Why this activist thinks public housing policy is hollowing out San Francisco's soul
On Wednesday, the senior citizens at the Bayview Hunters Point Multipurpose Senior Services received some bad news: the federal government’s Housing and Urban Development agency rejected a local proposition to grant preference for affordable housing to people living in the neighborhood.
According to the San Francisco Chronicle, the plan would have “set aside 40 percent of all new subsidized units for qualified people already living in the supervisorial district in which the development is being built or within a half mile of the project.”
HUD’s ruling significantly decreased the odds that the seniors at the Bayview Hunters Point Multipurpose Senior Services would secure housing at the soon-to-open Willie B. Kennedy affordable senior housing project, something they’d been dreading for months.
San Francisco’s affordable housing crisis is an issue that disproportionally affects people of color: 28% of the Eviction Defense Collaborative’s clients in eviction cases were African-American; African-Americans comprise just 6% of the city. And as the Chronicle wrote back in November, “less than 1 percent of subsidized units built by private developers and sold to low-income residents between 2008 and 2014 went to African Americans.”
Fusion spoke with Bayview Hunters Point Multipurpose Senior Services executive director Cathy Davis on HUD’s ruling, and what it feels like to learn you can no longer afford to live in the neighborhood you grew up in.
The following interview has been edited and condensed.
What’s your take on this news?
Well, it’s very disappointing. I work with a lot of seniors who want to remain in their neighborhood, became homeless in their neighborhood, and feel connected to the people and services around them. And I just think it’s really short-sighted on their part to apply a generalized rule to everything and not really look at the ramification of gentrification in places like San Francisco.
Honestly, we’re losing a lot of people from SF—all races, not just African-Americans—because they can’t afford to live here. And here, we build affordable housing, we create a new environment for people, we use their past history of discrimination and abuse that they’ve been through, we fix the neighborhood up, and then we tell them they have no preference to live in that neighborhood.