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2015 SF Tenant Rights Fair – Tenants speak out on eviction fights
A tenant’s rights conference was held at the Tenderloin Community School all day last Saturday, April 25. The event was sponsored by the San Francisco Anti-Displacement Coalition, which is a joint collaboration of most or all of the housing rights organizations in the city. The Coalition is together to continue a multi-pronged campaign to turn around the escalating epidemic of big money-oriented evictions aimed at driving the price of housing out of reach of mostly everyone except wealthy people (22 min).
Listen now:
Hear three renters speak out on their collective campaigns. In each case, building tenants are successfully allying with their neighbors to fight speculator-driven evictions evictions. In these and many others rental buildings around the City, speculators have created phony legalistic reasons to try to clear out whole buildings of rent control tenants to raise their profits on the buildings.
The first speaker is from 1049 Market Street. These renters are part of an escalating gentrification on upper Market and SOMA property brought about by the misguided payroll tax breaks handed to Twitter and other high tech companies taking over this section of town on the cheap. While the tax giveaway has reportedly cost the city estimates of well over 50 million dollars, it has also created open season on conversions of lower and moderate income housing and lower profit small businesses which serve the community.
I believe the next two speakers are from housing units in the North Beach/Chinatown area, another central city neighborhood in which profiteers are pushing out lower income residents and businesses at an alarming rate. Rent controlled private market rate tenants, disabled and other groups of people in low-income subsidized units, and the cheaper residential hotels are all targeted. The Asian population including non-English speaking tenants are allying themselves with renter’s rights organizations and direct action approaches to fight to stay in their homes.
The first speaker is from 1049 Market Street. These renters are part of an escalating gentrification on upper Market and SOMA property brought about by the misguided payroll tax breaks handed to Twitter and other high tech companies taking over this section of town on the cheap. While the tax giveaway has reportedly cost the city estimates of well over 50 million dollars, it has also created open season on conversions of lower and moderate income housing and lower profit small businesses which serve the community.
I believe the next two speakers are from housing units in the North Beach/Chinatown area, another central city neighborhood in which profiteers are pushing out lower income residents and businesses at an alarming rate. Rent controlled private market rate tenants, disabled and other groups of people in low-income subsidized units, and the cheaper residential hotels are all targeted. The Asian population including non-English speaking tenants are allying themselves with renter’s rights organizations and direct action approaches to fight to stay in their homes.
Listen now:
Listen now:
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Small property ownership
Mon, May 4, 2015 4:53PM
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