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The Foreclosure Crisis in Three Cities: Children, Schools, and Neighborhoods Cross-site Findings and Policy Implications. Kathryn Pettit Urban Affairs Association March 19, 2011. Range of Housing & School Contexts. Rising Share of Students Affected by Foreclosure in All Three Cities.
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The Foreclosure Crisis in Three Cities: Children, Schools, and NeighborhoodsCross-site Findings and Policy Implications Kathryn Pettit Urban Affairs Association March 19, 2011
Rising Share of Students Affected by Foreclosure in All Three Cities
Majority of Children Affected are African-American, Disproportionate Impact in NYC Baltimore DC NY 2008-09 2006-07
Share of Renter Students in Foreclosure Households Is Increasing
Residential Mobility: Regression • In DC and Baltimore, students living in a property with a foreclosure filing were more likely to move (as expected). • In both cities, students who were African-American or received free/reduced lunch also more likely to move. • In DC, Hispanic students and renters also more likely to move. • In DC, interaction of foreclosure and renter not significant (“just cause” eviction policy gives them right to stay and could in theory make it less likely for them to move).
Neighborhood Characteristics • In District of Columbia (regression) • Students affected by foreclosure started in neighborhoods that were more distressed thanthose of all students). • A move resulting from foreclosure (vs. other reasons) did not significantly effect the quality difference between the old and new neighborhoods. • In Baltimore (descriptive so far) • Opposite findings about origin neighborhoods – students in foreclosed homes live in less distressed neighborhoods. • Foreclosed movers moved to worse-off neighborhoods with relatively higher rates of juvenile arrests and vacant homes.
Bronx Manhattan Queens Brooklyn Staten Island Where Do Foreclosed Students Go to School?
School Switching: Regression • Different universes: DC – PS to grade 11; NYC – grades 1 to 8 • In DC and NYC, students living in a property with a foreclosure filing were more likely to switch schools. • In DC, students living in a property with a foreclosure filing were more likely to switch schools, even if they did not move. • In NYC: • Students living in multifamily homes that entered the foreclosure process were more likely to switch schools. • Even students living in units still in the foreclosure process or avoided foreclosure more likely to switch schools.
Change in School Quality: Regression • In DC and NYC • Dependent variable: change in the standardized test score for either math or reading • Living in property with foreclosed filing had no significant effect on change in school quality for switchers. • In NYC • Students with a 2-4 unit property that went to foreclosure auction slightly more likely to move to a worse quality school.
Implications for Program and Policy • Foreclosure harms public school children by increasing chance of school and housing instability, but changes to schools and neighborhoods similar to those of other movers. • Must view foreclosure in context of all residential & school instability – small piece of the whole picture. • But nonetheless, still policy opportunity to break down program silos and help this subset of children. • Coordination among education and housing services can help to mitigate harmful effects for displaced children.
Actions for Schools • Understand the patterns and trends of students affected by foreclosure to design appropriate responses. • Review school policy and practice for requiring children who move out-of-boundary mid-year to change schools. • Improve identification of children who become homeless and qualify for McKinney-Vento benefits and protections. • Partner with housing counselors to do financial education outreach.
Actions for Housing Counselors • Inform families who have to move about potential impacts on education, school policies, and support services. • Connect displaced families with housing search and rapid re-housing assistance. • Provide outreach and counseling for renters (many counseling programs focused on helping homeowners.) • For cities with increases in Hispanic families, boost Spanish-speaking counseling services.
Next Steps in Research • Complete cross-site analysis • school mobility & student performance analysis (Baltimore) • neighborhood change analysis (Baltimore and NYC) • NYU grant from MacArthur to look at impact of all mobility on student performance • Proposal to match foreclosure addresses to address of originating homelessness from intake center in DC • Proposal to convene school and housing stakeholders to discuss issues and realistic responses
Contacts Urban Institute Jennifer Comey jcomey@urban.org Kathy Pettit kpettit@urban.org Michel Grosz mgrosz@urban.org BNIA/Jacob France Institute Matthew Kachura mkachura@ubalt.edu New York University Vicki Been BeenV@exchange.law.nyu.edu Ingrid Gould Ellen ige2@nyu.edu Amy Schwartz aes1@nyu.edu Leanna Stiefel leanna.stiefel@nyu.edu