Live Breaking News & Updates on சிவப்பு புறணி

Stay updated with breaking news from சிவப்பு புறணி. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.

Black Americans Face Systematic Bias Homeownership


David Paul Morris/Getty Images
Amid a global pandemic, Black millennials led a boom in African American homeownership in 2020.
But racial disparities in wealth, education, employment, and homeownership still persist for Black Americans.
Homeownership is going to be a challenge for all millennials, but mostly for Black millennials, an expert told Insider. 
During a pandemic that hit Black communities hard, millennial buyers represented the bulk of African Americans home purchases in 2020.
Black adults between the ages of 26 and 39 sparked a nationwide rise in the homeownership rate for African Americans, CNN Business reported. 
According to a November report released by the National Association of Realtors, 5% of home buyers during the first three quarters of 2020 were Black, compared to 4% in 2019. Despite a 1% increase, US Census data shows Black millennials raised the homeownership rate for African Americans more than t ....

New York , United States , Joseph Zeballos Roig , Andre Perry , Joe Biden , Bloomberg Citylab , Alex Horton , Tenisha Tate Austin , Barbara Smith , Lawrence Yun , Shawn Rochester , Paul Austin , New York Times , Brookings Institution , Department Of Housing , National Low Income Housing Coalition , National Association Of Realtors , African American , National Association , Black Americans , Salt Lake County , Black Tax , Business Insider , Homestead Act , Fair Housing Act , Civil Rights Act ,

Racism and Redlining Can Be Seen 'in the Flood Data'


Alerts
Houses are surrounded by flood waters after Hurricane Delta passed through the area on Oct. 10, 2020 near Lake Charles, Louisiana.
Photo: Chandan Khanna (Getty Images)
There’s no question that flooding is becomingworse due to the climate crisis pushing up our sea levels and making heavy downpours more common. But the risk doesn’t affect us all equally. A report released by the real estate brokerage firm Redfin this week shows that formerly redlined areas are more vulnerable to the threat of floods.
Advertisement
Redlining was a discriminatory lending practice in the 1930s, wherein house appraisers mapped cities for the federal Homeowners’ Loan Corporation with different colored lines to indicate how desirable areas were to live in. Neighborhoods deemed “best” or “still desirable” were marked with green and blue lines, respectively. Those considered “definitely declining” were marked in yellow, and zones declared “hazardous” overwh ....

United States , Lake Charles , Chandan Khanna Getty , Hurricane Delta , Chandan Khanna , Getty Images , Sheharyar Bokhari , United States Department Of Housing And Urban Development , Red Lining , Urban Decay , Racial Segregation , Physical Geography , James Knighton , Mortgage Industry Of The United States , Flood Insurance , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , ஏரி சார்லஸ் , சந்தன் கண்ணா கெட்டி , சூறாவளி டெல்டா , சந்தன் கண்ணா , கெட்டி படங்கள் , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் துறை ஆஃப் வீட்டுவசதி மற்றும் நகர்ப்புற வளர்ச்சி , சிவப்பு புறணி , நகர்ப்புற சிதைவு , இன பாகுபாடு , உடல் நிலவியல் ,

A Tree Grows in Richmond: Southside Moves from Redlining to Greening


A Tree Grows in Richmond: Southside Moves from Redlining to Greening
A nonprofit-led project seeks to address environmental injustices and improve water quality with targeted tree planting.
Kenny Fletcher/CBF
Left: Southside, Richmond, Virginia, courtesy of Southside ReLeaf; Right: previous (2018) tree plantings led by the Chesapeake Bay Foundation at Branch’s Baptist Church in Southside.
At the peak of a Virginia summer, the difference between the sun and shade is stark. High urban temperatures can be dangerous in the capital city of Richmond. Trees can provide substantial cooling, pull pollution from air and water, and beautify neighborhoods. But in Richmond and other U.S. cities, the racist housing policy of redlining has resulted in less tree canopy for many neighborhoods with predominantly Black residents, making them now hotter in the summer. ....

Southside Park , United States , James River , Second Baptist Church , Science Museum Of Virginia , South Richmond , Broad Rock , Ann Jurczyk , Jeremy Hoffman , Amy Wentz , Amarissa Ramirez , Sheri Shannon , Southside Releaf , Natural Resource Defense Council , Virginia Department Of Forestry , Wildlife Foundation , A National Fish , Richmond Office Of Sustainability Alicia Zatcoff , Virginia Community Voice , Thriving Communities Program , Richmond Science Museum Of Virginia , Richmond City Council , Richmond Office Of Sustainability Climate Equity Index , Chesapeake Bay Foundation , Chesapeake Bay , Greening Southside Project ,