewide issue, I plan to bring this issue to the attention of a few Southern California politicians. Congresswoman Maxine Waters and Sen. Rod Wright come to mind.

Joe Debro is co-founder of the National Association of Minority Contractors, a general engineering contractor and a bio-chemical engineer. He can be reached at Transbayd@aol.com.
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Post Tue Dec 25, 2012 10:34 am 
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untanglingwebs
El Supremo

A0000012540 1/18/2013 ARELLANO & ASSOCIATES LLC $6,250.00

Stephen Arellano's Overview
Current consultant at Arellano and Associates LLC

Food Systems and Urban Agriculture Coordinator at City of Flint and Michigan State University

Founder at Arellano and Associates, LLC

Past Trustee at Community Foundation of Greater Flint

Prorgram Officer at Ruth Mott Foundation

guerilla media at National Environmental Trust

Education University of Michigan



Stephen Arellano's Experience

consultant

Arellano and Associates LLC

May 2012 – Present (9 months) Flint

Working on bolstering the local/regional food economies in Michigan cities.



Food Systems and Urban Agriculture Coordinator

City of Flint and Michigan State University




October 2011 – Present (1 year 4 months) City of Flint, MI

Working through a partnership between Michigan State University's Center for Regional Food Systems and City of Flint's Department of Community and Economic Development to bring resources and support to the local food movement in Flint. Emphasis for this position is on Master Planning and community and economic development.



Founder

Arellano and Associates, LLC

January 2011 – Present (2 years 1 month)

Just forming a consultant company.. not official yet. Smile

Trustee

Community Foundation of Greater Flint

2010 – 2010 (less than a year)

Prorgram Officer

Ruth Mott Foundation




September 2007 – November 2010 (3 years 3 months)

guerilla media

National Environmental Trust

Nonprofit; 51-200 employees; Nonprofit Organization Management industry

1997 – 1999 (2 years)



Stephen Arellano's Skills & Expertise

Non-profits
Local Food
Strategic Planning
Urban Agriculture
Fundraising
Economic Development
Food Systems



Stephen Arellano's Education




University of Michigan

M.A., Program in American Culture

1989 – 2001
Post Thu Jan 24, 2013 9:30 am 
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untanglingwebs
El Supremo

Searched for: ARELLANO AND ASSOCIATES, LLC

ID Num: D5630Q


Name:ARELLANO AND ASSOCIATES, LLC

Type: Domestic Limited Liability Company
Resident Agent: STEPHEN ARELLANO

Registered Office Address: 1309 KEARSLEY PARK BLVD FLINT MI 48506
Mailing/Office Address:

Formation/Qualification Date:3-30-2011

Jurisdiction of Origin:MICHIGAN

Managed by: Members

Status: ACTIVE Date: Present
Post Thu Jan 24, 2013 9:32 am 
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untanglingwebs
El Supremo

If this contract had come to council, (over the limit allowed by a PSA), the residents would know more about what is planned for our Urban Farming future.
Post Thu Jan 24, 2013 9:34 am 
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Dave Starr
F L I N T O I D

quote:
untanglingwebs schreef:

Stephen Arellano's Education


University of Michigan

M.A., Program in American Culture

1989 – 2001


11 years in the program? Doesn't look like he was awarded a master's.

_________________
I used to care, but I take a pill for that now.

Pushing buttons sure can be fun.

When a lion wants to go somewhere, he doesn’t worry about how many hyenas are in the way.

Paddle faster, I hear banjos.
Post Thu Jan 24, 2013 11:06 am 
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untanglingwebs
El Supremo

The Midwest has the highest level of segregated cities. Segregation in Flint is demonstrated greatly in our education system. Here are some alarming stats.



Michigan - Realize the Dream

www.realizethedream.org/reports/states/michigan.html

Segregation in Michigan. Michigan is the most segregated state for African Americans, with 62.7% of Black students in extremely segregated schools (those with
Post Mon Jan 28, 2013 9:05 am 
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