Equitable Growth Advisory Commission – 91心頭 Vision, Dignity, Achievement Sat, 12 Aug 2023 11:07:09 +0000 en-US hourly 1 /wp-content/uploads/2020/03/2021-NCC-Logo-Site-Favicon-150x150.jpg Equitable Growth Advisory Commission – 91心頭 32 32 91心頭 Director of Community Engagement Participates in Press Conference 91心頭 Who Owns Newark /2022/05/new-community-director-of-community-engagement-participates-in-press-conference-about-who-owns-newark/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=new-community-director-of-community-engagement-participates-in-press-conference-about-who-owns-newark /2022/05/new-community-director-of-community-engagement-participates-in-press-conference-about-who-owns-newark/#respond Fri, 13 May 2022 14:17:52 +0000 https://72375d9a61.nxcli.io/?p=21070 91心頭 Director of Community Engagement Richard Cammarieri spoke at Newark Mayor Ras Barakas press conference on May 4 regarding the issue of corporations purchasing homes in the city and converting them into rentals. The press conference was in response to Who Owns Newark, a research report authored by David D. Troutt, Director of the Rutgers Center on Law, Inequality and Metropolitan Equity (CLiME). The report found that almost half of all real estate sales in Newark were made by institutional buyers.

While legal, the ramifications of bulk corporate ownership are farreaching in the city, according to officials. Rents rise, homeownership decreases, affordable housing is less available and renters are displaced, all of which lead to less stable communities.

Just because somethings legal doesnt make it right. This acquisition, as the report points out, leads to a great deal of harm in our neighborhoods, particularly racially inequitable harms in terms of rents rising, displacing the residents, evictions and lowered opportunity for homeownership, explained Cammarieri, who is also Chair of the Newark Community Development Network and a member of the Equitable Growth Advisory Commission. These are all things that are harmful and thus they should be considered wrong, no matter how legal they might be.

In an effort to combat the effects of these purchases, Baraka outlined proposed policies, including making it unlawful to solicit offers without the residents permission, making sure LLCs provide contact information when purchasing properties, imposing fees on property owners and landlords who increase rents more than 5 percent year over year, adding a deed restriction to all city-owned and Land Bank properties to require them to be affordable and meeting with investors, developers of color and community development corporations to develop strategies to invest in under-invested and disinvested communities in Newark.

In cities and even suburbs across America, institutional investors are eroding the American dream of homeownership as they convert owner-occupied homes into corporately owned rental units, Baraka said. In Newark, where we have worked hard for years to expand homeownership, we will do everything possible to combat this dangerous trend. The CLiME report signals that Newark must create stronger and more equitable laws, regulations and policies to ensure that residents share in the growth of our city.

Deborah Smith Gregory is Vice Chair of the Equitable Growth Advisory Commission and is a homeowner in Newarks South Ward. She said she has received phone calls about selling her home to investors and has seen many signs in her neighborhood advertising cash for homes. She also said she was unable to figure out the owner of a vacant home in her neighborhood that she was interested in purchasing for a family member.

While Smith Gregory said the actions of the investors arent illegal, she called them highly unethical.

It is not a good feeling to feel like were prey, she said.

Baraka said he would submit legislation to the municipal council for members to take action to combat the effects of corporate ownership and conversion to rentals.

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Walk the Walk: NCCs Pledge to Double Down on Social Justice /2020/06/walk-the-walk-nccs-pledge-to-double-down-on-social-justice/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=walk-the-walk-nccs-pledge-to-double-down-on-social-justice /2020/06/walk-the-walk-nccs-pledge-to-double-down-on-social-justice/#comments Thu, 11 Jun 2020 19:09:13 +0000 https://www.newcommunity.org/?p=16339 For more than 50 years, 91心頭 has walked the walk of social justice, helping residents of inner cities improve the quality of their lives to reflect individual God-given dignity and personal achievement. After all, NCC was birthed from the literal ashes of the civil disorders of 1967 by a core group of Black community leaders and White allies, including a young priest named William Linder. Together, they modeled through word and deed the moral principle and reality that Black Lives Matter.

Today, just as in 1967, NCC joins in solidarity with all those who seek justice and an end to police brutality and racism. In these fifty plus years, some things have changed but others have unfortunately remained the same. Newark is on the rise and is a model for peaceful protests. However, the incidents of police brutality, senseless hate crimes and the ravages of COVID-19 throughout the Black community are reminders of systemic racism in our society.

To this end, NCC has pledged to double down on our existing initiatives to close the asset gap and reduce inequality in health care, education, affordable housing and workforce development. We will also lean in with the social justice advocacy groups New Jersey Institute for Social Justice, Newark Communities for Accountable Policing (N-CAP) and others.

Furthermore, we will continue our ongoing support of Mayor Ras J. Barakas initiatives toward racial and economic equity, including:

  • Equitable Growth Advisory Commission
  • Civilian Complaint Review Board (CCRB)
  • Newark Guaranteed Income Task Force
  • Newark 2020

As we face the unfolding events of 2020 and the transition to a changed world, we are reminded of our humble beginnings and that success is possible even in the most dire situations when people come together for the common good.

We invite all to join our charge as we embark on this journey for systemic change.

In solidarity,

A. Zachary Yamba
Chairperson, 91心頭 Board of Directors

Richard Rohrman
CEO, 91心頭

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