Sep 21 | YIMBY vs NIMBY: Looking Past Labels To The Real Impacts of Development | East Village, NY Patch

2022-09-11 11:05:23 By : Mr. Sunny Wen

This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Free, Zoom Panel Discussion, Registration is Required

A seemingly intractable housing affordability crisis has allowed YIMBYism (“Yes In my Backyard”) to emerge as an increasingly loud and politically influential voice in urban redevelopment debates in our neighborhoods, city, and country. Its call for more construction as a primary tool for mitigating housing costs has led to attacks against all opposition to development plans as reflexive “NIMBYs” (i.e., “Not In My Backyard”), a term traditionally reserved for residents who resist the nearby placement of necessary infrastructure so as to avoid its negative impacts. Preservationists and skeptics of large-scale development projects reject the label, pointing to specific perceived deficiencies that they accuse YIMBYs of casually disregarding in favor of unexamined, inflexible principles and often despite negative potential impacts on housing affordability. Both sides see themselves on the side of social justice and housing equity. Perhaps as a result, they regard each other with suspicion if not contempt, dismissing their counterparts as either reactionaries who zealously exclude on the basis of class or race in order to safeguard their own comfort and privilege, or as self-interested dogmatists who unwittingly operate as shills for the real estate industry. Unsurprisingly, this sort of condemnation has not led to productive debate between the groups. The recurrence and prominence of their political postures, however, has inspired us to look past the dead-end of vilification and see what we can learn from this latest iteration of pro- and anti-development coalitions.

Moderated by Village Preservation Special Projects Director Juan Rivero, this panel of experts will examine the composition of the so-called YIMBY and NIMBY movements, provide a historical perspective for their emergence, examine the political and development landscape in which their debates have unfolded, and review the empirical evidence that have fueled their arguments. It will then consider the usefulness and limitations of the terms of those debates for reconciling housing needs with a whole range of other valued dimensions of urban life, including the diverse values that we attach to our neighborhoods.

Tuesday, 6:30 pmLower East Side-Chinatown, NY

Wednesday, 7:30 pmLower East Side-Chinatown, NY