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, StarTribuRd007, Stroder and heilliaManiBesffrinoved from Cleveland to the Twin <br />11-IG . 1LG1 �. best friend a r persuaded a a her + + . + ��lttps:QYLt1�99N/f� tE <br />V1L1GJ 0.11,G1 he est friend from college Gl suaded o start a ne <br />chapter in her life. u=httpsctoWo <br />twin- twin- <br />cities- cities - <br />Her friend introduced her to pickled herring and took her out on a housirigausing- <br />rules- rules - <br />frozen lake for the first time. She fell in love with Minnesota. keep- keep- <br />the- the- <br />metro-metro-(https: <br />She has made a home for herself in a 1960s-era apartment complex in St. Lswiegatyiwiffla <br />Park, where she has made friends with her neighbors and tends to the <br />community garden, as well as the flowers, produce and herbs planted in <br />containers on her patio. Her rent has gone up at least 40% in the past decade, <br />though, making it even harder to save for a down payment on a home. <br />Over the years, Stroder would get excited when she saw a "For Sale" sign on a <br />house in St. Louis Park, thinking maybe that would be her dream home. <br />Then she looked at the price. <br />"People who live in rental housing here, they love the city too," Stroder said in <br />an interview earlier this year. "If they want that dream to own a home and <br />plant more permanent roots here, why isn't it something you're trying to make <br />possible for them?" <br />This is a question that St. Louis Park officials are wrestling with as well. They <br />realized that the 19% of the city's residents who are people of color are <br />concentrated in the few areas that have apartments. <br />"BIPOC (Black, Indigenous and People of Color) folks have been segregated <br />from more affluent neighborhoods because they haven't been able to have <br />more housing options in those neighborhoods," said Karen Barton, St. Louis <br />Park's community development director. "That affects education, health, <br />future incomes, everything." <br />The Twin Cities metro has become more racially diverse during the past two <br />decades, but people of color, especially Black and Latino, disproportionately <br />live in the relatively small areas zoned for multifamily housing, according to a <br />Star Tribune analysis. Nearly 25% of Black people live in these areas, compared <br />to 15% of Latino and 8% of white people. <br />