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stAktimmership data also shOlanil '6rf e8T6P e having a harder time <br />getting 111V Jllgle -fa .:y neighborhoods. Just 25 U of Black and nJnof Lat gps:L9svatiedtE <br />uhouseholds own their home, compared to about 74% of white households, twin- �sPY 9 <br />twin- twin - <br />according to U.S. census data for the seven -county metro. cities-cities- <br />housirtausing- <br />rules- rules- <br />keep- keep - <br />Twin Cities has wide racial disparities in homeownershipthe- the - <br />Twin met o-metro{https:, <br />segregaigdWiiir <br />PERCENTAGE OF HOUSEHOLDS IN EACH GROUP WHO OWN THEIR OWN HOME <br />50% <br />White ;an Indian <br />Includes the 102 cities in the Star Tribune zoning pattern analysis. <br />Source: American Community Survey 2015-2019 <br />The gap between Black and white homeownership in Ramsey and Hennepin <br />counties is the largest among metro areas in the nation and has widened in the <br />past 20 years, according to an Urban Institute report <br />(https://www.urban. org/research/publication/who-owns-twin- <br />cities/view/full_report) released in June. <br />Single-family neighborhoods are viewed as "high opportunity" areas due to the <br />relative lack of poverty, which has been repeatedly shown in research studies <br />to shape the trajectory of children in important ways. At the same time, the <br />homes generate wealth that can be passed to future generations, feeding a cycle <br />of prosperity that does not exist in neighborhoods with high concentrations of <br />rental property, said Cunningham, who serves as CEO of Prosperity Now, <br />(https://prosperitynow.org/) a nonprofit focused on closing the racial wealth <br />divide. <br />