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By:
News Report, Sandra Larson | |||||||||
Posted:
Jul,19-2015 00:12:23
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BOSTON--At United South End Settlements' Harriet Tubman House, neighborhood elders dropping in for the senior lunch recently had plenty to say about "a bunch of changes" they've seen over the years. "This right here used to be a nightclub," said "Spider" Edwards, 85, recalling the old Hi-Hat club where Count Basie and other jazz luminaries played in the 1940s, one of many clubs in this area where the South End meets Lower Roxbury. The former Louie's Lounge down on Washington Street is now an apartment building, added Luther Flynt, a South End dweller for some 70 years. A 2013 Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland analysis ranked Boston as the most rapidly gentrifying U.S. city, with one-quarter of the city's population affected. Other research ranks Boston fourth in the nation in income inequality, with incomes of the top 5 percent 15 times higher than those of the bottom 20 percent. Shift From Black to White Flynt rented on W. Springfield Street for 35 years, he said, up to 1999, and the price was reasonable -- "not sky high, like it is now." The men agree that rents started going up when "other folks" moved in over the past few decades. And the area has most definitely shifted from black to white. "It's changing. It's changing every day. People don't want to live in the suburbs anymore," said Flynt. Former South End neighbors have left for more affordable areas like Roxbury, Dorchester, Mattapan, and even Brockton, outside Boston, said James Banks. "Financially, they force you out," he said. At a nearby table, Barbara Randolph, 85, spoke of growing up in an era when the South End was full of low-cost apartments for families, and plenty of rooming houses serving those at the lowest economic rungs. Her childhood street, W. Rutland Square, housed mainly African American families like hers. But 15 or 20 years ago, "people wanted to buy," she said, and longtime owners sold multi-family buildings and decamped to other neighborhoods, such as Roxbury and Dorchester. "It's not like they were forced out," she said, "but at the time a lot of older people weren't able to keep up with repairs and maintenance. They sold the buildings for $300,000 or so, and moved to other areas." Randolph lives in a nearby housing cooperative now, so her monthly rent remains affordable. She feels lucky that she's been able to stay in the South End, where most of her needs are within walking distance. But she's watched with dismay as "fancy expensive restaurants" have popped up and family-owned and longstanding establishments have faded away. Randolph listed a few that have gone: Braddock Drug, Charlie’s Sandwich Shoppe, a funeral parlor, and Concord Baptist Church, whose Warren Avenue building is being turned into condominiums after the church relocated to Milton, Mass. She suspects newcomer pressure to quash a longstanding Sunday tradition of church-member parking in the center of Columbus Avenue helped force the church out. "Money talks. It's a shame," she concluded. Concern by housing advocates often centers on gentrification's negative ramifications for first-time homebuyers and lower- and middle-income renters. And in ethnic enclaves, such as Chinatown, residents fear the dilution of unique neighborhood culture. But its effects vary by street, by block, by individual tenant or homeowner, and longtime resident or newcomer. For elders with deep neighborhood roots, the experience of gentrification can be complex. There may be a sense of unease as different types of neighbors appear. Older tenants may be at sudden new risk of displacement or even homelessness, and may undergo price shock if they're thrust into the rental market after decades in one apartment. Those in senior centers or housing cooperatives may barely notice rising prices. Meanwhile, for those whose early sacrifices netted them eventual home ownership, high prices can be a golden opportunity to cash in, move south and enjoy a secure retirement. Chinatown: 'Everyone Speaks My Language' Kam Tong Wong and her husband came from China to Boston in 1951, and settled into a Chinatown apartment without hot water, heat or a refrigerator. She worked at a Kneeland Street garment factory, and he was a restaurant cook. The couple scrimped and saved for nearly 20 years before buying a three-family row house on Harrison Avenue. The price was about $40,000, she recalled. Now 81, Wong still calls the building home. Her tenants help her out with the building while enjoying lower rents than they would find elsewhere. Wong knows the building is worth a lot more money now--the building next door was sold in 2013 for $900,000. Another on a nearby street went for $500,000, displacing some elderly tenants--but Wong said she has no intention of selling. "Of course I want to stay here. This is my community. Everyone speaks my language," Wong said, speaking through a Chinese interpreter in her small, pink-walled kitchen. But when her grown children inherit the house, she thinks they will sell it, as they and their families live in other cities. The next generations doesn’t want to live in Chinatown, she said, because a lack of parking makes it too hard to drive to their jobs. For Wong, many of the changes in Chinatown have been positive. She lived through the days when the loud click-click-click of prostitutes' high heels on the sidewalk (she demonstrates the sound effect, jabbing her finger into the arm of her chair) kept her awake at night. She is glad her street is cleaner and safer now. Yet Wong also noted with some rue how the area has transformed around her. "There used to be more families in Chinatown. Now, with the new buildings, there are more single people," she said. "Also, because I'm older, it's hard to get to know the young people. Everyone used to know each other. They were my neighbors, and I also knew them at the factory. Now it's very different." While the South End is known far and wide as a textbook example of gentrification already out of the gate, and activists in Chinatown are fearing the loss of its low-income Chinese residents as luxury towers proliferate around it, other areas of Boston are grappling with earlier stages of transformation. They hope there's still time to slow things down. Part II of this series will highlight the experiences of elder residents in Boston's Jamaica Plain and Roxbury neighborhoods. Sandra Larson wrote this article for Boston's Bay State Banner through a Journalists in Aging Fellowship, a collaboration of New America Media and the Gerontological Society of America, with support from AARP. This story is the last in out "BOSTON" series on gentrification and housing challenges for low-income seniors. See those article and others on Oakland, Detroit, San Francisco and New York at NAM's special site,"Growing Older, Getting Poorer". | |||||||||
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