I always thought that public transit in the tri-state area was something you could not get anywhere else in the country and this article helps enforce that thought. However, it does bother me that gentrification moves people out of areas they once called home, and I wish this was not the collateral damage of what otherwise seems to be a positive trend. I certainly would not like to have to move because people who can pay more than me move in and force me out of my town. Then again, if moving to the town next door forces schools and services to become better, than maybe it's not so bad. It looks to me like no matter how positive the intentions, supply and demand will always rule along with their friend $$.