Laserfiche WebLink
<br />Housing and neighborhoods <br /> <br />( <br /> <br />Many residents in the three counties have personal relationships with people of other <br />races and express a desire to have neighbors of all races. Still, housing discrimination <br />happens when people seek a place to live as well as once they move in. <br /> <br />. In our survey, about a quarter say that they have family members of another race, and <br />72 percent indicate that they have at least one close friend who is of another race. <br /> <br />. 64 percent interact regularly with at least one neighbor of a different race. <br /> <br />. Rates of home ownership in 2000 were: 76 percent for Whites; 32 percent for Blacks/ <br />African Americans; 42 percent for American Indians; 51 percent for Asians; and 46 <br />percent for Hispanics/Latinos. <br /> <br />. In our survey, 77 percent of residents feel that most White people prefer to live in areas <br />where most of their neighbors are White; however, 59 percent say that they do not have <br />a preference about the race of their neighbors, and 26 percent prefer neighbors of <br />various races. <br /> <br />. In our survey, 4 percent of Black/African-Americans, 3 percent of Hmong, 2 percent of <br />American Indians, and 5 percent of Latinos report they have been refused housing in <br />the past two years, because of their race. No Whites say they have had this experience. <br /> <br />. In our community conversations, participants described some of the ways in which <br />housing discrimination occurs, including landlords saying apartments are no longer <br />available once they see the race of the individual and perceived discrimination by <br />realtors and mortgage companies. Southeast Asians in particular complained about <br />housing inspections, which caused barriers to home ownership or made the process <br />much more labor-intensive for the buyers. <br /> <br />. The community conversations also noted that renters and homeowners of color face <br />challenges from neighbors once they are living in their new neighborhoods, including <br />alienation, isolation, and blatant racist behavior from neighbors such as being called <br />racial names and being told to "go back home." They also described repeated <br />incidents of mistreatment of new residents of color by neighborhood police officers. <br /> <br />( <br /> <br />Economics and employment <br /> <br />Income disparities by race persist, and some grew in the past 10 years. Racism may <br />contribute to this gap through, among other factors, hiring discrimination; mistreatment, <br />exploitation, and alienation on the job; and the inaccessibility or inadequacy of human <br />rights intervention. <br /> <br />( <br /> <br />An assessment of racism in <br />Dakota, Ramsey, and Washington counties <br /> <br />3 <br /> <br />January 2004 <br />