It's still gentrification, guys.
Blacks' Majority in D.C. Slipping
By BRIAN WESTLEY
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Much has changed since Ben's Chili Bowl opened nearly 50 years ago on a bustling strip known as America's Black Broadway for its thriving black-owned shops and theaters.
Back then, the diner was a popular hangout for black bankers, doctors and blue-collar workers. Jazz greats Duke Ellington and Ella Fitzgerald could be found enjoying chili half-smokes and milkshakes after performing at nearby clubs.
Now, the crowd at the Washington landmark is sometimes mostly white, reflecting a neighborhood metamorphosis characterized by high-end condominiums and businesses like Starbucks.
"Sometimes you look around and wonder, 'Where are all the black people?'" said Virginia Ali, who opened the diner with her husband, Ben, in 1958.
A similar transformation is happening across Washington as the black population declines and more white residents and other ethnic groups move in. Demographers say if the trend continues the District of Columbia could lose its longtime majority-black status within 10 years. The changes are shaking up city politics, reshaping neighborhoods and displacing longtime residents.
Washington's black population peaked at 71 percent in 1970 as tens of thousands of white residents left for the suburbs, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. But by 2006, the estimated number of black residents had fallen to 57 percent.
At the same time, the population of white residents, which plunged from 65 percent in 1950 to 27 percent 30 years later, is growing. By 2006, the census estimated that 38 percent of D.C. residents were white. The city's Asian and Hispanic populations also are climbing.
Analysts attribute the shift to lower-income and middle-class black residents leaving for the suburbs while young white professionals and others able to afford expensive housing are moving in. The newcomers to D.C. are being lured by a robust economy, new condos and a chance to escape worsening highway congestion.
"The city today is occupied by a lot of singles and childless couples who have put incomes together," said Robert Lang, director of the Metropolitan Institute at Virginia Tech. "I don't think it's a straight-on white gentrification - it's more affluent as a whole."
Washington isn't the only city where neighborhoods have gentrified in recent years. But D.C. is one of the few places seeing such dramatic change, said William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution. He expects the city will cease to be majority black by 2015.
The city's diversifying racial makeup is being reflected in local politics. Adrian M. Fenty, who became mayor in January, is black, but many of his appointees are not. The police and fire chiefs are white, as is the city administrator. The new chancellor of the city's public schools is Korean-American. Those positions were held by black officials under previous mayors.
"Probably, at some point in the near future, we'll see a white mayor," said Dwight Cropp, who once worked for former Mayor Marion Barry and now teaches public policy at George Washington University.
Cropp said such an election would be significant - Washington hasn't had a white mayor since Congress passed legislation in 1973 allowing D.C. residents to choose their own mayor and city council.
Kenneth Carroll, 47, a writer who has lived in Washington his entire life, said the changes mean the loss of what be believes once defined D.C. - a sense of self-determination and self-confidence among black residents that stemmed from their majority status. That pride was instilled in everything from the community's political activism to the rich music scene, which included homegrown artists like Chuck Brown, the godfather of funk-based go-go.
"A lot of blacks saw D.C. as sort of the mecca," said Carroll, who is black. "You came here for education, to get a good job."
It was in those years, however, that many black neighborhoods fell into decline. Businesses and residents fled when rioting broke out in 1968 after Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated. That was followed by the cocaine epidemic of the 1980s. Buildings also were razed to make way for a subway line.
Many neighborhoods are now booming. In Columbia Heights, cranes dot the skyline as workers finish construction on a massive retail complex. Condos nearby are advertised at $300,000 and up.
Change has also come near the new convention center on the edge of downtown, where Shirley Williams is trying to hold on to the apartment she has lived in for 33 years. Her landlord recently agreed to sell to a developer who plans to tear it down.
"I've been here through all the rough times and now that it's getting better they want me to leave," the retired school teacher's assistant said. "I don't think that's right."
Council member Jim Graham, who represents some of the city's most racially mixed neighborhoods, said city officials have worked to preserve thousands of low-income housing units amid a red-hot housing market.
"If I wanted to live in a neighborhood where everybody looked and acted like me, I have many choices," said Graham, who is white. "I like a diverse neighborhood."
Still, in May a record 56,463 families were on a waiting list for vouchers to have their housing costs subsidized by the city, according to the latest statistics from the D.C. Housing Authority.
There are indications of growing frustration. Some new residents have complained about unsupervised youths targeting them by throwing rocks. And a local blog has posted complaints about graffiti that reads: "Go Home Rich White People."
Meanwhile, at Ben's Chili Bowl, Ali said she is pleased to see much of the city recovering after years of decline. And Ali and her sons, who now oversee the restaurant, welcome both newcomers and loyal customers alike. She is nostalgic, though, for the way things were when U Street felt like one big family.
While diversity is good and is change inevitable, she said, "you lose the closeness of an ethnic community."
Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Sorry, guys, but are you listening to yourselves talk?
New Orleans Retains a Black Majority
By JOHN MORENO GONZALES
Associated Press Writer
NEW ORLEANS - New Orleans is narrowly retaining a black majority after Hurricane Katrina, according to a study released Wednesday by The Brookings Institution.
The study determined that while blacks left the city at a much faster rate than whites, New Orleans was still 58 percent black during 2006. Before Katrina, which hit Aug. 29, 2005, the city was 67 percent black, according to the U.S. census.
"It's certainly still a predominantly African-American city," said William Frey, a demographer and senior fellow at Washington, D.C.-based Brookings. "Speculation that there was not going to be a black majority in the city is not true, according to these estimates."
While several studies have examined utility hookups and postal deliveries to estimate the population that has returned to New Orleans since Katrina, The Brookings Institution study is the first comprehensive look at the shifting demographics since the storm.
Through a special arrangement with the U.S. Census Bureau, Brookings gleaned statistics from new census data also released Wednesday that the institution called a "fuller picture on who moved out and who is coming back."
The Census Bureau estimated that New Orleans had about 455,000 residents a month before Katrina hit and was down to about 223,400 in July 2006. Other studies have shown that the city has regained approximately 60 percent of its population.
Allison Plyer, deputy director of the Greater New Orleans Community Data Center, a nonprofit that has looked at population return to the city, said: "It's very important to remember these numbers are from last year and there's been significant change in the population since."
Plyer said an estimated 80,000 people have returned to New Orleans from 2006 through today. But like the experts at Brookings, she believed that the city's majority black population would not be supplanted.
"It's probably still true that the city has fewer African-American residents than it did pre-Katrina, but it probably has more African-Americans than it did last year," Plyer said, noting increased public school enrollment and other factors.
The Brookings study also found that metropolitan New Orleans had become "more well-educated, less poor and had a higher percentage of homeowners" since the storm.
For instance, 21 percent of the people who left the city after Katrina had less than a high school education, while 32 percent who have moved to the city after the storm are college graduates.
Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.