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The
Nation
September 2, 2004
Poverty
in the Suburbs
by Peter Dreier
Hidden
in a Census Bureau report on poverty released in late August is a factoid with
significant political and social consequences. Poverty has moved to the suburbs.
Or, more accurately, poverty has expanded to the suburbs. Today, 13.8 million
poor Americans live in the suburbs--almost as many as the 14.6 million who live
in central cities. The suburban poor represent 38.5 percent of the nation's
poor, compared with 40.6 percent of the total who live in central cities.
The headlines about the Census report focused on the increase in overall poverty--from
11.3 percent of all Americans in 2000, a twenty-six-year low, to 12.5 percent
in 2003. In the last year alone, 1.3 million people fell below the poverty
line, bringing the total to to 35.9 million. {emphasis added}
This increase in poverty--along with a significant uptick in the number of Americans
without health insurance (15.6 percent of the population)--is surely bad news
for George W. Bush, who has been claiming that the economy is improving. The
suburbanization of poverty also changes the demographics of elections in ways
that are not yet determined but that could result in long-term Democratic growth.
Both the number and proportion of the poor living in suburbs has increased steadily.
In 1970 only 20.5 percent of the nation's poor lived in suburbs. By 2000, that
had grown to 35.9 percent. And those trends have continued.
After World War II, moving to the suburbs was a key component of the American
Dream of upward mobility. Indeed, the proportion of Americans who live in suburbs
has grown steadily, from 23 percent in 1950 to 50 percent in 2000. The 2000
presidential election was the first with a majority of suburban voters. The
1950s TV image of suburbia--shows like Leave It to Beaver, My Three Sons and
The Donna Reed Show--reflected reality: Suburbs were lily white and middle class.
Men commuted to the city to work. Mothers stayed at home with the kids or worked
part time.
The suburban landscape today has changed. More suburbanites now commute to other
suburbs than to cities. A growing number of blacks, Latinos and Asians now live
in suburbia, although suburbs are still racially segregated. Similarly, the
poor are not randomly scattered across the suburban landscape; they are concentrated
in inner-ring suburbs close to cities, as well as in the suburban fringe--former
rural towns swept up by suburban sprawl.
Like the rest of America, the suburbs are becoming more and more polarized by
income. During the past two decades, the number of "poor" suburbs--those
whose per capita income is less than three-quarters of the metropolitan area's--has
spiraled upward. Most of their residents are not poor, but neither are they
well-off. At the same time, the number of "rich" suburbs--those with
per capita incomes above 125 percent of the region's--has also increased. Rich
suburbs use "snob zoning" to exclude poor households (and, increasingly,
middle-class families) by zoning out apartments and requiring minimum-lot sizes
for large, single-family houses. Meanwhile, the number of middle-class suburbs
has declined.
For the poor, in particular, living in suburbia is a mixed bag at best. Research
on a federal program that provides the inner-city poor with housing vouchers
to move to middle-class suburbs shows that adults get better jobs and kids do
better in school. But few of the suburban poor live in such affluent suburbs
or attend good schools. Most live in troubled communities beset with problems
once associated with big cities: crime, hunger, homelessness, inadequate schools
and public services, and chronic fiscal crises.
Especially in the suburbs, where the explosion of low-paying jobs in the service
economy is most evident, the poor are the "working poor." Because
most suburbs lack decent public transportation, they have a harder time getting
to work. Few of the suburban poor have health insurance. There are fewer doctors
and health clinics in suburbia that accept Medicaid patients and fewer social
services. Few suburbs have any subsidized housing, so poor residents often wind
up paying half or more of their incomes just to keep a roof over their heads.
Many federal antipoverty programs are targeted to cities, leaving the suburban
poor in the lurch (the earned-income tax credit is an important exception).
And fiscally troubled suburbs have even fewer taxable resources than big cities
to provide money to address the needs of the poor.
The problems facing the troubled suburbs are due in part to the growing fragmentation
of our metropolitan areas. Suburbs engage in bidding wars--with each other and
with big cities--to attract stores, malls and jobs, undermining the fiscal health
of them all. They are also the result of "leapfrog" development: As
the affluent move to upscale enclaves, they bring expensive shopping malls with
them, leaving behind older retail districts and abandoned industrial parks.
The older housing stock in the troubled suburbs--built in the 1950s and '60s--now
requires substantial repairs but many residents can't afford them, and many
banks won't make loans anyway--a new kind of "redlining."
Although the suburban poor include transplanted city dwellers and newly arrived
immigrants, many are home-grown. Among them are families who were once middle
class--or the children of the middle class--who can now barely stay afloat in
the new economy. They often feel trapped: They can't afford to move to more
affluent areas because their incomes are stagnating or declining, their jobs
are increasingly insecure and their public schools, libraries and parks are
chronically underfunded. They are more likely to buy their clothes at Wal-Mart
than at Nordstrom. Many cannot afford to pay for college, as tuitions rise and
government scholarships are cut.
For most of the twentieth century, America's suburbs were overwhelmingly Republican,
while the big cities were Democrat territory. Today, there is no monolithic
suburban vote. Suburbanites are up for grabs politically, because they are now
a mirror of the larger society. The largest block of "swing voters"--and
most of the swing Congressional districts--are in the suburbs. In 2000, Al Gore
and George Bush each won about half the suburban vote. Bush won the majority
of suburban men, while Gore captured most of the women.
For the Democrats, these trends present opportunities to recruit new voters
but also problems in reaching them. As urban problems have spread to suburbia--especially
the lack of health insurance, the shortage of affordable housing, job insecurity
and falling incomes--as well as traditional suburban woes like traffic congestion
and sprawl, middle-class voters may be more receptive to Democratic approaches
that require a more active government. Democrats need to offset Republican appeals
to white fears and resentments about the increase of immigrants and blacks in
suburban schools and nearby neighborhoods.
While Democrats have a track record of mobilizing the urban poor through unions,
civil rights and community groups and inner-city churches, they have limited
experience mobilizing the suburban poor and near-poor, who are less likely to
be union members or members of community organizations. Unions and progressive
community-organizing groups like ACORN, the Industrial Areas Foundation and
the Gamaliel Network are just beginning to reach out to the suburban poor.
The latest Census data remind us that stereotypes about the "inner-city
poor" and the "suburban middle class" no longer reflect how we
live. As we revise our old images of suburbia, America must change its public
policies to acknowledge suburban poverty, and the Democratic Party must change
its strategies to reach those with good reasons to like what it has to offer.
Peter Dreier, the E.P. Clapp Distinguished Professor of
Politics at Occidental
College in Los Angeles, is co-author of Place Matters: Metropolitics for the
21st
Century (University Press of Kansas) and the forthcoming The Next LA: The
Struggle for a Livable City (University of California Press).
.
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