No room for low-income housing in South Los Angeles

by fayala | April 10, 2009 at 05:08 pm
232 views | 12 Recommendations | 1 comment

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Esperanza Housing Package

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Esperanza Housing Package

Low-income families are being priced out of their own neighborhoods in South Los Angeles so landlords can profit from luxury housing. Organizations such as Esperanza Community Housing aim to prevent the gentrification in South L.A. from leaving low-income families and individuals without a home.

The organization posted this on its blog, dated March 13, 2009: 

Esperanza members expressed their views on USC and Gentrification

Three of Esperanza members were interviewed by Francesca Ayala, a USC journalism student, and expressed their views and feelings towards gentrification in our neighborhood.  The video is about how the University of Southern California’s new specific plan does not provide adequate housing to meet student demand.  The University of Southern California (USC) has historically failed to meet the demand for student housing and has turned a blind eye to the displacement it has caused to the low-income families living in the neighborhood.

Esperanza welcomes development — but we want development that is inclusive of our community, not a continuation of policies that have displaced our community.  Esperanza and our partners have joined with USC students to demand MORE student housing, student housing that is commensurate to the actual demand for student housing.  We do not want token gestures that do not address the scale of the underlying problem.  We want USC to meet its obligations to its students so they are not forced into units that previously housed families.

USC’s policy of not housing students have resulted in sky-rocketing rents and has incentivized local landlords to engage in housing discrimination.  The consequence of USC ignoring — or failing to address this issue adequately — has already displaced over 40% of the families living in our neighborhood.  These families are torn from their community (many who have lived here for decades), children are taken from schools, families must leave their medical service provider, and their new housing is insecure.

Community needs and student needs are perfectly aligned: we both need more quality affordable housing.  Although our community has struggled against USC’s housing policies, we have always had fruitful and wonderful partnerships with USC students, such as this one with Francesca.  Thank you so much Francesca for helping us to tell our stories of our struggle against displacement. 

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eastvanray

That is what happens when you are a renter...you have no control over the cost of the housing you live in.  It would be unfair and even socialism for the owners not to be able to do what they please with the property they own.  I feel for these renters but taking away property rights is not the solution.

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First Flagged at 1:12 AM, Apr 11, 2009 by lefty_liberated
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