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The Changing Face of Public
Housing
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Alexander Polikoff shares his insight with
students on the Gautreaux housing suit. |
It was a bitter-gray Chicago morning when about 30 Northwestern students
got a first-hand glimpse of what daily life in public housing was like.
The daylong tour took them through some of Chicagos notorious public
housing sites, including Cabrini-Green, Robert Lathrop Homes, and Stateway
Gardens.
Accompanying the students on their tour, IPR Faculty Fellow Dan
A. Lewis, professor of education and social policy, likened what
they were seeing to remnants of an urban civilization that represent a
tragic, but significant, period in American civilization. Its
one thing to read about these sites in books and quite another to come
down here and talk with the residents, he said. Putting these
two together makes an incredibly strong learning experience.
The public-housing tour capped off the second event in the Inaugural
Undergraduate Series, The Changing Face of Public Housing: Lessons
from Chicago, in February. It covered the topic from a variety of
viewpoints, including those of academics, students, activists, and residents.
IPR was one of the events cosponsors.
Dr. Susan Popkin, senior research associate at the Urban Institute in
Washington, D.C., gave the keynote lecture on Hope VI, the $5 billion,
1992 federal program, which is funding the demolition and replacement
of severely distressed public housing. In two studies of more than 1,600
public housing residents in 13 cities, Popkin and her colleagues found
evidence that the residents who move do end up in better housing in better
neighborhoods, but many of these families are still struggling to adjust
to the private market. Others face barriers that may prevent them from
making a successful transition out of dilapidated public housing. Solutions
to help these residents, such as transitional housing, are costly, but
without them, the program will leave many behind in precarious conditions,
she advised.
The lead lawyer in the original Gautreaux housing suit, Alexander Polikoff,
spoke about his experiences and gave a historical overview in Waiting
for Gautreaux: Reflections and Conundrums about Chicago's Long-Running
Public Housing Desegregation Case. Polikoff is Senior Staff Counsel
with Business and Professional People for the Public Interest.
Three IPR faculty fellows, sociologist James
Rosenbaum, ethnographer Kathryn Edin, and economist Greg
Duncan, have also studied the challenges that low-income public
housing residents face in moving out of decaying, crime-ridden projects
into low- and middle-income communities: program inefficiencies, a tight
housing market, and predatory landlords to name a few. In their study
of Gautreaux families, they found that the barriers they face in relocating
are large, but not insurmountable.
Northwestern undergraduates Laurie Jaeckel and Dale Vieregge started the series to encourage undergraduates to engage policymakers and to understand the importance of social policy.