Did You Know? An Anti-Poverty Program Sent Funds to 33 Well-Off College Towns | Eastern North Carolina Now

Publisher's note: The James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal is a nonprofit institute dedicated to improving higher education in North Carolina and the nation. Located in Raleigh, North Carolina, it has been an independent 501(c)(3) organization since 2003. It was known as the John W. Pope Center for Higher Education Policy until early January 2017.

The author of this post is Megan Zogby.


    "Opportunity zones," defined by a 2017 law, are poor areas targeted by the federal government for economic investment.

    In a study by the Brookings Institution, researchers discovered that money intended for economically struggling areas was funneled to college towns instead. Though college towns have many unemployed, poor adults-known as students-they don't tend to be economically depressed. As Hilary Gelfond and Adam Looney noted for Brookings, "57 percent of all neighborhoods in America qualified-and not all were truly distressed."

    The rules governing investments in opportunity zones were also loose, geographically speaking. Up to 30 percent of funds could go to areas beyond the boundaries of opportunity zones.

    As a result of the flexible definitions and poor geographic targeting, the program hasn't lived up to its hype.

    Dozens of neighborhoods in college towns that weren't poor qualified for funds. "States picked the campuses of the University of Southern California, Liberty University, Auburn University, Ohio State University, University of Kansas, the University of Illinois and University of Maryland, among many others-all of which are located in Census tracts where over 90 percent of residents are students," Gelfond and Looney wrote.

    Opportunity zones weren't meant to be another subsidy to college campuses, but the program gave states too much discretion in choosing which neighborhoods qualified for funds. According to the law, governors may nominate neighborhoods as opportunity zones for approval by the Department of the Treasury. Governors were supposed to focus on areas that were the focus of local, state, or private initiatives to attract businesses. Then, after the Treasury chooses the zones, the funding follows.

    Poor residents, however, have not seen the benefits promised by opportunity zone supporters. Brookings recommended that legislators better define what, exactly, economic distress is and to raise the bar for what qualifies as "distressed." Limiting state governments from choosing non-poor neighborhoods is also key. Legislators shouldn't get the chance to abuse opportunity zones to grab more funding for their political districts.

    Kentucky senator Rand Paul claimed that opportunity zones would be the largest anti-poverty initiative since the War on Poverty and allow impoverished areas to grow without the burden of harmful taxes and regulations. When the idea became reality, though, the payoff wasn't so high. Instead, college towns benefited while distressed areas of America lost out.

    Megan Zogby is a Martin Center intern.
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