This reality has sparked a debate among city leaders. For years, many housing advocates have cited gentrification as the main reason Black people are being forced out of the city, by rising rents and housing prices many can no longer afford. But recently, some elected officials have claimed that Black Pittsburghers are leaving the city by choice.
During a public hearing on the subject that was requested by city residents and some housing advocates, Pittsburgh City Councilors Ricky Burgess (D-Point Breeze) and Daniel Lavelle (D-Hill District), both of whom are Black, disagreed with the premise that Black Pittsburghers were being forced out of the city by gentrification.
“They chose to leave because of crime and blight,” said Burgess, according to TribLive. Burgess represents the majority Black neighborhoods of Homewood, Larimer, and Garfield.
Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto tweeted out the story on April 6, and said it was an "important discussion on the reasons behind the most recent black flight in Pittsburgh.”
Is there a crisis of 'forced mass displacement' of Black Pittsburghers? Residents, council divided on answer https://t.co/aFaY5yiSuf
— bill peduto (@billpeduto) April 6, 2021
An important discussion on the reasons behind the most recent black flight in Pittsburgh.
Now, some community leaders in Pittsburgh's Black community are responding to that characterization and reiterating that gentrification is pushing Black people out of the city proper.
“Lawrenceville has been my home for years, but now I have no choice but to move outside Pittsburgh. My landlord recently hiked my rent to over $1300 per month,” says Karen Lyons, a community leader and member of an advocacy group, in a press release. “Like most people I know, that’s beyond my budget, but obviously landlords and real estate developers know that they can replace working-class Black tenants with high dollar renters. This week I just had to move out to Braddock Hills.”
Lawrenceville has also seen its Black population decline over the years.
The reason behind Black people leaving the city limits of Pittsburgh isn’t perfectly clear. But, this trend is starker from 2010-2019 than any previous decade, bringing up questions of why are Black people are only recently leaving the city, and not in the 1990s when crime rates were higher.
Also, while Black people are leaving neighborhoods like East Liberty in large numbers over the last several years, white people are moving into East Liberty at a significant pace. The Black population of Garfield has also shrunk over the years, while at the same time the white population has increased.
Additionally, many first-ring suburbs — such as Penn Hills and Bellevue — are attracting hundreds of Black Pittsburghers over the years, and those communities' public transit rates are increasing, suggesting that Black Pittsburghers without access to cars are moving to those areas.
Carl Redwood is the chair of the Hill District Consensus Group's board of directors and a lifelong community activist, who has called for more affordable housing in Pittsburgh. He has been a strong voice in pushing for policies and actions that help to keep Black residents in urban neighborhoods that are well served by public transit. He says there are forces pushing some residents of color to less accessible outskirts of the city.
“Public housing complexes have been demolished without building replacement housing first; project-based Section 8 units are at risk of termination; and unemployment continues to skyrocket in many parts of the city,” says Redwood in a press release. “Together this has resulted in the forced displacement of Black residents from Pittsburgh to surrounding municipalities.”
Both Lyons and Redwood blame development strategies of the Peduto administration, and previous leaders, for the displacement of Black Pittsburghers over the years.
“In Pittsburgh, over the last four decades, politicians have promised a city that would be economically and racially diverse. But Peduto, like others before him, has accelerated existing class- and race-based inequities,” says Redwood.