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Articles in the Urban Poverty Category

Crime, Economic Development, Featured, U.S. Auto Industry, Urban Poverty »

[4 Oct 2009 | No Comment | ]
Tracing a City’s History…Through One House

I thoroughly enjoyed reading this Wall Street Journal article that traces the story of one home in the Motor City – and through that house, decades of history and change in the neighborhood and the city overall.
Spend a few minutes reading about 1626 W. Boston Boulevard, in Detroit’s Boston-Edison neighborhood, from its auto-industry origins to a subprime borrower.
-KG
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Crime, Featured, Good Ideas, Politics, Race Relations, Urban Poverty »

[6 Sep 2009 | 2 Comments | ]
A Look at “Brick City”

I saw an interesting ad recently, previewing the Sundance Channel documentary Brick City.
The show will focus on Newark, New Jersey (a city that while not in the Rust Belt, has certainly had its share of problems), Mayor Cory Booker, and other city officials and residents, such as the chief of police, a gang member, and a youth counselor.
You can watch a number of clips from the show and read a bit about it on the web site.
We’ve written about Mayor Booker and his efforts to turn the city around on …

Featured, Good Ideas, Green Jobs, Politics, Urban Poverty »

[23 Aug 2009 | No Comment | ]
Taxing City Residents

A study by a University of Michigan researcher has confirmed what we already knew: City residents pay more taxes.

“Workers in expensive cities in the Northeast, Great Lakes and Pacific regions bear a disproportionate share of the federal tax burden, effectively paying 27 percent more in federal income taxes than workers with similar skills in a small city or rural area,” according to The Atlantic.

The study asserts that city residents have higher incomes than their rural counterparts, but also contend with higher cost of living. This holds for not only pricey cities like L.A. and New York, but also Detroit.

Education, Featured, Public Education, Urban Poverty »

[13 Aug 2009 | No Comment | ]
Depressing Detroit Story of the Week

Several Detroit Public School employees have been charged with felonies in connection with corruption and missing funds totaling tens of millions of dollars, as The Wall Street Journal reports.
This is on top of another pressing problem the school is struggling with, a $259 million budget deficit.
The charges are pretty shocking – “A probe launched by [Emergency financial manager] Mr. Bobb uncovered paychecks going to 257 “ghost” employees who have yet to be accounted for,” the Journal explained.
“He said that approximately 500 illegal health-care dependents he uncovered have cost the district …

Crime, Featured, Urban Poverty »

[4 Aug 2009 | 2 Comments | ]
How Do You Stop An Epidemic of Violence?

I hesitate to even post this story, it is so violent, depressing, and hopeless.
At a recent cookout in East Baltimore, a dozen people were shot – which in itself is bad enough – but is part of a larger wave of violence that swept the city recently.
“The shootings on Conkling were not related to the shooting on Ashland, which might have sparked the shootings at Baltimore and Bond, which might have led to the shootings on Comet, which might have been retaliation for a shooting six months ago which was …

Featured, Good Ideas, Urban Planning, Urban Poverty »

[29 Jul 2009 | One Comment | ]
White House Launches Office of Urban Affairs

The Root Magazine is reporting that the White House has made good on its promise to establish an Office of Urban Affairs.
The office is designed to facilitate and coordinate programs that improve the lives of city dwellers. Adolfo Carrion, former Bronx borough president, will lead the office.
On the campaign trail President Obama promised to “stop seeing cities as the problem and start seeing them as a solution.”

The president has a lot on his plate right now, but this seems like a step in the right direction. We need a new vision …

Crime, Urban Poverty »

[16 Jul 2009 | 5 Comments | ]
A Disturbing Crime in Toledo

Last month, 66-year-old Robert Brundage was riding his bicycle home from a Jobs with Justice meeting at the library in Toledo’s Old West End neighborhood.
Around 6:30 p.m., he was knocked off his bike by a 15-year-old who lives nearby; the teen stole Brundage’s bicycle. Brundage died.
Brundage was well-known to many in the city – he was often seen riding his bike, or attending board or other meetings for the Collingwood Arts Center, the Toledo Poetry Foundation, the Urban Coalition, the MultiFaith Council of Northwest Ohio, Toledo Area Jobs With Justice …