Tag: Tenant Rights

  • Housing Justice Working Group Digest (OCT 2020)

    The purpose of this digest is to bring all of our comrades up to speed on the work here in Housing Justice, especially those who have been away for a while, or those who wish to get involved!

    If you wish to get involved, drop a message in our Slack channel #wg-met-housing-justice or message our current Housing Justice Working Group chairs. You can attend our weekly tenant organizing check-ins at 6:00 PM on Mondays – see the slack for details. We’ll train you!


    Earlier this year, the Housing Justice working group was revived with an orientation towards the “base building” strategy, according to the ratified project proposal here. As the project progresses, we try to always keep a handful of goals in mind:

    1. Engage people who are not familiar with socialist politics
    2. Develop relationships with working class communities 
    3. Join working class communities in their struggles
    4. Foster the formation of organized bodies of tenants across different buildings and neighborhoods, under different landlords, with the means of leveraging their collective power for, e.g. rent negotiations, striking, occupations
    5. Recognize where the San Diego Tenants Union is lacking and fill that gap
    6. Improve our own organizing skills
    7. Ensure that the project can persist even if our relationships with working partners were to change. 

    To those ends, we have undertaken some major projects in order to pursue an investigation of the material conditions on the ground with regards to rented housing, meet working class communities where they’re at, and develop our skills as organizers. The intention is to organize the unorganized and to create independent working class institutions capable of fighting the capitalists. The ultimate goal is, of course, socialism.  

    We consider the work here in Housing Justice to be critical to our goals as socialists because revolution can only be achieved through centering the working class as agents of their own liberation. Thus, organizing the working class is paramount. However, successfully organizing the working class requires socialists to be equipped with the right politics, and the right politics can only really be arrived at through struggling among the working class and actually learning about the concrete conditions in which the working class exists. Tenant organizing provides us one major avenue of accomplishing all of this.    


    In September, we began developing a “Eviction Defense Network,” a project initially proposed by the Cancel the Rent Coalition (CRC). We established the Tenant Solidarity Network, an ongoing project independent of CRC, informed by the base building orientation of the working group. Organizing Tenant Solidarity Network has challenged our organizers as we’ve developed numerous connections with vibrant working class communities. We now struggle alongside tenants who are facing evictions, and foment the organization of tenants into institutions capable of defending themselves against the landlord class. Generally, our work in the Tenant Solidarity Network can be broken down into a few key components:

    • “Loose” canvassing of locations where housing-precarious people congregate, with the intent of learning about the struggles of people who have to contend with the extremely exploitative machine that is commodified housing as well as provide individual tenants with information about their protections from eviction under AB3088(COVID-19 Tenant Relief Act). Through this work we’ve been able to locate numerous apartment complexes to focus our organizing efforts on.
    • Through our efforts, we’ve been able to connect to various communities and individuals. For example, we have developed a relationship with the Mid-City Church of the Nazarene, which has been allowing us to canvass their massive food bank lines, as well as vouch for us with those who are a little more wary of us. Through this relationship we have been able to identify many individuals and apartment complexes who are experiencing hardship.
    • Organizing of tenants within apartment complexes. The pandemic and associated economic strife has further precarized large swathes of the renting population – many tenants are finding themselves without the means to pay rent, utilities, food expenses, etc. The intent of organizing tenants within apartment complexes is to unify neighbor with neighbor on the common ground of their exploitation at the hands of their landlord, so that they can successfully fight back and defend themselves as a collective, despite the countless advantages afforded to landlords by the bourgeois state. We endeavor to foster each tenant association into acquiring their own momentum, sustainable without our constant direct administration. The ultimate goal for each tenant association organized is achieving rent-strike readiness, and coordinated mass rent-strike readiness under the San Diego Tenants Union.
    • We are currently attempting to organize no less than 5 complexes across the San Diego metro area. The number of complexes we’ve identified through our conversations with various precarious individuals as being strategically necessary to organize numbers twice that amount. Needless to say, we’re always looking to grow our organizing capacity here in the working group.
    • Plugging in tenants to an online community and resource repository. A Facebook group was created for tenants to plug into in order to both share their experiences as tenants with other tenants across the city, as well as access helpful information and resources. https://www.facebook.com/groups/tsn.sd/ 
    • Training new organizers and leaders. Necessary to the project is the constant growth of our organizing capacity. To that end, we provide the training to equip interested comrades with the tools for organizing tenants or fulfilling our administrative needs. A healthy project is always developing leaders!   
    • In the past, we’ve hosted a 2-day comprehensive training seminar covering everything from theory to practice with regards to tenant organizing. Expect more of these!
    • We also provide one-on-one training, or mentorship during fieldwork – sometimes you learn best by doing!

    Anyways, If you wish to get involved, drop a message in our Slack channel #wg-met-housing-justice or message our current Housing Justice Working Group chairs. You can attend our weekly tenant organizing check-ins at 6:00 PM on Mondays – see the slack for details.  Again, we’ll train you! Don’t let lack of confidence stop you!

  • Tenant’s Town Hall – August 19th @ 6 PM

    Tenant’s Town Hall – August 19th @ 6 PM

    Come join the “Cancel The Rent” Coalition as we put on a Tenants Town Hall in order to educate, mobilize, & inspire the working class in San Diego against the inhumane actions of many landlords & apathetic politicians!!!  We will have information on the current eviction moratoriums & your rights as a tenant.  We will also have guest speakers and testimonials on the current struggle many tenants are facing in the midst of this COVID-19 pandemic.

    If you are interested in coming to the event please fill out this Google Form.

    https://forms.gle/MJoJ1cqvQxfq1UnT7

    Coalition Partner: DSA-SD, ACCE, The San Diego Tenants Union, PSL, Socialist Alternative, SD-TPOC Colectivo

    Hope to see ya’ll there!  Solidarity!

  • EXTEND THE EVICTION MORATORIUM / EXTIENDAN LA MORATORIA DE DESALOJOS

    TELL SAN DIEGO CITY COUNCIL: 

    EXTEND THE  EVICTION MORATORIUM 

    WITH MORE TENANT PROTECTIONS! 

    • The current moratorium is set to expire on June 30th
    • Tenants will owe all accumulated rent debt by September 25th
    • More than 1 in 4 San Diegans are still unemployed
    • The unemployment benefits from the CARES act expire on July 31st
    • SD City Council must invest in tenant protections and to prevent mass homelessness and evictions during a global pandemic

    OUR DEMANDS

    • Extend the eviction moratorium until the state of emergency is lifted           
    • Extend the payback period to AT LEAST six months after the moratorium expires                         
    • Allow tenants to break their leases if they are not able to pay their rent because of COVID19 

    This is the bare minimum of what SD City Council should do right now to protect tenants. Ultimately, the rents and mortgages must be cancelled! 

    HOW TO CALL-IN 

    SAN DIEGO CITY COUNCIL MEETING TUESDAY, JUNE 30TH @11AM 

    Call 619-541-6310 to comment on agenda item 101 

    Enter the Access Code: 877861 then press ‘#’ 

    Link to public comment: https://bit.ly/sdpubliccomment

    DIGALE AL CONCEJO MUNICIPAL DE SAN DIEGO

    EXTIENDAN LA MORATORIA DE DESALOJOS 

    CON MÁS PROTECCIONES A LOS INQUILINOS!! 

    • La actual moratoria de desalojos se expira el 30 de Junio 
    • Los inquilinos deberán toda la deuda de renta acumulada el 25 de Septiembre. 
    • Más de 1 en cada 4 personas en San Diego todavía están desempleados. 
    • Los beneficios de desempleo de la ley CARE se expiran el 31 de Julio. 
    • El Concejo Municipal de San Diego tiene que invertir en las protecciones de inquilinos y en la prevención de falta de vivienda masiva. 

    NUESTRAS DEMANDAS 

    • Extiendan la moratoria de desalojos hasta que el estado de emergencia se haya levantado.
    • Extiendan el período de pagar la deuda hasta al menos 6 meses después de que la moratoria se expire.
    • Dejen que los inquilinos rompan su contrato de arrendamiento si no pueden pagar su renta por el COVID-19.

    Esto es lo mínimo que el Concejo Municipal de San Diego debe de hacer ahora para proteger a los inquilinos. A lo largo, las rentas y los pagos de hipoteca deben de ser canceladas! 

    LO QUE USTED PUEDE HACER: 

    CONCEJO MUNICIPAL DE SAN DIEGO MARTES, 30 DE JUNTO @11AM 

    Llame al 619-541-6310 para comentar en el ítem de la agenda 101 

    Introduzca el código de acceso: 877861 y oprima ‘#’ 

    Enlace al comentario publico: https://bit.ly/sdpubliccomment

  • May 1st “Cancel The Rent” Caravan

    Location: 4655 Border Village Rd, San Ysidro, CA 92173-3105, United States

    Start Date & Time:  May 1, 2020,  9:30am

    End Date & Time:  May 1, 2020, 2pm

    DSA San Diego, in coalition with ACCE, The San Diego Tenants Union, Anakbayan, & Migrante. Will be executing a caravan demonstration in order to bring awareness to the rent strike movement happening all throughout the state of California.

    The Rent Strike is being made in order to get several demands from the State and the City of San Diego. Demands include but are not limited to:

    ACCE’s Demands:

    • All publicly owned property and vacant housing units -including luxury unitsneed to be opened up to house currently unhoused people.
    • Rent and mortgage payments must be frozen for as long as people are not able to work because of COVID-19, and any rent and mortgage debt accumulated during this period must be forgiven.
    • Moratoriums on any process related to evictions and foreclosures must be instituted immediately and remain in place until the spread of coronavirus is no longer a public threat.
    • Californians need a guarantee that they will be rehired if they have been laid off, or that their shifts will be restored once isolation orders have been lifted. 
    • Anyone who is laid off or experiencing a decline in wages must have access to unemployment benefits that cover 100% of that person’s wages before the job decline.
    • Californians need an immediate stimulus package that puts cash in people’s hands. We must learn the lessons from the 2008 financial crisis and bail out people -not just businesses.

    DSA San Diego’s Demands:

    1. Rent Suspension: No Rent Now, No Debt Later:

    • The City and County must enact a rent suspension or rent forgiveness policy to protect renters and to prevent future debt and homelessness. 
    • The rent payment suspension period should be enacted retroactively from April 1, 2020 and remain in effect through the duration of the statewide shelterin-place mandate, or a minimum of 90 days.
    • The City and County leadership must do everything within their power to advocate for a state level legislative package providing the same.

    2. Support for Unhoused Residents:

    To contain the spread of COVID-19, we must immediately provide emergency shelter, expanded services, and reliable information to all unhoused individuals in San Diego.

    • Hotel vouchers to allow all unhoused people access to safe, clean and comfortable lodging. Vouchers should be made available to anyone needing shelter, not just individuals who are presenting symptoms.
    • Permanent commitment to provide housing for everyone who needs it, not just a temporary measure that will put people right back on the streets when this crisis is over.
    • Expanded housing services through an infusion of resources and funding to community health clinics, shelters, and other frontline service providers, to cover staff overtime pay and necessary supplies, like sanitizers, medicine, masks, etc.
    • Emergency sanitation sites for people who cannot move indoors. Sanitation sites should include 24-hour restrooms and showers, laundry, hygiene supplies, COVID-19 screening, case worker availability, and disease prevention information.
    • End to encampment sweeps, ticketing, and vehicle tows (all practices that criminalize houselessness).

    Please join us in our struggle to make housing a basic human right on May 1st and if you wanna sign on in support of the rent strike follow this link! Rent Strike Movement

    If you are a DSA member please fill this google form out in order for us to coordinate DSA’s contingent as effectively as possible. DSA San Diego’s “May 1st Caravan” Sign Up Form

    In Solidarity,

    DSA San Diego

    Event Schedule: May 1, 2020: 

    • 9:30am: 4655 Border Village Rd, San Ysidro, CA 92173 
    • 10:30am: “El Super” 3007 Highland Ave, National City, CA 91950
    • 11:30am: 1950 Main St, San Diego
    • 12pm: 1350 Front St, San Diego
    • 12:30pm: 3990 Old Town Rd
    • 1pm: 2249 Ulric Rd, San Diego

  • Housing is Healthcare: San Diego Emergency Demands

    Emailed 4/16 to Governor Gavin Newsom, Mayor Kevin Faulconer, City Attorney Mara Elliott, Councilmember Barbara Bry, Councilmember Jennifer Campbell, Councilmember Christopher Ward, Councilmember Monica Montgomery, Councilmember Mark Kersey, Councilmember Chris Cate, Councilmember Scott Sherman, Councilmember Vivian Moreno, Council President Georgette Gomez, Supervisor Greg Cox, Supervisor Dianne Jacob, Supervisor Kristin Gaspar, Supervisor Nathan Fletcher, Supervisor Jim Desmond

    Endorsing organizations:

    • Democratic Socialists of America – San Diego
    • Otay Mesa Detention Resistance
    • San Diego 350
    • San Diego Tenants United
    • Standing Up for Racial Justice – San Diego
    • Student Housing Association at UC San Diego
    • Sunrise Movement – San Diego
    • The Travelers Club
    • Think Dignity
    • UCSD Green New Deal
    • Unión del Barrio

    We are calling on San Diego leadership to immediately enact emergency housing measures to protect the health, safety and dignity of all residents affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. In March 2020, a record 10 million Americans filed for unemployment. According to the SD Workforce Partnership, in just 3 days from March 16-18, 190,000 Californians submitted unemployment insurance claims, four times the typical weekly average and more than have been  submitted in any single week this century. More layoffs and business closures will follow.

    The full effects of this crisis have yet to be seen, but one thing is certain – immediate action is required to protect vulnerable residents from additional harm. In this moment each City, County and State leader can either embrace the opportunity to champion justice and to protect residents, or allow San Diego families to spiral into inescapable debt and potential homelessness. Following are the measures we believe necessary for San Diego’s long-term, balanced prosperity. 

    01. Rent Suspension: No Rent Now, No Debt Later

    Economic relief and displacement protections must not be limited to property owners. The City must act to prioritize the well-being and safety of tenants who are at grave risk of losing their homes. Mortgage holders and property owners have already been granted statewide and nationwide relief in the form of mortgage deferral options, but no such provision has been offered to renters, who are even more financially vulnerable.

    The catastrophic economic effects of this global emergency will last for years. To address the crisis with a temporary evictions ban is not only short sighted but dangerous, and puts thousands of households at risk of homelessness and severe poverty.

    Nearly 60% of all renting households in San Diego are rent-burdened, meaning they spend more than one-third – and in some cases close to 100% – of their income on housing. What will happen to tenants at the end of a no-evictions grace period as they are hit with thousands of dollars of accumulated rent debt? For many families, the crisis won’t end, it will simply continue into inescapable debt and potential homelessness or bankruptcy. We urge our leaders to recognize the severity of the situation, and act accordingly to ensure the safety and security of all residents. 

    The City and County must enact a rent suspension or rent forgiveness policy to protect renters and to prevent future debt and homelessness. The rent payment suspension period should be enacted retroactively from April 1, 2020 and remain in effect through the duration of the statewide shelter-in-place mandate, or a minimum of 90 days. 

    The City and County leadership must do everything within their power to advocate for a state level legislative package providing the same.

    02. Support for Unhoused Residents

    Housing justice is not merely an issue of tenants’ rights, but of human rights broadly.  At least 8,000 people are currently without housing in San Diego County. Not guaranteeing housing as a human right inevitably leads to the unnecessary suffering of thousands: people experiencing homelessness have higher rates of illness than their housed peers, are more likely to die prematurely, and are among the most vulnerable to COVID-19. Official guidance compels the public to “stay at home” to contain the spread of the virus, but  “staying home” only works if you have somewhere to stay. To contain the spread of COVID-19, we must immediately provide emergency shelter, expanded services, and reliable information to all unhoused individuals in San Diego.

    The City of San Diego has already committed to converting parts of the Convention Center to a shelter and securing 1,300 hotel rooms for high-risk individuals, showing that we have the resources to act decisively on this issue. However, warehousing people in open spaces with little privacy, and only offering hotel rooms to people deemed “high risk” is not an adequate solution. In addition to the actions already being taken, we demand:

    – Hotel vouchers to allow all unhoused people access to safe, clean and comfortable lodging. Vouchers should be made available to anyone needing shelter, not just individuals who are presenting symptoms.

    – Permanent commitment to provide housing for everyone who needs it, not just a temporary  measure that will put people right back on the streets when this crisis is over.

    – Expanded housing services through an infusion of resources and funding to community health clinics, shelters, and other frontline service providers, to cover staff overtime pay and necessary supplies, like sanitizers, medicine, masks, etc.

    – Emergency sanitation sites for people who cannot move indoors. Sanitation sites should include 24-hour restrooms and showers, laundry, hygiene supplies, COVID-19 screening, case worker availability, and disease prevention information.

    – End to encampment sweeps, ticketing, and vehicle tows (all practices that criminalize  houselessness).

    Enforcement / Outreach 

    – Penalties for landlords who do not inform tenants of their rights under these provisions

    – Penalties for landlords who do not comply with these emergency restrictions

    – No funding for service providers that discriminate against individuals on the basis of their age, race, ethnicity, gender, sex, sexual orientation, or religion

    – Fund outreach by community-based organizations to tenants: disseminate reliable information covering tenants’ rights and provide a monitored complaint hotline to tenants

    While San Diego leaders may find it worthwhile to explore access to massive relief funds such as those approved by the U.S. Congress for corporations of all sizes to offset landlord losses, our commitment lies with those who are without assets, and who are therefore most vulnerable to long-term financial ruin. We ask you to intervene now on behalf of your most populous constituency, the working-class tenants so integral to San Diego’s vibrant, hospitable identity.

    Downloadable PDF for circulation: https://bit.ly/HousingJusticeSD