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In reply to the discussion: Message auto-removed [View all]Celerity
(53,851 posts)20. How the Media Is Getting Mayor Pete's Gentrification Story Wrong
https://washingtonmonthly.com/2019/04/21/how-the-media-is-getting-mayor-petes-south-bend-gentrification-story-wrong/
South Bend, Indiana was a prosperous manufacturing town through much of the 20th century. It achieved a measure of fame for hosting the auto plant that built the Studebaker. But as the economy changed, so did the towns fortunes. Between 1960 and 2010, its population plummeted by nearly 25 percent. Left in the wake of mass departure and economic stagnation was a rash of urban blight: thousands of homes and other buildings stood vacant, left to disrepair. With blight came decreased home values and a rise in crime.
South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg, now a Democratic presidential candidate, launched an initiative in February 2013 he called 1,000 Homes, 1,000 Days. The goal: identify 1,000 vacant or abandoned homes (about a third of the total) and either demolish or repair them. By November 2015, 427 homes were repaired, 569 were demolished, 10 were deconstructed, 6 were set aside for repair by community development corporations, and 110 were under contract for demolition, according to the Department of Housing and Urban Development, which provided a block grant supporting the initiative. If Buttigiegs reelection with 75 percent of the vote is anything to go by, South Bends citizens have signaled their approval. The citys population has steadily increased since 2013.
Buttigieg has made the initiatives success a centerpiece of his presidential campaign, so it should be no surprise that journalists have looked into it. But two remarkably similar stories published last weekin Buzzfeed and on CNN.comsaid the initiative smacked of gentrification. That this odd phrase appeared verbatim in both stories is perhaps interesting. (Buzzfeeds Henry Gomez, who published his piece first, should wonder where CNNs Dan Merica and Vanessa Yurkevich got their inspiration.) Whats puzzling, however, is the decision to frame the demolition and rehabilitation of vacant and abandoned homes as akin to displacing minority communities. (Judging from 2011 and 2019 population estimates, no displacement appears to have occurred. Whats more, its hard to displace people from homes where no one was living.)
The two major challenges Buttigiegs initiative faced were the towns lackadaisical enforcement of building code violations and absentee owners of the targeted homes. One of the initiatives biggest obstacles was determining if the blighted properties owners were both sufficiently willing and able to improve them. Both the Buzzfeed and CNN stories lean heavily on two sources: Stacey Odom and Regina Williams-Preston, two African American women who had purchased blighted properties. Odom purchased one, which she hoped to fix up and make her own home, without knowing that the initiative had already slated it for demolition. Williams-Preston had purchased three vacant homes with plans to refurbish them and either sell them for a profit or create a business, like a day care for local kids, CNN reported. Sadly, her husband fell seriously ill and money that wouldve gone toward their investment went toward health care instead.
Both stories strike a decidedly oppositional tone. Buzzfeed seemed particularly intent on framing the story as a conflict between a robotic, white, impersonal politician and a black community. (The word data, and the mayors abiding interest in it, somehow became grounds for opprobrium.) Ironically, both stories show Buttigieg to have been an exceptional leader. Odom struggled to get her property off the demo list, but then, as CNN reports, she had a chance encounter with Buttigieg. What happened next was governance par excellence:
snip
Stacey Odom and/or Regina Williams-Preston have been in almost every story trying to negative frame Buttigieg, this OP story above uses Williams-Preston yet again.
South Bend, Indiana was a prosperous manufacturing town through much of the 20th century. It achieved a measure of fame for hosting the auto plant that built the Studebaker. But as the economy changed, so did the towns fortunes. Between 1960 and 2010, its population plummeted by nearly 25 percent. Left in the wake of mass departure and economic stagnation was a rash of urban blight: thousands of homes and other buildings stood vacant, left to disrepair. With blight came decreased home values and a rise in crime.
South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg, now a Democratic presidential candidate, launched an initiative in February 2013 he called 1,000 Homes, 1,000 Days. The goal: identify 1,000 vacant or abandoned homes (about a third of the total) and either demolish or repair them. By November 2015, 427 homes were repaired, 569 were demolished, 10 were deconstructed, 6 were set aside for repair by community development corporations, and 110 were under contract for demolition, according to the Department of Housing and Urban Development, which provided a block grant supporting the initiative. If Buttigiegs reelection with 75 percent of the vote is anything to go by, South Bends citizens have signaled their approval. The citys population has steadily increased since 2013.
Buttigieg has made the initiatives success a centerpiece of his presidential campaign, so it should be no surprise that journalists have looked into it. But two remarkably similar stories published last weekin Buzzfeed and on CNN.comsaid the initiative smacked of gentrification. That this odd phrase appeared verbatim in both stories is perhaps interesting. (Buzzfeeds Henry Gomez, who published his piece first, should wonder where CNNs Dan Merica and Vanessa Yurkevich got their inspiration.) Whats puzzling, however, is the decision to frame the demolition and rehabilitation of vacant and abandoned homes as akin to displacing minority communities. (Judging from 2011 and 2019 population estimates, no displacement appears to have occurred. Whats more, its hard to displace people from homes where no one was living.)
The two major challenges Buttigiegs initiative faced were the towns lackadaisical enforcement of building code violations and absentee owners of the targeted homes. One of the initiatives biggest obstacles was determining if the blighted properties owners were both sufficiently willing and able to improve them. Both the Buzzfeed and CNN stories lean heavily on two sources: Stacey Odom and Regina Williams-Preston, two African American women who had purchased blighted properties. Odom purchased one, which she hoped to fix up and make her own home, without knowing that the initiative had already slated it for demolition. Williams-Preston had purchased three vacant homes with plans to refurbish them and either sell them for a profit or create a business, like a day care for local kids, CNN reported. Sadly, her husband fell seriously ill and money that wouldve gone toward their investment went toward health care instead.
Both stories strike a decidedly oppositional tone. Buzzfeed seemed particularly intent on framing the story as a conflict between a robotic, white, impersonal politician and a black community. (The word data, and the mayors abiding interest in it, somehow became grounds for opprobrium.) Ironically, both stories show Buttigieg to have been an exceptional leader. Odom struggled to get her property off the demo list, but then, as CNN reports, she had a chance encounter with Buttigieg. What happened next was governance par excellence:
snip
Stacey Odom and/or Regina Williams-Preston have been in almost every story trying to negative frame Buttigieg, this OP story above uses Williams-Preston yet again.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
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an hour or two old account posting hit pieces, and recc'ing them yourself, welcome to DU
Celerity
Apr 2019
#1
I pointed out her minor mistake, that's not the same as 'being on your (personal) side'
mr_lebowski
Apr 2019
#70
I don't think it's appropriate, either.But it's done a lot. I've seen two by Harris supporters...
Honeycombe8
Apr 2019
#8
Because they had the Harris supporter flag at the bottom, like you do. So does the above OP. nt
Honeycombe8
Apr 2019
#17
No. Why would you think that? Geez...I was describing the logo thingie. Like you have.
Honeycombe8
Apr 2019
#32
I think some select a candidate that they do not like, then post tosh to associate that candidate
Celerity
Apr 2019
#60
I think it is very telling. I have never spent even close to $79 fr a phone.
Honeycombe8
Apr 2019
#30
The guy in the pic has a smartphone. Smartphones are pretty expensive. I don't have one.
Honeycombe8
Apr 2019
#10
WTF? A reporter taking the word of a random person or two as gospel for a whole group. nt
Blue_true
Apr 2019
#18
Here is an example of another poster (now banned) admitting to trolling against Buttigieg
Celerity
Apr 2019
#37
I've lived in the same city for 40 years and I've never met any of its mayors.
The Velveteen Ocelot
Apr 2019
#41