{"id":4170,"date":"2020-10-06T09:31:55","date_gmt":"2020-10-06T09:31:55","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/9thstreetjournal.org\/?p=4170"},"modified":"2023-03-27T15:52:16","modified_gmt":"2023-03-27T15:52:16","slug":"as-gentrification-marches-on-braggtown-is-latest-durham-community-fighting-back","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/9thstreetjournal.org\/2020\/10\/06\/as-gentrification-marches-on-braggtown-is-latest-durham-community-fighting-back\/","title":{"rendered":"As gentrification marches on, Braggtown is latest Durham community fighting back"},"content":{"rendered":"
Braggtown, like many predominantly Black neighborhoods in Durham, was settled by formerly enslaved people.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Liberated from the vast Stagville plantation<\/a> at the end of the Civil War, these men and women migrated south of the Eno River a few miles to what was then a rural Durham County crossroads.<\/span><\/p>\n Today, residents of Braggtown are at another kind of crossroads for their community: the proposed development of hundreds of upscale homes and apartments that could level forest land in the neighborhood, cause property taxes to rise, and squeeze out low-income residents.<\/span><\/p>\n It would be the kind of transformation that has hopped around Durham for years, as the city\u2019s resurgence has made overlooked \u2013 and often neglected \u2013 neighborhoods targets for private investment.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n \u201c<\/span>There was a time, 12 years ago, when downtown was pretty boarded up [with] not much investment,” former City Manager Thomas Bonfield said<\/a> in August, shortly before retiring.\u00a0 “People wanted Durham to be different. And I think that we have worked really hard across a lot of sectors to create a different Durham.\u201d\u00a0 <\/span>But this transformation, Bonfield said then, means the city and its communities need to determine what they want from Durham\u2019s growth.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n \u201cI\u2019ve lived here all my life,\u201d said Constance Wright, vice chair of the Braggtown Community Association.\u00a0 \u201cIt just hurts to see how all the different parts of town that I’ve lived in has been either gentrified, or a highway has gone through it, or the houses are no longer there.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n \u201cAnd then when you hear a city council member tell you that if somebody buys an empty lot beside your house,\u201d said Wright, \u201cand wants to build a million-dollar house beside your house, that your property taxes are gonna go up because of that house and there’s nothing you can do about it. I mean how does that sound?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n Already, community opposition led the Durham Planning Commission in <\/span>August<\/span><\/a> to vote against two adjacent rezoning proposals that would allow nearly 900 apartments, townhouses and single-family homes on around 180 acres, mostly woodlands, in Braggtown. The majority of the land is owned by Leonard B. Shaffer of Joven Properties, a longtime developer in Durham.<\/span><\/p>\n Despite the commission\u2019s vote, the planning department staff says that the development is compatible with city guidelines, and the matter goes next to the City Council. A hearing is tentatively scheduled for Nov. 16.<\/span><\/p>\n Life in Braggtown<\/b><\/p>\n Over time, parts of Braggtown have become a vibrant commercial hub with hundreds of businesses catering to a predominantly Black and Hispanic clientele.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n It is a reminder for some of the other communities of color that were displaced in the 1970s<\/a> by urban renewal and the construction of the Durham Freeway.\u00a0 <\/span>Those are painful memories for longtime residents such as Wright and Vannessa Mason-Evans, chair of the Braggtown Community Association.<\/span><\/p>\n \u201cI have lived in Braggtown all my life,\u201d said Mason-Evans.\u00a0 \u201cI am a descendant of slaves from both sides of my family. My mother’s side were slaves from Granville County and my father is a descendant of slaves from the Chatham County area.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n Gentrification, by its very nature, targets communities that don\u2019t have a lot of resources to put up a fight. They are often neighborhoods that have struggled to gain political power and win amenities and attention from City Hall.<\/span><\/p>\n Braggtown residents are mostly lower-income and people of color. According to census figures, the typical median household income is around $32,000, less than 60 percent of the county average. More than a third of the residents live below the poverty line. Housing is modest. The median value of owner-occupied homes is $108,000, about half the county average, and three-quarters of the community\u2019s housing are rentals.<\/span><\/p>\n All this makes it a challenge for people like Mason-Evans and Wright, who are trying to convince politicians and potential allies that Braggtown wants to shape its own destiny.<\/span><\/p>\n For years, they haven\u2019t had much help.<\/span><\/p>\n \u201cWe’ve been wanting a community center for years ever since I was a little girl; my parents wanted a community center,\u201d said Mason-Evans. \u201cBut the city has never given us that, and they’ve always said we were annexed out. And they have never wanted to give us any type of funding,\u201d Mason-Evans said.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n So getting after-school programs and other services has been a struggle, she said. The only community space available to a select few residents was a private recreation center at the Oxford Manor apartments.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n A community organizes<\/b><\/p>\n In an effort to revitalize and beautify the community, Mason-Evans helped found the Braggtown Community Association four years ago. Wright would join the Association shortly after.<\/span><\/p>\n Mason-Evans has worked with the Parks and Recreation Department to clean up<\/span> Lakeview Park, to reopen a closed-down county library branch this year, and to establish a Braggtown community garden.<\/span><\/p>\n In Red Maple Park where Wright lives, the community holds neighborhood clean-up events and has been working with TreesDurham, an advocate for urban forest preservation, to plant trees in a park rebuilt in 2015.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n \u201cMy dream has always been to have an eating community where, you know, people can just walk and pull food off the trees,\u201d Wright said.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n This was the community trying to improve Braggtown, Mason-Evans points out, actions that have increased local developers’ interest in the neighborhood.<\/span><\/p>\n In an effort to save the history and heritage of <\/span>Braggtown<\/span><\/a>, the community association zeroed in on the proposed housing development along East Carver Street and Old Oxford Road. It would remove a broad swath of woodlands at a time when one of the city\u2019s highest priorities is the preservation of its <\/span>tree canopy<\/span><\/a>.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n This has brought on a partnership with TreesDurham. One of the developers originally agreed to preserve about 20 percent of the trees. Community opposition boosted that commitment to 21 percent.<\/span><\/p>\n \u201cThe environmental justice concerns of clear-cutting forest within a historically Black neighborhood are . . . important to consider,\u201d said Jason Arrol, a Braggtown resident and community association member during the August planning commission meeting.<\/span><\/p>\n \u201cWe’re getting development that is centered around urban sprawl,\u201d said Katie Rose Levin, executive director of TreesDurham. \u201cThe main purpose is to build a lot of houses very quickly with the most profit for the developer. The design aggravates climate change, cements a reliance on fossil fuels, creates flooding and heat islands and heat sickness because there’s no emphasis on conservation.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n The community is dissatisfied with this 21 percent increase, calling for at least 35 percent. They\u2019re also calling for guarantees of affordable housing.<\/span><\/p>\n \u201cIn the beginning, they only want to give us 10 affordable houses,\u201d Wright said. \u201cThat was a slap in the face. Then they turned around and they said 20 affordable houses. That’s still a slap in the face.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n \u201cWe’re trying to collaborate and make a beautiful community for Black and Brown people,\u201d said Mason-Evans. \u201cWe’re trying to make sure we have affordable housing for people and that we’re not just making our community beautiful for [the city] to come push us out and let white people come live in this community.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n A template<\/b><\/p>\n The fight for Braggtown has become a template of sorts for other neighborhoods looking for a more equitable development process.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Three miles to the southeast, across I-85, sits the Merrick Moore neighborhood, where resident Bonita Green is worried about 400 acres of woodland purchased for development in her community and surrounding ones.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n \u201cOur concerns are around safety as well as the environment and affordable housing,\u201d Green said, noting that as trees come down and developments go up, property taxes have also increased.<\/span><\/p>\n Like the Braggtown residents, Merrick Moore won a recent rezoning skirmish. At a Sept. 22\u00a0 meeting, the planning commission voted unanimously against the Merrick Moore rezoning proposal. A final decision, as with Braggtown, will come from council in six to eight weeks. But Green described the vote as a victory.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n The Walltown community has also been working with the city and developers to understand what the renovation of Northgate Mall will mean for them. <\/span>Dataworks NC<\/span>, which seeks to empower citizens, <\/span><\/a>highlighted community concerns around resident input during this development. One typical comment gathered by the group: \u201c<\/span>I\u2019m concerned that the developer does not respect or understand the community, and as a result will change the community for the worse.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n The view from the planning commission<\/b><\/p>\n