Tag: Gentrification
Neely Fuller Jr. On Being Forced To Move From Place To Place
Mark Winston Griffith Of The Brooklyn Movement Center On Gentrification
Gentrification: “What Used To Be Ours Is Now Theirs”
The Attack On Black Communities: The Gentrification Of Bed Stuy
Gentrification In Brixton
The Gentrification of Harlem: Blight, Columbia University & Eminent Domain
Gentrification: Newburgh, NY
This video includes discussions of: The wickedness of gentrification, governmental corruption, voter intimidation, and police terrorism.
NY Is The Original Trendsetter When It Comes To “Urban Renewal”
“In 1949, the federal government enacted a new approach to the housing problems in cities: urban renewal. The approach was now both in philosophy- for the first time in America, government was given the right to seize an individual’s private property not for its own use but for reassignment to another individual for his use and profit- and in scope: a billion dollars was appropriated in 1949 and it was agreed that this was only seed money to prepare the ground for later, greater plantings of cash.
Most cities approached urban renewal with caution. But in New York City, urban renewal was directed by Robert Moses. By 1957, $133,000,000 of public monies had been expended on urban renewal in all the cities of the United States with the exception of New York: $267,000,000 had been spent in New York. So far ahead was New York that when scores of huge buildings constructed under its urban renewal program were already erected and occupied, administrators from other cities were still borrowing New York’s contract forms to learn how to draw up the initial legal agreements with interested developers. When Moses resigned from his urban renewal directorship in 1960, urban renewal had produced more physical results in New York than in all other American cities combined.” -From, “The Power Broker: Robert Moses and The Fall of New York” By: Robert A. Caro
Gentrification In Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn
A short documentary on the gentrification of Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn. The filmmaker interviews various people about the issue of gentrification in general, and specifically how it affects Bed-Stuy.
[SIDEBAR: $350 for rent?? There are people who have lived in Bed-Stuy for generations whose rent isn’t that cheap. Where did he gat that deal?! SMH!]