S.F. moves to stem African American exodus

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May 5, 2002
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S.F. moves to stem African American exodus
Critics say effort to reverse longtime trend may be too late


SF Chronicle

Joseph Blue has lived in San Francisco for 20 years and toughed out the drastic decline in its black population, a phenomenon that persists despite being recognized for decades as a problem.

Neighborhoods that once thrived with African American culture and black-owned businesses have all but disappeared.

"San Francisco no longer has a viable black community," said Blue, an African American who lives in the Western Addition. "The middle class is gone, and what we have left is underprivileged, uneducated, poor black folks."

San Francisco officials are now calling the thousands of black people who have moved away "the African American diaspora," and the mayor's office is putting together a task force to figure out what can be done to preserve the remaining black population and cultivate new residents.

San Francisco's black population has dropped from 96,000 -- or 13.4 percent of the city -- in 1970 to an estimated 47,000 in 2005, about 6.5 percent of city residents, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. African Americans make up about 12.1 percent of the nation's population overall.

"The decline is phenomenal," said Hans Johnson, a demographer with the Public Policy Institute of California.

San Francisco is not alone. From 1995 to 2000, Oakland and neighborhoods of Los Angeles lost tens of thousands of black residents. Not one West Coast city made a list of the nation's top cities for African Americans compiled last year by Black Enterprise magazine based on income potential, the cost of living, proximity to employers and housing costs. Most are in the South and most -- coincidentally or not -- have black mayors.

"We don't even have any black leaders," said Blue, who unsuccessfully ran for supervisor in 2004. "When I moved here, there was a vibrant and enthusiastic black culture that brought its own ethnic mix and vitality. Now, the culture and the political influence have evaporated. The population is so low that it is beyond saving."

But Seattle and San Diego, which have reputations for being predominately white, had higher percentages of African Americans than San Francisco in 2005, according to the Census Bureau's American Community Survey. In recent years, San Francisco's black population has dropped faster than that of any other large city in the United States.

Though San Francisco is still often seen as diverse, it was 53 percent white and 33.5 percent Asian in 2005, with Chinese Americans accounting for about two-thirds of Asian residents.

"This is something the community and the mayor have been concerned about," said Fred Blackwell, director of the Mayor's Office of Community Development. "But we want to approach it in a real thoughtful way, a way that is solution focused."

Supervisor Ross Mirkarimi, whose district includes the Western Addition, said the exodus has been 40 years in the making -- and the task force may be too little too late.

"There has been no plan to fix this, and any talk of a roundtable is bothersome because we are well beyond documenting the obvious," Mirkarimi said. "This exodus completely belies our credentials as a progressive city. We need to spend time organizing in the community."

Demographers cite economic success among black residents as the primary reason for the exodus. But others, including those who still live here, say that after redevelopment pushed black people out of the Fillmore district in the late 1950s, there was no longer a strong black neighborhood. The city's black population peaked about 1970, when 13.4 of San Franciscans were black.

Even the Bayview district, still considered predominately black, is not, though it is home to about one-third of the city's black residents. In 2000, Bayview-Hunters Point was 46.9 percent black; 28 percent Asian and Pacific Islander; 4.9 percent white and 16.4 percent Hispanic of any race, according to the census. Many analysts said the Bayview's black population has fallen markedly in the last five years, but no firm count is available.

Oakland and other older cities have seen similar shifts. Oakland's population went from 46.9 percent black in 1980 -- when its proportion of African American residents peaked -- to 35.7 percent in 2000, according to census counts. The Census Bureau estimates that black people made up between 29 percent and 33.2 percent of Oakland residents in mid-2005.

Johnson, the demographer, said many African Americans leave San Francisco for outlying suburbs when they have the means, just like members of other racial groups, in search of more of the trappings of middle-class life. Although it is virtually impossible to track where people go, he said it is safe to say that Bay Area cities with growing black populations are seeing those gains because of San Francisco's loss.

Most are in the East Bay and North Bay. Vallejo's black population has doubled since 1980 to 26.8 percent. In Pittsburg, the number of African Americans jumped to 19 percent in 2005. Suisun City is 19.3 percent black, and San Leandro's black population went from 1 percent in 1980 to 12.2 percent in 2005 as the small East Bay city grew 21.3 percent overall.

"This is a concern because this city values having a diverse population," said Greg Wagner, a program director at SPUR, the San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association. "But even if you can identify the causes, it is hard to know what you would do to stop it. It is economics combined with cultural things that are tough to sort out. There are restrictions in this state about what you can do that is racially based."

Blackwell, of the mayor's office, is in the process of pulling together prior studies, surveys and needs assessments addressing the issue. He will look at some nationwide practices and then pick a task force, probably in May, to analyze both what is pushing people away from the city and what is pulling them toward other areas.

"We have a lot of information; we don't need to start from scratch," Blackwell said.

On the task force will be San Francisco residents, business leaders, faith groups, community organizations, activists and families who have left.

"We will not only have the established leaders but new voices," he said. "This should not be framed as just stopping the flight. We also need to put a better foot forward in being attractive to families, young professionals and low-income folks. We will look at places that are gaining African American residents, find out what they are doing policy-wise, and replicate it."

The exodus has been coming up in lots of discussions across the city recently because of current and planned development efforts in the Bayview and Hunters Point. The Bayview Reporter runs an article or commentary in nearly every edition about how a proposal for redevelopment and private development at the former Hunters Point Naval Shipyard marks the end of any chance for African Americans to remain in the city.

"All of the city agencies are working to please the big developers and rich communities," said Willie Ratcliff, the paper's publisher. "The supervisors want to grab the ground without any consideration for the people who have lived here and suffered through the environment, the shipyard and PG&E."

E-mail Leslie Fulbright at [email protected].
 
May 5, 2002
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#3
^^ i dunno about sayin its because of Asians. Its redevelopment and whoever makes financial gain from that. but shit this definitely contributes to why Frisco has dropped off as a major factor in Bay rap. Granted there's still a few puttin it down, but not like it used to be back in the early 90s
 

Gas One

Moderator
May 24, 2006
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Downtown, Pittsburg. Southeast Dago.
#4
san dego is still somewhat like 8 percent african american, and black people look at eachother like aliens here. you cant believe youre seeing another black person besides you.

and saying it had higher percentages than SF dosent mean much because we have millions more in population, as well as LA...and LA has more low income areas than san francisco
 
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CcytzO_Loc

Guest
#5
Did yall see the Dave Chappelle Stand up at the Filmore????

he was like "everytime i come to San Francisco yall people are so happy.....i figured it out.....ITS CUZ YOU PUT ALL THE NIGGAZ ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THAT BRIDGE!!!!!! here everywhere i go people say 'hello have a nice stay in Frisco.......cross over that bridge and its 'WELCOME TO OAKLAND BITCH!"


lol
 
C

CcytzO_Loc

Guest
#8
he spoke on the gay population too...

"ya know all around the country i hear bad things about San Francisco and how its fulla gay people.....so when i came i was expecting to see a bunch a gays walkin around and i didnt see none.....but then i went to the CASTRO district....now THAT is one fucced up place!!!!"

and the TL

"i went to the tenderloin.....wasnt nuttin TENDER about that bitch...i never seen people smoke rocc so openly....."


lol dave is a foo....
 

Gas One

Moderator
May 24, 2006
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Downtown, Pittsburg. Southeast Dago.
#9
thats for real though, niggas in tenderloin smoke rock like that shits an accepted way of life

you know how crackheads turn around and use a corner to light up

TL crackheads put they pipe in the air in front of them liek he mans sword with the lighter on high

not only that they put fucking insense on the street light LMAO
 

28g w/o the bag

politically incorrect
Jan 18, 2003
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siccness.net
#10
CcytzO_Loc said:
he spoke on the gay population too...

"ya know all around the country i hear bad things about San Francisco and how its fulla gay people.....so when i came i was expecting to see a bunch a gays walkin around and i didnt see none.....but then i went to the CASTRO district....now THAT is one fucced up place!!!!"

and the TL

"i went to the tenderloin.....wasnt nuttin TENDER about that bitch...i never seen people smoke rocc so openly....."


lol dave is a foo....
smokin crack AND drinkin starbucks... this is off the hook

::
 
Dec 25, 2003
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#11
TL Crackheads are more afriad to smoke cigarettes in public than crack.

Whats funny, though, is for a rock spot the place is surprisingly quiet/safe. I think in any other city, that many fiends and addicts in one place would spell serious trouble.

And before 15 e-thugs from Frisco come out here talkin bout "ITZ REAL AS FUCK OUT HERE NIGGA", I'll save you time and say now to stfu.
 

GHP

Sicc OG
Jul 21, 2002
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#12
I can't speak for black people but i'm pretty sure most of em move out of the bay for the same reasons I did, the cost of living out in the bay especially SF and silicon valley is ridiculous. Its really tough for working class people to make a living out here. You pretty much gotta have 2 college educated people in a household to even think about owning a home out there, its still a stretch. collectivly my mom and step dad take home pretty good money but with 3 kids still at home they only have enough to pay the bills, thats a pretty shitty quality of life if you ask me. I stay in Phoenix now and shit evens out a hell of alot more, in 10 years I bet my whole family will end up out here. What they are paying to rent a duplex could buy them a very nice house in a great nieghborhood out here with cash to spare

I do miss all the trees and the coastline though, thats for sure
 
Jun 6, 2006
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i love my city...its just way to expensive...my auntie was payin like 1500-2000 a month to stay in the projects in fillmoe...well apartments but right in the middle of all the shit...my mom figured out the shit along time ago and just stacked and put down a down payment for a house and afterwards was payin the same rate as most ppl pay for small ass apartments in frisco a month....my auntie finally moved a few months back to sumwhere in richmond...nope matter of fact it was san bruno
 
Jun 6, 2006
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#16
plus maufckas is dyin and gettin locked up left and right...families is being brought down mentally...they wanna escape from that life mayne...plus cost of livin is to much....i dont think much is gonna change...this was planned long ago