Community Disengagement - The Disastrous Outcome of Gentrification
InflexionPoint Podcast | Episode 92
2025 Theme: Community Engagement & the Grassroots of Change
Introduction
Welcome to another episode of InflexionPoint Podcast, where we are dedicated to antiracism activation and the art of listening in authentic conversation, engagement, action, and accountability. Featuring creator/host Anita D. Russell, joined by co-hosts Mavis Bauman and Gail Hunter. Throughout the year, we’ve been lifting up stories, strategies, and successes of community-driven movements. But in this episode, we take a different approach: exploring the adverse impact of community disengagement, focusing on the painful story of gentrification in Pittsburgh, PA.
How We Got Here
Anita opens up the conversation with a stark reality: Community disengagement in Pittsburgh cannot be separated from the city’s long arc of gentrification. Policies that began with redlining and urban renewal set the stage for today’s tech-driven investment and redevelopment, which often unfolds without strong tenant protections or genuine community power. The Pittsburgh Paradox: Pittsburgh was named one of America’s Most Livable Cities (2005–2018). In 2019, it was also identified as America’s 8th most gentrified city. In 2021, Jerry Dickinson, law professor at the University of Pittsburgh, described it as “America’s Apartheid City.” This is the Reality We Must Confront
The History of Displacement
Gail leads a disccussion revealing Pittsburgh' multi-layered history: From racial covenants, redlining (1930s) and urban renewal devastating a vibrant Black community (1950s-60s); to so-called "modernization" that triggered decades of decline (1960s); to Steel Collapse to "Eds and Meds" (1980s-2000s) leading to struggles against overwhelming odds for communty nonprofits. 2010s to Today: The city formalized “community input” via Registered Community Organizations, but too often those processes lacked teeth. Meanwhile, private reinvestment accelerated land values, displacement, and racialized housing cost burdens.
Imagine Authentic Engagement
Mavis guides you to envision what true engagement and anti-displacement could look like in Pittsburgh. The short answer is this: Participation without power is not enough. Authentic engagement means redistributing decision-making power back to the people most affected. Key shifts required: Shift from input to shared governance. Stabilize residents where they live. Integrate commuunity equity and inclusion in development rules. Resource community voice. Execute real-time accountability.
Call to Action
Gentrification in Pittsburgh is not new—it’s another chapter in a long story of disinvestment, removal, and broken promises. When people feel decisions are made over them, not with them, they disengage. But disengagement is not destiny. What action are you willing to take?
Watch: https://youtu.be/XBBNWXAErWs
Episode giveaways:
- Pittsburgh: The Ultimate Guide to America’s Most Livable City
https://www.pittsburghbeautiful.com/2025/02/06/pittsburgh-the-ultimate-guide-to-americas-most-livable-city
- Pittsburgh Is One of the Most Gentrified Cities in the U.S.
https://www.pghcitypaper.com/news/pittsburgh-is-one-of-the-most-gentrified-cities-in-the-us-14381722 - Jerry Dickinson: Pittsburgh Is America’s Apartheid City
https://www.publicsource.org/commentary-jerry-dickinson-pittsburgh-is-americas-apartheid-city/ - Public Source: Hidden Racist History of Pittsburgh Neighborhoods
https://www.publicsource.org/pittsburgh-racially-restrictive-covenants-barring-black-buyers-suburbs-subdivisions-racism/ - URA Housing Opportunity Fund Annual Report (2024)
https://www.ura.org/media/W1siZiIsIjIwMjUvMDcvMTcvMjZhdHR4MGFhc18yMDI0X2hvZl9hbm51YWxfcmVwb3J0LnBkZiJdXQ/2024-hof-annual-report.pdf - Disrupting the Eviction System
https://evictionlab.org/disrupting-the-eviction-system/


