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Old 09-29-2009, 07:06 PM
agzg agzg is offline
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: but I am le tired...
Posts: 7,283
Quote:
Originally Posted by epchick View Post
I agree, and even if the area is left untouched for the Olympics, do you really think the city is gonna use it's revenues to help the South Side? I seriously doubt they would.
Exactly. Although I can look forward to my rent going up if we get the bid, because people will be willing to pay more to live in my (almost completely gentrified) neighborhood. I really feel bad for the older couples on my street that have been here forever. Unless they own their houses (and I'm not sure that they do), the likelihood of their rent raises forcing them out of the houses they've lived in for years and years is great, especially considering that many of them are retired and living on fixed incomes.

I really hope it never happens - they're all so sweet. I can't walk down my street without feeling like my arm is going to fall off from all the waving I do because they call out to you.

Quote:
Originally Posted by knight_shadow View Post
I won't call you a pessiment, because it's likely going to be the case.

All of the development will probably lead to (more) gentrification in the city, pushing the lower-class citizens farther out. I'm willing to bet money, though, that city leaders will use the argument to bring the games to the city.
I worry about the type of turmoil it's going to cause... if we have "neighborhood" fights like this... I don't even want to think about it.

Quote:
Originally Posted by DrPhil View Post
If the 1996 Summer Olympics can be in ATL then the 2010 Olympics can be in Chicago.

Both are urban centers with booming economies in some regards. Both have a large impoverished population. The government will just cover up the high levels of deprivation for the Olympics and then leave Chicago exactly the way they found it (the money made from the Olympics is just a bandaid on the poverty in these areas).
I think the likelihood that we'll get the bid is pretty good. However, the city's having trouble raising the funds necessary. Mayor Daley is promising that the city can raise it, and it probably will if they do get the bid, but there's also a likelihood that the bill will just be tacked on to our (already rising) taxes.

I got the easy end of the deal, I don't own my house.

Quote:
Originally Posted by jojapeach View Post
Pretty much. There's been a LOT of gentrification in Atlanta since the '96 Olympics. There's only a handful of housing projects left, but most outlying cities did not experience a great deal of improvement IMO. In the end, a lot of the projects were closed, and a lot of those residents got vouchers to move elsewhere. Clayton Co has gone from a tranquil place I dreamed of living in one day to a place with increasing violence and crime. Thanks, Olympics!
That's what I worry about here.

Oh and the fact that there will basically be a two week period where I won't be able to get to work. Hopefully they finish the upgrades on the L by the time the Olympics roll around (although they've been working on a few particular spots on the blue line for over a year now), and hopefully they can handle the traffic demands, but I'm just really skeptical.
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