Moondoggie said:
"Gentrification is awesome!"
Really easy to support gentrification when it is no skin off of our affluent Baylor grad backs, as we are not affected by their side of this at all. Sure, not all of us are monied, but losing your neighborhood and then drowning in property taxes that cannot be come up with…. Come on, folks. Total tragedy for the poor usually. To see this issue only from the viewpoint of one with abundance( and read this thread as it is apparent that none of us are hurting), is to barely see the issue at all.
And I have no solution for this problem, but just realize there will be no solution till we consider both sides of the problem equally.
Sic em
Moondoggie, I appreciate your viewpoint and your heart. Unfortunately, there isn't a good solution. Gentrification causes alot of pain to the poor, especially the poor that rent. Wages are not increasing at the same rate as cost of living.
I talked to Jimmy Dorrell, the founder of Mission Waco, years ago about it, and he admitted that he was struggling with how to help North Waco improve beyond where it already had that did not encourage gentrification.
I look at the other side though, and I see Jackson, MS. It is a failed city. It can't even provide clean drinking water to its residents. It is a great example of city mismanagement and little to no investment in the city. In the 90's when World Com was the only Fortune 500 company in Mississippi, the city basically shoved them to the suburbs. They were planning to build a new headquarters in downtown Jackson. They needed approval from the city council to have an 11 foot wide sidewalk on one side of the building, instead of the 12 foot sidewalk required. The city council told them no, and they said goodbye. The suburb that they moved to loved having high paying exec and tech jobs move there. Jackson offers no future to its residents, especially the poor ones.
I agree that is painful, but so is the alternative. I have no solutions either.