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xstaptiittfieft in tears, feeling tattP" "ett a'ah't want people who look <br />line iiie here." (https:(htt v/fticilk <br />u=httpsctoWo <br />twin- twin - <br />"Just because people don't have the same money and access to privilege, how <br />itthat they are a threat to you?" Stroder said, reflecting on the meeting mol sirs 3using- <br />rules- rules - <br />than a year later. keep- keep- <br />the- the- <br />metro-metro-(https:, <br />Stroder, who continues working with the affordable housing group, is pleasegiegatfflawate <br />that the apartment building got approved, but she is quick to point out that it's <br />not enough to solve the city's affordability and segregation problems. <br />The bigger work that needs to be done, she says, is one of the key things she <br />told the crowd at that meeting: "If the city is going to follow the tenet of being <br />concerned with racial equity and inclusivity, equality ... this is something that <br />all of us have to look into our hearts to find a way to work together to support <br />that." <br />Staff writers Eric Roper, Jim Buchta and Jeff Hargarten contributed to this report. <br />METHODOLOGY <br />To examine residential zoning patterns in the Twin Cities, the Star Tribune requested zoning maps <br />from more than 100 communities that are designated by the Metropolitan Council as urban or <br />suburban and are served by the regional sewer system. <br />Reporters reviewed zoning ordinances from each city and used information collected from a <br />survey of city planning officials to standardize the residential zoning districts. Each district was <br />assigned to a category based on the most dense form of housing allowed without a conditional <br />use permit or other form of special permission. <br />The categories were: single-family detached, multifamily housing of more than four units, and <br />districts that allow townhouses, duplexes, triplexes, fourplexes or mobile homes (this is often <br />called "middle housing"). We also identified mixed -use areas that allow both residential and <br />nonresidential use. Areas zoned as a Planned Unit Development were categorized separately <br />since these areas are governed by agreements between a city and a developer, often overriding <br />existing zoning regulations. <br />