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    • View Park–Windsor Hills, Los Angeles County, California. History: View Park–Windsor Hills is one of the richest Black communities in the U.S. and is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
    • Baldwin Hills, Los Angeles County, California. History: Baldwin Hills is the largest middle- and upper-class Black community in Los Angeles. Dubbed “The Black Beverly Hills” because of the actors and musicians who have flocked to it, the community found itself in the spotlight with the BET docudrama Baldwin Hills in 2007.
    • Ladera Heights, Los Angeles County, California. History: Also with stunning views, it shares a border on the north with Baldwin Hills, on the east with View Park and on the south with Inglewood.
    • Mitchellville and Woodmore, Prince George’s County, Maryland. History: Mitchellville is named after the owners of the plantation that it was built on. Today, tobacco farms are replaced by a thriving Black residential community.
  1. Jun 19, 2020 · Photo by Jane Tyska, Bay Area News Group. In summary. Data show that the state’s housing crisis is worse for black communities, with decades of systemic racism having led to significant barriers to building and retaining wealth. California’s housing crisis is nothing new for many Black Californians.

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  3. According to projections by the Urban Institute, the 2020 Census could result in the worst undercount of Black people since 1990 (1) when more than 1.3 million or 4.4 percent of the nation’s African American population were not counted in the census. In California, more than 181,489 or 7.6 percent of Blacks were undercounted that year.

  4. Jun 15, 2022 · The 2020 census showed that people of color comprised more than half the suburban populations in 15 of the nation’s 56 major metro areas, compared to 10 in 2010 and five in 2000. The newest ...

  5. Jul 16, 2020 · In Southern California, the Black population climbed around 400% in Palmdale and Victorville, shrinking by 45% in Compton and 26% in Los Angeles. Black Californians are increasingly leaving expensive cities to search for homeownership, safety and better schools in suburbia — or other states altogether.

  6. For example, in 2016, the typical — or median — white family’s wealth nationally was $171,000 (Figure 1). [3] For black families, median wealth amounted to $17,600, or roughly 10% of that for white families. For Latinx families, median wealth was $20,700, or about 12% of that for white families.

  7. Dec 24, 2021 · White and Asian workers earn a median income above $51,000 annually, while Black, Native American, and Latino workers earn less than $37,000. In every rural and urban area in California, White workers make above the median income and Latino workers earn below the median, according to the report.

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