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Showing Original Post only (View all)The Bleaching of San Francisco: Extreme Gentrification and Suburbanized Poverty in the Bay Area [View all]
http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/23305-the-bleaching-of-san-francisco-extreme-gentrification-and-suburbanized-poverty-in-the-bay
Protesters block a Facebook bus at intersection of San Francisco's Market and 8th Streets and show unfair system of private tech buses. (Photo: Adam Hudson)
On January 21, dozens of protesters, decrying displacement and inequality, gathered near City Hall in San Francisco on a chilly Tuesday morning. At around 9:15 a.m., they marched down Market Street and blockaded two tech shuttles, one that was parked at a MUNI (San Francisco Municipal Railway) bus stop, the other in the middle of the street. Tech shuttles - also infamously known as "Google buses" - are private corporate buses that take tech industry workers from their homes in San Francisco down the peninsula to work in Silicon Valley.
Protesters surrounded the buses and placed signs near them that read: "Stop Displacement Now" and "Warning: Rents and evictions up near private shuttle stops." A UC-Berkeley study and maps show that evictions and rent increases often follow the locations of tech bus stops. One sign bluntly read: "Fuck off Google."
Present at the protest was Martina Ayala, a teacher, artist and consultant for San Francisco nonprofits working with low-income families. She is currently facing a no-fault eviction from her residence in San Francisco's Outer Richmond neighborhood that sits next to the Pacific Ocean beach. Ayala told Truthout, "The landlord would like us to self-evict" - but not by way of a buy-out, in which landlords evict tenants by paying them to leave. Instead, Ayala said, "They're trying to get us out without having to pay the eviction costs. And so they're doing that by harassing us and calling us every day, sending us three-day notice to pay rent or quit without following through with service." Why would the landlord go to such lengths to push the family out? Ayala says, "Even though we are paying $1,750, that is still not enough for the landlord, because the average rent is now $3,000."
The Google bus blockade lasted for a half-hour. Afterward, the crowd marched down Grove Street to the San Francisco Association of Realtors, then ended at City Hall. Much of the media coverage of the protest focused on the Google bus blockade. However, the protesters emphasized that the tech industry was not the only culprit. Developers, real estate brokers, and City Hall all play a role in economically displacing many San Francisco residents.
***does any one remember san francisco when it was called Baghdad by the Bay? when the Soul of the city was a wild Bohemian spirit? when you could drive across the Bay Bridge and see the waves roll in on the ocean side and even make out PlayLand?
i do -- it's why you wanted to live there.
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The Bleaching of San Francisco: Extreme Gentrification and Suburbanized Poverty in the Bay Area [View all]
xchrom
Apr 2014
OP
Just did a super-quick google on Detroit real estate. Found these cuties ca 1930 house for $52,000
KittyWampus
Apr 2014
#10
That last one is something else. Detroit had some absolutely beautiful homes. n/t
RKP5637
Apr 2014
#44
And nature is close at hand, as abandoned lots are engulfed in foliage...
Arugula Latte
Apr 2014
#52
Had a friend that their house was valued at about 20k years ago, after the subway went in that
RKP5637
Apr 2014
#4
Interesting topic- lower income people don't have cars but need to get to work somehow.
KittyWampus
Apr 2014
#19
Absolutely disgusting how these "tech companies" are creating well-paying jobs
Nye Bevan
Apr 2014
#12
Revitalizing depressed areas in the manner you suggest would be even more heinous.
Nye Bevan
Apr 2014
#21
The SF Chron ran an article recently that disassembled the protesters movement.
Xithras
Apr 2014
#56
Tax breaks so that people earning $77k per year can live in San Francisco instead of commuting?
Nye Bevan
Apr 2014
#25
I think about how little I paid 25 years ago for my half of a San Francisco apartment with a
Arugula Latte
Apr 2014
#57
she can afford to live in SF, just not in the neighborhood she was in. And looking at the photos
KittyWampus
Apr 2014
#28
The subject of this article makes $77,000 per year and would like to live in SF's Mission District.
Nye Bevan
Apr 2014
#23
The problem isn't that the techs pay well. It's that the displaced poor people's employers DON'T.
Lizzie Poppet
Apr 2014
#42
Exactly. Another case of misplaced outrage. Like the focus on unions. The anger should not be
stevenleser
Apr 2014
#63
Why do poor people want to live in a high cost of living area like San Francisco?
FarCenter
Apr 2014
#45
Isn't it in one's self-interest to move to a place where your income goes farther?
FarCenter
Apr 2014
#71
The city is less than 1/5 the metro area and less than 1/10th the Consolidated Statistical Area
FarCenter
Apr 2014
#76
In the 90's when high school dropouts were getting high-paying internet start-up
closeupready
Apr 2014
#51
A city is the people in it. San Jose and SF have the same people, in shifts
Bluenorthwest
Apr 2014
#65
It's always the same. Hippies find a cool place, make it artsy, fun, and real, and fucking yuppies
Zorra
Apr 2014
#64