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Object.assign.bind() : function (target) { for (var i = 1; i < arguments.length; i++) { var source = arguments[i]; for (var key in source) { if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(source, key)) { target[key] = source[key]; } } } return target; }; return _extends.apply(this, arguments); }\nfunction _objectWithoutProperties(source, excluded) { if (source == null) return {}; var target = _objectWithoutPropertiesLoose(source, excluded); var key, i; if (Object.getOwnPropertySymbols) { var sourceSymbolKeys = Object.getOwnPropertySymbols(source); for (i = 0; i < sourceSymbolKeys.length; i++) { key = sourceSymbolKeys[i]; if (excluded.indexOf(key) >= 0) continue; if (!Object.prototype.propertyIsEnumerable.call(source, key)) continue; target[key] = source[key]; } } return target; }\nfunction _objectWithoutPropertiesLoose(source, excluded) { if (source == null) return {}; var target = {}; var sourceKeys = Object.keys(source); var key, i; for (i = 0; i < sourceKeys.length; i++) { key = sourceKeys[i]; if (excluded.indexOf(key) >= 0) continue; target[key] = source[key]; } return target; }\n/* @jsxRuntime classic */\n/* @jsx mdx */\n\nvar _frontmatter = {\n  \"date\": \"2022-02-24\",\n  \"title\": \"Black exodus from Berkeley\",\n  \"bylineName\": [\"Cameron Fozi\", \"Veronica Roseborough\", \"Annie Lin\"],\n  \"bylineUrl\": [\"https://www.dailycal.org/author/cfozi\", \"https://www.dailycal.org/author/vroseborough\", \"https://www.dailycal.org/author/annielin\"],\n  \"subhead\": \"Amid gentrification and displacement, opportunity heads elsewhere\",\n  \"featuredImage\": \"../images/exodus-visual.JPG\",\n  \"imageAttribution\": \"Aishwarya Jayadeep | Senior Staff\",\n  \"aboutStory\": \"Data for this project come from the California Department of Education and the U.S. Census.\"\n};\nvar makeShortcode = function makeShortcode(name) {\n  return function MDXDefaultShortcode(props) {\n    console.warn(\"Component \" + name + \" was not imported, exported, or provided by MDXProvider as global scope\");\n    return mdx(\"div\", props);\n  };\n};\nvar BlackPopulationCensus = makeShortcode(\"BlackPopulationCensus\");\nvar BUSDBlackEnrollment = makeShortcode(\"BUSDBlackEnrollment\");\nvar DistrictMap = makeShortcode(\"DistrictMap\");\nvar layoutProps = {\n  _frontmatter: _frontmatter\n};\nvar MDXLayout = \"wrapper\";\nreturn function MDXContent(_ref) {\n  var components = _ref.components,\n    props = _objectWithoutProperties(_ref, _excluded);\n  return mdx(MDXLayout, _extends({}, layoutProps, props, {\n    components: components,\n    mdxType: \"MDXLayout\"\n  }), mdx(\"p\", null, \"In 1970, Berkeley was home to more than 27,000 Black residents. Today, less than half remain.\"), mdx(\"br\", null), mdx(BlackPopulationCensus, {\n    mdxType: \"BlackPopulationCensus\"\n  }), mdx(\"br\", null), mdx(\"p\", null, \"The charts show the change in Berkeley and Alameda County\\u2019s Black population from 1950 to 2020, according to US Census data. As reflected in both graphs, the population steadily increased from 1950-1970. However, in Berkeley specifically, there is a sharp decline after 1970. In Alameda County, we see the population start to level off after 1990, hovering at about 185,000 today. (Note: data do not include residents who reported two or more races.)\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"According to Brandi Summers, campus assistant professor of geography and global metropolitan studies, the increase in the city of Berkeley and Alameda County\\u2019s Black population began during the Great Migration.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"While the first stage of the migration entailed the movement of Black people from the Black Belt states to the east coast and midwest, it wasn\\u2019t until the second stage that the migrants came to California en masse during World War II.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"\\u201CPrior to that 1950 period, \\u2026 you had Black folks being encouraged to come not only to escape Jim Crow racism, but also for opportunity,\\u201D Summers said.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"That opportunity came in the form of industry, specifically wartime industry, according to Summers. Industries such as shipbuilding and munitions created an abundance of jobs, attracting Black people from states such as Louisiana and Texas.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"Those who came to escape Jim Crow, however, were met with more of the same.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"As a result of \", mdx(\"a\", {\n    parentName: \"p\",\n    \"href\": \"https://dailycal-projects.netlify.app/2021-07-10-redlining\"\n  }, \"redlining and restrictive covenants\"), \", Black migrants were confined to settling in wartime housing in specific areas.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"\\u201CThere was a period in which 90% of the Black population was living in West Oakland,\\u201D Summers said. \\u201CDuring that time, you had more dilapidated housing because a lot of it was intended to be temporary war housing, or it was that people were stacked up in multifamily units.\\u201D\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"According to Summers, aside from being thought of as temporary and in a state of disrepair, housing in these areas was \\u201Cintentionally disinvested.\\u201D Instead, Summers said, funds were distributed to white residents so they could move away from the city center and into the suburbs.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"Only 20 years later, Berkeley\\u2019s Black population leveled off and began to decline around the early 1970s: The community was being displaced.\"), mdx(\"br\", null), mdx(BUSDBlackEnrollment, {\n    mdxType: \"BUSDBlackEnrollment\"\n  }), mdx(\"br\", null), mdx(\"p\", null, \"According to data from the California Department of Education, Black enrollment in both BUSD and Alameda County school districts dropped significantly after the 1997-1998 academic year.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"According to Summers, environmental degradation, gentrification and freeway building have made much of the East Bay inhospitable to Black communities.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"\\u201CMost of the industrial businesses were in West Oakland, and so, it was easier for people to get to their jobs if they lived close,\\u201D Summers said. \\u201CBut of course, the downside is if you have all this industrial waste or pollution, these aren't the most desirable areas to live in. So typically, it's the most poor or marginalized communities that are left to live in the neighborhoods that are essentially most dangerous in terms of the environmental impact.\\u201D\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"On top of that, the construction of freeways cut the land up in such a way that it separated Black communities from businesses, opportunities and access to the rest of Oakland. According to Summers, the community was sending a message: \\u201CWe don\\u2019t want you here anymore.\\u201D\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"Summers also noted the quality of education while she was growing up in Oakland in the 1980s.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"\\u201COakland Unified School District was notorious just in terms of low standards, low funding and there were a lot of people who felt as though it was pure racism on display,\\u201D Summers said. \\u201CYou\\u2019re seeing the ways they\\u2019re not training teachers; they\\u2019re not providing adequate opportunities for students. And instead, it\\u2019s kind of this school-to-prison pipeline.\\u201D\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"According to data from the California Department of Education, Black enrollment in both BUSD and Alameda County public school districts dropped significantly after the 1997-98 school year.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"Amid the lessening opportunity of majority-Black neighborhoods in the East Bay, communities in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta arose as opportunities for a better quality of life.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"\\u201CIn the \\u201880s and the \\u201890s, there were more opportunities for middle-class Black and other people of color to move out to these suburban locations where they're looking for better schools, are looking for more space, bigger homes, etc.,\\u201D Summers said. \\u201CSo you have that happening, which isn't necessarily displacement; it's an opportunity.\\u201D\"), mdx(\"br\", null), mdx(DistrictMap, {\n    mdxType: \"DistrictMap\"\n  }), mdx(\"br\", null), mdx(\"p\", null, \"The interactive map provides a school district-specific view of changes in enrollment of Black students across some northern California counties. It visualizes data on the difference in Black student enrollment between the 1990-1991 and 2020-2021 school years in 18 counties in and around the Bay Area, including Alameda, Contra Costa, Lake, Marin, Mendocino, Merced, Napa, Sacramento, San Benito, San Francisco, San Joaquin, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Solano, Sonoma, Stanislaus and Yolo. The data do not account for students attending private schools or for the many \", mdx(\"a\", {\n    parentName: \"p\",\n    \"href\": \"https://calmatters.org/newsletters/whatmatters/2020/07/inside-californias-black-exodus/\"\n  }, \"Black people leaving the greater Bay Area or the state of California altogether\"), \".\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"Each circle marker represents a school district. Larger markers represent great decreases while smaller markers signify small increases or decreases in the raw enrollment of Black students in the district. While darker orange markers represent decreases in the percent composition of Black students in each district, lighter orange markers represent increases in the composition. Very small gray dots represent school districts from which data were not available.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"In the East Bay, the largest decreases in the percent composition of Black students are in BUSD, Oakland Unified, Emeryville Unified and West Contra Costa Unified. Meanwhile, Antioch Unified, Brentwood Elementary and Liberty Union High in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta see the largest increases in Black student enrollment.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"To address the decline in Berkeley\\u2019s Black population, City Councilmember Rigel Robinson suggested increasing student housing near campus to mitigate the gentrification of the surrounding areas of Berkeley.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"\\u201CAs the campus grows, students must look further and further from campus to find housing, competing with long-time Berkeley families in the process,\\u201D Robinson said in an email.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"The student housing search, therefore, prompts landlords and property owners in South Berkeley to cater toward student renters, Robinson added in the email.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"Robinson also emphasized the importance of rectifying \\u201Cthe mistakes of the past\\u201D through rezoning, especially with the update of the city of Berkeley\\u2019s Housing Element, a comprehensive document that will serve as the city\\u2019s housing plan from 2023 to 2031, according to the city of Berkeley\\u2019s website.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"\\u201CWe must eliminate exclusionary zoning, bring more affordable housing to our neighborhoods, and welcome an influx of new student housing near campus to contain and reverse the student housing crisis and curtail the gentrifying force of the university,\\u201D Robinson said in the email.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"According to Darrell Owens, transit and housing activist and member of East Bay for Everyone, the trend in Berkeley may even out, but \\u201Cit\\u2019ll never reverse.\\u201D\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"\\u201CIt\\u2019s been a problem for such a long time, \\u2026 to sound the alarm bells is kind of late at this point,\\u201D Owens said. \\u201CThe vast majority of Black residents have already left. \\u2026 The solutions we needed were needed decades ago.\\u201D\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"As for the restoration of the Black population in Berkeley and the greater East Bay, Summers acknowledged the need to decouple livability and habitability in order to provide adequate housing for all but recognized that such a process is difficult due to the inherent link between housing and profit accumulation.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"Moreover, Summers was uncertain about which factors would draw Black communities back to Berkeley.\"), mdx(\"p\", null, \"\\u201CI\\u2019m trying to think about the conditions that would make it so that a city would want its most marginalized people to come,\\u201D Summers said. \\u201CI just can\\u2019t see what that would be right now.\\u201D\"), mdx(\"br\", null), mdx(\"p\", null, mdx(\"em\", {\n    parentName: \"p\"\n  }, \"Cameron Fozi is the projects editor. Contact him at \", mdx(\"a\", {\n    parentName: \"em\",\n    \"href\": \"mailto:cfozi@dailycal.org\"\n  }, \"cfozi@dailycal.org\"), \".\")), mdx(\"p\", null, mdx(\"em\", {\n    parentName: \"p\"\n  }, \"Veronica Roseborough is the deputy projects editor. Contact her at \", mdx(\"a\", {\n    parentName: \"em\",\n    \"href\": \"mailto:vroseborough@dailycal.org\"\n  }, \"vroseborough@dailycal.org\"), \".\")), mdx(\"p\", null, mdx(\"em\", {\n    parentName: \"p\"\n  }, \"Annie Lin is a projects developer. Contact her at \", mdx(\"a\", {\n    parentName: \"em\",\n    \"href\": \"mailto:annielin@dailycal.org\"\n  }, \"annielin@dailycal.org\"), \".\")));\n}\n;\nMDXContent.isMDXComponent = true;","frontmatter":{"date":"February 24, 2022","title":"Black exodus from Berkeley","bylineName":["Cameron Fozi","Veronica Roseborough","Annie Lin"],"bylineUrl":["https://www.dailycal.org/author/cfozi","https://www.dailycal.org/author/vroseborough","https://www.dailycal.org/author/annielin"],"subhead":"Amid gentrification and displacement, opportunity heads elsewhere","aboutStory":"Data for this project come from the California Department of Education and the U.S. Census.","hideHeroImage":null,"featuredImage":{"childImageSharp":{"resize":{"src":"/static/2c9425a4e3b59d8ed7d84da5dcc2d695/47498/exodus-visual.jpg","height":773,"width":1200},"gatsbyImageData":{"layout":"constrained","placeholder":{"fallback":"data:image/jpeg;base64,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"},"images":{"fallback":{"src":"/static/2c9425a4e3b59d8ed7d84da5dcc2d695/6ea33/exodus-visual.jpg","srcSet":"/static/2c9425a4e3b59d8ed7d84da5dcc2d695/ea5c0/exodus-visual.jpg 188w,\n/static/2c9425a4e3b59d8ed7d84da5dcc2d695/eb289/exodus-visual.jpg 375w,\n/static/2c9425a4e3b59d8ed7d84da5dcc2d695/6ea33/exodus-visual.jpg 750w,\n/static/2c9425a4e3b59d8ed7d84da5dcc2d695/4ba8e/exodus-visual.jpg 1500w","sizes":"(min-width: 750px) 750px, 100vw"},"sources":[{"srcSet":"/static/2c9425a4e3b59d8ed7d84da5dcc2d695/ab1ed/exodus-visual.webp 188w,\n/static/2c9425a4e3b59d8ed7d84da5dcc2d695/33fba/exodus-visual.webp 375w,\n/static/2c9425a4e3b59d8ed7d84da5dcc2d695/70553/exodus-visual.webp 750w,\n/static/2c9425a4e3b59d8ed7d84da5dcc2d695/7761f/exodus-visual.webp 1500w","type":"image/webp","sizes":"(min-width: 750px) 750px, 100vw"}]},"width":750,"height":483}}},"imageAttribution":"Aishwarya Jayadeep | Senior Staff","imageCaption1":null,"embeddedImages":null}}},"pageContext":{"slug":"2022-01-21-exodus"}},
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