Photo by the author.

Last year, Montgomery County became majority-minority for the first time. But neighborhoods there aren’t as integrated as they could be, threatening the county’s ability to grow and prosper.

An article in Sunday’s Washington Post highlighted newly-diverse suburban neighborhoods across the United States, focusing on the Hillandale neighborhood of Silver Spring:

From one end of McGovern Drive to the other, and on adjacent streets, a boundless diversity continues: immigrants, or their offspring, from Jamaica and Haiti, Egypt and Israel; African Americans who have lived there for 20 years; and whites who bought their homes when Lyndon Johnson was president.

Since 1999, my family’s lived in Calverton, which, like Hillendale, was until recently a predominantly-white community.

In 1990, whites made up almost three-fourths of Calverton’s roughly 11,000 residents. Though the neighborhood has grown by more than half since then, whites and blacks make up equal shares of its population, at about 39 percent each. The Asian population’s been steady, but the Hispanic contingent has tripled to become one-tenth of the community. This graph shows the shifts (numbers may not add up to 100% because Hispanics are counted as an ethnicity, not a race):

Demographic Shift in Calverton

Yet as Montgomery County becomes more polyglot, it’s not necessarily integrated. Two years ago, my brother graduated from Galway Elementary School in Calverton. Its nearly 800 students are half black, a quarter Hispanic, and just 4.3 percent white.

In a neighborhood where the median household income is $76,000 a year and the average home sells for nearly $400,000, 60 percent of students are on free or reduced lunch. In addition, test scores are generally lower than they are at elementary schools elsewhere in the county.

Galway Elementary School Sign (In Spanish)

Signs at Galway Elementary are written in English and Spanish. Photo by Mark Doore, Calverton Citizens Association.

Where are Calverton’s white and middle-class residents? Some of have moved to Rockville or Olney, which are generally more affluent and have higher-rated public schools. Those who remained chose to “opt out” of the system, putting their kids in private school. They also take part in other exclusive amenities, like the members-only Calverton Swim Club across the street from Galway. A quick look at the club’s website indicates its demographic makeup.

Calverton Swim Club

The membership of Calverton Swim Club remains predominantly white, though the neighborhood isn’t. Photo by Mark Doore, Calverton Citizens Association.

This isn’t necessarily a problem for our family. My parents are very involved in my brother’s education and are generally happy with his experience at Galway and now at Briggs Chaney Middle School, which is slightly more diverse. While my family aren’t members of the Calverton Swim Club, we can go to the nicer and public Martin Luther King Jr. Pool, which has water slides and a lazy river.

At the same time, it’s generally recognized that the United States will cease to be a predominantly-white nation in about thirty years. We’re seeing the beginnings of that in Montgomery County. This actually puts us in the catbird seat: If we’re going to compete in a global society, we must be able to understand and react to cultural differences. Your kids might be having birthday parties with Salvadorian, Iranian, and Korean kids today, but they’re preparing themselves to do business with people from those countries in the future.

Montgomery County has the ability to use its polyglot population as a strength, to create better, unified communities, and draw investment and ideas from around the world. Yet it’s frequently thwarted when more fortunate residents try to keep the less privileged out or, as in Calverton, “opt out” of the community altogether.

For years, the Columbia Country Club and the Town of Chevy Chase have fought to keep the Purple Line out of their community. A community group in Silver Spring tried to remove a soccer field in a local park because Hispanic teams from outside the neighborhood used it. And neighbors in Bethesda had a vacant home demolished rather than letting a homeless family live there. These actions may benefit a small minority, but in the end, they hurt everyone.

Montgomery County has long had a reputation for progressive politics due to our affordable housing program and agricultural preserve. As a result, we tend to take diversity for granted, assuming that having Hispanic Heritage Month each October or occasionally eating ethnic food in Wheaton is enough. (Meanwhile, some are afraid to eat in Wheaton at all.) But this isn’t enough. In order to fully take advantage of the county’s diversity, and to ensure that everyone has a place here, we have to create truly integrated communities.

How can we do this?

We have to work even harder to create an equitable school system, ensuring students in affluent “Green Zone” schools and struggling “Red Zone” schools get the same level of education. Meanwhile, we have to continue investing in older communities like Silver Spring where “Red Zone” schools are located to give people the option of staying rather than moving further out and self-segregating.

We have to create neighborhoods that are accessible to a broad swath of the population, by providing a mix of housing styles and prices. In addition, we have to make it safer and easier to get around by foot, by bike, and by public transit, which benefit all residents, not just those who can afford a car. And we have to make everyone feel welcome here, instead of scapegoating immigrants or teenagers

Most importantly, we have to have the political wherewithal to do these things, rather than capitulate to groups who fight to preserve the status quo.

It’s been a long time since Montgomery County was the “perfect suburbia,” and it’s not always clear what we’ll become. Nonetheless, we have the opportunity to become something even greater. It won’t be easy, but if we want to ensure the county’s continued prosperity, we don’t have a choice.

Dan Reed (they/them) is Greater Greater Washington’s regional policy director, focused on housing and land use policy in Maryland and Northern Virginia. For a decade prior, Dan was a transportation planner working with communities all over North America to make their streets safer, enjoyable, and equitable. Their writing has appeared in publications including Washingtonian, CityLab, and Shelterforce, as well as Just Up The Pike, a neighborhood blog founded in 2006. Dan lives in Silver Spring with Drizzy, the goodest boy ever.