Redlining
The Minneapolis Map (Local History)
Health & Environment (The Legacy)
Modern Impacts & Solutions (The Future)
100

What does the acronym HOLC stand for?

Home Owners’ Loan Corporation.

100

According to our presentation, Minneapolis currently has one of the largest gaps in this type of wealth-building activity in the country.

Homeownership.

100

Residents in formerly redlined areas often face higher rates of this respiratory condition due to poor air quality.

Asthma

100

This modern process involves the "renewal" of a neighborhood that often leads to the displacement of original, lower-income residents.

Gentrification.

200

Which color was used on HOLC maps to indicate the "most desirable" neighborhoods for real estate investment?

Green

200

This specific Minneapolis neighborhood is often cited in the slides as having been significantly impacted by historical redlining.

Near North (or North Minneapolis)

200

This term describes how formerly redlined neighborhoods are often significantly hotter than "Green" neighborhoods due to a lack of trees.

The Urban Heat Island Effect.

200

The presentation notes that home equity is the primary way American families build this across generations.

Intergenerational Wealth.

300

This 1968 Act officially made housing discrimination and redlining illegal in the United States.

The Fair Housing Act

300

Many property deeds in Minneapolis once contained these "covenants," which legally prohibited non-white people from buying or occupying certain homes.

Racial Restrictive Covenants.

300

High levels of this toxic metal are more commonly found in the soil and older housing of formerly redlined districts.

Lead

300

Name one of the four themes of gentrification identified in the Twin Cities resident interviews.

Loss of Community Control, Physical Displacement, Cultural Displacement, or Presence of Whiteness.

400

True or False: Redlining was a practice used by private banks, but it was never supported or funded by the federal government.

False (It was a federal policy driven by the FHA and HOLC)

400

In the 1930s, the presence of even a single family of this background could cause an entire Minneapolis block to be "redlined."

African American (or Black).

400

How does the lack of "Green Space" in redlined areas affect the mental health of the community?

It increases stress levels and reduces opportunities for physical activity and community gathering.

400

What was the percentage of Black homeownership in Minneapolis mentioned in the slides?

24% (compared to 76% for white households

500

What specific "risk level" did the color red represent on a city's residential security map?

Hazardous

500

Besides race, what other "detrimental influence" did HOLC appraisers look for when grading Minneapolis neighborhoods?

Proximity to industrial sites or "smoke and odors."


500

What is the term for the deliberate placement of polluting industries and highways in low-income, minority neighborhoods?

Environmental Racism

500

What is one proposed "policy solution" mentioned in the presentation to help address the damage caused by redlining?

Down payment assistance for descendants of redlined areas, zoning reform, or community land trusts

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