greenline
See also: green line
English
    
    Etymology
    
From green + line; compare redline, greenlight.
Verb
    
greenline (third-person singular simple present greenlines, present participle greenlining, simple past and past participle greenlined)
- (transitive) To ease access to services to residents in specific areas, particularly by designating such areas as suitable for real-estate lending and property insurance.
-  1964, The Bankers Magazine, volume 162, page 47:- Bankers, who must fight to stay even with inflation and face an uneven credit supply (even many "greenlined"' areas didn't get loans during the recession of 1974-1975)
 
-  2011, Manuel B. Aalbers, Place, Exclusion and Mortgage Markets:- But ABN-AMRO redlined some small areas in largely yellowlined zip code areas, and greenlined some small areas in largely redlined areas.
 
-  2013, Loretta Lees, Tom Slater, Elvin Wyly, Gentrification, page 32:- If the new residents, especially the most recent arrivals, are less tolerant of lower or working-class behavior, these tensions may become serious. Banks begin to greenline the area, looking for spatial patterns of reinvestment
 
 
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