28
Mar 14

Wallace “Planned Shrinkage”

While trying to get past the plethora of statistics presented in this paper I managed to get the point: the planned shrinkage and essential redlining in poor, overcrowded neighborhoods actually led to the expansion of HIV and AIDS within the community and borough. There were numerous public health risks involved as I went through the paper. The first issue was the original concept of overcrowding in these low income neighborhoods. This was similar to the immigrant culture of the 1920s, particularly in the neighborhood now known as Chinatown. Families and distant relatives would huddle into small apartments while working meager wages to be able to pay rent. Overcrowding could cause hygiene concerns, fire hazards, and loss of other amenities as landlords became disillusioned with upkeep. The fire hazard concern was only amplified as corporate investment took hold and fire services were limited. This in turn alleviated the overcrowding issue through the worst possible means for almost every party as mental health took a turn by losing community bonds but managed to move lower income people to better buildings while also causing homelessness. THE FINAL EFFECT! The spread of HIV and AIDs as intravenous drug users had sexual intercourse to spread the disease.
The article made points on how the city would be affected by this in the long term but the article was published a while ago and it would be interesting to see the development of these neighborhoods after redlining took hold and to see if the predictions made actually occurred. I also remember speaking of East New York being redlined by fire and the community is still greatly impacted. As mentioned, like three times before, we talked about this in our Seminar class last term.

I think it is pretty amazing to see how things all tie together, how corporate decisions ripple down into ways they probably never worried about, especially since AIDS was heavily stigmatized at the time as a gay disease that heterosexuals could not get. To be able to conceive a spread of disease on this scale was not an issue for them and in certain ways overcrowding posed a greater disease threat through the sheer concentration of people in close proximity with each other. A cholera outbreak would not necessarily be an issue but meningitis and other diseases derived from close contact with bacteria in saliva or fecal deposits could pose a threat.


27
Mar 14

The South Bronx

My father grew up in the South Bronx. He carries that with him everywhere he goes, and in everything he does. I’ve seen his childhood home and wondered, a child myself, why it was so dirty and why it smelled the way it did and why there were so many flystrips speckled with dead flies to the point of obscurity. I wouldn’t learn until years later what the actual reasons for these conditions were. It was ironic to read about policies that called for a pullback in fire services because the aforementioned childhood home of my father did actually catch fire some years back.

My father moved to Queens when he was very young. Queens, of all places (like, who goes to Queens willingly?) He didn’t have many friends growing up (or so he tells me), but he always had two friends, Ryan and David. Today, only Ryan is alive. They lost David to AIDS some decades ago. My father’s never told me this himself; I learned it through my mother.

It’s saddening to read about how city policy hindered progress in regards to controlling the spread of HIV and AIDS. Unfortunately, the inner city is like a petri dish wherein one can grow a culture of a germ unhindered. The overcrowdedness, the relative isolation, and the low quality of life don’t only enable the spread of HIV/AIDS, they encourage it. It’s important to note that there is a direct correlation betweent the number of AIDS deaths and the number of injection drug overdose deaths; drug habituation and AIDS are understandably linked. This is why systems such as needle exchanges are so important. I’m glad I got a chance to learn about those when we visited the Harm Reduction Committee.

It was interesting to read about how “planned shrinkage” redistributed people in such a way that injection drug users were sent to different places in the Bronx as well. Surely that would result in harmful spread. I suppose the question from here on in is, how do we combat urban decay such that we stimy the spread of HIV/AIDS?


27
Mar 14

Planned Shrinkage

Because of urban decay, partially caused by the planned shrinkage of the Bronx’s fire departments, the populations either living with AIDS and/or using intravenous drugs had no choice but to disperse throughout the borough, leaving them, many times, at a loss for accessible health care and community programs that would allow them medical and emotional support.  In the reading, among the three solutions given for restoring stability in the Bronx is, “intensive community organizing.”  While this would likely help the situation, it seems like it would be quite difficult for communities struck severely by poverty, disease and lack of resources to find the time and means to organize effectively; by no means am I saying that they would be unable to do so, but if a household is spending the majority of their time struggling to take care of themselves, I doubt “intensive community organizing” would be high up on their priority list.  The majority of the responsibility should fall on both the city’s government and it’s more stable populations to provide adequate services and housing for these neglected populations.  Even now, as limited low income housing forces people onto years-long waiting lists, out of the city, and even into the streets, not nearly enough is being done to rectify the situation.  We need more low income housing and fewer high rise condominiums to be built; more resources and public spaces that are accessible to the entire community–to build and sustain community relations–and fewer corporate coffee shops popping up on every corner.

As stated in the reading, plagues typically begin within the lower class and “work their way up.”  As such, it’s a incredulous misstep that more attention is not paid to the welfare of the lower class in New York City and elsewhere.  The middle and upper classes often focus on their own well being without taking into account that not only is the lower class composed of people that deserve good health just as much as they do, but the health of the lower class has a strong impact on the health of everyone.  Recalling a comment Professor Braine made in a previous class, socioeconomic disparity negatively affects all classes, not just those lower on the class hierarchy.  Given this information, not only is the implementation of “planned shrinkage” borderline evil from a moral standpoint, it is also completely counterproductive even if a city seeks to only better the health of its middle and upper class populations.