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Romney can’t escape the economic divide

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LOS ANGELES (MCT) — The sleepy Boston suburb that Mitt Romney has called home for much of his adult life has much to recommend it for a family. It features excellent schools, big homes, and so little excitement that a local newspaper once called it the most boring town in the region.

But there’s a division in Belmont too, that may, or may not, have been present as far back as when the painter Winslow Homer built a summer home here in the 1850s. It’s a divide between the rich and everyone else.

Before he sold his house and moved into a condo, Romney and his family lived on Belmont Hill, where the residences are large and the yards spacious. The private Belmont Hill School, which Romney’s five sons attended, is here, along with a Mormon temple that draws visitors from around New England.

But travel down the hill through a series of stop lights — past blocks of single-family homes — and another neighborhood emerges, one of two-family homes and convenience stores. It feels like a different town altogether.

“They’re snobs up in Belmont Hill. This is supposedly the ghetto,” said Joe Venuti, 74, who has lived in the Waverly Square neighborhood of Belmont his whole life. A retired town firefighter, Venuti lives in a two-family home across from a Dunkin’ Donuts, where he and a handful of other old-timers convene a daily coffee klatch.

“This is a real working-class neighborhood,” said Bob Dally, 60, a 911 dispatcher who lives in the same apartment above a drugstore that he did when he got married 33 years ago.

Across the street, buses from Cambridge unload passengers of all races as cars speed by. This area of town has a bicycle shop, a Vietnamese restaurant and a few empty storefronts. Belmont Center, the gateway to the Belmont Hill neighborhood, has a number of expensive boutiques, a high-end Italian restaurant, and both a craft beer and a wine store, which holds tastings on the weekends.

The divide is evident in census data, which shows that the Belmont Hill area has hundreds of homes with household incomes above $200,000. The usual income range in the Waverly Square area is $60,000 to $75,000. There are also more than 100 households making $10,000 to $15,000 in Waverly Square, the largest area of Belmont with such low incomes.

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