State of African Americans in DC: Employment

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An Analysis:

African American Employment, Population


&Housing Trends in Washington, D.C.

Submitted to
The Commission on African American Affairs
District of Columbia Government
2017
Edited and with an introduction, summary,
recommendations, and conclusion
by Maurice Jackson, Ph.D.
Georgetown University, Department of History
Inaugural Chair, D.C. Commission on
African American Affairs (201316)
1 Acknowledgments
1 Editors Note
2 Editors Introduction
3 Summary
4 Economic Inequality and Mobility
6 Migration Trends and Opportunities
8 D.C. Labor Market and Qualifications
12 The Economy and Housing
17 Workforce Development Efforts

Table of 20 Recommendations

Contents 24 Conclusion
25 Notes

Cover photo: Frederick Douglass National Historic Site, Anacostia, Washington, D.C.
(courtesy of National Park Service)

2017 Georgetown University


Report edited and with an introduction, summary, recommendations,
andconclusion by Maurice Jackson, Ph.D.,Georgetown University,
Department of History; Inaugural Chair, D.C. Commission on
African American Affairs (201316).
For more information about this report, please contact:
Maurice Jackson, Ph.D.
Department of History
Georgetown University
37th & O Streets NW
Washington, D.C. 20057
202-687-1619
[email protected]
This report has been adapted from the research of masters students in
the Georgetown University McCourt School of Public Policy. Allison Beer, JessicaBonilla,
Renita Marcellin, and Megan Miraglia focused on issues related to employment, while
Nikki Edson, Junxiao Liang, Ryan Meyer, and Ben Tingle focused on issues related
to housing. Prof. Micah Jensen and Prof. Maurice Jackson served as project advisors.
McCourtSchool staff and professors, including Mike Barber, Eric Gardner, Jeff Mayer,
and Prof. Alice Rivlin, offered needed support. Special appreciation goes to Prof. Rivlin
and Martha Ross of the Brookings Institution, and to Ed Lazere, Executive Director of
the D.C. Fiscal Policy Institute. Prof. Jonathan Jackson of the University of Maryland and
personnel from the D.C. Department of Housing and Community Development offered
helpful advice on research, quantitative analysis, and writing.
As the first appointed Chair to the D.C. Commission on African American Affairs,
Maurice Jackson wishes to express gratitude to the McCourt teams and others for their
hard work, dedication, and contributions. He thanks Georgetown University President
Dr.John J. DeGioia for his unwavering support during his tenure as Commission chair;
Dr.Joseph Ferrara, Chief of Staff to the President, and his office for assistance in producing
the report; and Dr. James Benton, the Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation Fellow, for
offering insightful perspectives on the nature of the African American workforce. Healso
wishes to thank Christopher Murphy, Vice President for Government Relations and
Community Engagement, for his advice and keen insight into the D.C. government and
its agencies; Heidi Tseu, Director of Local Government Affairs, for her support; and
Samuel Dejoie, a student in the College class of 2019, forhis assistance. Prof. Rohan ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Williamson of the McDonough School of Business provided insight on tracking black
business development. Finally, he thanks Provost Robert Groves and members of his staff
who helped arrange for Jackson to find time to collect data and organize this report.
Maurice Jackson has edited and unified the reports on employment trends and housing, added
tothem, and updated data, and accepts responsibility for any remaining errors or mistakes.

When I agreed to become the first appointed Chair of the newly established
Commission on African American Affairs, I did so with certain reservations. Key among
EDITORS NOTE
them was the extent of support the committee would receive from city officials and
agencies. There were no office, supplies, or staff. With certain assurances, I accepted the
volunteer position and made several pledges. The first was that the commission would
begin by establishing its rules, by-laws, and mission statement,a and forming a committee
structure. The second pledge was to establish a permanent office; in the second year of the
new commission, the Office of the Mayor appointed a full-time Executive Director, albeit
with no staff. These goals were met. The third pledge was to publish several reports on the
status of African Americans in Washington. Toresearch and publish these reports, Ifound
it necessary to seek the support of my home institution Georgetown University. The first
of these reports, The Health of the African American Community in the District of
Columbia: Disparities and Recommendations, was published in the fall of 2016. Prepared
by faculty leader Prof. Christopher J. King and eight student contributorsb with the active
support of Dr. Patricia Cloonan, Dean of the School of Nursing & Health Studies, this
report has been widely distributed, studied, and discussed. The present report is the second
in the series. I hope that it contributes to the discussion and offers meaningful ideas to help
find ways to halt the flow of African Americans out of D.C. and to help make life for those
who remain a bit better.
Maurice Jackson, Georgetown University, Department of History;
Inaugural Chair, D.C. Commission on African American Affairs (201316)

The mission statement reads: Thegoal of the Commission on African American Affairs of the District of Columbia is to address the concerns
a

and needs of African American communities with low and moderate incomes: to gather economic, education, health, housing and other social
indicators and to review and analyze the decline in the population of African American residents of the District, as indicated by the 2010
UnitedStates Census. The Commission will seek input from D.C. residents, social service agencies and concerned experts, hold fact-finding
hearings, and submit definitive reports and policy recommendations to the Mayor and Council of the District of Columbia.
b
The student contributors are: TaylorBrown, Stefanie Kurgatt, Eileen Marino, Ogechi Nwodim, ErikSchimmel, Jordan Smith, JaclynTatge,
andJohn A. Davis.
An Analysis: African American Employment, Population & Housing Trends in Washington, D.C. 1
African Americans have made extraordinary contributions to the rich
cultural, social, and civic heritage of Washington, D.C. since the citys founding. However,
over the past few decades, an alarming trend has developed:1 the citys African American
population has declined significantlya trend expected to continue. In 1957, Washington
became the first large city with a black majority population, and in 1960, the city reported
an African American population at 53.9 percent. This rose to its height at 71.1 percent in
1970. However, by 2015, it dipped below 50 percent for the first time in nearly 60years
to 48.3 percent.2 Much of the population loss can be attributed to the economy. Simply
put, African Americans, some D.C. born and raised, have been priced out of the housing
Photo courtesy of washington.org market and pushed out of the job market due to the lack of available jobs, lack of skills
training, and a lag in educational attainment. Shifts in the federal workforce and the
creation of some higher-paying private employer jobs outside of the city, along with
high housing costs and the notion that affordable housing near quality schools are more
accessible in the suburbs, have also caused middle- to higher-income African Americans
to leave the city.

This report seeks to analyze those trends and to offer ideas about how to halt the flow of
African Americans out of Washington, D.C., the stated mission of the D.C. Commission
EDITORS on African American Affairs.

INTRODUCTION

African Americans, some D.C. born and raised,


have been priced out of the housing market and
pushed out of the job market due to the lack of
available jobs, lack of skills training, and a lag in
educational attainment.

Photo courtesy of washington.org

2 2017 Georgetown University


The African American population in U.S. cities, such as Chicago, Cleveland,
Oakland, and St. Louis, has also been in decline, the result of economic factors, including
increasing income inequality and a dearth of equal economic opportunities for African
American residents. In D.C., especially for at least three decades, African Americans have
experienced consistent patterns of declining income gains, higher unemployment, and
lower educational attainment than white residents.c

The predicted growth of the D.C. labor market is alarmingly mismatched with the
educational attainment trends of the citys African American residents.d By 2020,
50percent of all new jobs will require at least a bachelors degree or above, and nearly
60 percent will require at least some form of education and training beyond high school.
However, 60,000 adult African American D.C. residents have not finished high school;3
afull 50 percent have no formal education past high school, compared to 5 percent of
white residents; and 12.3 percent of African Americans have a bachelors degree, while
37.1percent of white residents do. According to the U.S. Department of Educations
National Center for Education Statistics, 19 percent of adults in the city do not have the
reading proficiency to read a daily newspaper. The Washington Literacy Center estimates
that 90,000 adults in D.C. (13.4 percent of city residents) are functionally illiterate. This
shows a major gap between the qualifications employers are seeking and those acquired by
disproportionately significant segments of the African American community in D.C.
SUMMARY
To help address this and other concerning and complex issues, the Mayor of the
Districtof Columbia established the Commission on African American Affairs in2011
to address the concerns of African-American communities with low-economic,
-education, or -health indicators in the District, and to review and analyze the decline in
population of African-American residents of the District.4

To support the Commissions work, this report seeks to:

Assess the areas employment opportunities as they relate to the qualifications of


African Americans with low to moderate incomes

Analyze how employment is related to the population decline of D.C.s African


American community

Identify the impact of the lack of affordable housing on the low- and moderate-income The median annual
African American community in Washington, D.C. income in D.C. for
Propose feasible policies to improve the economic well-being of the citys African white families is
American residents
$120,000, while it is
The city must enact policies and support programs that ensure equal economic
opportunities for its African American residents. Such steps are essential to properly $41,000 for African
honoring and building upon the invaluable contributions of African Americans to the
American families.
culture, social fabric, and civic life of the nations capital.5

This statement is based on data retrieved from the Integrated Public Microdata Series (IPUMS-
c

USA) obtained from the American Community Survey (ACS) and the Decennial Census data.
d
This statement is based on statistics reported by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
and the D.C. Department of Employment Services (DOES) to analyze the gaps between
employment opportunities and the employment qualifications of African Americans.

An Analysis: African American Employment, Population & Housing Trends in Washington, D.C. 3
Interconnected trends in income inequality, economic mobility, and
employment have shaped the economic well-being of African Americans in D.C.
and contributed to the population decline of African Americans in cities across the U.S.,
including D.C., over the past few decades. Analysis by the Congressional Budget Office
(CBO) suggests that national disparities in economic well-being have been largely driven
by differences in income growth rates between high and low earners.6

Disparities in wealth, defined as the accumulation of economic assets, also contribute to


economic inequality across the nation, where the wealth gap between blacks and whites
is many times larger than the income gap and has an especially large effect on income
inequality among older Americans.7

While trends in economic mobility in the U.S. have varied since the late nineteenth
century, the overall rates of upward and downward economic mobility remained relatively
static from the 1970s through 1990s.8 Despite this overall trend, African Americans in the
U.S. have experienced less upward mobility and more downward mobility than whites.9

In addition, intergenerational mobility, defined as the degree to which a childs economic


achievements exceed their parents status, is correlated with parents income and with
ECONOMIC income inequality between families of different races and ethnicities. On average, a
INEQUALITY 10-percentile increase in parents income increases a childs income by 3.4 percentiles.10
Other factors impacting mobility include educational attainment, cognitive ability, family
AND MOBILITY structure, and geographic location. Increases in educational attainment, especially higher
education and rises in cognitive ability, significantly increase upward mobility.11 The
importance of higher education with regard to economic well-being and race is further
discussed later in this report.

Unemployment continues to play a significant role in economic inequality and mobility as


well, as African Americans experience a higher rate of unemployment across the nation at
7.9 percent compared to the overall rate of 4.5 percent for the population at-large in the
fourth quarter of 2016.12 The unemployment rate for African Americans has historically
been at least twice the rate for whites nationally and locally. Economists and sociologists
have disagreed on the causes of the high level of unemployment among African Americans.
While any reduction in unemployment improves economic conditions for the African
American community and helps fix some social issues, such as higher crime rates, the
matter is more complex.13 Reducing unemployment is important, but jobs that help
reduce unemployment must provide decent wages and benefits in order to combat
poverty, create potential for homeownership, contribute to family stability, decrease
poverty, and lower crime. Though changes in the workforce can create more jobs, such
jobs do not always alleviate poverty. Other problems that must be addressed include a rise
in contract employment and temporary employment, flexible work schedules that do not
guarantee a set number of work hours, and the proliferation of de-skilled jobs; while
these trends may theoretically help reduce unemployment, they do not always offer wages
or benefits that can help stabilize families and communities.

4 2017 Georgetown University


D.C. Economic Inequality and Mobility
While the national trends in economic inequality and mobility are concerning, they are
especially stark and alarming in D.C. From 20072014, the number of poor residents
in D.C. increased by 18,000, with African Americans experiencing the largest increase.
During this period, the poverty rate for the citys African Americans increased from
23percent to 26 percent. Despite an overall increase in D.C.s median household
income by approximately $10,000, the median household income for African Americans
remained flat during this period.14 The median annual income in D.C. for white families
is $120,000, while it is $41,000 for African American families.15 Furthermore, white
households have a net worth 81 times greater than black households: $284,000 versus
$3,500.16

A recent report on economic disparity in the city, Ward Snapshots by D.C. Action for
Children, shows that in Ward 8, the median family income dropped nearly 17 percent
between 20062010 and 20102015 from $28, 979 to $24,096. In Ward 7, the median
family income during those years went from $34,562 to $31, 273, a nearly 10 percent
drop. By comparison, the median family income in Ward 2 jumped nearly 65 percent,
from $114, 752 to $189, 324.17 Lower-income African Americans, specifically, tend to
White households
experience more negative economic impacts than other socioeconomic groups.18
have a net worth
D.C. residents who are most likely to be low-income are: black residents, single-parent
families, individuals with disabilities, and those without a high school diploma.19 81 times greater than
black households:
D.C. Unemployment
$284,000 versus
A recently released report by the D.C. Fiscal Policy Institute gets to the root of some of
the problems facing unemployed and underemployed African Americans in the District. $3,500.
In 2016, the unemployment rate was 6.4 percent, up from 5.7 percent in 2007 during
the last Great Recession. The white unemployment rate was under 2 percent in 2016,
while the rate for black residents was 13.4 percent.20 This means the African American
unemployment rate stood at over six times the white ratean astonishing number.
African Americans, even with an undergraduate college degree, were also three times
more likely to be jobless than their white peers with the same degree in 2016.

Among the long-term unemployed, defined as those without work for 27 weeks or longer,
42 percent who lost their jobs in 2016 remain jobless, a steady rise from 18 percent in
2007. Unemployment affects both African American youth and older workers. As has
been true in the past, the unemployment rate in Wards 7 and 8 are extremely high.
InJanuary 2017, in Ward 8, it was officially 12.9 percent and in Ward 7, 10 percent.
Thesefigures only include those actively looking for work and not those who may have
simply given up. The official rate for Ward 1 was 4.3 percent; 4 percent for Ward 2;
3.9percent for Ward 3; 5.5 percent for Ward 4; 6.9 percent for Ward 5; and 5.3 percent
for Ward6. However, unemployment rates for African Americans in these wards were
more than twice the overall unemployment rates for each ward as a whole.21

An Analysis: African American Employment, Population & Housing Trends in Washington, D.C. 5
Since the 1990s, growing metropolitan areas in the U.S. are more likely to
have populations with lower incomes, greater income declines, and higher poverty rates
for minority groups.22 A common reason that migrants cited for moving was to seek
employment. Out-migrants typically benefit from increased wages after moving.23

D.C.s economic landscape is disproportionately bleak for African American residents,


forcing many to seek opportunities elsewhere. Changes in the makeup of the federal
workforce, privatization, outsourcing at local hospitals and universities whose maintenance
staffs had been traditionally in-house, and a greater reliance on subcontracting have
Photo courtesy of washington.org
all had a negative impact on African American employment. Historically, the lack of
manufacturing, compared to other cities, has also denied for generations an economic
outlet for people with lower levels of education and skills.

In the 1990s, income disparities between D.C. neighborhoods increased greatly.


Thenegative effects of this trend were mostly felt in low-income neighborhoods and
resulted in both a decline in residents income and population numbers. During that
decade, D.C. lost 28,000 residents, many of whom had been living in predominately
low-income neighborhoods.24 Based on analysis of census data, Jonathan Jackson argued
MIGRATION that the displacement of low-income African American residents in D.C. is largely due
to young, college-educated individuals moving to the city.25 These demographic changes
TRENDS and have been linked to gentrification. Lisa Sturtevants research underscores this finding,
OPPORTUNITIES showing that population changes in D.C. between 20002012 were characterized by an
influx of white residents and a decrease in African American residents.26 At the Brookings
Institute, Brooke DeRenzis and Alice Rivlin further support this point, demonstrating
that, since 1990, D.C. has had an increase in white and higher-income residents, while
Prince Georges County has had an increase in black middle-income residents. This
trend, they suggest, is likely driven by the presence of more affordable housing and safe
neighborhoods, and by the perception of better schools outside of D.C.27

Findings from Data Analysis


The average household income of out-migrants (D.C. residents moving out of the city)
was lower than the average household income of non-migrants (D.C. residents who did
not move), as illustrated by Figure 1. From 20122013, the average household income
for out-migrants of all races was $91,980, compared to $100,910 for non-migrants of all
races; however, for those moving to Prince Georges County, who were predominantly
African American, it was $40,430.28 This finding is consistent with prior research indicating
that migrants who leave a city are typically lower-income and in search of better wages.
In-migrants (those moving into D.C.) consistently had the lowest average income among
all three groups; however, research shows that this group is largely comprised of college-
educated individuals who will likely experience positive economic outcomes in D.C.

Migration in D.C. is largely characterized by movement to and from nearby suburbs.


Migrants showed great variation in average household income depending on migration
origin and destination. Particularly, those who moved from D.C. to Prince Georges County
had income levels much lower than those who moved from D.C. to Montgomery County
and the Northern Virginia suburbs. Figure 2 illustrates the differences in income levels
by destination. For 2015, the average household income among those moving to Prince
Georges County was $38,190 compared to $80,880 for all out-migrants.29

6 2017 Georgetown University


The demographic and migration trends discussed thus far highlight the need for D.C.
to address the economic well-being of African American residents in order to prevent
further population decline. In the next chapter, the D.C. labor market, its current and
future qualifications, and their impact on African Americans are examined.

Figure 1
Differences in Migrant Average Household Income, 20002015

Source: Calculated with data from the Internal Revenue Service and U.S. Population Migration Data.30

Figure 2
Comparison of Out-Migrant Income by Destination, 2015

Source: Calculated with data from the Internal Revenue Service and U.S. Population Migration Data.31

An Analysis: African American Employment, Population & Housing Trends in Washington, D.C. 7
Many of D.C.s African American residents are not prepared for the jobs
available in the D.C. labor market.32 As a result, the unemployment rate for African
Americans is over six times higher than for white residents. Recent research highlights
several root causes for the misalignment of employment opportunities and qualifications
among African American residents, including a highly competitive labor market and
education and skills gaps.

Competitive Labor Market


D.C. is home to one of the more competitive job markets in the nation.33 As of 2014,
D.C. counted 764,759 jobs, of which 96 percent were in service-providing industries.34
The daily influx of hundreds of thousands of workers from neighboring states results in
high levels of competition for D.C. residents.35 Because D.C. attracts large numbers of
young, college-educated workers, those with postsecondary degrees sometimes fill jobs
that might otherwise go to less educated and less skilled candidates. The evidence of this
phenomenon is stark. For example, 30 percent of administrative workers in D.C. have
a college degree, much larger than the proportion nationally.36 In D.C., the people who
need jobs the most do not have access to learning by doing jobs; instead, they must
D.C. LABOR compete for jobs that require a formal education that either they have not received, or
if they have, now puts them into competition with other job seekers who have more
MARKET AND education and skills.
QUALIFICATIONS
Education and Skills Gaps
The highly-competitive job market is one of several challenges facing D.C.s low-
to moderate-income African American residents. Data demonstrate a large gap in
educational and skills attainment necessary to meet most available job qualifications.
While 73 percent of white residents earn a bachelors degree by their early 20s, only
26percent of African American residents do so in the same time period.37 Furthermore,
over 60,000 of all D.C. adult residents do not have a high school diploma, meaning a
significant portion of the population is missing the basic skills required to enter and stay
in todays workforce.38 This discrepancy carries into employment opportunities, as
one-third of those with only a high school diploma are unemployed or underemployed,
and the average unemployment rate of residents without a high school degree is five times
greater than that of college graduates.39 In addition, roughly one out of five individuals
without a high school diploma is significantly disconnected from the labor market,
reporting they have not worked in the last five years.40 Meanwhile, 9 percent of the D.C.
population between the ages of 1624 are either not enrolled in school, not employed, or
have less than an associates degree. Seventy percent of this group is African American.41

More than one third of D.C. residents who are 16 and olderan estimated 170,620
of 469,000operate at the most basic level of literacy. According to a report by the
University of the District of Columbia, an adult in D.C. with very basic reading skills is
likely to have income close to the poverty level, be older than 25 with less than a high
school diploma, be disproportionately black or Latino, and live in rental or subsidized
housing. Additionally, the report points out that the children of these adults are likely
to qualify for free and reduced lunch and attend low-performing public schools. Many
of these same residents also lack the technology skills needed to succeed in todays
workforce.42 Collectively, these skills gaps are a significant source of high unemployment
rates and intergenerational poverty in the affected communities.43

8 2017 Georgetown University


While the current consequences of severe education and skills greater variation in the regional labor market, along with the
gaps are well documented for D.C. residents, some researchers higher percentage of jobs in the trade, transportation, and utilities
suggest the challenges for those affected by these gaps will only sector, suggests that lower-skilled D.C. residents may benefit from
worsen. According to a report from the D.C. governments considering employment opportunities outside of the city. As a
Department of Employment Services (DOES), in the next three result, DOES announced that it intends to explore developing
years, 72 percent of all jobs in the District will require at least closer relationships with local workforce systems in neighboring
some postsecondary education.44 More than half of all new jobs jurisdictions to identify partnership opportunities to enhance the
created in D.C. between 20102020 will require a bachelors success of D.C. residents in the regional labor market.
degree or above, and nearly 60 percent will require at least some
form of education and training beyond the high school level.45 Projected Growth and Trends
in the D.C. LaborMarket
Landscape of the Current D.C. Labor Market
Overall employment between 20102020 for all wage and salary
According to the most recent D.C. State Integrated Workforce workers is projected to increase by 11 percentfrom 785,351 jobs
Plan, approximately 98percent of all jobs in D.C. are in service- to 874,211 jobs. More specifically, the majority of all employment
providing industries, leaving only 2 percent in goods-producing growth in D.C. between 20102020 is expected to come from
industries. The five largest industry sectors accounted for more two sectors: 1) professional and business services, and
than 77 percent of total employment in 2010 and are expected to 2)education and health services, both of which have formal
account for nearly 79 percent of all jobs in 2020. These five major training and educational requirements. The former is expected to
sectors are: add approximately 36,587 jobs during that time frame, and the
latter is expected to add 29,409 jobs. Although government
Governmentfederal government, state government, and
employment is expected to decline slightly between 20102020,
public transportation
itis expected to remain the single largest industry sector in D.C.
Professional and Business Servicesprofessional, scientific,
and technical services; legal services; employment services; Figure 3 shows a more detailed description of the top industry
administrative, support, waste management, and remediation sectors in D.C. that are projected to add the most jobs by 2020.
services According to DOES, legal services is projected to be the
Education and Health Servicescolleges, universities, fastest-growing occupational category by 2020. Other areas of
and professional schools; health care and social assistance; high growth include computer and mathematical fields, office
ambulatory health care services; hospitals; nursing and and administrative support, and healthcare support services.46
residential care facilities According to 20102011 U.S. Census American Community
Survey microdata analyzed by DOES, only 6.4 percent of those
Other Servicesreligious, grant-making, civic, professional, employed in legal services in D.C. have less than a bachelors
and similar organizations; professional, labor, political, and degree and only one-quarter have less than a law degree. The
similar organizations same data showed that 73.2 percent of those in computer and
Leisure and Hospitalityarts, entertainment, and recreation; mathematical occupations in D.C. have a bachelors degree or
accommodations and food services; bars, full-service higher, and only 5.2 percent have a high school diploma or less.
restaurants, limited-service eating places, and special food In office and administrative support occupations in D.C., less
services than one-quarter of those employed have a high school diploma
or below.47 These trends support the analysis that the D.C. labor
Compared to D.C., jobs in the broader Metropolitan Statistical market is moving in a direction that favors more educational
Area (MSA), which covers D.C. and parts of Maryland, attainment, limiting opportunities for those with less than a
Virginia, and West Virginia, are similarly skewed towards service bachelors degree. However, healthcare support occupations in
industries but with a few key differences. First, jobs in the trade, D.C. show a slightly different trend, as only 12 percent of those
transportation, and utilities sector outnumber jobs classified as employed have a bachelors degree or higher and almost half have
other services in the MSA. Second, the top five industries in the a high school diploma or below.
MSA account for only 66 percent of the MSAs labor market,
compared to D.C., where the top five industries account for about
77 percent of the labor market overall. According to DOES, the

An Analysis: African American Employment, Population & Housing Trends in Washington, D.C. 9
While nearly 60 percent of new jobs created in D.C. between However, an analysis of census data reveals that African
20102020 will require at least some form of education and Americans are disproportionately less likely to have graduated
training beyond the high school level, a number of industries from college, as only 12.3 percent of adult African American
with significant projected job growth will create relatively few residents had graduated from college with a bachelors degree in
jobs available to workers with an associates degree or below. 2014, compared to 37.1 percent of white residents. Additionally,
For instance, only 2 percent of job openings in information in 2014, 16.5 percent of African American residents had less
technology and 11 percent of job openings in science, technology, than a high school diploma, compared to 3.5 percent of white
engineering, and math fields will be available to individuals with residents.
an associates degree or below. While positions that require an
associates degree may not have an expansive projected job growth, Given the skills that the current D.C. labor market favors, and
individuals who fill these positions are projected to earn an the direction that the D.C. labor market is projected to go by
average annual median income of $62,475, which is substantially 2020, a majority of D.C.s African American residents will not
higher than the average projected annual median income of have the qualifications and resources needed to respond to the
$43,450 for positions that only require a high school diploma. changing educational demands of the labor market.49

D.C. employers draw their workforce from a broad labor force


Current Qualifications of D.C. Residents that includes highly-skilled and lower-skilled workers from
According to the State Integrated Workforce plan, D.C. is Virginia, Maryland, and other neighboring areas. The availability
well-positioned to respond to the educational demands of of workers from outside D.C. creates significant competition for
the labor market because more than 51 percent of the citys job opportunities. In fact, non-residents outnumber residents
population in 2012 had at least a bachelors degree; nationally, in every single educational attainment category of the D.C.
this rate is just 28 percent.48 This statistic can be misleading, workforce, including jobs requiring a high school diploma or
as the numbers likely include people who very recently moved below. Thus, not only are residents with a college degree facing
into the city, which obscures the population of people without significant competition from non-resident workers, but jobs
bachelors degrees. which could be filled by D.C. residents with only a high school

Figure 3
D.C. Employment by Industry Sector, 2010 and Projected 2020

Source: DOES, Office of Labor Market Research & Information (via D.C. Workforce State Integrated Plan)50

10 2017 Georgetown University


diploma are more likely to be filled by non-residents with the In November 2015, the Ward 7 Business Partnership (W7BP)
same qualifications.51 With shrinking opportunity to participate created a business directory. The Impact Directory report listed as
in a shifting labor market and subsequently high unemployment one goal to provide the technical assistance needed to connect
numbers, less-educated African American residents have a harder neighborhood businesses in Ward 7 with public and private
time making a suitable living in D.C., which could be a factor economic development resources. While it does not list the
contributing to the decreasing African American population. businesses by racial or ethnic group, it does list them by category.
A more complete version of this brochure ought to be a goal of
African American Business Development those interested in minority business development and creating
jobs for African Americans in the city.
Another central reason for the continual decline of the African
American population is the lack of business opportunities. Some A full database and a directory of minority businesses should
may recall that in the aftermath of the 1968 riots, some ethnic be developed by the D.C. Chamber of Commerce and relevant
groups whose businesses were harmed decided to relocate to organizations. Such a document needs to outline opportunities
the outer suburbs. Aspiring black businesspeople were unable and procedures for small business loans and training aids.
to fill the vacuum simply because they could not secure a line of Additionally, all local universities with undergraduate and
credit to open and maintain small businesses, stores, dry cleaners, graduate business schools should offer courses in the economics
restaurants, and other outlets. Indeed, while the common notion of the inner city, job creation, and the how-tos of minority
that it has been those at the very bottom of the economic ladder business development.
who have left D.C., most available information leads to the
conclusion that it has been those in the middle class, searching To accomplish all of the above, the District should convene a
for affordable housing near quality public schools, who have been meeting of relevant city agencies, commissions, associations,
among the largest group leaving the city. universities, churches, trade associations, nonprofits, hospitals,
labor unions, workforce development and apprenticeship bodies,
Despite some of the unfortunate events of Mayor Marion S. Barrys the Federal City Council, D. C. Chamber of Commerce, Metro
tenure, he has been applauded for his support of the rise of the Board of Trade, and aspiring businessmen and businesswomen
black middle class by offering government support, training, to meet and develop a permanent structure to address the central
and small business loans, regardless of race. This led to a call issue: has the loss of opportunities for black businesses led to the
to end the practice of redlining, in which banks and loaning decline of the middle class African American population in the
institutions refused to aid small black and minority businessmen city? And, what are concrete solutions to address these concerns?
who sought to provide services in the inner city. Indeed, some of
these institutions were also found to deny housing loans based on
race and location. Although many city agencies are tasked with
small business development, no coherent plan to aid aspiring
entrepreneurs exists. Given the skills that the current
Furthermore, no recent document or study exists to track the D.C. labor market favors, and
number of African American businesses in the city. While the
Ethiopian community has developed its own yellow book to the direction that the D.C.
list related businesses and offer ways for them to meet and work labor market is projected to go
together, a search revealed no such resource regarding African
American businesses. Historically, this has not been the case. by 2020, a majority of D.C.s
Forexample, in 1974, a report entitled Impact Directory: Businesses African American residents will
in the Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Area offered a full survey
of African American businesses in the DMV.52 While the not have the qualifications and
Washington Afro American and the Washington Informer have been
resources needed to respond
consistent in their support for minority business development and
aiding and advertising jobs and training opportunities, in recent to the changing educational
years, the efforts have slowed. While associations have existed for
years in Columbia Heights, H Street, Ward 7, and other areas, the
demands of the labor market.
time is now to pick up steam.

An Analysis: African American Employment, Population & Housing Trends in Washington, D.C. 11
Income, Gentrification, and the Lack of Affordable Housinge
Major socioeconomic changes due to trends such as gentrification are associated with
the rapid decline of the Districts African American population.53 The shrinking African
American population illustrates that many hardworking African Americans, even those
with modest means, have been forced to respond to these depressed socioeconomic
conditions by leaving D.C. Once these residents leave, they usually do not return, due to
insufficient job prospects and affordable housing. For too long, the waiting list for public
housing was 70,000 households long. Even though it has been recently reduced to 47,000,
this is still much too large.54 More must be done.

Washington, D.C. has a total of 303,000 housing units, about 18 percent of which are
financed by the local or federal government.f The 43,000 District residents who qualify
as extremely low-income (making no more than $32,000, or less than 30 percent of
the area median, for a family of four) are especially impacted by the small amount of
subsidized housing.g The average income of these households is just above $16,000 for a
family of four and has remained relatively flat for the last decade. African American and
Latino residents are disproportionately affected, with 91 percent of residents in extremely
low-income households identifying as African American and 10 percent as Latino.
THE ECONOMY Thepercentage of residents spending a majority of their income on housing has risen as
AND HOUSING well: in 2004, 50 percent of D.C.s extremely low-income residents spent more than half
of their income on rent and utilities; in 2016, 62 percent of extremely low-income District
residents did so.55

As in many other major U.S. cities, expenditures on housing in Washington, D.C. have
become a relatively large financial burden for most low- to moderate-income residents.
Researchers identify 30 percent or more of income spent on housing costs as housing-
cost burden.56 In 2013, 34.3 percent of all owner-occupied households in D.C. spent
more than 30 percent or more of their income on housing, and 75.8 percent of the
burdened households spent 35 percent or more of their income on housing.

The housing burden was even greater for renter-occupied households in D.C., of whom
49.7 percent spent more than 30 percent or more of their income on housing. To afford
rent in D.C. without spending more than 30 percent of his or her income on housing,
arenter would need to earn more than $30 per hour, or 2.4 times D.C.s $12.50 per hour
minimum wage.57 Among these burdened households, 82.1 percent spent 35 percent or
more of their income on housing. This result was confirmed in a 2016 report from the
D.C. Fiscal Policy Institute.58 According to this report, among extremely low-income
households, defined as those making less than 30 percent of area median income,

e
For some, gentrification is considered the process where a neighborhood that has been
historically populated mostly by lower-, middle- and even higher-income African American
households is elevated by capital investments from higher-income white households
homebuyers, renters, and commercial interests from outside the neighborhood. For those
gentrified, however, it is often considered the taking over of their neighborhoods without concern
for their well-being or where they and their families will go.
Public housing is defined as a program, usually managed by government through local housing
f

agencies, that offers financial or physical support for eligible low-income families, the elderly, and
persons with disabilities, at affordable rents.
g
A household is defined as low-income by the Census Bureau if its annual income lies below the
family size-adjusted poverty threshold. For example, the threshold is $12,119 for a single-person
household and $16,057 for a household of two adults and two children under 18.

12 2017 Georgetown University


a full 84 percent suffer from a housing cost burden, and two-thirds face a severe burden.59
These burdened families, a large portion of the population in D.C., especially those at
lower income levels, need greater access to more affordable housing options and assistance.h

The disparity between the incomes of this population and newer residents, who tend to
be white, younger, more affluent, and highly educated, continues to widen. The increasing
housing costs are pricing out current residents at the lower income levels, which are
predominantly made up of African Americans, and are a growing burden especially for
older residents.

Since the 1950s, housing patterns across the country have undergone dramatic changes
when a pattern of suburbanization began.h This involved the migration of middle- and
upper-class households from city centers to suburbs, leaving the poorer and less-educated
working class and even moderate-income people in the urban center.j In the last few
decades, many middle-class African Americans left urban areas in the Northeast,
Mid-Atlantic, Midwest, and West and migrated to the South, following increasing
employment opportunities there. This migration trend continued to rise and, by 2011,
57percent of the nations African American population was living in the South.60

This suburbanization led to economic downturn within several major cities, such as Atlanta,
Increasing housing
Chicago, and Washington, creating fiscal crises due to shrinking tax bases.61 Toalleviate costs are pricing out
this problem, many city governments pursued policies to attract new investments in the
city, bring in wealthier residents to increase taxable income and housing sales, revitalize
current residents at
retail activity, and raise sales tax revenue.62 the lower income
During the 1970s, gentrification involved individuals who invested personal time and levels, which are
resources to renovate a single unit. After enough individuals invested in an area, a
neighborhood would start to see change. Since the 1990s, gentrification has more often
predominantly made up
been characterized by a state-led effort in partnership with outside developers, wherein of African Americans,
government policy has promoted the demolition of public and low-income housing
and invested in redevelopment through mixed-income housing in more affluent
and are a growing
neighborhoods.63 These efforts involved the use of federal Housing Opportunities for burden especially for
People Everywhere (HOPE VI) funding to demolish public housing and low-income
housing and build mixed-income housing.64 Created in 1992, HOPE VI offers funding older residents.
to cities for the redevelopment of existing public housing into mixed-income units.k
Thisprogram aimed to address the issue of concentrated poverty within inner cities, but
instead may have caused the displacement of low-income individuals through the loss of
existing affordable units without one-for-one replacement.65

h
The housing burden describes a household spending 30 percent or more of income on housing
costs.
i
Suburbanization is a pattern of urban development characterized by the out-migration of
middle- and upper-class households from city centers to newly built suburbs. Suburbanization gives
rise to social issues such as the concentration of a poorer and less-educated working class in the
urban center, which creates fiscal crises and loss of revenue for the municipal government.
Moderate-income is defined as individuals and geographies having a median family income of at
j

least 50 percent and less than 80 percent of the area median income.
k
HOPE VI is a public housing program managed by U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development that was originally known as the Urban Revitalization Demonstration (URD).
HOPE VI aims to promote community revitalization in three general areas: physical improvements,
management improvements, and social and community services to address resident needs.

An Analysis: African American Employment, Population & Housing Trends in Washington, D.C. 13
Gentrification leads to displacement, as there are not enough new affordable units built
to replace the demolished ones, while residents who stay behind are not able to afford the
newly built higher-priced units.66 Supporters of gentrification claim that existing residents
actually benefit from displacement because affected populations may be exposed to new
economic and social benefits and therefore elevated from poverty.67 This debate stems from
a lack of knowledge of the final destination of out-migrants and broad geographic regions
to study, vague definitions of gentrification and displacement, and complexity regarding
the overall reasons for moving, among other factors.68 Scholars have used various data sets
from the U.S. Census Bureau, Internal Revenue Service (IRS), and U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to attempt to address this question.

A study69 of U.S. public housing found that demolition was higher in housing
complexes with predominately African American populations.l In Washington, D.C.,
scholar Jonathan Jackson compared gentrifying tracts to non-gentrifying tracts and
found displacement occurred at greater rates in the gentrifying regions. However,
this displacement declined slightly after 2000.70 Areas have been especially affected
in the neighborhood North of Massachusetts Avenue NE & NW (NOMA) in the
vicinity of Union Station, especially the Sursum Corda development (west of North
Capitol Street and south of New York Avenue NW). Claire Cook found that housing
development firms displaced residents through the demolition of an affordable housing
complex. The white population in the neighborhood increased by 1,000 percent (from
4.8 percent to 44percent) during the 20002010 period, while the African American
population decreased substantially (from 92.9 percent to 44.2 percent).71 In addition
to physical displacement, discrimination in home buying appears to show that, in
Displaced residents
gentrified neighborhoods, African American applicants are 2.33 times more likely to be
fear a loss of social rejected than white homebuyers. Inthe District as a whole, the rejection rate for African
American homebuyers over their white counterparts increases slightly, to 2.59 times.72
network including
friends, schools, and Another indication of high housing prices in D.C. comes from a recent report by
LendingTree, which showed that almost one-half (46.8 percent) of all mortgage requests
churches; the inability were from women and men 35 years of age or younger. The average loan amount was
$381,110 with an average downpayment of $83,461. This was the highest amount of any
to create new social
U.S. city save Pittsburgh.m While the report does not offer a racial breakdown, the other
ties; isolation from their economic data presented in this report suggests that few of those buying these homes in
D.C. would be African American.73
community; or loss
of their political voice Aside from physical displacement and discrimination, social and political displacements
are also concerns. Residents fear a loss of social network including friends, schools, and
and the pricing of their churches;74 the inability to create new social ties; isolation from their community;75 or
loss of their political voice and the pricing of their culture and humanity out of the city.76
culture and humanity
Once displacement occurs, it is unlikely the resident will ever return to their original
out of the city. neighborhood. Instead, they tend to move to other economically disadvantaged parts of
the city. Only between 14 percent and 25 percent of displaced residents return to their

Compared to all other public housing projects in the same city in the same year, the demolished
l

projects had 9.6 percent more African Americans.


m
The national average of home loan requests from this age cohort is 36.1 percent, an increase from
34.2 percent in 20152016. The average loan amount in the D.C. region across all age cohorts
was $394,769 with a downpayment of $97,202. Other cities in the top 10 besides D.C. and
Pittsburgh are Des Moines, Boston, St. Louis, Minneapolis, Cincinnati, Chicago, Omaha, and
San Francisco.

14 2017 Georgetown University


original neighborhood to occupy a new mixed-income unit. As the number of affordable
available units decreases, the price of other units rises.77 Low-income residents often cannot
meet the increased rent expectations, even in the new so-called affordable housing units.78

Housing, Education, and the Re-segregation of D.C.


In 1946, President Harry S. Truman established the National Committee on Segregation
inthe nations capital. Its express intent was to shed light on racial discrimination, especially
in education. Among its members were future Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey,
then Mayor of Minneapolis, Minnesota; Walter Reuther, president of the United
Automobile Workers of America; and former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt. In 1948, the
committee issued a publication titled Segregation in Washington: A Report of the National
Committee on Segregation in the Nations Capital that described Washington as rigidly
segregated. Citing the role that education must play in seeking to bring about unity and
In 2013, 71 percent
equality in the U.S., the report concludes, When the public schools of the capital are used of African American
instead to divide citizens on racial lines, to perpetuate inequalities, to increase them, and
worse to justify them, then the time has come to consider what kind of an America we want students in the D.C.
to build for the future.79 The report concluded that the primary influence on segregation in Public Schools (DCPS)
Washington was residential.
system and the citys
Today, segregation in Washington, D.C. is ever rampant. A March 2017 study from the
Civil Rights Project at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), reported that
charter schools had
71 percent of African American students in the D.C. Public Schools (DCPS) system almost no white peers.
and the citys charter schools attended schools in 2013 that had almost no white peers.80
Gary Orfield, a UCLA professor who co-authored the study with postdoctoral researcher
Jongyeon Ee, says that Washington now has possibilities that most cities simply dont
have, and whats striking about it is that officials have tried everything else [other] than
welcoming diversity into schools.81 He adds, the increasing gentrification in Washington
has increasingly led to segregation in education and housing.

The total number of students in public and charter schools in 2013 was close to 76,000.
African American enrollment declined from 89 percent to 73 percent between 19922013.
White student enrollment doubled over the last 20 years from 4 percent to 9 percent and
the Latino student population increased by 8.7 percentage points, equal to one-seventh of
D.C. students, in 2013. According to the UCLA report, Residential segregation remains
high in the city but isolation in schools is substantially greater. In other words, many
people who live in diverse communities are sending their children to segregated schools.
Thereport adds,

In comparing public and charter schools of the District of Columbia, double


segregationsegregation by race and povertywas higher in the charter schools where
nearly three-fourths of the students were low-income, and black and Latino students
had far more poor classmates than did their Asian and white counterparts. In public
schools more than half of students were poor, and black and Latino students tended
to attend schools with a far higher percentage of low-income classmates than white
students. The percent of black students in a school was highly correlated with the
proportion of students living in poverty.82

An Analysis: African American Employment, Population & Housing Trends in Washington, D.C. 15
The Civil Rights Project strikingly notes,

Washington, D.C. never experienced substantial school diversity that was created
in other cities during the civil rights era desegregation plans. ... In 2011, about two-
in-three students in D.C. were from low-income families, and students of color and
poverty, in particular, tended to have more low-income classmates. A typical black
student attended a school with over two thirds students of poverty, and more than half
of the classmates of a typical Latino student were poor students. This double segregation
is the basic mechanism for the perpetuation of inequality in D.C., which has extreme
racial gaps in educational achievement, gaps larger than those in any state that have
not changed significantly for many years. Whites in the city and suburbs usually
attend schools with a substantial share of whites and a large majority of middle class
schoolmates, whereas black students are segregated by both race and poverty.83

Although many African Americans have opted for charter schools, the report shows that
even more than in the traditional DCPS school, segregation has increased everyyear.
It adds that while more whites have moved into the city, this diversity has not led to
diversity in public, private, or charter schools. It notes that in SY 20132014, charter
schools enrolled over 80 percent blacks and 12 percent Latinos, and the combined share of
white and Asian students was less than 5 percent. About 80 percent of students enrolled
in charter schools in SY 20132014 were designated as low-income. Since the charter
school movement started in the mid- to late 1990s, the African American enrollment in the
Districts private schools has declined, in spite of tuition vouchers. White enrollment has
not. In short, race and class increasingly divide the Districts schools.

Since the charter school movement started in


the mid- to late 1990s, the African American
enrollment in the Districts private schools
has declined, in spite of tuition vouchers.
Whiteenrollment has not. In short, race and
classincreasingly divide the Districts schools.

16 2017 Georgetown University


In recent years, the D.C. government has increased its efforts to lower
unemployment, particularly among the African American community. The city
government agencies that fund or directly provide employment services are the
Department of Employment Services (DOES), Office of the State Superintendent of
Education (OSSE), Department of Youth Rehabilitation Services (DYRS), Department
of Human Services (DHS), Child and Family Services Agency (CFSA), and Economic
Security Administration (ESA).84 These agencies provide employment services,
adult literacy programs, and job training programs, including technological training.
Additionally, the Workforce Investment Council (WIC), Youth Investment Council
(YIC), and OSSE act as policymaking or oversight bodies that seek to improve the
economic and employment landscape of D.C.

DOES and Project Empowerment


DOES is primarily responsible for strengthening the workforce in D.C. It administers
the funding made possible by Title I of the federal Workforce Investment Act (WIA),
alaw that was originally passed in 1998 and requires all states to create a state board
that assists its governor in creating a workforce development plan.85 DOES administers
D.C.s flagship employment program, Project Empowerment. The program offers a
three-week training course followed by placement in private sector jobs. The program
WORKFORCE
pays participants earned wages for a maximum of six months.86 On average, Project DEVELOPMENT
Empowerment serves only about 800 people annually, mostly residents who have been
previously incarcerated, have a history of substance abuse, or are homeless.87 Tobe
EFFORTS
eligible, participants must be between ages 2254, currently unemployed, and not
receiving unemployment or Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) benefits.
Additionally, participants must satisfy three of the following conditions: 1)have a basic
skills deficiency determined by testing, 2) lack a secondary education credential, 3)have
a documented history of substance abuse, 4) be homeless, 5) be unable to maintain
steady employment, or 6) have been previously incarcerated or convicted of a felony.
Unfortunately, only approximately half of all participants in this program transition to
unsubsidized jobs, and only half of those retain their jobs for more than a year. In other
words, only about 25 percent of Project Empowerments participants are employed in an
unsubsidized job for longer than one year.

One of the reasons for the programs limited success is how the participants are funded.
Project Empowerment fully pays the wages of the participants. This distorts the hiring
incentives of the employers who participate in the program. Under this system, the
employers are receiving virtually free labor since the government of D.C. is paying the
participants wage. Employers that were not truly seeking to hire new workers have no
incentive to retain the participants when the subsidy the government provides is over.

Another issue that may be limiting Project Empowerments effectiveness is consistent


underspending of funds at DOES.88 On too many occasions, the D.C. government has
not utilized all of the available funds for apprenticeship and job training programs needed
in the city, especially by those who are marginalized or underserved. It has also performed
poorly on its First Source program, which prioritizes the hiring of D.C. residents on
publicly financed projects.

The agency had authority to spend $12 million in adult training programs for FY2015;
however, it spent only $5.3 million on these programs, less than half the amount allocated.
Underspending also occurred in 2014, during which DOES spent $53 million on
workforce development programs although it was allotted $63 million. In FY 2012 and
FY 2013, DOES underspent a combined $46 million.

An Analysis: African American Employment, Population & Housing Trends in Washington, D.C. 17
The Mayor Marion S. Barry Summer Youth Employment Program
The D.C. Summer Jobs Program, now the Mayor Marion S. Barry Summer Youth
Employment Program (SYEP), has offered summer jobs to district youth for over
30years. When the program was first started, one of its goals was to encourage businesses
to employ young people and to help guide them academically and occupationally.

The businesses were encouraged to help pay the young peoples wages. Over the years,
the economic and social support from businesses has declined, while the government has
become the sole employer for all intents and purposes.

Apprenticeship The SYEP must not be seen as a make work job center where no skills are learned
and no educational or occupational guidance is given. It must go back to its origins.
programs ought Universities, churches, labor unions, trade associations, hospitals, the physical therapy
to be established. industry, the hospitality industry (hotels, restaurants), museums, start-ups, the high tech
industry, the legal and medical professions, the entertainment industry, and sports and
Educational programs recreation enterprises all need to step up to the plate and support the SYEP.
and outings, Where possible, apprenticeship programs ought to be established. Educational programs
computer training, and outings, computer training, and construction skills need to be emphasized. When
young people need part of the summer to do remedial schoolwork, they ought to be paid.
and construction When businesses require an employee to pass certain tests for certifications, they ought to
skills need to be help the participants prepare for them. Most of all, businesses and industries must aid the
participants, especially those less economically fortunate, in using their summers to make
emphasized. plans for the future. Where possible, SYEP jobs ought to lead to permanent positions
when the applicant meets the needed qualifications or can be taught to obtain them.

Office of the State Superintendent for Education (OSSE)


Adult Training Programs
OSSE provides funding for adult training programs in D.C. through grants issued
under Title II of the federal Workforce Investment Act (WIA). These programs provide
literacy and numeracy training, GED exam preparation, and English proficiency training,
many of which are implemented through partnerships with non-profit organizations.89
WhileOSSEs local budget for postsecondary education and workforce readiness
programs increased from $6.7 million in fiscal year 201290 to over $11.2 million in
fiscal year 2016, it is only slightly more in the approved budgets for fiscal years 201791
and 201892 at $11.9million and $11.8 million.93 These programs include the career and
technical education (CTE) administered by D.C. Public Schools (DCPS) and public
charter schools, which are described in more detail below.

Career and Technical Education Programs and Career Academies


DCPS implements Career and Technical Education (CTE) programs to increase
college readiness among students and to prepare them to successfully enter the labor
force of certain occupational fields. In 2014, OSSE administered funds to support
95 CTE programs for which approximately 15,000 students were eligible, including
about 2,100 students in public charter schools.94 CTE provides courses in a diverse
range of occupations including construction, digital media, hospitality, health, business,
information technology, arts, communications, engineering, and human services. In 2017,
OSSEs budget for CTE was $6.4 million.95

18 2017 Georgetown University


Workforce Investment Council
The Workforce Investment Council (WIC) is mandated by WIA to develop an annual
plan for how D.C. will comply with federal government regulations. It is supposed to
collaborate with the local business, education, nonprofit, and government sectors. The
Mayor appoints members and more than half of WICs membership is required to be
from the private sector. The Mayor appointed a local businessman as the chairman of
WIC in December 2015.96

Prior to this appointment, the post had been vacant since May 2014. In 2012, the U.S.
Department of Labor labeled D.C. a high-risk partner in job training and employment
programs, making it the only jurisdiction in the country to have such a label.97 One reason
it was labeled high-risk is that it did not spend the funds allocated to aid needy and
willing D.C. residents who want to work.

Filling the position was one of the stipulations set by the Department of Labor to have
this designation removed.

According to the Fiscal Policy Institutes report on the 2018 D.C. budget, across all
workforce programs at DOES, a total of 17 million in federal money from prior fiscal
years has been left unspent, including $6.2 million for youth, $4 million for dislocated
workers and over $2 million in employment services.98

In 2012, the U.S. Department


of Labor labeled D.C. a
high-risk partner in job
training and employment
programs, making it the only
jurisdiction in the country to
have such alabel.

An Analysis: African American Employment, Population & Housing Trends in Washington, D.C. 19
Workforce Recommendations
1. Increase agency support.
The D.C. government should increase the institutional support given to the primary
agencies that address workforce development and skills. This requires a full commitment by
the Mayor and City Council to robustly fund workforce development programs in DOES
and OSSE. Given that both agencies report to the Mayor, the Mayor should require WIC
to create yearly evaluation reports on the workforce development programs implemented
in D.C., in collaboration with DOES and OSSE. If the Mayors administration makes
these programs a priority and increases accountability for them, the agencies behavior will
change. This will lead to a more accurate evaluation of the governments programs and will
serve as a guide for policymakers when deciding how to strengthen these programs.

2. Strengthen Project Empowerment.


Following the D.C. Fiscal Policy Institutes recommendations, Project Empowerment
should change its model from a direct payment system to a partial reimbursement system,
in which the employer pays the participant its wages and the D.C. government reimburses
only a fixed percentage.99 This system will give employers further incentive for the ongoing
RECOMMENDATIONS investment in and support of workers because they will be required to pay for some of
the costs associated with a new hire. This would minimize the risk of employers hiring
participants only to capitalize on cheap labor and ensure that employers participation
is based on a genuine interest to expand their workforce, thereby leading to higher job
retention rates for participants.

Project Empowerment should also remove its ban on potential participants receiving
unemployment benefits to be eligible. This ban has the potential to force potential
participants to choose between receiving the income these safety net programs provide and
the training and prospect of obtaining steady employment. People receiving unemployment
benefits should be allowed to have wages supplement their unemployment benefits, as
a way to both encourage their transition into full-time work and allow them to make a
decent living and provide for themselves and their families.

3. Strengthen SYEP.
The District must work with local entities to make the jobs supported by the MarionS.Barry
Summer Youth Employment Program (SYEP) permanent. This may entail working with the
federal government to develop Registered Apprenticeship programs (per Recommendation
#5, below). The District should also work with local colleges and universities to help
qualified applicants work toward associates, bachelors, masters, and other degrees.

4. Partner with a growing industry.


The D.C. government should follow practices used by other cities and partner with
established and emerging industries in the area. Many cities including Boston and
NewOrleans have adopted this model to increase economic development.100 D.C. should
develop a healthcare cluster development plan in order to increase the number of jobs
available to African American residents.

It is estimated that the majority of all employment growth in D.C. between 20102020
will come from two sectors: 1) professional and business services, and 2) education and
health services. Both are expected to add over 67,000 new jobs in the coming years.101
Asmentioned earlier, it is estimated that 50 percent of the projected new jobs in the
healthcare industry will not require advanced degrees. For this reason, the D.C. government
should invest in developing a workforce that will be qualified for these jobs in the healthcare
industry. Further, creating new jobs in itself is not sufficient. Jobs must come with decent

20 2017 Georgetown University


benefits and opportunities for advancement, especially in healthcare, logistics, and hospitality, which
are steadily growing in the city. Opening new paths for jobs in new and emerging industries must
occur with a commitment to maintain the highest quality of working conditions. These jobs must also
allow for on-the-job growth, training, and the ability to advance the careers of employees.

The city must create a pipeline from its high schools to careers such as nursing, radiology, EMT, and
physicians assistants, which typically pay a living wage or better. D.C. can start by reconfiguring the
Career Academies and CTE programs administered by DCPS to be geared toward these careers.

The Career Academies and CTE programs should partner with D.C.s medical universities to offer
college credits in the careers stated above. The citys hospitals and patient centers can also be used to
provide real-world training to future healthcare professionals. School administrators should also
define clear entry points for employers. This will lead employers to build relationships with students
and see them as a potential workforce. New jobs must allow workers the ability to move up and
provide beneficial working conditions and the potential to learn by doing.
Apprenticeship is a
5. Develop Registered Apprenticeship programs.
proven model for
Many employers in the financial and healthcare sectors are also working with the federal government
to develop Registered Apprenticeship programs. Washington, D.C. must engage in this initiative to job preparation
help workers improve their skills and increase their opportunities for advancement. Apprenticeship is
that combines
a proven model for job preparation that combines paid on-the-job training with related instruction to
progressively increase workers skill levels and wages. Such programs are business-driven models that paid on-the-job
provide effective ways for employers to recruit, train, and retain highly skilled workers. They allow
employers to develop and apply industry standards to training programs which increase efficiency
training with
and the quality of the workforce. As an earn and learn strategy, Registered Apprenticeship offers related instruction
job seekers immediate employment opportunities that pay sustainable wages and offer advancement
along a career path. Graduates of Registered Apprenticeship programs receive nationally recognized
to progressively
credentials, and their training may be applied toward further postsecondary education. New appren- increase workers
ticeship programs are taking place across the country as an innovative solution to talent development.
D.C. has a long history of apprenticeship programs in the construction industry and could benefit skill levels
from expanding programs in industries including information technology, healthcare, transportation, and wages.
hospitality, financial services, and government. This would be a triple win: for D.C. businesses which
would have better trained workers, for D.C. residents who would have access to better jobs, and for
the city which would improve economic development and create a stable workforce. Government
agencies, private employees, trade associations, universities, hospitals, and, where they exist, labor
unions, must form much needed partnerships to develop Registered Apprenticeship programs and
training. All parties must comply strictly with existing laws and regulations.

6. Support publicprivate partnerships to increase employment opportunities.


The District must find ways to increase employment opportunities for its residents, notably African
Americans, through partnerships between employers, the government, and third sector organizations.

First, the District must improve its performance under the First Source program (on the books since
1984), designed to encourage hiring of D.C. residents for 51 percent of new jobs on publicly funded
projects in the District. Enforcement of this law on publicly funded projects could have provided
thousands of temporary, part-time, and full-time jobs on construction and public works projects
around D.C. This could include establishing an independent monitor to ensure compliance with First
Source and to place D.C. residentsincluding those who have completed job training programs for
permanent jobsin jobs covered by the FirstSource law. Some local enterprises, including Georgetown
University and its hospital, seek to guarantee that 51 percent of new jobs go to District residents.102

The District government must also increase its support of third sector organizations such as the
BlackWorkers Center, which seeks to address issues of race and employment while helping black
workers create their own opportunities for training, employment, and ownership.

An Analysis: African American Employment, Population & Housing Trends in Washington, D.C. 21
7. Fully fund the IIEP Act of 2016.
According to recent reports, each year several thousand returning citizens, or formerly incarcerated
women and men, come back to the District after their release. Currently, D.C. has a total of more
than 60,000 returning citizens. While the District of Columbia Council passed the Incarceration
to Incorporated Entrepreneurship Act of 2016 (IIEP Act of 2016), this program has never been
properly funded. In order for returning citizens to seek educational, employment, and housing
opportunitiesand to reduce the rate of recidivismthis program must be fully funded.103

Housing Recommendations
These recommendations are intended to underscore the link between housing and the economy.
Many who have jobs find that the high cost of adequate housing precludes them the right to
While wealth remain in the city. The most significant housing problems are the lack of affordable housing stock,
the housing burden that causes many working individuals to pay well over one-third of their
creation for income for rent or housing, and the inability of working African Americans to become or remain
homeowners in a city where many typically have been born. These trends directly correlate with
individuals is an
the fact that many African Americans are stuck with lower-paying jobs and few opportunities for
important goal, job training to advance. The city as a whole needs a more complete report and more comprehensive
strategy to promote and develop decent affordable housing for all and to combat homelessness.
the city needs TheMayor and Council ought to appoint a new Comprehensive Housing Strategy Task Force.
to focus first on Thelast task force was appointed in 2012 and its report came out in 2013.104 The new task force
should call together a forum with all city agencies involved in housing, all pro-people developers,
creating more housing and tenant advocates, nonprofits, and churches who have built and maintained affordable
affordable housing housing to immediately begin plans for a citywide summit on housing. Georgetown University
would be willing to host the initial planning session.
stock immediately
Specifically, the District government and task force should:
to address the
considerable 1. Address the effects of gentrification and displacement in wealthier
neighborhoods through investment in dense, mixed-use housing.
demand.
To combat the negative effects of gentrification that have been linked to the displacement of
poorer, minority residents, the District government should develop a more comprehensive plan
for constructing mixed-use model affordable housing. While wealth creation for individuals is an
important goal as it gives poorer residents a financial asset to combat poverty and increase their
stake in the community,105 the city needs to focus first on creating more affordable housing stock
immediately to address the considerable demand. In terms of location, the city should introduce
the mixed-use model in neighborhoods with higher income levels, instead of neighborhoods with
a large number of public housing or rent-to-own housing units. Placing these units in various
neighborhoods throughout the city could have a greater impact on the poorer residents, as it
allows them to access other economic and social benefits of the neighborhood, such as walkability,
nearby retail, convenient access to public transportation, and interactions with a greater diversity of
neighbors. Columbia Heights, Capitol Hill, 14th Street, Adams Morgan, H Street, and NOMA
are examples of neighborhoods where new mixed-use models have been constructed and should
continue to be constructed.106 The city must aid tenants who have paid rents for years and help
those in cases where rent-to-own options exist.

2. Invest in poorer neighborhoods with rent-to-own housing.


Unlike wealthier, gentrifying neighborhoods, poorer communities find fewer developers aiming
to build new projects, citing the neighborhoods often-higher crime rates and the lower or
nonexistent profit margins of such ventures.107 However, building new housing projects in
poorer neighborhoods will benefit existing low-income residents by promoting business activity

22 2017 Georgetown University


and the local real estate market with additional employment options and the social benefits
of an improving local economy. In these communities, policies should offer a path to eventual
homeownership, enabling individuals to eventually purchase a unit at an affordable price. Rent-
to-own housing is beneficial because it creates personal equity for individuals and helps lift
residents from poverty. Homeowners typically have an increased sense of belonging and pride
in their communities. Allowing existing residents to own homes in these communities may help
stave off the negative associations with gentrification, such as displacement. By creating more
homeownership in poorer communities, the government will help support less wealthy individuals
before their neighborhoods experience an influx of new, younger, more educated residents. It is
important to allow these residents the opportunity to remain in their current neighborhoods.
Examples of neighborhoods where this type of housing could be constructed include Capitol View,
Congress Heights, and others east of the Anacostia River.

Rent-to-own housing does have the impact of reducing affordable housing stock in the long
term. Onceresidents purchase a home, that unit is no longer available for future residents as an
affordable option. However, by focusing this rent-to-own housing in the poorer communities, the
economic values of those communities will increase and help lift other residents out of poverty.
Thebenefits to the current disadvantaged residents outweigh the costs of less affordable housing in
the long term.

3. Assess the regional demand for affordable housing and current regional
investments in affordable housing by jurisdiction.
With its now annual investment of at least $100 million in local tax revenue in affordable housing
per capita, the District invests far more funding in affordable housing than any of the surrounding
jurisdictions. What is a reasonable share of the regions low-income housing burden for the District By creating more
to take on? Shouldit increase its investment in affordable housing production beyond $100 million
per year? Should other jurisdictions do so? It is long past time these questions are explored.
homeownership in
poorer communities,
4. Create a comprehensive affordable housing database.
the government
Washington D.C. could benefit from a comprehensive affordable housing database to keep track
of all current affordable housing projects, public housing, rent-controlled housing, vacant housing, will help support
housing in need of repairs or maintenance, and housing at risk. This would allow the city to
have an accurate view of its current affordable housing situation and decide the best next steps.
less wealthy
Currently, the D.C. Department of Housing and Community Development maintains a listing of individuals before
some recent and new properties of which the city government is in some way a sponsor, owner, or
partner. However, the citys patchwork of housing assistance programs has changed over the years,
their neighborhoods
creating a large number of properties all with different rules and opportunities for residents. This experience an influx
ignores the additional large number of properties assisted by HUD. The city government should
take the lead on creating a unified and searchable database of all properties that would allow of new, younger,
residents to see potential opportunities easily. more educated
5. Strengthen landlord penalties. residents.
The D.C. government must strengthen the provision and enforcement of stiff penalties, such as
seizure of property, on landlords who engage in unfair practices such as forcing tenants out by
cutting off utilities, refusing to make repairs, or otherwise making tenants lives unbearable.

6. Report full disclosure of housing funds.


To ensure affordable housing for African Americans, the D.C. government should also provide a
more complete explanation of all federal housing and funds for the homeless allocated to the city
and returned.108

An Analysis: African American Employment, Population & Housing Trends in Washington, D.C. 23
Over the last 20 years, D.C.s demographic composition has shifted
significantly. Since the 1980s, D.C. has undergone economic growth and gentrification
trends that have disproportionately hindered African American residentsand economic
disparities between African American and white residents are expected to continue.
While the City Councils efforts to improve wages and family leave should be applauded,
more must be done.

In the coming years, industries will require qualifications that do not align with the
current skills of African American residents. Projections indicate that more than half of
Photo courtesy of washington.org
all newly created jobs in D.C. between 20102020 will require at least a bachelors degree.
Meanwhile, assessment of the current demographic makeup of D.C. residents confirmed
that in 2014 only 12.3 percent of the African American population held a bachelors
degree. Therefore, the D.C. labor market is moving in a direction that does not favor the
current employment qualifications of African American residents.

The D.C. Office of the Mayor and the D.C. government should commit to enhancing
the organizational leadership and support for three of the most significant government
agencies devoted to improving D.C.s workforce: WIC, DOES, and OSSE. It should also
CONCLUSION strengthen the citys flagship workforce development program, Project Empowerment;
develop a robust and comprehensive career pathway to the healthcare support industry;
and institute Registered Apprenticeship programs. They should also implement policies
that ensure affordable housing for African Americans, particularly those who are
low-income. Growing inequalities are endangering the African American community in
D.C. More must be done to enhance the employment qualifications of and opportunities
for low- to moderate-income African American residents, thereby building a more
prosperous and supportive community for all.

Growing inequalities are


endangering the African
American community in D.C.

24 2017 Georgetown University


1. Maurice Jackson, Pricing the soul out of Washington, The Chronicle of Higher
Education, June 18, 2012, www.chronicle.com/article/Pricing-the-Soul-Out-
of/132259/.
Maurice Jackson, Why police cant fix urban Americas violent crime problem,
TheWashington Post, September 3, 2015, www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/
wp/2015/09/03/why-police-cant-fix-urban-americas-violent-crime-problem/.
2. Campbell Gibson and Kay Jung, Table 23. District of ColumbiaRace and Hispanic
Origin: 1800 to 1990, Historical Census Statistics on Population Totals by Race,
1790 to 1990, and by Hispanic Origin, 1970 to 1990, For the United States, Regions,
Divisions, and States, United States Census Bureau, September 2002, www.census.
gov/content/dam/Census/library/working-papers/2002/demo/POP-twps0056.pdf.
Quick Facts: District of Columbia, United States Census Bureau, last modified for
July 1, 2016, www.census.gov/quickfacts/table/PST045215/11.
3. Brooke DeRenzis, From Basic Skills to Good Jobs: A Strategy for Connecting
D.C.s Adult Learners to Career Pathways, D.C. Appleseed, April 2014,
www.dcappleseed.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/From-Basic-Skills-to-Good-
Jobs-April-2014.pdf.
4. Commission on African-American Affairs Establishment Act of 2011, Council
of the District of Columbia, January 20, 2012, lims.dccouncil.us/Download/25969/
B19-0213-SignedAct.pdf.
NOTES
5. Maurice Jackson, Pricing the soul...
6. Congressional Budget Office, The Distribution of Household Income and Federal
Taxes, 2011. 49440. 2014.
7. Signe-Mary McKernan, Caroline Ratcliffe, C. Eugene Steuerle and Sisi Zhang,
Less than Equal: Racial Disparities in Wealth Accumulation, Urban Institute,
April 25, 2013, www.urban.org/research/publication/less-equal-racial-disparities-
wealth-accumulation/view/full_report.
8. Emily Beller and Michael Hout, Intergenerational Social Mobility: The United
States in Comparative Perspective, Future of Children 16.2 (2006): 19.
9. Raj Chetty, Nathaniel Hendren, Patrick Kline and Emmanuel Saez, Where is the
Land of Opportunity? The Geography of Intergenerational Mobility in the United
States, National Bureau of Economic Research, January 2014, www.nber.org/
papers/w19843.pdf.
Bhashkar Mazumder, Black-White Differences in Intergenerational Economic
Mobility in the United States. Economic Perspectives 1 (2014).
10. Ibid.
11. Gregory Acs, Downward Mobility from the Middle Class: Waking Up from the
American Dream, Pew Charitable Trust, 2011.
Beller and Hout, Intergenerational Social Mobility, 19.
Mazumder, Black-White Differences.
12. Labor Force Statistics from the Current Population Survey, Bureau of Labor and
Statistics, UnitedStates Department of Labor, January 6, 2017, www.bls.gov/web/
empsit/cpsee_e16.htm.
13. Algernon Austin, A jobs-centered approach to African American community
development, Economic Policy Institute, December14, 2011, www.epi.org/
publication/bp328-african-american-unemployment/.
Maurice Jackson, Why police...
Ming-Jen Lin, Does unemployment increase crime? Evidence from U.S. data
19742000, Journal of Human Resources 43, no. 2 (2008): 413436.
14. Wes Rivers and Claire Zippel, While D.C. Continues to Recover from Recession,
Communities ofColor Continue to Face Challenges, D.C. Fiscal Policy Institute,
September 18, 2015, www.dcfpi.org/while-dc-continues-to-recover-from-recession-
communities-of-color-continue-to-face-challenges.

An Analysis: African American Employment, Population & Housing Trends in Washington, D.C. 25
15. D.C.s Racial Inequality Continues to Widen... 29. SOI Tax StatsMigration Data, U.S. Internal Revenue
D.C.Fiscal Policy Institute. Service, www.irs.gov/uac/soi-tax-stats-migration-data.
16. Kilolo Kijakazi, Rachel Marie Brooks Atkins, MarkPaul, 30. Ibid.
Anne Price, Darrick Hamilton, William A. DarityJr., 31. Ibid.
TheColor of Wealth in the Nations Capital,
32. DeRenzis, From Basic Skills...
UrbanInstitute, October31,2016, www.urban.org/
research/publication/color-wealth-nations-capital. District of Columbia State Integrated Workforce
Plan: Program Years 20122016, D.C.Department of
17. Perry Stein, Economic disparity persists in D.C.,
Employment Services, 2012.
TheWashington Post, April 18, 2017.
Jasmin Griffin and Jenny Reed, Falling Short: The
Ward Snapshots: Tracking Child Well-Being in
Districts Economic Recovery is Leaving Several Groups
YourWard, D.C. Action for Children, April2017,
Behind, D.C. Fiscal Policy Institute, March 5, 2014,
www.dcactionforchildren.org/sites/default/files/
www.dcfpi.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/3-4-14-
2016WARDSnapshots_FINAL_4_11_17.pdf.
State-of-Working-DC-FINAL.pdf.
18. D.C.s Racial Inequality Continues to Widen, Even as
33. Hometown Prosperity: Increasing Opportunities for DCs
the City Sees Substantial Economic Growth, D.C. Fiscal
Low-Income Working Families, D.C.Appleseed and
Policy Institute, September 15, 2016, www.dcfpi.org/dcs-
D.C. Fiscal Policy Institute, January 2008, www.dcfpi.org/
racial-inequality-continues-to-widen-even-as-the-city-
DC_Appleseed_sm.pdf.
sees-substantial-economic-growthh.
34. District of Columbia Long-term Industry Projections, 2014
19. Jenny Reed, Who is Low-Income in DC? D.C. Fiscal
and projected 2024, Department of Employment Services,
Policy Institute, October 26, 2010, www.dcfpi.org/
Government of the District of Columbia, does.dc.gov/
who-is-low-income-in-dc.
sites/default/files/dc/sites/does/publication/attachments/
20. Linnea Lassiter, Still Looking for Work: Unemployment District%20of%20Columbia%20Long-Term%20
in D.C. Highlights Racial Inequity, D.C.Fiscal Policy Industry%20Projections%2C%202014%20-%202024.pdf.
Institute, March 2, 2017, www.dcfpi.org/still-looking-for-
35. District of Columbia State Integrated Workforce Plan.
work-unemployment-in-dc-highlights-racial-inequity.
36. Hometown Prosperity.
21. Ibid.
37. Martha Ross and Mala B. Thakur, Improving Youth
22. Eben Fodor, Relationship between Growth and Prosperity
Programs and Outcomes in Washington, D.C., Brookings
in the 100 Largest U.S. Metropolitan Areas, Economic
Institution, December10, 2014, www.brookings.edu/
Development Quarterly 26.3 (2012): 220230.
research/improving-youth-programs-and-outcomes-in-
23. Rubn Hernndez-Murillo, Lesli S. Ott, and washington-d-c/.
MichaelT.Owyang, Patterns of Interstate Migration
38. DeRenzis, From Basic Skills...
inthe United States from the Survey of Income and
Program Participation, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 39. Ed Lazere and Marco Guzman, Left Behind: DCs
Review 93.3 (2011): 169185. Economic Recovery is not Reaching all Residents, D.C.
Fiscal Policy Institute, January 29, 2015, www.dcfpi.org/wp-
24. Ed Lazere and Angie Rodgers, Losing Ground: The
content/uploads/2015/01/State-of-Working-DC.Final_1.pdf.
Districts Lowest-Income Neighborhoods Suffered Large
Population and Income Losses in the 1990s, D.C. Fiscal Martha Ross and Brooke DeRenzis, Reducing Poverty in
Policy Institute, revisedNovember 17, 2005, www.dcfpi. Washington, D.C. and Rebuilding the Middle Class from
org/10-31-05pov.pdf. Within, Brookings Institution, March 1, 2007,
www.brookings.edu/research/reducing-poverty-in-
25. Jonathan Jackson, The Consequences of Gentrification
washington-d-c-and-rebuilding-the-middle-class-from-
for Racial Change in Washington, D.C., Housing Policy
within/.
Debate 25.2 (2015): 353373.
40. Ross and DeRenzis, Reducing Poverty...
26. Brooke DeRenzis, Population Dynamics in the District of
Columbia since 2000, Brookings Institution, January 2008, 41. Ross and Thakur, Improving Youth Programs...
www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/01_dc_ 42. State Education Agency, The State of Adult Literacy
demographics_derenzis.pdf. Report: Investing in Human Capital, University of the
27. Brooke DeRenzis and Alice Rivlin, A Pathway to the District of Columbia, 2007.
Middle Class: Migration and Demographic Change 43. DeRenzis, From Basic Skills...
in Prince Georges County, Brookings Institution, 44. Ed Lazere, Helping D.C. Residents Get Good Jobs,
April 2007, www.brookings.edu/wp-content/ D.C. Fiscal Policy Institute, January 2015, www.dcfpi.org/
uploads/2016/06/20070402_princegeorge.pdf. wp-content/uploads/2015/01/1.5.15-3-of-11_Helping-
28. Ibid. DC-Residents-Get-Good-Jobs.pdf.

26 2017 Georgetown University


45. District of Columbia State Integrated Workforce Plan. Silva Mathema, Gentrification, Poverty and Race
46. Ibid. Research Action Council, October 2013, prrac.org/pdf/
Gentrification_literature_review_-_October_2013.pdf.
47. Educational Attainment of People Working in the
District of Columbia by Occupation, D.C.Department of Ashon Nesbitt, A Model of Gentrification: Monitoring
Employment Services, 2012. Community Change in Selected Neighborhoods of
St.Petersburg, Florida Using the Analytic Hierarchy
48. Ibid.
Process (PhD diss., University of Florida, 2005).
49. Ibid.
Loic Wacquant, Relocating Gentrification: The Working
50. District of Columbia State Integrated Workforce Plan. Class, Science, and the State in Recent Urban Research,
51. Educational Attainment of People Working in the International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 32,
District of Columbia by Occupation. vol.1 (2008): 14682427.
52. Impact Directory: Businesses in the Washington, D.C. 64. HUD awards $34.9 million grant to Washington, D.C. to
Metropolitan Area, Washington, D.C: Impact Consortium, transform public housing, help residents, U.S. Department
Inc., 1974. of Housing and Urban Development Archive, October 19,
53. Maurice Jackson, Why police... 2001, archives.hud.gov/news/2001/pr01-091.cfm.
54. Mark Lieberman, Northwest Current, Audit finds flaws in 65. Mindy T. Fullilove and Rodrick Wallace, Serial Forced
affordable Housing Trust Fund, April19, 2017, Real Estate Displacement in American Cities, 1916-2010, Journal of
Guide, RE4. Urban Health 88,no.3 (2001): 381389.
Yearly Picture of Subsidized Households, United States Edward Goetz, Gentrification in Black and White: The
Department of Housing and Urban Development, Racial Impact of Public Housing Demolition in American
www.huduser.org/portal/datasets/picture/yearlydata.html. Cities, UrbanStudies 48, no. 8 (2011): 15811604.
55. Claire Zippel, A Broken Foundation: Affordable Housing Silva Mathema, Gentrification.
Crisis Threatens DCs Lowest-Income Residents, 66. Brian Berry, Comments on Elvin K. Wylie and
D.C.Fiscal Policy Institute, December 18, 2016, Daniel J. Hammels Islands of Decay in Seas of Renewal:
www.dcfpi.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/DCFPI- Housing Policy and the Resurgence of Gentrification,
Broken-Foundation-Housing-Report-12-8-16.pdf. Housing Policy Debate 10, no. 4 (2008): 783788.
56. Mary Schwartz and Ellen Wilson, Who Can Afford To Jonathan Jackson, The Consequences, 353373.
Live in a Home?: A look at data from the 2006 American Maurice Kennedy and Paul Leonard, Dealing with
Community Survey, U.S. Census Bureau, www.census.gov/ Neighborhood Change: A Primer on Gentrification
housing/census/publications/who-can-afford.pdf. and Policy Choices, paperprepared for the Brookings
Lisa Sturtevant, Agnes Artemel, D.C. area incomes fall Institution Center on Urban and Metropolitan Policy,
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(blog), greatergreaterwashington.org/post/16343/dc-area- 67. Ingrid Ellen and Katherine M. ORegan, How low-income
incomes-fall-behind-skyrocketing-housing-costs/. neighborhoods change: entry, exit, and enhancement,
57. Rania Khalek, D.C.s Poorest Residents Fight Displacement Regional Science and Urban Economics 41, no. 2 (2011):
by Gentrification, Truth-out, www.truth-out.org/news/ 8997.
item/21563-poorest-residents-fight-displacement-by- Terra McKinnish, Walsh Randall, and White T. Kirk,
gentrification. Who gentrifies low-income neighborhoods? Journal of
58. Zippel, A Broken Foundation... Urban Economics 67,no.2 (2010): 180193.
59. Aaron Wiener, D.C. Still Majority-Black, Barely, 68. Rowland Atkinson, The hidden costs of gentrification:
Washington City Paper, June 12, 2013, www.washington Displacement in central London, JournalofHousing and
citypaper.com/blogs/housingcomplex/2013/06/12/d-c- the Built Environment 15, vol. 1 (2001): 307326.
still-majority-black-barely/. McKinnish, et. al., Who gentrifies...
60. Sabrina Tavernise and Robert Gebeloff, Many U.S. 69. Edward Goetz, Gentrification, 15811604.
Blacks Moving to South, Reversing Trend, TheNew York
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Times, March 24, 2011. www.nytimes.com/2011/03/25/
us/25south.html?_r=0. 70. Jonathan Jackson, The Consequences, 353373.
61. Lance Freeman and Frank Braconi, Gentrification and 71. Claire Cook, The Displacement of Displacement:
displacement New York City in the 1990s, Journal of the New-Build Gentrification in Washington, D.C.
American Planning Association 70, no. 1 (2004): 3952. (PhDdiss., The George Washington University).
62. Ibid. 72. Elvin Wyle and Daniel Hammel, Gentrification,
segregation, and discrimination in the American urban
63. Mark Davidson and Loretta Lees, New-build
system, Environment and Planning A 36 (2004): 12151242.
gentrification and Londons riverside renaissance,
Environment and Planning A 37(2005): 11651190.

An Analysis: African American Employment, Population & Housing Trends in Washington, D.C. 27
73. Megan Greuling, Where are the nations young 89. FY 2017 Proposed Budget and Financial Plan, Washington,
homebuyers now? Pittsburgh, D.C. and Des Moines, D.C. Office of the State Superintendent ofEducation.
Lending Tree, March 13, 2017, www.lendingtree.com/ 90. FY 2014 Proposed Budget and Financial Plan, Washington,
press-release/where-are-nations-young-homebuyers. D.C. Office of the State Superintendent of Education.
Michael Lerner, D.C. Region Ranks No. 2 in the 91. FY 2018 Proposed Budget and Financial Plan, Washington,
abundance of millennial home buyers, TheWashington Post, D.C. Office of the State Superintendent of Education.
March 22, 2017. Datacollected between August 1, 2016
92. Fiscal Year 2018 Local Budget Act of 2017, Council
and February 1, 2017.
of the District of Columbia, June 13, 2017, http://lims.
74. Rowland Atkinson, The hidden costs, 307326. dccouncil.us/Download/37845/B22-0242-Enrollment.pdf.
75. Edward Goetz, Gentrification, 15811604. 93. FY 2014 Proposed Budget and Financial Plan, Washington,
76. Maurice Jackson, Pricing the soul out... D.C. Office of the State Superintendent of Education.
Leslie Martin, Fighting for Control: Political 94. The Office of Career and Technical Education Programs
Displacement in Atlantas Gentrifying Neighborhoods, of Study, Office of the State Superintendent of Education,
Urban Affairs Review 42, no. 5 (2007): 603628. Government of the District of Columbia, April 28, 2014,
77. Edward Goetz, Gentrification, 15811604. osse.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/osse/publication/
attachments/2014%20Comprehensive%20List%20
78. L. Hendey, P. Tatian, and G. MacDonald, Housing security
of%20DCPS%20High%20Schools%20w%20CTE%20
in the Washington region, UrbanInstitute, www.urban.org/
Programs%20v.2%5B1%5D.pdf.
research/publication/housing-security-washington-region.
95. Career and Technical Education (CTE) at DCPS,
79. Kenesaw M. Landis, Segregation in Washington: A Report of
District of Columbia Public Schools, dcps.dc.gov/service/
the National Committee on Segregation intheNations Capital
career-and-technical-education-cte-DCPS.
(Chicago:1948), 76.
FY 2016 Proposed Budget and Financial Plan, Washington,
80. Gary Orfield and Jongyeon Ee, Our Segregated Capital:
D.C. Office of the State Superintendent ofEducation.
An Increasingly Diverse City with RaciallyPolarized
Schools, The Civil Rights Project/Proyecto Derechos 96. McCartney, Uniquely Bad Record.
Civiles, Los Angeles, February 9, 2017. 97. Ibid.
81. Mandy McLauren, Public Schools in the District Remain 98. Whats the Proposed FY 2018 Budget for Workforce
Highly Segregated, The Washington Post, February 26, 2017. Development and Subsidized Jobs Programs, D.C. Fiscal
82. Orfield and Ee, Our Segregated Capital, 1213. Policy Institute Budget Toolkit, April 20, 2017.
83. New Report Shows Schools in the Nations Capital Remain 99. Lazere, Making a Good Jobs Program Even Better...
Intensely Segregated; Charter Schools are most segregated 100. Clusters, U.S. Cluster Mapping, 2014,
in the City, Civil Rights Project/Proyecto Derechos www.clustermapping.us/cluster.
Civiles, University of California, Los Angeles, February 101. District of Columbia State Integrated Workforce Plan.
9, 2017, www.civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/news/press-
102. Jennifer Bryant, An Economic Agenda for Black
releases/2017-press-releases/new-report-shows-schools-
Workers, Organizing Neighborhood Equity D.C.,
in-the-nation2019s-capital-remain-intensely-segregated-
April27, 2015, www.onedconline.org/bwcpanel.
charter-schools-are-most-segregated-in-the-city.
103. Kevin Smith and Kimberly A. Nelson, D.C. missed
84. Martha Ross, Strengthening Educational and Career
another opportunity to help ex-offenders, The Washington
Pathways for D.C. Youth, Brookings Institution,
Post, June 18, 2017.
October5, 2011, www.brookings.edu/research/strengthening-
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85. WIOA Overview, Employment and Training
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housingtaskforce-report-031113-singles.pdf.
86. Project Empowerment Program, Department of
105. Peter J. Byrne and Michael Diamond, Affordable Housing,
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empowerment-program.
Fordham Urban Law Journal 34 (2007): 527.
87. Ed Lazere, Making a Good Jobs Program Even Better:
106. Byrne and Diamond, Affordable Housing, 527.
How to Strengthen DCs Project Empowerment,
D.C.Fiscal Policy Institute, April 1, 2015, www.dcfpi. 107. Ibid.
org/making-a-good-jobs-program-even-better-how-to- 108. Debbie Cenziper, The nations capital forfeits millions in
strengthen-dcs-project-empowerment. affordable housing funds as homelessness surges. Why?
88. Robert McCartney, Why D.C. Has a Uniquely The Washington Post, May 8, 2017.
Bad Record on Helping the Unemployed Get Jobs, Paul Duggan, Report faults homelessness in the city,
TheWashington Post, December12, 2015. TheWashington Post, May 7, 2017.

28 2017 Georgetown University


communityengagement.georgetown.edu/DCAAemployment

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