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Ugly comments divide a neighborhood

As you know, I’ve been a big supporter of Pine Street Inn’s plans to open a transitional housing facility on Upton Street, in Boston’s South End neighborhood. The property (three buildings) is currently used by Hope House as a drug and alcohol treatment center.

Having Pine Street Inn move in is a great idea.

Not everyone agrees. A small group of neighbors have come out in opposition to the proposal.

It’s irrelevant. The purchase by Pine Street Inn is a private transaction, and there is no chance that their plans can be derailed.

Here’s an op-ed piece written by one of the people who live on Upton Street.

The need to be neighborly
By James Alan Fox

It pains me to advocate against any initiative of the Pine Street Innkeepers to assist the homeless. Yet, their attempt to claim a major section of my street is inconsistent with the character of the neighborhood.

The problem of homelessness in Boston, numbering almost 7,000 people by latest count, has been longstanding, as it has in other cities around the country. It hardly takes a rocket scientist or an urban plannner to anticipate that today’s economic crisis, particularly in the real estate sector, will make the problem even more acute.

Unfortunately, our city’s plan – to use the term generously – for responding to the homelessness issue is chaotic rather than strategic. In the long run, lack of logic and foresight may produce unintended and unfortunate side effects.

As an official card-carrying liberal, it pains me to advocate against any initiative of the Pine Street Innkeepers to assist the homeless. Yet, their heavy-handed attempt to claim a major section of my small one-block residential street in the South End is inconsistent with the character of the neighborhood as it now exists.

For decades, the Pine Street Inn has been the admirable key player in the fight against homelessness. In addition to its main shelter situated nearby on Harrison Avenue amidst pricey lofts and chic eateries, Pine Street has established low-income housing projects around the city. More accurately, Pine Street has targeted not all parts of the city, but those neighborhoods that are least resistant: the South End, Dorchester and Jamaica Plain together host hundreds of permanent housing beds operated by Pine Street, while Beacon Hill and Back Bay as well as Southie and Hyde Park have none.

This is hardly a well-conceived plan for integrating low-income residents into established communities, but an opportunistic response to available locations and outdated zoning. The lack of strategy has come to a head, in Pine Street’s recent effort to purchase and convert, with the assistance of public subsidy and political wheel-greasing, three brownstones on tiny Upton Street into a megaplex of single-room occupancy. If successful, this housing initiative will be the largest of its kind on the smallest of host streets.

By this effort, the well-meaning and altruistic folks at Pine Street are turning a one-way road into a politically divided highway, pitting resident vs. resident over homelessness. This is not the way to build community. In recent weeks, a welcoming committee has been doing Pine Street’s bidding in a not very civil war in the Union Park neighborhood that includes Upton Street.

Upton residents have, from the outset, welcomed a project that is scaled more in proportion to the size of the block, like Pine Street housing on similar streets. In fact, a majority of residents signed a petition proposing one, rather than three contiguous buildings for conversion.

The campaign to dismiss legitimate concerns voiced by residents has demonized Upton Street, subjecting folks to hate mail and name-calling – including NIMBY, elitist and heartless – not to mention the ones not fit to print. This tactic has alienated neighbors in a way that is counterproductive for both current residents and Pine Street’s placements-to-be.

Initiatives for the homeless should be done with a neighborhood, not to a neighborhood. The city of Boston and the Pine Street Inn need a better plan. Transitioning individuals and families from homelessness to self-sufficiency is an important objective, but must be accomplished in the right manner. Unfortunately, even while the Pine Street leadership was eyeing a potential opportunity on Upton, it failed to include the residents, particularly abutters, in decision-making on matters that will directly impact us. In the process, Pine Street has created a climate of anger and hostility on my street, which will take years to repair.

James Alan Fox is the Lipman Family Professor of Criminal Justice and Professor of Law, Policy and Society at Northeastern University.

Read other posts about: South End Real Estate

17 Responses to “Ugly comments divide a neighborhood” »»

  1. Comment by The Lonely Condo Market | 06/15/08 at 8:52 pm

    Not sure what to say. Either my reading comprehension has diminished…or the author’s rationale is incomprehensible.

    My view on the South End: much of what made it great is gone. Sure, it’s got the city’s greatest restaurants, but the energy and lifeblood has been replaced by families who want doggie daycare and grocery stores. Not saying it’s a bad thing, but…”it is what it is.” And what it is…is a gentrified, far-from-1995 neighborhood that made it creative and vibrant.

    Thus, opinions like the one posted will be more common (if I am reading it correctly). What is the saying? “Not in my back yard?”

    Just my two cents.

  2. Comment by David | 06/16/08 at 10:58 am

    The author makes his point clearly; the Pine Street Inn is welcome on his street but in a form that is less dense than proposed.

  3. Comment by Observer | 06/16/08 at 11:00 am

    I am supportive of the Pine Street units on Upton BUT the author does make a valid point that other neighborhoods, namely Beacon Hill and Back Bay, do not carry their share of the homeless housing demand. Generally, this is due to the fact that bldgs. cost much more in those n’hoods, thus making non-profit developments less likely to occur, but it would be nice to see some effort in balancing these housing demands across the City.

  4. Comment by Megan | 06/16/08 at 11:35 am

    Yes, the author made his point. That doesn’t mean that the city is required to act. The Pine Street Inn is going to have fewer people in these buildings than currently exists. The author calls the group of buildings a megaplex. They will occupy 3 of (I believe) 40 buildings on this block. Three brownstones is a megaplex? What is the real concern here? Is there a fear that poor people will be hanging out in front of the building? That property values will be affected?

  5. Comment by John | 06/16/08 at 7:23 pm

    Sorry, but I’m not sure I would want 37 studio apartments across the street from me either. I don’t really care who it was.

    Granted, when when the author bought his home, there were more people living there, and they appear to have been a more transient population.

  6. Comment by John A Keith | 06/16/08 at 7:57 pm

    Makes sense John.

    For those who don’t know, 60 people live there, currently. Pine Street’s plans would actually reduce the number of residents.

  7. Comment by Matthew | 06/17/08 at 12:24 am

    Sorry John Keith, not sure I agree that the issue is whether the Pine Street housing will be better than what is there now. My understanding is that it would be Pine Street’s largest housing facility on such a small street. Why can’t they make it smaller?

  8. Comment by John A Keith | 06/17/08 at 12:35 am

    Matthew, I don’t if there’s a reason to make it smaller (or larger). What compelling reason would there be to make it smaller? Why can’t they take up as much space as they’d like? They are a private landlord, just like anyone else.

    The proposed facility is “less dense” than what is there, currently. A step in the right direction? Perhaps.

    I can’t see any reason for anyone to have any say, pro- or con- about this. I say, let Pine Street do whatever it wants. I only got involved because of the pig-headed opinions of a (small) group of people who seemed to feel that somehow, their opinions mattered more than others. Which, as many of my friends know, burns my ass more than just about anything else.

  9. Comment by Matthew | 06/17/08 at 1:02 am

    I don’t pretend to be an expert, but I also would not assume anyone involved is “pig-headed” (whatever that means). I actually believe that when it comes to finding housing for the homeless everyone should engage – including Beacon Hill and Back Bay (far inferior neighborhoods than ours!).

    To me, it makes sense that whenever a new project such as Pine Street housing is proposed the new owner/landlord should work with the neighborhood. If I wanted to convert my house (condo) into apartments I would ask my neighbors what they thought.

  10. Comment by John A Keith | 06/17/08 at 1:29 am

    PIne Street did work with the neighborhood, at first, but several members of the neighborhood association began to be unreasonable. Pine Street agreed to reduce the number of tenants, but the UPNA didn’t think it was enough of an effort.

    Having twelve people live in a four-five story building is hardly unreasonable, which is what Pine Street is proposing.

  11. Comment by Matthew | 06/17/08 at 8:00 am

    Well, I am close enough to the situation to say that Pine Street never agreed to reduce the tenants. As a matter of fact, I recall that both the pro and con group asked them to reduce and they refused.

  12. Comment by The Southender | 06/17/08 at 1:02 pm

    Where on earth did this notion that you get to pick and choose your neighbors come from? That’s a nice concept. If it were true, I’d never have allowed spoiled, noisy sorority sisters and frat boys to take over my building. I’d gladly send them over to Upton Street so I could get a good night’s sleep.

    The Pine Street Inn does a very thorough screening of the putative residents. They want them to succeed and they have selected people who they expect to succeed. I’m not sure if the current residents ever went through any such rigorous selection. Also, the density will be 1/3 of what it is currently.

    But it shouldn’t matter (as you stated) as the PSI is a private landlord.

  13. Comment by The Southender | 06/17/08 at 1:03 pm

    Sorry, I meant “1/3 less” than what it is currently.

  14. Comment by Matthew | 06/17/08 at 6:44 pm

    No one picks their neighbors. In the case of Pine Street’s proposal, both Hope House and Pine Street asked the neighborhood for its opinion; otherwise, rightly or wrongly, no opinion would have been offered.

    From time to time the response was disjointed but I can tell you that it was essentially a combination of Pine Street housing, middle class housing, and market rate housing. Unfortunately the context of the question and responses became lost and here we are in this divisive atmosphere.

  15. Comment by John A Keith | 06/17/08 at 6:57 pm

    I don’t know if I’d call it “divisive”. Based on the overwhelmingly positive response by the majority of neighbors and South End residents (as evidenced by the full-page ad in this week’s South End News), it appears there are only a few misguided people who are against this proposal, in any way, shape, or form.

  16. Comment by Matthew | 06/17/08 at 7:33 pm

    Since I live in the neighborhood in close proximity to the proposal I can tell you that you underestimate the number of objectors.

  17. Comment by Megan | 06/17/08 at 8:36 pm

    The Pine Street Inn has a good Q&A online about the project.

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