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r <br />City of Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio 7 <br />88 u 88 Analysis of Impediments to Fair Housing Choice <br />1990 and 2000 the tract split and the decrease has more to do with the split than with <br />actual loss of minorities. <br />As can be seen on the maps, although almost all of the tracts within the city are <br />experiencing an increase in minority population, tract 5201 .02, which includes the Bailey - <br />Monroe Falls area and the State Portage Trail area, shows the greatest increase in minority <br />population between 1990 and 2000. This is followed by tract 5080, which includes the <br />Northhampton area, where the percentage of the minority population has increased by <br />between 1990 and 2000.6 This can possibly be attributed to the growth in minority <br />population in the adjoining tracts during the 10 -year period. <br />However, growth in minority population has not necessarily moved the minority population <br />to new tracts, as can be seen by comparing maps from 1990 to 2000, With the exception <br />of tract 5206, those tracts that were minority in 1990 have only increased in the percent <br />minority. According to the City tract 5329 has had the highest rate of new construction in <br />the community, In 2000 this tract, also know as the Northhampton District, had 5.6% of the <br />housing stock occupied by Blacks <br />It is also important that policies for the City of Cuyahoga Falls encourage development of <br />housing that would be affordable and that Not in My Backyard (NIMBY) issues do not <br />interfere with housing choice. While often NIMBY shows itself in opposition to commercial <br />development, especially large, box type stores. However, NIMBY is also a major road <br />block to housing development, from affordable /low- income housing to housing for the <br />disabled. It is the consultants experience that this form of NIMBY is far more prevalent that <br />opposition to commercial development. <br />NIMBY is the response that often comes when a developer or a community announces that <br />they will build a affordable, low- moderate income (LMI) or group homes in a neighborhood <br />or suburb. Residents in the neighborhood rise up to protest the perceived notions that such <br />a housing development or program will drastically hurt their property values, overcrowd the <br />neighborhood, cause an increase in crime and other concerns. NIMBY is a fear that what <br />they have will be destroyed by something or someone they do not know. It is especially <br />prevalent in the development of group homes for the disabled or individuals' recovery from <br />various addictions. This attitude can drastically impact the ability of local government to <br />plan and produce housing for those who cannot afford to buy or rent market rate housing <br />as the demand for such housing increases. While many communities, like Cuyahoga Falls, <br />do not build housing , they can impact housing that is built. (Appendix 5 includes a <br />document regarding NIMBY) <br />According to the City of Cuyahoga Falls FY2O04 -2008 Consolidated Plan, "there is not a <br />'City of Cuyahoga Falls Consolidated Plan, 2004 -2008 <br />