The Houston Housing Authority recently announced plans to build two mixed-income apartment complexes in the Second Ward’s gentrifying East End neighborhood, a historically working-class, Latinx community. The complex could help counter the predicted displacement of low-income families from their longtime neighborhood, and would include units for families earning less than 30 percent of the area median income. In response to opposition, experts, such as Kyle Shelton, deputy director of Rice University’s Kinder Institute for Urban Research, say that research shows “there aren’t really negative impacts [of low-income units], on everything from property values to schools.”