*Amazon logo superimposed over the picture of Pittsburgh, with “Pittsburgh” as the text. From Seattle24x7.com
Great panel conversation hosted by Pitt Human Rights City Initiative and the research and advocacy organization UrbanKind, about the possible impacts of Amazon HQ2 on affordable housing, public transit, worker rights, taxpayer liabilities among other unforeseen consequences. See the live feed of the discussion here:
https://www.facebook.com/publicsource/videos/1832226540130569/
Forged for All? Amazon HQ2 & the Future of Pittsburgh Human Rights, the Right to the City, and Equity implications of the City of Pittsburgh’s Future.
This was an overdue conversation about the City of Pittsburgh’s proposal to host “Amazon HQ2.” While the project would create certain kinds of jobs, would they, as leaders claim, be “forged for all”? How would the project impact Pittsburgh’s already severe problems of affordable housing, racial inequity, aging infrastructure, and declining public services? How would the city’s proposal affect our future tax base? How can we work to ensure that future planning and development better account of the human rights and needs of residents?
The panelists were:
Mila Sanina, executive director of PublicSource
Carl Redwood, Hill District Consensus Group
Jourdan Hicks, The Hazelwood Initiative
Amanda Green, Director, Civil and Human Rights Department, United Steelworkers, Board member, Pittsburgh United
Laura Wiens, Pittsburghers for Public Transit
Facilitators: Jason Beery, Urbankind Institute and Jackie Smith, Pittsburgh Human Rights City Alliance
GeekWire also reported on the event, saying
“Carl Redwood, an affordable housing activist and adjunct professor at the University of Pittsburgh who led the “Whose city? Our city!” chant, cited a history of declines in Pittsburgh’s African American population, in part because of rising of rents.
‘There’s a battle already going on in Pittsburgh between the government that supports businesses like the Pittsburgh Penguins and Uber and Google and all these other companies coming into town, and the people who lived here for so long who can no longer afford to live in Pittsburgh or even in the Pittsburgh region,’ he said. ‘If Amazon comes here, it will accelerate the battle and it won’t accelerate it necessarily in our favor.’
Redwood questioned the role of government as a business facilitator, offering incentives to corporations with the promise that benefits will trickle down to all citizens.
‘Trickle down never really happens anywhere,’ he said.”