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Home » Categories » Society » Opinions » Pushing Poor People Away » Printer Friendly

Pushing Poor People Away

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Submitted Wednesday, April 02, 2008
Steve Gillman (9,731)
http://www.IncreaseBrainPower.com
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Why do many poor people live just outside of our towns and cities? Because we won't let them live any closer. You see, low income residents are more likely to live in ugly homes and apartments. Other residents seek to ban such ugliness, and so attack the poor whether we - or they - realize that is what is happening. Some people may realize it on some level, and know that their laws and regulations are meant to push the poor out of town.

First Step: Get Rid Of Mobile Homes

This is a legal process which happens in almost every community at some point. As a town grows, residents become more worried about property values, and so less tolerant of "ugly" housing. Eventually, almost every town wants to ban mobile homes in particular.

The reason mobile homes exist is because they provide cheap housing, whether they are bought or rented. However, to many who do not live in them, they are considered ugly, so they must be kept out of town. First step: ban mobiles (and sometimes modulars) within the city limits.

The result? Mobile home parks and neighborhoods in the townships outside of the city limits. But in time, these townships too want to get rid of the mobiles, so they stop allowing new parks to be built. Next they pass laws and regulations stipulating that only new mobiles or those under five years old can be moved into the township. They eventually may just outlaw any additional mobile homes. At least they generally leave the existing ones alone, but if yours burns down, it has to be replaced with a frame house.

These rules and laws are presented as being good for residents. They help get rid of "substandard housing." This IS good for those with nicer homes, but those with lower incomes are pushed further and further away from the city and jobs there. Longer commutes mean more expense, and a lowered standard of living, of course. Actually, when one watches the process, it almost seems that the unspoken goal is to get rid of poor people. In any case getting rid of their "ugly" homes accomplishes this.

When hurricane Andrew devastated Homestead Township in 1992, I said people would soon try to ban mobiles there, in the name of public safety, with hurricanes as an excuse. Sure enough, lawmakers were soon suggesting this. I didn't follow what happened, but I doubt they were as concerned about people's safety as they were about the value of that land if they could get rid of the poor people and their ugly homes.

Consider that the safest homes might have three-foot-thick cement walls, but nobody was calling for that standard as a matter of law. Residents of all home types get a lot of warning in any case, and so can avoid being there when hurricanes come. People lived in mobile homes there because they are cheaper, so once again, if they're banned, the lower income folk have to move away, further from jobs.

Second Step: Rental Regulations

Having rental housing standards is another idea which claims to be about helping poor people. Nobody wants unsafe living conditions, after all. But when you look closely at how the process works, you see something else. The Northern Michigan town where I lived years ago instituted a rental code. I went and picked up a copy of it.

One of the many new regulations specified the required square inches of window space to allow light into a bedroom. This wasn't about creating a usable emergency exit, something already covered by other regulations. One rule required that there be no peeling paint - never mind whether the paint was dangerous or not. Many other statutes required all the niceties most people might like in their home. Only a few were about safety.

Consider why people rent places with peeling paint, small windows and drafty doors: they can afford these places! Now, when a landlord is forced to spend thousands on new windows, doors and paint, that cost is passed on to tenants. This is another way to make it too expensive for poor people to live in town. They move away, out to where the free market still provides affordable rentals.

Keep in mind that if they wanted and could afford the new paint and large windows, they would have rented a place with these features. Rentals like these are always available with or without regulation. All that such laws do is reduce the options people have.

Watch the reality of these legal processes, and it truly seems they are intended to push away the poor. Banning mobiles and forcing upgrades on ugly houses does make a town prettier. It increases home values too. Unfortunately, it also may be that this attack on "ugliness" is in part an attack on those seen as "ugly people." Certainly it shows that residents are comfortable banishing poor people and making them even poorer for the sake of property values and "prettiness."

Those who might actually care about this injustice have to see that the free market works. It provides what people need. Renters get lower rent if allowed, and then rent nicer places when they can afford them. Meanwhile, if you pass laws to prevent "ugly" homes, you simply make the tenants (and low-income home buyers) move away or pay more - either way you make poor people poorer.

Copyright Steve Gillman. For inventions, new product ideas, business ideas, story ideas, political and economic theories, deep thoughts, and a free course on How To Have New Ideas, visit: http://www.999ideas.com






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Comments on this article:


» left by Mr. Keith (2,892)
Mr. Keith
(243 days 18 hours ago.)

Reader Rating: 4 out of 5
A well written article. I have major disagreements because all of my history with "poor" people is they choose to not work too hard. They choose to stay at home and they choose to do drugs or drink.
I work 60+ hours a week and have little sympathy for those that choose to be lazy.
If you are poor, get a job. If you are underpaid, get two jobs.

I WAS once homeless with 3 children after my wife died and I lost my home and my job within 90 days. I worked for free to prove I could be a valuable employee and learned a construction trade. I pulled myself up because of hard work and sweat.
I have little to no sympathy for the "poor" because they got that way all by themselves.
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» left by Teresa Ortiz (4,776)
Teresa Ortiz
(242 days 17 hours ago.)

Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
Hi Steve, great job and points well made. It is true, the rich get richere and the poor get poorer. It's very difficult for the poor to step up to a higher level. Some very hard working families end up in circumstances beyond thier control. Of them, some are fortunate and get a second chance, others remain. I think a rental property owner should have some basic ethics. If they wouldn't live in "it" they shouldn't expect others to. Just because there isn't alot of money, doesn't mean the place has to be a dump. My husband is in construction and its sad sometimes to see how many wealthy people want him to cut corners and put cheap products in their rentals. Anyway, I could go on and on. Thanks for the thought provoking article. Blessings to you. Teresa
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» left by Ken McCreless (161)
Ken McCreless
(242 days 11 hours ago.)

Reader Rating: 3 out of 5
Steve,
The old "not in my neighborhood" brigade. I don't think folks mind poor people so much, just don't want to see them.
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» left by Gerry Charbonneau (364)
Gerry Charbonneau
(227 days 4 hours ago.)

Reader Rating: 4 out of 5
Good article Steve. One bone of contention though. Many of the "poor" who receive subsidized housing seem unable to appreciate a well constructed, safe and secure dwelling. I live in anapartment complex and from time to time a "less fortunate" family receives subsidized housing assistance. The families I've know have the following characteristics: absentee father, many offspring, works two or three jobs, children home alone even at night, no parental guidance. older child takes care of younger siblings; police often called to the apartment due to fighting, disorderly conduct or nosiness in the early hours of the morning. When this family is evicted they leave the safe and secure apartment in shambles: human excrement in the fridge and stove, wals damaged and in disrepair,carpeting set fire to and destroyed. So much for the tragically down and out. They get social assistance ...the other tenants have to foot the bill for the damages these folks inflicted on the building. Who's right or wrong in this instance?
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