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SoMa Stabilization Press Release

PRESS RELEASE                                       

SoMa residents saved from displacement with help from broad community coalition

San Francisco, CA – Amidst an ever-increasing background of displacement and Ellis Act evictions of lower income households in San Francisco, a broad coalition of community-based organizations has saved the homes of five low-income households living at 534-536 Natoma Street in the South of Market (SoMa) neighborhood, by using the Community Land Trust model to acquire the apartment building before it sold on the private market.

Working together to identify a strategy for stabilizing existing residents and homes in the rapidly developing SoMa neighborhood, the San Francisco Community Land Trust (SFCLT), South of Market Community Action Network (SOMCAN), Asian Neighborhood Design (AND), and the Filipino American Development Foundation positioned themselves to take action when a low-income apartment building was at risk of losing its affordable units to the private re-sale market.

With the real estate market heating up in San Francisco, existing rent-controlled, affordable apartments are at risk of losing their affordability due to various market forces. When a long-term tenant moves out, the rent can be adjusted to market rate. Rents for a one-bedroom apartment start at $1800/month, which is not affordable to any household earning less than 80% of San Francisco’s median income. This may be good for an investor, but it’s not good for the community, especially when only 38% of San Francisco residents can afford homeownership and 62% depend on rental housing. Additionally, Ellis Act evictions by investors who want to re-sell the units as Tenants-in-Common (TIC) units displace long-term residents, many of whom are low-income and will not be able to find alternative affordable housing in the community. The Rent Board reports a 68% increase in Ellis Act Evictions in the last fiscal year.

SFCLT plans to rehabilitate the building to improve the quality and extend the life of these affordable homes. The acquisition-rehab strategy can be more cost-effective than building new affordable homes in San Francisco, and yields greater socio-economic benefits by preserving the existing social-economic fabric of the neighborhood. The successful acquisition of this small building reflects a new strategy that can be used by community organizations to preserve existing affordable, rental housing in a competitive real estate market. This collaborative effort would not have been possible without the support of the SoMa Stabilization Fund, the San Francisco Foundation and the Levi Strauss Foundation.

SFCLT Organizational Director, Tracy Parent, said, “This is a small but significant victory for the community. As a result of our coalition’s planning and preparation, we were poised to take immediate action when the opportunity arose. Despite receiving five offers, the owner was willing to give the community a chance to buy the building to not only stabilize these five families, but to stabilize five quality homes for many generations to come. Residents and community members have voting power within the Land Trust to ensure the long-term preservation of this community asset.”

Glenda De Vera, long-time resident of 534 Natoma Street says, “I am very happy that SFCLT bought our building and saved it from sale to a private investor. If they didn’t buy it, it would have been a big problem for us. Now we know that our building and affordability will be maintained and that our issues will be heard.”

In addition to rehabilitating and stabilizing the property, SFCLT will offer its financial education program to the residents to help them build their financial assets through savings, credit counseling, and debt management. SFCLT’s education program is funded by a Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) from the Mayor’s Office of Housing, the San Francisco Foundation and the Levi Strauss Foundation.

In an effort to counter and mitigate the negative effects of rapid private development and gentrification in SoMa, the nonprofit community led an effort to create the SoMa Stabilization Fund, funded by a portion of proceeds from private residential developments on Rincon Hill. Since 2010, the Fund has supported numerous community-based nonprofit organizations to identify strategies for stabilizing diverse, long-time, low-income residents and businesses in the community. This recent victory serves as an alternative strategy in the realm of affordable housing development. While a limited number of affordable apartments have been created in SoMa, the large number of applications received and selected through a lottery process makes it difficult for existing SoMa residents to compete for apartments in their own neighborhood.

Acquisition financing was provided by Clearinghouse Community Development Financial Institution, and a generous private investor. Douglas J Bystry, President of Clearinghouse CDFI says, “we consider affordable housing preservation essential to achieving our community development mission. Clearinghouse CDFI is honored to provide permanent financing to SFCLT to preserve and stabilize housing for Natoma Street residents.” Clearinghouse CDFI provides economic opportunities and improves the quality of life for lower-income individuals and communities through innovative financing that is unavailable in the conventional market. To date, the company has funded a total of $925 million in loans to distressed communities, benefiting over 776,000 individuals each year.

SFCLT is a membership-based organization whose mission is to create permanently affordable, resident-controlled housing for low- to moderate-income people in San Francisco through community ownership of the land.

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Feeling the Squeze: The Impact of Tech Boom 2.0

housing web 01 29 2012 


Written By: Elyssa White

The San Francisco Bay Area is an exciting place to live in as well as visit. We are home to some of the world's greatest universities, groundbreaking technological innovations, and fun and wacky arts and cultural events.

However, this region, and San Francisco in particular, has also become a tragic rental market - a place where many of the creative people responsible for this city’s fine arts, culture, and community have no choice but to leave for more affordable homes elsewhere or, at best, struggle to get by as a result of surging rental prices.

This March, the Huffington Post ran an article entitled “San Francisco Rents The Highest of Any City in the Country”. The article notes that a San Francisco pre-school teacher who earns a typical salary of $37,000 a year and works as the sole breadwinner of his or her family would need to hold more than one full time to job simply afford a two-bedroom rental apartment in the city. The article then states (no surprise) “the high cost of housing in San Francisco is the main reason cited by the legion of families with children who flee the city for the suburbs every year. Only 13.4 percent of San Francisco's approximately 800,000 people are under the age of 18 - the lowest proportion of kids for any major city in the United States."

Exacerbating the affordability concerns further, this May, BusinessWeek ran an article entitled “Twitter Rent Surge Makes San Francisco Best Office Market”, discussing how traditionally affordable markets in Mid and South of Market Street are now being considered commercial hot spots for tech growth as a result of Twitter and other dotcom companies moving into the urban core.

Most San Francisco residents are extremely proud of the city’s accomplishments. But many of these accomplishments, a new University of California Medical School campus, huge new offices for Twitter, and a surge in Hipster coffee shops, restaurants and other amenities, are coming at the expense of the long-term moderate or low income populations.

As we all know, where there is business (e.g., new dotcoms), there will soon be a desire for high rise condos, Whole Foods markets, and chichi shopping. It will not be long before iconic cultural spaces like the Mint Mall, located at Fifth and Mission Streets, are pushed out due to higher rental costs.

In the last year San Francisco rents rose 15.8 percent in the first quarter compared with the same time last year, to an average of $2,663 for all size units, according to Real Facts. The San Francisco Chronicle reports that “Studio apartments average $2,075, up 16.5 percent in a year. The steepest rise came in one-bedroom, one-bathroom apartments, which are now $2,611 - up 19.9 percent in the pst year and up 30 percent from just two years ago."

We now face a rental crisis for low and moderate income families that requires immediate intervention, before it is too late. The mission of the SFCLT and our desire to build more low-income cooperative opportunities is crucial in order to preserve essential demographics and communities in this city, even more so now than ever before. We look forward to continuing our work this summer and working with you, our inspiring and devoted partners, to find more opportunities to preserve housing and locate local and permanent funding to do so.


 

SFCLT - Oak St. In the News

 

 
 
 
 

Darnell N. Robinson, Community Development Director of Clearinghouse CDFI, being interviewed by KCBS.
(Photo: Fenglin Zhao/Epoch Times)

KTVU Channel 2 Story May 3, 2012

SF Examiner Article May 8, 2012

KCBS on SFCLT victory! May 3, 2012

Epoch Times -  华裔社区开先例 土地信托再建功

Epoch_Times_Article-English.pdf

Occupy Bernal and Occupy the Auctions Coverage

 
 

Bayview News, Oct 2011

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Housing co-op a long-term solution to displacement of families and seniors from San Francisco

October 13, 2011

Columbus United Cooperative, 53 Columbus Ave., San Francisco

San Francisco– Residents of the Columbus United Cooperative (CUC) celebrate an end to their 13-year housing struggle as they take ownership of their building as a permanently affordable, resident-owned limited-equity housing cooperative (co-op).

In August, a unanimous vote of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors allowed their 21-unit apartment building to convert to a housing cooperative. Now the residents can purchase “shares” in the co-op for id=mce_marker0,000, allowing them to become cooperative home owners with control of their building’s finances, membership and maintenance and the ability to pass down their home to their children.

The action brings to an end a 13-year struggle against displacement of the building’s residents and the first truly affordable home ownership opportunity in San Francisco’s Chinatown neighborhood. The majority of these home owners earn less than 50 percent of area median income, while most of the city’s below market rate condominiums are priced affordable for households earning 80-120 percent of area median income.

This is not only a local milestone, but of national importance. The residents of 53 Columbus Ave. have been working with the San Francisco Community Land Trust (SFCLT) to protect the building and to convert it into a permanently affordable housing cooperative. The CUC-SFCLT collaboration is the first community land trust in the country to use a housing cooperative explicitly to prevent the eviction of current residents.

The building located at 53 Columbus Ave. was purchased by City College of San Francisco in 1998, which intended to demolish it to make way for its Chinatown campus. Residents, with the assistance of the Asian Law Caucus (ALC) and Chinatown Community Development Center, organized first for relocation and later for the right to remain. In 2005, the residents approached SFCLT to explore the purchase of the building with the goal of renovating it and converting into a housing cooperative. Since then SFCLT has been working directly with the residents to develop their capacity to own and manage their residences as a cooperative, while ALC moved into the downstairs commercial space, which it will own separately.

Longtime resident and CUC Board of Directors Vice President Miao Yan Wen comments: “This building represents the community. It is important to take care of the low-income people who live here. There are many seniors who live in this building. If the building were torn down, they would have to move out of the neighborhood and lose their access to doctors, stores, services and people of a similar background who live in Chinatown.” She says that now that the building is a cooperative, “I feel stable and safe. We have better control of the building and all the related bills so we can better manage the building.”

SFCLT Director Tracy Parent remarks: “This is a victory not just for these 21 families but for the greater community of San Francisco. Limited equity housing cooperatives allow the current residents to benefit from affordable homeownership, with a moderate but steady appreciation over time that’s pegged to the consumer price index, which ensures that other families can buy these homes for an affordable price in the future. The SF Community Land Trust also provides ongoing support and education for the residents to help them continue to build their household assets, such as savings for education, starting a small business or planning retirement.”

Community land trusts are locally based non-profit organizations that create permanently affordable housing through community ownership of the land. CLTs separate the ownership of residential buildings from ownership of the land under those buildings. Residents control their buildings by owning them. Residents can own a house, an apartment, or a share in a housing cooperative. In a limited equity housing cooperative, each household has one share and thus one vote in the affairs of the co-op. The CLT retains ownership of the land under the buildings.

By separating the ownership of the land from the buildings, the CLT can reduce the cost of owning a building or house. The CLT creates long-term ground leases for the buildings on their land, usually 99 years, and includes re-sale restrictions in these ground leases. In this way, the buildings can remain affordable not just for the first owner, but for all owners in the future.

So in exchange for inexpensive homes, residents agree to sell their homes back to the CLT, or another low-income household, at a restricted price. This restriction on price benefits the larger community of low-income people by restraining inflation in the price of that housing. Through community control of the CLT, it can focus on the housing needs of the community, not of for-profit developers.

According to a recent study by the National Housing Institute, urban CLTs across the nation are increasingly being recognized for not only creating permanently affordable housing stock for diverse lower-income families, but also for building family assets and promoting community building. The combination of affordable ownership and ongoing financial education enable low-income households to move out of poverty and into economic self-sufficiency.

Poverty is not just the lack of income; it’s the lack of asset wealth. Without savings, home equity or equity in a retirement account or a business, an asset-poor household would face serious consequences if a sudden drop in income were to occur. According to the city’s Consolidated Plan, 30 percent of the city’s residents are asset poor compared to 10 percent who are income poor, with non-white households being twice as likely as white households to become asset poor.

Low-income families often lack asset building opportunities that middle-income families take for granted, such as homeownership and financial education. In addition to the benefits and protections of owning property on CLT land, the cooperative structure offers additional protection for homeowners against predatory lenders that created the foreclosure crisis in recent years.

http://sfbayview.com/2011/housing-co-op-a-long-term-solution-to-displacement-of-families-and-seniors-from-san-francisco/

 

Interview with CUC Vice-President

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On August 10th, SFCLT staffer Jamie Spector took a few minutes to speak with Columbus United Co-op Board Vice President Miao Yan Wen and ask her about her reflections on forming a housing cooperative. Read on to hear her insightful comments...

Read more...

 
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SF Community Land Trust
SFCLT is a membership-based organization whose mission is to create permanently affordable, resident-controlled housing for low- to moderate-income people in San Francisco through community ownership of the land.
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