Archive for the 'Poverty' Category

What economic loss looks like in Buffalo.

I have been working on a project on the East Side for the past week, and after driving in and out of the the area several times, I was more shocked than usual at how it looks.  Entire city blocks have vanished since I was last there, and the few that remain have decayed dramatically.

This entire city block is marked for demolition. City crews will come with bulldozers, level the houses, fill any basements, and grade the empty space. This has happened over and over again on the East Side of Buffalo over the past 20 years.

Decay accelerates as homes are abandoned.  This can be seen in a pattern repeated over and over again.  A few houses on a block become empty, and drug users, squatters, school kids, vandals, and others quickly move to stake a claim on the now available property.  This quickly makes the empty buildings, and thus the surrounding neighborhood unsafe.   More people move out and more houses become vacant, and now nearly impossible to sell. Once a block gets to a tipping point, entire blocks empty pretty quickly of all who can still afford to move out.
The problem began years ago, long before the country’s current economic troubles, which unfortunately have rapidly increased the rate of decay here the past few years.  Business began to slow down here two years ago.  What the rest of the country save Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, and a few other rust belt cities are now experiencing, we have already gone through.
The devastation on the East Side is now clearly apparent, not in what is crumbling, but more so in what is missing.  Neighborhoods have vanished, streets with no occupants now dot the area.  Lone houses dot plains of block after block of empty lots.  I saw a small herd of deer while I was out taking photos the other day.  Deer.  A few blocks from downtown Buffalo.  That’s how desolate some of these areas are.

Formerly three Buffalo City Blocks - Only a few houses remain, and some are already boarded up.

What remains of three city blocks. Most of the remaining houses are abandoned.

Continue reading ‘What economic loss looks like in Buffalo.’

Will the next slums be in the suburbs?

Buffalo Decay As housing trends shift, and Urban areas once again become popular with home buyers, other markets naturally become unpopular. Here in Buffalo, urban renewal has hit full stride with a myriad of residential redevelopment projects that have turned old warehouses, factories, and other rust belt leftovers into sparkling new homes. People have started to move back downtown, and it is now considered hip again to live downtown. But it’s important to note the history of the area that got us here.

Suburban flight was in full swing by the time Buffalo’s inner city was rocked by riots, drugs, and changes to the economic climate of rust belt cities in the 1970′s. Many manufacturing jobs left forever, as steel, automotive, and other industries laid off tens of thousands of men from well paying union jobs. The area was jolted by over 15% unemployment. Once solid ethnic defined neighborhoods that had been terrific places to live for five generations, quickly degenerated into ghettos, as housing prices plummeted and empty buildings popped up nearby.

Poor families replaced working families in homes that were hastily divided into apartments by owners who left the city to live in clean new suburbs like Orchard Park, Amherst, Cheektowaga, and West Seneca. Families that did want to stay, eventually moved out though, as neighborhood businesses closed and most of the city’s urban center was overcome by poverty in the 1980′s.

Buffalo Decay By the 1990′s homes that had gone from family legacies to slum rentals stood now stood abandoned. Neglect, a 20 year economic slump in the economy, and a general lack of interest in living in the city left thousands of homes abandoned in huge areas just outside of the city center.

Driving into the city from the suburbs now meant driving through the East and South sides of the city, both decimated by two decades of poverty. There were almost no retail businesses left downtown, but most of all, it was just plain depressing, Main Street was lined with mostly empty storefronts, stores that were open sold knock off sporting goods and cheap jewelry. There are a lot of photos of the remnants of Buffalo’s Urban Decay at this site.

In the 90′s they came with the bulldozers. Empty houses, likely targets for squatters, arsonists, and crack addicts, were now razed, by the thousands. Entire city blocks were leveled. Homes that stood alone looked oddly out of place, like the survivors of a huge battle. Many of these fell to what I suspect was trauma, after being left alone without their neighbors.

These empty fields began to sprout new homes – suburban style. Vinyl siding, concrete driveways, front facing garage doors, and all the earmarks of the burbs wrapped their smaller citified cousins. At first the homes were sold to low income families, the only people willing to live in the former war zone. But as these neighborhoods grew, so did the size of the homes, and not long after, middle class and luxury developments started popping up nearby downtown. Buffalo is now in the throes of an urban residential boom.

Sub Prime house for saleAs the sub prime mortgage crisis hits full stride, there are communities all over the country that are now seeing a remarkable side effect of developments full of McMansions standing nearly empty. They are experiencing the same familiar problems that rust belt inner cities felt in the 1970′s and 1980′s – owners renting to questionable tenants, gang activity, increased property crime and graffiti, and a huge increases in violent crime. That’s right – inner city demons exported to suburbia.

In it’s article The Next Slum?, Atlantic Monthly predicts a grim outlook for many of the newer suburbs built in the last 10-15 years:

“But much of the future decline is likely to occur on the fringes, in towns far away from the central city, not served by rail transit, and lacking any real core. In other words, some of the worst problems are likely to be seen in some of the country’s more recently developed areas—and not only those inhabited by sub prime-mortgage borrowers. Many of these areas will become magnets for poverty, crime, and social dysfunction.”

Well built houses from the 1800 and early 1900′s had to be gutted for their copper, woodwork, and other valuables before succumbing to the elements to fall down. Today’s particle board wrapped, vinyl sided exteriors are no match for the brick and solid hardwood of 100 years ago. Decay in the suburbs would happen very quickly, and be tough to stem in the larger, more expensive to maintain homes being built in the suburbs.

This will be an interesting trend to watch.

New heroes

Someone mysteriously sent me a terrific book, Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, a Man Who Would Cure the World, written by Pulitzer Prize winner Tracy Kidder. Not a book I would ordinarily seek out, it has changed my mind on many issues, and opened my eyes to many other important ones.

Only because quoting the back of the book saves me an hour or so of rewriting it…

“Doctor, Harvard professor, renowned infectious-disease specialist, anthropologist, the recipient of a MacArthur “genius” grant, world-class Robin Hood, Farmer was brought up in a bus and on a boat, and in medical school found his life’s calling: to diagnose and cure infectious diseases and to bring the lifesaving tools of modern medicine to those who need them most.”

Paul Farmer is genuinely inspiring, as you can see in this YouTube video talking about his foundation Partners in Health. PIH offers help to places of the world that nobody else is. Here are some ways that you can help.