Book contents
Sixteen - Living through a Pandemic in the Shadows of Gentrification and Displacement: Experiences of Marginalized Residents in Waterloo Region, Canada
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 April 2023
Summary
Introduction
What happens to marginalized communities that were already facing gentrification and displacement pressures when a major pandemic arrives? This chapter engages with, listens to and amplifies the experiences of very low-income and unsheltered residents as they deal with the pre-existing conditions of extreme housing challenges and the arrival of the first wave of COVID-19.
This chapter is part of a wider collaboration between the researchers at University of Waterloo (UW) and the Social Development Centre Waterloo Region (SDC), a charitable non-profit, social planning, and community development organization that focuses on advancing social justice and documenting the lived experiences of poverty and homelessness. Throughout the late spring and summer of 2020, we interviewed residents living through both gentrification and the pandemic. In this chapter, we focus on the everyday lives, challenges, experiences, and opportunities of some of the most marginalized members of our community. The pandemic brought new challenges into a landscape that was already hostile to low-income people. Our chapter seeks to amplify their voices and experiences, which is essential for achieving equitable policy outcomes. At the same time, we juxtapose their experiences with some of the dominant narratives of how COVID-19 has impacted the region.
The gentrification context
Our case study is the Region of Waterloo, which is comprised of three contiguous mid-sized cities (Kitchener, Waterloo, and Cambridge) and four rural townships. It ranks among Canada's fastest growing urban areas and has a total population of approximately 620,000. The region is situated 100km west of Toronto, Canada's largest city. Kitchener is the largest of the three cities; like many mid-sized communities, its downtown underwent several decades of decline, beginning in the 1980s. Large old homes were divided up into rooming houses, a cluster of social services organizations emerged, and downtown Kitchener became home to much of the region's very low-income population.
However, over the past decade, a combination of publicand private-investment in the downtown core has led to a remarkable transformation and regeneration, unlike any other mid-sized city in Ontario. Much of this was spurred by the development of a new Light Rail Transit Line, which opened in 2019 and was financed by the Region of Waterloo. Even before a single passenger was carried, more than $3 billion worth of investment was made along the 19km route, much of it in downtown Kitchener.
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- Volume 2: Housing and Home , pp. 175 - 188Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2021