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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.

17 of 520 comments (clear)

  1. and yet by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And yet cities continue to build new office buildings without building enough places for people to live, then wonder why there aren't enough places for people to live. When more people come without enough places to live, that will drive prices up: that is how supply and demand works.

    --
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    1. Re: and yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well duh, the people that own property continue to vote for no new housing to be built. They do not want their property to depreciate from adding more housing.

    2. Re: and yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Cities in the US have actually abandoned constructing any buildings.

      Sorry! Any Rand got her way.

    3. Re: and yet by quenda · · Score: 4, Informative

      Center of empire has moved on to China, which is more economically free than the US and Europe

      Free? The economy is less regulated, freedom for capitalists, but not individuals.
      True freedom comes from economic security, which means savings for the middle class, or at least a welfare system that allows people to keep their homes and health insurance if they lose their job. Even well-paid professionals in Silicon Valley can feel like serfs.

      China is of course struggling with a mass-migration of workers at a speed and scale unprecedented in world history.
      50 million new apartments are empty, while millions of migrant workers live in squalid dormitories.
      China is improving rapidly, but it is a rough road. And will get worse when the debt bomb explodes.

    4. Re:and yet by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Insightful

      An hour long train ride is not a good substitute for building housing where people actually want to live. I live in Silicon Valley, and we have mile after mile of low-rise sprawl. There is plenty of space to build high density housing in the core area where the jobs are.

      Liberals love to criticize Republican tax cuts for the rich, but coastal city zoning regulations contribute as much to income inequality by keeping people of modest means away from the best job opportunities.

      Zoning laws and the rise of inequality

      Fighting inequality through zoning

      The left is waking up to inequality cause by zoning

      When it comes to inequality, liberals need to stop asking "Who can we blame for this problem" and start asking "What can we do to fix this problem."

    5. Re:and yet by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 4, Interesting

      My town, a major tourist draw in rural northern Arizona, also has a low-cost housing problem. The place is full of artists and high-end retirees, but there is no low-cost housing for our service army of waitstaff, janitors, medical techs, and cashiers. The spare rooms the plebeians used to rent are now being Air BnBed out of their reach.

      Last month, a solution emerged: an Evil Developer staked out a large trailer park on the main highway just outside the city limits in county territory, where it does not require city approval. Though it would handily solve the worker housing problem, local property snobs are reacting as though it's going to be "The Stacks" from Ready Player One.

    6. Re:and yet by AHuxley · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Re "This is all rather rich... free markets to the rescue...."
      Hows that gov control with waste in the streets and people living in RV working for decades?
      Need another city and state tax to support the poor?

      Let the free market build some new housing by removing gov control over the number of new homes.
      The free market will fill released land by building homes that will sell in that area.
      Wealthy people get nice new homes. Rents will reflect the price the value of a nice area, that's clean and has no crime.
      Middle class areas get affordable homes.
      Poor areas get rent supported homes.
      Wealth keeps the different communities well apart and tech workers will enjoy their new homes.

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    7. Re:and yet by djinn6 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In my town, the high density housing that comes out of this mindset ends up being luxury 1 bedroom condominiums starting at 750k. Renovicting people who have been paying decent rents in a duplex or small low rise apartment, and pushing them to things like in TFA which is forming RV shantytowns.

      That luxury condo is still soaking up a bunch of the richer tenants from other apartments, leaving those for the less rich. If you build enough of those, the ordinary apartments are going to have plenty of space for everyone who was evicted.

      If you want to fix the problem, either build 1k-2k /per month apartments that can fit a family, or houses that arent over 500k.

      Asking developers to sell for below cost just isn't going to work. Nobody can build a house for $500k in the Bay Area and nobody will invest $1 million to get a $24k annual rental income, of which $20k goes to property tax and $5k goes to utilities and maintenance (notice how $24k < $25k).

      Ban people from owning more than one property in the same regional district is my starting idea.

      What do you do for the existing properties they own? And what about those owned by businesses?

      Increase the cost of money

      That reduces construction of new units, since those are funded by loans too.

      don't allow foreigners to purchase land.

      Might not make much of a difference in the Bay Area. According to this site, less than 10% are all cash sales (which is indicative of foreign investment).

    8. Re:and yet by GameboyRMH · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's a hilarious quote, liberals are the ones actually proposing legislation to fix the problem rather than just giving out tidbits of advice on how to get a real good grip on your bootstraps.

      But the right probably sees that legislation as "blaming" because they don't want the people benefitting from the explosion of inequality to stop benefitting - even poor people on the right who are taking the brunt of the damage, but willingly hurt themselves for the sake of stupid-ass culture war horseshit, just as planned by their wealthy masters.

      --
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  2. Seven dogs by Spazmania · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm supposed to feel sorry for someone who has seven dogs? Life choices man. She chose the expense of seven dogs over the expense of non-disgusting housing.

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    1. Re: Seven dogs by sjames · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I guess you missed the part where rent has recently doubled. In other words, she could afford the rent and the dogs just fine and then the rent doubled.

      What would you have her do, take the dogs to the landlord's house and shoot them execution style on the front porch?

  3. Cause and effect, not fault. by raymorris · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not sure why some are always looking for who to blame, while actively denying the very basic idea of cause and effect.

    The ASPCA says the *nationwide* average cost per dog is $1,000-$2,000 / year. Things cost 43% in California, on average, so that's roughly $2,100 / year per dog. Total $15,000 / for the dogs. That's what dogs cost. It's not someone's FAULT, it's just a fact. Dogs need food, vet care, etc. If you spend $15,000/year on dogs, and another $15,000/year on whatever odd choice, you're left with less money to take care of yourself. That's called arithmetic, not fault.

    It's funny - just this morning I had a conversation with my daughter, mostly listening to her talk. First she said she wanted all of the toys in the Ryan's Toy Reviews line, now available at Walmart. Next, she said she'd spend ALL of her money on those toys. "But then I couldn't get any other toys", she said. "I want to have money in my gifting cup to buy gifts for my friends", she continued. With me barely saying a word, she quickly reasoned through that she did NOT want to spend all of her money on Ryan toys. Maybe just one, she decided. Maybe one Ryan toy would be good.

    My daughter understands the cause and effect of choosing to spend money on one thing means you don't have that money for other things she wants. She's four. Four years old.

  4. Lower-Income Peple Have No Representation Here by BrendaEM · · Score: 5, Informative

    The sheer amount of homeless people in this area, which I have been told may be over 22,000 is daunting. The powers that be in this area have generally not been inclusive of the needs of the poor an low-income people.

    There are even some 2,000 college students that represent the future of America, who are now stricken with homelessness in this areas.

    Whatever was supposed to happen to put a check and balance the asymmetrical, biased political power of the corporate giants and house-flippers who invest in this area--has failed.

    I likely am going to be homeless in a few weeks. As a person with a disability, as I look deeper into the resources here in California. What I have found by following the leads has simply been one of the most disheartening things I have witnessed.

    I heard was "low-income" housing exists, which honest people with a SSD/SSI income could never afford. The lay of the landscape currently has a 1-5 year waiting list for a place to live. Yet, I have heard that some housing exists for people making as much as $75,000/yr. I checked up on homeless shelters where a homeless person is not even afforded a wall to put their back against. I have read of a shower and wash van, supporting the homeless that only comes to an area once in a week.

    [Who would want to sit next to a person who only showered/bathed once in a week?]

    In all honesty, as someone who has written proof that I have tried to add my name to the HUD waiting list for a nearly a decade, I am deeply upset. Yes, clearly I am upset for myself, but also for I am upset for the other homeless people, many of which (also) have disabilities.

    --
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  5. Um.... Dogs are cheap by rsilvergun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    you buy dry food in bulk and put them down if they get sick. Also, if you're a 63 year old woman living in a trailer you need a lot of dogs for protection. She could ditch every one of those dogs and wouldn't have the extra $2k/mo it takes to rent a tiny, dumpy apartment.

    And what's with all the non-stop poor shaming? Is this supposed to make you feel better about abandoning these folks to their miserable fate? Does it? Somewhere in the back of your mind it's gnawing on you, how you're letting fellow Americans live like shit. The Americans who do work you want done.

    Bottom line, You want those people to live near where you are so they can cook, clean and fix your plumbing but you'll be damned if you want to pay for them to have an OK life. When people bitch about "gentrification" that's what they're talking about. You know that's messed up, so you do crap like this to try and convince yourself it's their choice. Gives you an out, but like I said, it gnaws on you, doesn't it?

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  6. You can't just drop a house by rsilvergun · · Score: 5, Interesting

    you need the land graded, roads built, water, gas and electric lines run. You need police and fire departments. In otherwords, infrastructure. That's not billions, that's trillions of dollars in land development that was all done on the gov't's dime.

    Zoning regulations are a red herring. The rich got tired of paying for working class Americans to have decent homes. The only reason they had to for a time was post WWII the working class, having just got back from fighting a war, had gained a sense of entitlement. They felt owed something. Also a _lot_ of working age men died in that war, meaning labor shortages. So for a time they were better treated. Those times have passed, and we're back to where we were in the 1920s. Better tech at food production and a few depression era policies (social security & medicare, food stamps, etc) have masked some of that, but even those are under siege.

    What I don't get is why is it that confronting all this reality makes Americans so damned uncomfortable? It's not like anyone's gonna tax you to to the max. Odds are you're living paycheck to paycheck like the rest of Americans, and even if you've got a bit of savings it's not enough to matter. When it comes to raising taxes to pay for social programs it's the top 5% who would be the targets. And it's not like they'd lose much in the way of standard of living, what they're really lose is _power_.

    That's what you're defending when you post stuff like you did: a group of ultra-wealthy power mongers who's wealth has ceased being material and become raw power.

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  7. Re:The government used to build infrastructure by swillden · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Land developers sure as hell aren't going to pay to get that land ready themselves

    Utter nonsense. Land developers routinely do all of that prep themselves. They have to follow lots of government rules about how to lay out the streets, what access roads to build, how to build all of the wiring, plumbing and sewer infrastructure, etc., but it's the developers who foot the bill, not the city. As far as I can tell, it has always been that way, too.

    Obviously I'm not saying you should feel sorry for the land developers; they make great profits on their investments. But government doesn't do any of this.

    The result is massive housing shortages in a lot of places.

    Government is the cause of the housing shortages in the bay area, but because of the restrictions it imposes, not because of the things it fails to do. Developers would love to build lots of high density, multi-story housing in the area, but the city councils won't allow it, because they're in the pockets of the long-time residents who love the fact that the house they paid $30K for decades ago is now worth $2M.

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  8. How to Really Help by BrendaEM · · Score: 4, Insightful

    1. Decriminalize homelessness.
    2. Establish emergency minimal-level shelters were people can shower/sleep, and wash their clothes.
    3. Allow people to sleep in their cars, one car, one night, one block,
    4. Require people who buy homes to own then for no less than 5 years or be fined, unless proof of financial hardship, divorce or partner split.
    5. Restore Section 8 Housing for people with disabilities.
    6. Discourage foreign investors and companies from purchasing homes.
    7. Rezone areas to end single-family homes.
    8. Make sure that homeless people can vote.
    9. Rezone certain industrial and business buildings for shelter use.
    10. Require all non-profit charities to abstract their organization or religious presence from their offer of help.
    12. Require all California cities and towns to take in a certain percentage of the the homeless people.
    13. Vote out the people who only represent rich people.

    --
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