LATINA/OS AND HOUSING POLICIES
BY STUDENT
How does Latino/as housing
conditions and policies in New York in the 20th century relate to
these same policies in the 21st century? That is the grand question
but unfortunately, the same kind of problems still arise. In this blog post, I
will speak about the housing policies for Latinos in the 20th and 21st
centuries respectively and how not much has changed. Up to this day, Latinos
face housing discrimination and it seems to be a trend that is not changing
anytime soon. Throughout the past decades, the housing situation for Latino has
improved, but the problem is that it is not par to par with other ethnic groups
such as Whites and their housing situations. When something is wrong in someone’s
apartment let’s say for example, the correct thing to do is report. This is the
opposite of what Latinos are doing. The face the fear of filing complaints when
they have to, have language barriers when a disagreement occurs, and are
unfamiliar with the culture which relates to not trusting the government or
even their landlord. Latinos have feared to speak up about the awful housing
conditions they reside in and for the reason for that is the lack of general
knowledge on knowing fair housing rights and responsibilities. The Fair Housing
Act of 1968 helped dramatically, with a house provider having been forced to
meet with someone seeking to rent regardless of their ethnicity or race but
problems still arise in the 21st century.
The housing conditions around
the 20th century were crowded and deficient with more than five people living
in one single apartment built for two. Tiny, crammed full, musty and filthy
buildings that migrants were forced to be in when they migrated to America.
These were called tenements. As the book, How
the Other Half Lives, by Jacob Riis states, in a specific tenement, a total
of 89 children out of 180 people resided in the just two tenements. These
places were not big to begin with in the first place. 150 lodgers were found sleeping
on the tenement floors in just two apartment buildings and even worse, water
did not rise up to the second floor in some locations. Overtime, these types of
housing locations were exposed and change was made but not soon enough.
New York City has been a home
to many foreigners, who have struggled trying to find a living on their own
homeland. Puerto Ricans were a group of people that faced many inequalities
regarding housing conditions where they would live in. Housing conditions for
Puerto Ricans during the 20th century was nothing but dreadful to those who
migrated to New York City. While those who thought coming to New York would
change their lives, it made a huge impact on Latinos, for they have struggled
to make their ends meet. The Puerto Ricans that migrated to New York City
settled in the barrios of the Lower East Side, East Harlem and the Bronx during
the mid-20th century. The housing in these places was horrible and also was
severely crowded, as was stated in the Lower East Side Tenement Museum article.
In fact, the 1990 census showed that the median family income for Puerto Ricans
was close to half of the income of other New Yorkers and also stated that most
Puerto Ricans still continue to live below the poverty line.