Surviving Gentrification Along the U Street Corridor

14th and U Street NW before the Metro.

14th and U Street NW before the Metro.

Gentrification is a funny thing.  The developers who bought up all the property along the U Street Corridor staked their fortunes on being able to attract wealthy individuals looking for a central location to live and shop.  They capitalized on the history along the corridor and named buildings and businesses after DC’s most famous African-Americans.  Ironically, they attracted a whole slew of white folks who seem to think the cultural history of DC is cool, but the low-income and working class black folk who are alive and well today don’t always make the best neighbors.  Thus, a neighborhood like Shaw, which was for decades a bastion of the black middle class, who came together to build a sense of stability within a deeply segregated city, remains stable only for those African-Americans who bought and paid for property before the housing bubble or those who are extremely well-heeled.

And so it was with the U Street Corridor.   Only three U Street businesses between Georgia Avenue and 16th Street survived the riots of the 60s, the neglect of the 70s, the housing boom and the coming of the U Street/Cardozo Metro Station.  Those three businesses are Lee’s Flower and Card Shop, the Industrial Bank of Washington and Ben’s Chili Bowl.  How they survived is chronicled in the audio podcast 192 Years of Black B’ness on U Street  produced by Brenda Hayes and Be Steadwell.  The report makes it clear that although these business owners are thriving now, that was not always the case.  For those of us attempting to withstand the harsh winds of gentrification, it is a history well worth remembering.

Walmart!

On Tuesday, I went to the common security club event that was the subject of the last post.  There were many ideas proposed for how individuals and communities can get by during hard times.   The speaker, Chuck Collins from the Institute for Policy Studies,  pointed out that our economy is designed to funnel money upward toward the wealthy.  Those on the right believe that wealth trickles down.  Why we believe money conforms to the laws of physics–funneling upwards like a cow caught in a twister or trickling down like soap suds caught in the drain–eludes me.

I’m not a physicist nor am I an economist.  I don’t know how money reacts in a physical universe except to say that it does leave my wallet just about as fast as I can put it in there.  My sense is, when I go to Walmart (I’ve only ever been once.  I bought a sweater.) the money I give them is mostly funneling up.  Sure, some small portion of it goes to pay the cashier, the sales associates, stock clerks, etc.  A significantly smaller portion (an infinitesimal portion) makes its way back to the factory worker in Indonesia who put together my $12 sweater, but I think the vast majority of my money found its way into the wallets of the Walton Family.

Sure they’ll take my money and yours and  build more stores and employ more cashiers, stock clerks, sales associates and managers, but no one is getting rich working for Walmart.  Evidence suggests that most Walmart employees are just barely making ends meet.   The Walton family on the other hand, well they’ll just keep doing better and better.  It’s not their job to make sure their employees get rich.  So far as they see it, it’s the responsibility of their employees to see that the Waltons remain rich and become even richer.  Do they feel any responsibility to their employees or their suppliers?  Or is it in the interest of the Walton’s that their employees be given just enough to get by and no more?  After all, if they did make a good living, well …  all manner of things might happen to upset that strong current upward.

What does any of this mean to someone who doesn’t have a job?   In the current economy, I’m not blaming anybody for working for Walmart or for shopping there.  I do believe that if we are ever to get out of this bind of waiting for money to trickle down so we can send it back up through the funnel, we need alternatives and we need to fight for them.

With that in mind, I’m posting here coverage by Luke from the fight to keep DC Walmart Free–Dozens Protest Walmart Outside of Developer’s House posted on DC’s Independent Media Center and his video Walmart’s DC Developer Gets 2nd Protest at his House as posted on LiveLeak.com.

Soon Walmart will intensify a media campaign that insists that those who oppose Walmart would turn down new jobs, stop people from paying lower prices and hinder Walmart’s noble efforts to feed poor folk healthy food.  (Oh Michelle, what are you doing?)  To get the other side of the story, check out walmartwatch.org and walmartsubsidywatch.org.

If you’re none too fond of sitting in front of a computer screen to get your information and would prefer to be among people, go to the free community film screening of

Walmart:  The High Cost of Low Prices
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
6:30-8:30 PM Emory Recreation Center
5701 Georgia Avenue NW

To get specifics about the campaign in DC and join the fight go to walmartfreedc.org.

Finally, for all of us out here who want to put food on the table and buy clothes for our kids that we can afford without shopping at Walmart or Target  consider forming or joining a common security club.  You’ll get all the information you need and more at the Common Security Club Workshop sponsored by the Institute for Policy Studies:

Saturday, January 29, 2011
10:00 am to 4:00 pm
Festival Center
1640 Columbia Road NW
Washington, DC
 
 

Giving Thanks

On any given day in the District of Columbia, 12,000 children, families, and individuals are homeless and or in need of food; 82% of these families are headed by single women.  As we approached the Thanksgiving holiday, reporter Brenda Hayes and producer Rebecca Steadwell sought out the city’s homeless as well as those who help to meet their needs and asked them one simple question.  Are you thankful?  Their report gives a candid glimpse into the day-to-day reality of the District’s neediest residents.

A Meal at the Community for Creative Non-Violence

Give Thanks MP3

Organizations highlighted in this piece include the Community for Creative Non-Violence and DC Central Kitchen who help to provide over 600,000 meals a year to DC residents.  Although CCNV relies entirely on donations to fund its operations, DC Central Kitchen receives upwards of $50,000 a year from the District government.  That may change as the DC Council decides  how to fix a $175 million budget shortfall.  But DC Central Kitchen and organizations like it don’t have to end up on the city budget chopping block.

Rather than more cuts, it is time for a balanced approach that includes progressive revenue. Right now DC’s top tax rate (8.5%) starts at $40,000 a year. City leaders should create a new tax bracket of 1% more for income over $200,000. The revenue raised can help preserve the programs we are thankful for. If you care about this issue, send an email to Chairman Gray and ask him to take a balanced approach and protect the programs you care about.

It Is What It Is

The Grassroots DC is all about community media.  Valencia’s It Is What It Is Mobile Talk Show is as community media as community media gets.  With nothing but a flash video camera and access to the internet, co-producers Valencia Rutledge and Judith Hawkins have presented Southeast DC and PG County to the world in a way that the mainstream media could never accomplish.  Their work is raw–mostly unscripted, unedited interviews of the people they meet on the street or community members trying to make things better.  They made some effort to polish their work by taking classes at DCTV, but found that the prices were too high.  What does it mean that even the public access station isn’t accessible to everyone?  Making community media takes commitment.  Making community media without technical or financial support is only accomplished by the most determined.  Having worked with Judith and Valencia on their editing skills for a little over a month,  I can say that the word determined describes them perfectly.

I’m posting just a few of their videos here for your consideration.  If you live east of the river, watching their videos is like checking in with your neighbors.  If the other side of the Anacostia is like a foreign country to you,  then be prepared to have your assumptions challenged.

Valencia’s & Judith’s Corner

Valencia and Judith speak to audience about their concerns for the surrounding communities and make a pitch for financial support, so they can continue their work.

DC Shootings!

  Valencia and Judith return to the scene of shooting.

Homelessness in DC

Being homeless is no picnic.

N-PUT FEEDS THE NEEDY AND THE HOMELESS

Have you heard of the N-PUT Organization?  I didn’t think so.  Community groups doing positive work in Southeast DC aren’t commonly on the radar of our most common news sources.

DC Evictions

  This was the first video that Judith and Valencia edited at the Grassroots Media Project lab.  There pitch for financial support did not garner enough support, and Valencia was evicted.

To continue following the adventures of Valencia and Judith on Valencia’s It Is What It Is Mobile Talk Show, subscribe to their Youtube channel @ iiwiitalkshow111.

The People’s Soapbox

Empower DC set up the PEOPLE’S SOAPBOX for the first time at last weekend’s Black LUV festival.  In our first edition, Brian Anders has some ideas about how to deal with homelessness and DC’s affordable housing crisis.  Do you agree with him or not? 

Expect more from the PEOPLE’S SOAPBOX soon.