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overview | LA: starved for green | inequitable
distribution of green | existing measures are ineffectual
| environmental reasons for LANLT | opportunistic strategy
The
question of equity in the distribution of parks has become
particularly acute in the city’s communities of color,
where a shortage of park and recreation facilities is widely
perceived as an environmental justice issue.
Today in Los Angeles, for entire neighborhoods there are
no accessible parks within walking distance, and existing
large parks such as the approximately 4,000 acre Griffith
Park (created in the late Nineteenth Century) must turn people
away on weekends. Poorer, denser neighborhoods where there
are concentrations of people of color and immigrants are at
an even greater disadvantage than their white, more affluent,
counterparts. The five poorest City Council districts
in Los Angeles have only 17% of the total neighborhood park
space, when based on an equal distribution of park
space across districts they should have at least 33% (this
is not even based on population density which would indicate
that these districts have much farther below their fair share
of neighborhood park space).
The
maps below show clearly the inequitable distribution of park
resources in the City of Los Angeles for low-income communities
and communities of color. Areas dominated by Latinos, African
Americans and Asian-Pacific Islanders have dramatically lower
levels of access to park resources than do other areas. The
figures are most dramatic in areas of a single ethnic group.
Census tracts with over a 75% white population had 31.8 park
acres per 1,000 population and 192.9 acres per 1,000 children.
This compares to census tracts with over a 75% African-American
population which had 1.7 park acres per 1,000 population and
6.3 acres per 1,000 children. For census tracts dominated
by over 75% Latinos, the statistic is worse with only 0.6
park acres per 1,000 population and 1.6 acres per 1,000 children.
For Asian-Pacific Islander dominated census tracts (75% or
higher) there are only 0.3 park acres per 1,000 population
and 1.9 park acres per 1,000 children. Less than a third of
the Latino population lives within a ¼ mile of a park.
In 2002, almost 500,000 children or 73% of children living
in Latino-dominated areas (50% or more) had no easy access
to park facilities. As mentioned previously, the areas with
the highest shares of Latino residents are in the worst situation
in terms of park acres per 1,000 residents and children living
within a ¼ mile from a park.
Lower income households and areas with higher concentrations of
poverty have much worse access to park resources than do higher
income households and areas with little or no poverty.
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