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Dog City: San Francisco's Affordable Housing Struggle
By Jamilah King, WireTap
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| Prop Up Rent Control! |
| San Francisco's affordable housing struggle isn't the only challenge facing California's working families. Residents are mobilizing to defeat Proposition 98, an initiative that would eliminate rent control throughout California. A coalition of renters have formed their own counter initiative. The "No on 98/Yes on 99" campaign has worked on behalf of renters, working families and youth to ensure affordable housing for future generations. PROP 98: The California Property Owners & Farmland Protection Act What it will do: Eliminate rent control and other renter protection laws, including fair return of rental deposits and laws protecting seniors and the disabled from drastic rent increases. Environmental impact: Would eliminate environmental laws used to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, protect sensitive wetland areas and laws that restrict polluting industries, adult businesses and big box retail stores. Endorsed and funded by: Wealthy landowners and others. Opposed by: Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, and other leaders. PROP 99: The Homeowners Protection Act What it will do: Prohibit the government from using eminent domain to take a home or transfer it to a private developer. Endorsed and funded by: U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco), U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein (D) and other civic and community leaders |
Residents of San Francisco's predominantly working class, Black, Latino and Asian/Pacific Islander Bayview Hunters Point neighborhood have withstood the effects of toxic waste. The neighborhood is within earshot of an abandoned Naval shipyard that, over the years, has spewed poisonous particles into the air causing higher than average rates of asthma and cancer.
"Both of my daughters had routine nosebleeds," remembers Nina Donahue, a community activist and resident of Bayview. "At one point, doctors thought they were going to have to operate on one of my daughters' noses." Donahue eventually moved to Daly City, just south of San Francisco, and the nosebleeds stopped. She also recalls a coworker frequently bleeding from his ear and an instance when she blew her nose only to find small rock particles in her tissue.
For decades, the Navy, city officials and community members have debated over the best course of action for the toxic shipyard. Then, the San Francisco 49ers professional football organization, whose playing facility is located in Bayview's Candlestick Point area, threatened to leave the city if the team didn't get a new stadium. And while the 49ers have been moving forward with preliminary plans to relocate to the city of Santa Clara, Mayor Gavin Newsom has joined forces with Senator Dianne Feinstein in what writer Sarah Phelan has described as "a last-ditch solution to keep the 49ers in town." The city has joined forces with Lennar Corporation to build a new stadium, partially funded by luxury housing on the new site.
Part of the proposed site, however, sits on state land. That's why Lennar funded a new ballot initiative that would turn the land over for development.
The initiative, Proposition G, would give Lennar public property to develop a new football stadium, luxury housing and businesses. Backed by Newsom, Feinstein and Supervisor Sophie Maxwell, the proposition has both government and financial sway. Proponents argue that Proposition G will make good on decades-long promises to revitalize the vulnerable community, and will provide much needed construction and retail jobs for the area.
Yet opponents to the proposition argue that it's a deceptive ploy that will usher in the gentrification of the city's last remaining affordable community of color, pointing out that Prop G is filled language that sounds beneficial, but is not legally binding.
"Proposition G never guaranteed the people in the community anything," says Donahue. "They didn't outline what they meant by affordable housing, and there's nothing in it that calls for permanent jobs for people from the community."

Proposition F: Families Fight Back
Residents, church leaders and community organizations have helped orchestrate an ambitious grassroots movement against Proposition G. In less than two weeks, the coalition known as The Bayview Affordable Housing Initiative gathered nearly 12,000 signatures to sponsor a counter initiative on the June ballot. The alternative measure, known as Proposition F, attempts to outline standards for affordability and holds any developer accountable for cleaning up hazardous areas rather than simply capping or building over them.
"Lennar has failed us in the past," Donahue says. "We saw what they did in other communities, and refused to let them to do the same to us."
A key Proposition F demand is its insistence that 50 percent of all new housing units built in Bayview's Candlestick Point neighborhood be affordable to those who make 30, 60 and 80 percent of the Area Median Income (AMI). Under current plans, Lennar has claimed that only 30 percent of the new development would be available to low and middle income families. Prop F supporters also point out that the Lennar-backed proposal is not legally binding, questioning the validity of some of the commitments he has made to the community.

Lennar has already dumped $2.23 million to defeat Proposition F, countered with the less than $10,000 Proposition F supporters have spent. The Proposition G campaign, which opponents call deceptive, uses imagery that draws on the community's history of working class industry. The Proposition G campaign has also recruited church leaders and youth of color from the community to work on its behalf.
"I've seen these kids on the street passing out flyers and wearing 'Yes on Prop G' T-shirts, and when I ask them if they've read the fine print, or if they know what it's about, most times they just shrug their shoulders," Donahue remarks. "Everybody wants the shipyard to be cleaned up and for the community to be beautiful, but we're fighting to make sure that we're around when that happens."
Canine issues may seem irrelevant when stacked up against the removal of working families and the existence of toxic waste. Yet the disparity in the level of attention and resources directed towards the humans of this city is an entryway to discussing solutions to an outrageous problem.
"Dogs in this city are being taken care of [better] than people in our communities," Donahue says. "People need to be conscious of what's really going on."
For a recent update on the negotiations surrounding Propositions F and G, read the San Francisco Chronicle's recent story.
Please note that the Chronicle's editorial board has publicly endorsed Prop G.