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Two Miles From Facebook's Headquarters, Working Poor Live In Trailers (mercurynews.com)

"The working poor are spilling into Bay Area streets for lack of safe, affordable shelter," report two Silicon Valley newspapers describing a "pop-up neighborhood" that's now banding together, "a small community of blue collar RV dwellers...fighting for the only place they can call home."

The beautifully-illustrated article begins with an interview with a grey-haired woman named Lisa Cosey-Steven: [D]espite steady work and little debt, she trudges back and forth to the office every day from a dark RV trailer, packed floor to ceiling with bags of clothes, pet supplies for her seven dogs, thriller novels and food. Cosey-Stevens, 63, has been parked on the shoulder of Bay Road in East Palo Alto, just about two miles from Facebook headquarters and some of the wealthiest neighborhoods in the country, since June. "No one knows how badly I want out of this," she said during an interview in her trailer. "It's depressing to live like this...."

She's part of an unplanned and impromptu RV park, about 80 people pushed out of apartments and into trailers and the edge of homelessness... Their neighborhood of about 50 RVs lines the eastern end of Bay Road and Tara Street, next to a stretch of salvage yards, warehouses and empty lots guarded by chain link fence. It's just off a thoroughfare for local tech employees and sits adjacent to the site of a new, multi-million dollar youth education center, Epacenter Arts. Several of the aging RVs have large banners draped over the sides, making pleas to the big employers in the area: "SOS -- Facebook, Sobrato, Amazon, Google."

The [RV Families Association of East Palo Alto] has a grand vision for East Palo Alto, a city steeped in activism and landlord-tenant disputes: to get a few acres donated by a major tech company to build an RV park with security, facilities and regular, affordable rent for low-income workers. But first, they're fighting City Hall to keep their homes. A proposed ordinance working its way through city government would ban most RVs from overnight parking on city streets.

"It's not like they're trying to be a nuisance to the city," says the mayor of East Palo Alto. "It's a survival thing. It's a strategy, a tactic to survive for a while."

"We are the working homeless," says a 57-year-old upholsterer and Navy veteran "who moved into his RV after his rent in East Palo Alto doubled to $4,000 a month." Another family lost their Redwood City apartment when their landlord increased the rent from $1,300 to $2,800 a month.

3 of 520 comments (clear)

  1. Re: Seven dogs by Spazmania · · Score: 1, Troll

    I have no more strategy for caring for stray animals than I do for the bears in the forest or the birds in the sky. And why should I?

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  2. Re:and yet by AHuxley · · Score: 1, Troll

    When city planning cant plan for long term housing and normal people have to live in an RV they are poor.
    The problem is the "older and richer neighbors living in a nearly identical house". Stop trying to shape a city with demographics.
    Free up land use and let the free market move in.
    People who don't want to live in an illegal parked RV will then find homes as that demand for low cost housing exists.
    Areas of the city will face huge property taxes changes.
    Wealthy areas will stay wealthy and attract only more very wealth people.
    Areas then free from city tax rates and efforts to shape "demographics" will then be open to new investment.

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  3. Re:Land devs do the prep for high dollar homes by swillden · · Score: 1, Troll

    There's so much confusion and error in your post that I don't even know where to begin. In fact, I'm just not going to bother. You are unable to see things through any lens other than class warfare, so there's no point in trying.

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