Monday, November 26, 2018

Interview on Lakewood's Growth

From the interview with NJ.com
So just like there are many young black families or older black families that are being priced out, or Hispanic families, there are many Orthodox families that are being priced out, too.  If you asked me, what would be my dream? I would love to see a ton of affordable housing built here. 

Where are Lakewood's newly arriving Orthodox Jews coming from, and why?
The why is so easy: they love it here! New Jersey is a great place to live, (even though) we may be the butt of jokes across the country. ... It’s affordable relative to New York or Philadelphia, it’s accessible, there are great jobs here, it’s an unbelievable jobs engine here. There are good schools, there are good neighbors. And there are good people of all types here. It’s diverse, it’s energetic. It has all the advantages of the city without the disadvantages of the city.

Okay. But where are they coming from? Are they being priced out of Brooklyn?
A lot of the Orthodox families in Brooklyn were being priced out by Brooklyn gentrification.
Brooklyn prices in some ways have exceeded Manhattan. And that made Brooklyn not affordable. And we’re going to see this effect again now, with Amazon coming into Long Island City. Queens, I’ve read, is going off the charts in terms of real estate.

So, New Jersey is an affordable alternative. Now, we in Jersey, we say it’s not affordable. But relative to those folks, they’re moving out of Flatbush (Brooklyn), or places like that, they’re buying a quarter-acre or a half-acre lot in Toms River with a nice big home. As long as they have schools, and community and jobs, they’re happy to do it.

Will the growth of the Orthodox population force out Lakewood's other ethnic communities?

So, the Hispanic population grew rapidly for a long time, as the Orthodox population grew. And I think that the Hispanic population, to significant degree, displaced the black population.  I think there’s a lot more displacement of Orthodox taking place, numerically, than there is of Hispanic or black people.

Displacement of Orthodox?

Yeah, of the poor Orthodox. So just like there are many young black families or older black families that are being priced out, or Hispanic families, there are many Orthodox families that are being priced out, too.  If you asked me, what would be my dream? I would love to see a ton of affordable housing built here.

7 comments:

  1. The kolell guys or the poor orthodox were chased away when homes were marketed for outsiders by those who profit more by selling to chasidim from Brooklyn or wealthy out if towners .
    Besides for the minimal affordable houses that took 15 years nothing else was done to keep home prices affordable.

    This all was preventable but money always wins

    ReplyDelete
  2. Replies
    1. True, but it was the ridiculous zoning changes that opened it up to the many in the NY market. Maybe they meant well and thought that increased supply, would lower prices, but many who moved from NY wanted to do so as a block, and were only able to do so because of the high density zoning, which had the opposite effect on housing prices.

      Delete
  3. Something really troubled me in this interview. He was asked for his favorite passage in the Talmud, and he misquoted. It does not say ‘do to others what you have them do to you’, it says ‘what you dislike, do not do unto others’.
    You may think it is a minor mistake. But his quote was from the new testament. That should give us pause.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. you can never trust a reporter to be accurate, and in this ccase he prefaced his remarks that he is saying over from Hillel hazakein

      Delete
  4. It not likely that R Aron misquoted. It's more likely that the interviewer chose this phrasing

    ReplyDelete
  5. chatrette Charette Charettte Charette they think we are fools.

    ReplyDelete