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City Government

Op-Ed:Oakland’s Decades of Failure to Halt Evictions and Tenant Displacement

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By James Vann

Part II

 

Oakland’s present catastrophic rental and affordable housing crisis, which monthly disrupts 1,000 long-established households through evictions, displacement, foreclosures, and destruction of neighborhoods, is not new.

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The City has been in continuing crises since the late 1970s. At that time, rental properties were being flipped two to three times a year, each time with huge increases in rent.

 

Lacking any regulations, a quarter of apartment buildings surrounding Lake Merritt had been converted to condominiums; and “no-cause” tenant evictions were rampaging at 7,000 to 8,000 displacements a year.

 

By early 1980, broad public outcry prompted tenant activists to develop and circulate an initiative petition to place “rent control” on the ballot.

 

Fearing the initiative’s possible success, city leaders and the realty industry joined together to counter the tenant measure with a pro-landlord ordinance — not for rent control, but for “residential rent arbitration.”

 

The City-landlord alternative was rushed onto the ballot by unanimous vote of the City Council. Aided by massive spending, government-landlord collusion, deceptive billboards throughout Oakland, and letters on City letterhead signed by Mayor Lionel Wilson to each Oakland voter, the citizen initiative was closely defeated 53 percent to 47 percent.

 

Although renters have consistently complained to city leaders about the many inequities of Oakland’s one-of-a-kind-landlord-written law, the program has continued for 35 years to oppress and abuse the 60 percent of Oakland residents who are renters. Yet, there have been no changes of real significance from the City Council.

 

Following the landlord’s rental victory, a developer-driven condominium conversion ordinance was drawn up and adopted in1981. The ill-conceived no-fee ordinance profited converters by providing free access, without constraints, to 25 percent of Oakland’s rental inventory.

 

The new condo law further enriched developers by creating a lucrative new commodity called “conversion rights,” a valuable entitlement that can be sold and traded among housing developers for additional windfall profits, but no return to the City. To date, the city’s regressive condominium ordinance has resulted in the removal of approximately 3,500 badly needed rental units from the inventory and which, despite its obvious defects, has remained unchanged for 34 years.

 

Since 1980, there have been at least 16 concrete occasions where the City Council ignored or failed to take positive action on proposals and requests to counter the ever-present crisis in rental and affordable housing (for details of the Council’s failed opportunities, see the popular blog <DrakeTalkOakland>).

 

Fast-forward to the conditions Oaklanders are facing today. The City’s recently adopted — but not implemented – “Housing Equity Roadmap” documents that between 2000 and 2010, Oakland lost 33,502 Black residents and almost 17 per of families with school age children. The hemorrhaging and the crisis continue unabated.

 

Early in Mayor Libby Schaaf’s administration, she announced that halting evictions and displacement of long-term Oakland residents would be among the highest priorities of her administration.

 

Starting her second year in office, so far neither Mayor Schaaf nor the City Council has advanced any positive actions or concrete initiatives to achieve justice and equity for renters and affordable housing.

 

The inaction of Oakland leaders stands in naked contrast to “declarations,” “states of emergency,” or “moratoriums” on “no-cause” evictions and exorbitant rent increases that have been quickly enacted by several Bay Area cities in response to the region’s unrelenting crisis,

 

Despite the weakness or absence of leadership by our elected officials, renters can and must take positive steps to achieve housing justice. Tenants cannot match either landlord/developer dollars or their slick highly paid lobbyists who daily comb City Hall.

 

What tenants do have is the “power of the ballot.” This November, tenants, who make up 60 percent of the city’s population, can seize the opportunity, take charge of their own destiny, and enact the needed positive changes that our moribund city leaders, seemingly, have been too afraid to take.

 

 

James Vann is co-founder of the Oakland Tenant Union. In next week’s installment, he will discuss critical and needed state laws that hamper the ability of cities to protect tenants from runaway rents, evictions, and displacement.

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Activism

Oakland Post: Week of April 24 – 30, 2024

The printed Weekly Edition of the Oakland Post: Week of April 24 – 30, 2024

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To enlarge your view of this issue, use the slider, magnifying glass icon or full page icon in the lower right corner of the browser window.

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Alameda County

DA Pamela Price Stands by Mom Who Lost Son to Gun Violence in Oakland

Last week, The Post published a photo showing Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price with Carol Jones, whose son, Patrick DeMarco Scott, was gunned down by an unknown assailant in 2018.

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District Attorney Pamela Price with Carol Jones
District Attorney Pamela Price with Carol Jones

Publisher’s note: Last week, The Post published a photo showing Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price with Carol Jones, whose son, Patrick DeMarco Scott, was gunned down by an unknown assailant in 2018. The photo was too small for readers to see where the women were and what they were doing.  Here we show Price and Jones as they complete a walk in memory of Scott. For more information and to contribute, please contact Carol Jones at 510-978-5517 at morefoundation.help@gmail.com. Courtesy photo.

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City Government

Vallejo Welcomes Interim City Manager Beverli Marshall

At Tuesday night’s Council meeting, the Vallejo City Council appointed Beverli Marshall as the interim city manager. Her tenure in the City Manager’s Office began today, Wednesday, April 10. Mayor Robert McConnell praised Marshall’s extensive background, noting her “wide breadth of experience in many areas that will assist the City and its citizens in understanding the complexity of the many issues that must be solved” in Vallejo.

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Beverli Marshall began her first day with the City on April 10. ICMA image.
Beverli Marshall began her first day with the City on April 10. ICMA image.

Special to The Post

At Tuesday night’s Council meeting, the Vallejo City Council appointed Beverli Marshall as the interim city manager. Her tenure in the City Manager’s Office began today, Wednesday, April 10.

Mayor Robert McConnell praised Marshall’s extensive background, noting her “wide breadth of experience in many areas that will assist the City and its citizens in understanding the complexity of the many issues that must be solved” in Vallejo.

Current City Manager Michael Malone, whose official departure is slated for April 18, expressed his well wishes. “I wish the City of Vallejo and Interim City Manager Marshall all the best in moving forward on the progress we’ve made to improve service to residents.” Malone expressed his hope that the staff and Council will work closely with ICM Marshall to “ensure success and prosperity for the City.”

According to the Vallejo Sun, Malone stepped into the role of interim city manager in 2021 and became permanent in 2022. Previously, Malone served as the city’s water director and decided to retire from city service e at the end of his contract which is April 18.

“I hope the excellent work of City staff will continue for years to come in Vallejo,” he said. “However, recent developments have led me to this decision to announce my retirement.”

When Malone was appointed, Vallejo was awash in scandals involving the housing division and the police department. A third of the city’s jobs went unfilled during most of his tenure, making for a rocky road for getting things done, the Vallejo Sun reported.

At last night’s council meeting, McConnell explained the selection process, highlighting the council’s confidence in achieving positive outcomes through a collaborative effort, and said this afternoon, “The Council is confident that by working closely together, positive results will be obtained.” 

While the search for a permanent city manager is ongoing, an announcement is expected in the coming months.

On behalf of the City Council, Mayor McConnell extended gratitude to the staff, citizen groups, and recruitment firm. 

“The Council wishes to thank the staff, the citizens’ group, and the recruitment firm for their diligent work and careful consideration for the selection of what is possibly the most important decision a Council can make on behalf of the betterment of our City,” McConnell said.

The Vallejo Sun contributed to this report.

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