Since 2020, I've worked part-time in non-profit journalism as a researcher, data analyst, writer, editor, and grant writer. This page highlights some of what I've done.

🚧 Work in progress 🚧

Long-term poverty impacts of zoning in a small American city

Investigative journalism

Project Overview

Starting in the summer of 2021, I led an investigative series for the Granite State News Collaborative that tried to understand why poverty and non-white communities in New Hampshire's biggest city are so concentrated in certain neighborhoods, but relatively absent in others.

Our investigation showed that more than a hundred years of discriminatory housing policies, dating back to Manchester's founding and extending all the way to the present day, created and reinforced areas of persistent poverty. In those neighborhoods, these policies have negatively impacted many aspects of life, including crime, public health, and housing.

My Contributions

I conceptualized the series, working with editors from the Collaborative, NH Business Review, and Business NH Magazine. Early interviews pointed us toward the history of land use zoning, but we quickly realized that little info was available on this topic.

In fall 2021, I created a novel spatial dataset by georeferencing and overlaying the city's zoning maps dating back to 1929, when the first map was approved. This simple analysis showed that the areas in the city that suffered from chronic high poverty and high crime today have been consistently targeted by the zoning laws for high-density housing, while wealthier neighborhoods were reserved for single-family homes.

To convey our research to the public, I wrote a three-part story that presented this issue as part of a 180-year history. I showed that the city's present-day economic segregation actually began with the mill company that lorded over Manchester for the city's first 100 years, but that starting in the 1920s these patterns of discrimination were reinforced by land use zoning.

2023 Public Occurrences Award Winner




Recognizing "the very best work that New England newspapers produce each year"

Read more about the series:

Selected graphics from introductory articles: