December 07, 2017

By Niele Anderson

Contributing Writer

 

The Baldwin, Crenshaw, Leimert area is under serious re-development. You notice it on Crenshaw; from Jefferson to almost Florence. You see The Metro construction you hear about the upcoming redesign of the Baldwin Hills mall, you see and hear about local Churches Community Development Corporations building senior homes and schools and you see the new Kaiser Permanente. With all the great development, many are concerned about the other entities.

The Baldwin, Crenshaw Leimert are a part of the only predominately black community in Los Angeles. While some see it as growth many residents rapidly see Corporate developers, corporate landlords, and Wall Street speculators transform their neighborhoods into high-priced markets at the expense of working-class communities.

On Dec 2 over 700 attendees came together for the Resist Gentrification Action Summit. The event brought together the AIDS Healthcare Foundation’s Housing of Human Rights project and over 40 tenant rights, civil rights, faith-based and social justice organizations to discuss the community re-developments.

Event organizer Damien Goodman founder of the Crenshaw Subway Coalition,

noted, ““Sixty percent of the room was black, but the rest was brown and yellow coming together, If I’m a powerful person trying to gentrify the community, I’d be a little bit scared today.”

The summit sought to address the issue of gentrification through plenaries and breakout panels focusing on combating gentrification, promoting community wealth building, and demanding development without displacement. The all-day summit was held at Audubon Middle School located in Leimert Park. The summit tackled three key objectives:

1.) Unite behind the ongoing effort to repeal the Costa-Hawkins Rental Act, allowing localities to strengthen protections against rent increases.

2.) Share protective strategies to keep residents in their homes and neighborhoods, such as building tenant power, stopping criminalization as a tool of gentrification, countering real estate speculation, and more.

3.) Share community wealth-building tools to improve communities without displacement, such as community land trusts, cooperatives, quality community-controlled public housing, and more.

Convening groups of the historic summit include: AIDS Healthcare Foundation, Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment - Los Angeles, Black Community Clergy & Labor Alliance, CDTech, Crenshaw Subway Coalition, Eviction Defense Network, Fannie Lou Hamer In­stitute, and Los Angeles Community Action Network.

Supporting organizations include: Advocates for Black Strategic Altern­atives, African American Cultural Center, A. Philip Randolph Institute, Association of Black Social Workers-Greater Los Angeles, Black Lives Matter-Los Angeles, Black Women for Wellness, The Church Without Walls, Clergy & Laity United for Economic Justice, Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles, Coalition to Preserve LA, Community Coalition, Creating Justice, Democratic Socialists of America-Los Angeles, Glendale Tenants Union, Holman United Methodist Church, Housing Long Beach, Housing Now, Hyde Park Organizational Partnership for Empowerment, Inquilinos Unidos, Labor/Community Strategy Center-Fight for the Soul of the Cities, LA Voice, Los Angeles Black Worker Center, Los Angeles Council of Black Professional Engineers, Los Angeles Tenants Union, National Action Network-Los Angeles, NAACP-Beverly Hills/Hollywood Branch, Pico Neighborhood Association, SoLA Food Co-op, Southern Christian Leadership Conference-Southern California, Strategic Actions for a Just Economy, T.R.U.S.T. South LA, Union de Vecinos, Uplift Inglewood, Venice Community Housing, and Youth Justice Coalition.

For more information visit: www.housinghumanright.org.

Category: Community