“People like to put their names on buildings,” he said, jokingly.
“They built some high rises and brought the college kids in and the prostitutes disappeared,” she said. “It just made me realize when the city or whoever is responsible for cleaning up a community, they can do it.
“This is the only place I’ve ever lived”
‘Oh is that a home?’ But no — it’s six apartments.”
“I think that most people in Gainesville care about the issue of equity, and one of the great sources of inequity in our city has been our exclusionary zoning policies that have benefited the affluent, and been predominantly white residents, and caused great harm to our traditionally Black neighborhoods," Poe said