The California wildfires could be leaving deeper inequality in their
wake
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[January 13, 2025]
By TERRY TANG, JENNIFER SINCO KELLEHER and JAE HONG
ALTADENA, Calif. (AP) — The sight of celebrity mansions and movie
landmarks reduced to ashes can make it seem like the wildfires roaring
through the Los Angeles area affected a constellation of movie stars.
But a drive through the charred neighborhoods around Altadena shows that
the fires also burned through a remarkable haven for generations of
Black families avoiding discriminatory housing practices elsewhere. They
have been communities of racial and economic diversity, where many
people own their own homes.
Some now fear the most destructive fires in California’s history have
altered that for good. Recovery and rebuilding may be out of reach for
many, and pressures of gentrification could be renewed.
Samantha Santoro, 22, a first-generation college student at Cal Poly
Pomona, remembered being annoyed when the initial news coverage of the
wildfires focused more on celebrities. She and her sister, who attends
UC Berkeley, worry how their Mexican immigrant parents and working-class
neighbors who lost their homes in Altadena will move forward.
“We don’t have like, ‘Oh, I’ll just go to my second home and stay
there,'" Santoro said.
The landlord of their family's two-bedroom house with a pool had never
increased the $1,650 rent, making it possible for the Santoros to
affordably raise their daughters. Now, they're temporarily staying with
a relative in Pasadena. The family has renters insurance but not much
else.
“I think it’s hard to believe that you have nothing,” Santoro said,
through tears, thinking of her parents. "Everything that they ever
worked for was in that house.”
Altadena had been a mix of tiny bungalows and magnificent mansions. The
community of 42,000 includes blue-collar families, artists,
entertainment industry workers and white-collar ones. About 58% of
residents are non-white, with one-fourth of them Hispanic and nearly a
fifth Black, according to Census data.
During the Civil Rights era, Altadena became a rare land of opportunity
for Black Americans to reach the middle class without the discriminatory
practices of denying them access to credit. They kept homes within the
family and helped others to flourish. Today, the Black home ownership
rate there is at 81.5%, almost double the national rate.
That's impressive considering 92% of the 15,000 residences in Altadena
are single-family homes, according to the 2023 Census American Community
Survey. The median income is over $129,000. Just over 7% of residents
live in poverty.
Victoria Knapp, chair of the Altadena Town Council, worries that the
fires have irreparably changed the landscape for these families.
“Someone is going to buy it and develop who knows what on it. And that
is going to change the character of Altadena," Knapp said, adding that
those with fewer resources will be disproportionately hurt.
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Residents embrace outside of a burning property as the Eaton Fire
swept through Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2025 in Altadena, Calif. (AP
Photo/Ethan Swope, File)
The family of Kenneth Snowden, 57, was one of the Black families able to
purchase a home in 1962. That house, as well as the one Snowden bought
almost 20 years ago, are both gone.
He is challenging state and federal officials to help all fire-affected
communities fairly because “your $40 million home is no different than
my $2 million home.”
Snowden wants the ability to acquire home loans with 0% interest. "Give
us the ability to rebuild, restart our lives,” he said. “If you can
spend billions of dollars fighting a war, you can spend a billion
dollars to help us get back where we were at.”
Shawn Brown lost not only her home but also the public charter school
she founded in Altadena. She had a message for fellow Black homeowners
who might be tempted with offers for their property: “I would tell them
to stand strong, rebuild, continue the generational progress of
African-Americans."
She and other staff at Pasadena Rosebud Academy are trying to raise
money to rebuild while looking at temporary sites in churches.
But even some churches have burned. At Altadena Baptist Church, the bell
tower is pretty much the only thing still standing.
The Rev. George Van Alstine and others are trying to help more than 10
church members who lost homes with needs like navigating insurance and
federal aid. The pastor is worried the fires will lead to
gentrification, with Black parishioners, who make up half the
congregation, paying the price.
“We’re seeing a number of families who are probably going to have to
move out of the area because rebuilding in Altadena will be too
expensive for them,” he said.
The 32-year-old photographer Daniela Dawson, who had been working two
jobs to meet the $2,200 rent for her studio apartment, fled the
wildfires with her Hyundai SUV and her cat, Lola. She lost almost
everything else, including thousands of dollars of photography gear.
She did not have renter's insurance. “Obviously now I’m thinking about
it. Wish I had it,” she said.
Dawson plans to return to Arizona, where she lived previously, and
regroup. But she likely won’t be returning to Altadena.
___
Tang reported from Sunnyvale, California. Kelleher reported from
Honolulu. Associated Press deputy director Kim Johnson in Chicago,
graphics artist Philip Holm in New York and data reporter Angeliki
Kastanis in Los Angeles contributed to this report.
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