Posted inHousing, Politics & Policy

In America’s Poorest State, Unhoused People May Soon Be Jailed

NEW ORLEANS — As the Louisiana state Senate debated what the National Homelessness Law Center says is “one of the cruelest anti-homeless bills in the country,” more than 50 mainly Black unhoused people sat and lay on the sidewalk in New Orleans’ Central City neighborhood.  The bill, which already passed overwhelmingly through the state’s Republican-dominated […]

Posted inPolitics & Policy, Technology

In Chicago, a Pentagon‑backed Lab Could Price Out Black Residents

CHICAGO — By the time Jerry Whirley heard that a $9 billion quantum-computing campus was coming a few blocks from his South Shore home, most of what he actually needed from his neighborhood, like somewhere to buy medicine or groceries, had already vanished.  He didn’t learn about “Quantum City” from the governor or the mayor, […]

Posted inHousing, Partner Content

In the Shadow of the Obama Center, Chicago Residents Fight Displacement

Originally published by In These Times When Barack Obama met with Chicago residents about his proposed presidential center in 2018, the former president downplayed the threat that gentrification might pose to their communities.  “We’ve got such a long way to go in terms of economic development before you’re even going to start seeing the prospect of significant gentrification,” Obama said […]

Posted inClimate Change, Environmental Justice

Moving South, Black Americans Are Weathering Climate Change

This is the fifth installment of a yearlong Capital B series on the country’s current Black migration, the most significant movement of Black people in the U.S. in 50 years. It was made possible, in part, by a grant from the Environmental and Epistemic Justice Initiative at Wake Forest University. Stephanie Roberson wasn’t expecting this phone call from […]

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