20
SCIENCE NEWS
|
February 12, 2022
COUR
TESY OF A. WILLIAMS
FEATURE
|
MILITARY LESSONS ON INTEGRATION
73 percent of white, non -Hispanic people owned
their homes compared with about 42 percent of
Black people.
Homeowners still receive government sup-
port not typically available to renters, such as
tax breaks, Price says. “These are policies that
help people maintain and build wealth. They are
geared toward high-income earners, people who
have homes of high value. Those people tend to
be white people.”
Redlining’s legacy also means that homes in
Black neighborhoods appreciate more slowly than
homes in white neighborhoods (
SN: 5/11/19 &
5/25/19, p. 16). Consider the trajectories of
Levittown and Mereday’s Lakeview neighbor-
hood. With Levittown houses selling for at least
$350,000 nearly five years ago when Rothstein
published his book, white families who bought
homes there in 1948 had accrued, on average, over
$200,000 in wealth. Black families who bought
in Lakeview, meanwhile, gained no more than
$45,000 during that time.
Residents in predominantly Black towns like
Lakeview were also hit hard by the 2008 hous-
ing crisis. Massey has documented how mortgage
brokers had previously targeted buyers in predom-
inantly Black neighborhoods for subprime loans,
which came with high interest rates and fees. That
caused many more Black families to face foreclo-
sure on their homes than white families.
Faber wondered what would have happened
if that history, starting with HOLC and up to the
present, had never transpired. What if the fed-
eral government had instead sought to break up
the de facto segregation that characterized many
U.S. neighborhoods in the 1930s by prioritizing
loans for Black people?
Faber’s calculations showed that in actual 2010,
over a third of people in HOLC-appraised cities
would have had to move for integration to occur.
But in the alternate universe of Faber’s model, less
than a quarter of people would have had to move
for that same outcome.
Similarly, in real-life 2010, almost 5 million Black
people lived in cities in which almost 70 percent
of residents would have had to move to integrate
neighborhoods. Under an antiracist policy, highly
segregated cities would not exist.
Public policies entrenched segregation in the
United States, Faber says. But he sees an upside.
“We know what we did to segregate, so we know,
in a way, how to desegregate.”
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