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           | From  the East Bay Times: 
              Richmond:  Activists protest evictions ahead of rent control vote  
              Fair housing  advocates have criticized the owner of a Richmond apartment complex for what  they describe as an unnecessary eviction that affects many elderly and  low-income residents 
                 
               
          
             Jose Gonzalez,  Vincent Justin, Luis Ugalde and former Richmond mayor Gayle McLaughlin, from  left, listen to speakers as tenants rally at the Creekview Apartments in  Richmond on Thursday, Oct. 6. Justin recently moved out after living there for  22 years. More than 100 renters are being evicted from the apartments. Tenants  are demanding that the owner, PMI Properties, halt evictions and let the  remaining tenants stay in the recently refurbished apartments. (Jane Tyska/Bay  Area News Group) 
               
              By Karina Ioffee | kioffee@bayareanewsgroup.com  
              PUBLISHED:  October 7, 2016 at 8:00 am | UPDATED: October 7, 2016 at 8:07 am 
               
              RICHMOND — Since  proponents of rent control announced their intent to place a measure on the  November ballot, hundreds of residents throughout this working-class city have  received rent increases and notices asking them to move out, according to fair  housing advocates. 
               
              It has occurred  in small and large apartment complexes throughout Richmond,  the advocates say, with typically no reason given. Residents typically  comply and quietly move out since there is, at the moment, no legal  recourse to challenge such notices. Few want an eviction to mar their housing  history. 
               
              But  an effort that began this summer to remove 100 tenants, many of  them low-income and elderly, from a local apartment complex  undergoing renovations has become a lightening rod for local  activists who say the situation highlights the need for both rent control  and just-cause eviction. If approved, the November measure would prevent rent increases  of more than 3 percent a year and require landlords to have a legitimate reason  before asking someone to move out, such as not paying rent, drugs, loud parties  and similar infractions. Approximately 10,000 units of rental housing  and approximately 20,000 to 25,000 renters would be covered; housing built  after 1995 would be exempt under state law. 
               
              “It’s too easy  for landlords to evict people by saying they need to renovate,” said Leah Simon  Weisberg, an attorney for Tenants Together, which has been working to  advise residents who live in the Creekview Apartments. “Instead of dealing  with the problems there, they are just deciding to evict people in order  to circumvent the protections that are about to go into effect.” 
               
              The 194-unit  apartment complex is located at 3535 El Portal Drive on the border with El  Sobrante. 
   
  Beverly Hills-based  PMI Properties, the company that has owned Creekview  Apartments for at least two decades, has said that it needs tenants to  move out in order to complete extensive repairs on the property,  including water intrusion and mold in many of the units. Some work  began in 2015 and has continued over the past two years, with an expected  completion date of 2018. 
   
  “We needed to  vacate all the units and to start doing the work because when the rains start  again in a few weeks, we will have the same problems with molds and will be  substantially delayed in finishing all of the units,”  PMI Properties said in a statement. 
               
              The company has  denied that its decision was spurred by the upcoming rent control vote, which  is widely expected to pass, saying that losing rent while investing millions  for repairs just to “beat rent control” does not make financial sense. 
              Residents,  however, are not convinced. 
               
              “There have been  mold problems for many years, yet they were accepting our rent no problem,”  said Sharon Brown, 65, a retired telecommunications employee who has lived in  the complex for six years. “Suddenly, they need us all to move out. It  doesn’t make sense, especially because there are eight buildings and they could  have done the remodel in stages.” 
               
              The news of the  eviction hit Brown at the same time as a health scare that kept her in the  hospital for weeks. Instead of focusing on recovery, she now has to spend her  days filling out housing applications and browsing Craigslist. She is planning  on staying with a friend and a nephew while she continues the search. 
               
              Mayor Tom Butt,  an architect and an opponent of the measure, has said that rent control and  just-cause eviction laws would have not stopped eviction at the apartment  complex because the measure allows property owners to ask tenants to leave if  improvements need to be made. 
               
              “The bottom line  is that the work has to be done and the buildings have to be vacated to do  it,”‘ he said. “The tenants are victims of  bad design and shoddy  construction, as is the owner, who is also suffering significant losses.” 
               
              PMI  Properties has promised to help residents look for new housing  and told them that they could reapply once the units are finished. But several  residents said they have not received any assistance and instead were left to  navigate the extremely tight housing market on their own. As a result,  some are now staying in  
              motels or with relatives. 
               
              “Most places  want three times the rent for your income, which is ridiculous,” said Vincent  Justin, 68, a retired MUNI bus driver who lived at Creekview for 22 years  before moving out October 1 to avoid eviction. He’s now staying with his  daughters and ex-wife. 
               
              On its website,  PMI describes its recent focus of gentrifying urban areas where the company is  renovating obsolete properties into “hip, creative multifamily apartments that  appeal to Generation Y, knowledge workers, the creative class and urbanites.” 
               
              Many Richmond  residents can’t wait for the city to become more developed, with the coffee  shops, restaurants, retail and other trappings that gentrification often  brings. But others wonder who will bear the cost of such changes. 
               
              “This company  does not care about the people who are living in these apartments,” said Edith  Pastrano, a community organizer with Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment, or ACCE.  “They are elderly, and they are people of color who have been good tenants for  many, many years who are now being pushed out to make way for people with more  money. It’s disgusting.” 
   
  Creekview owners  defend decision to rebuild 
     
              Oct  5, 2016 
               
              Owners of the  194-unit Creekview Condominiums in Richmond say they are being unfairly  slandered amid a vigorous campaign to pass a rent control ordinance in Richmond  in the November election. 
               
              Tenants rights groups  supported by the Richmond Progressive Alliance (RPA) have been pushing for a  rent control policy locally and in other Bay Area cities, saying rents are  surging and displacing low-income residents. Despite warnings from a majority of economists that rent control policies  do more harm than good, supporters gathered enough signatures this past summer  to place the measure on the Nov. 8 ballot. 
               
              The measure came  at an inopportune time for PMI Properties, owner of Creekview Condominiums,  according to spokesman David Silver. The nine-building complex at 3535 El  Portal Dr. developed a mold problem so pervasive that it needed to be vacated  and rebuilt “from ground up,” Silver said. 
               
                
               
              Creekview’s  decision to vacate the complex for a complete reconstruction mobilized tenants  rights advocates who support Measure L, the rent control measure that would  prevent landlords from increasing rents by more than the Consumer Price Index,  about 2 percent a year.  The policy would affect about 10,000 Richmond  units and would create a rent control board estimated to cost the city between  $1.5 million and $3 million annually. 
               
              Advocates and  RPA members have accused Creekview of purposefully evicting tenants in advance  of the possibility that voters will approve rent control on Nov. 8. They have  joined tenants in holding demonstrations at the property, as well as a demonstration during a vote on rent control at  Richmond City Council. Activists and tenants proclaimed the evictions were a  result of greed rather than concern over the health risks from a growing mold  problem. 
               
              Silver flatly  denied any link between the decision to vacate residents and the impending rent  control vote. He sent the Richmond Standard a “fact sheet” (posted in  full below) that he says disproves claims by tenant rights advocates. 
               
              “During these  years of rebuilding, we are losing millions in rents and investing millions to  make the entire 194 units safe to live in,” Silver said, adding the property  isn’t expected to be completed until 2018. 
               
              The RPA and  supporters, according to Silver, have ignored the fact that Creekview managers  had informed a majority of its residents about mold issues as early as December 2014, well before the rent  control measure was put on the ballot. He said property owners have worked  closely with the city of Richmond’s building staff to obtain the proper permits  for the remediation and rebuild. 
               
              Richmond Mayor  Tom Butt, a veteran architect who opposes rent control, has backed Silver’s  claims, saying the building repairs “would not be possible with tenants  present.” 
               
                
               
  “Because of a  combination of design flaws and construction defects, the buildings have been  subjected to massive water damage that has resulted in widespread mold,” Butt  said in his e-forum newsletter. 
               
              The same  activists targeting Creekview were recently accused of unfairly branding an elderly  Iron Triangle resident as a greedy landlord, holding protests in front of her  home as part of the campaign to promote rent control as a necessary policy for  the city. 
               
              Mayor Butt and  Councilmember Vinay Pimple, who faced a flurry of insults after voting against a  temporary moratorium on evictions, have said the RPA’s actions on rent control  are mostly for the purpose of “political theater.” 
              Creekview ended  up falsely cast a bad actor, according to Silver. 
               
              Tenants were  made aware of a significant water intrusion in Building H as early as December  2014, he said. Property managers attributed it to shoddy construction when the  structure was built in the early 1990s. Despite remediation attempts the mold  problem only worsened. “Engineers, architects, mold specialists and health  specialists” had “all agreed” the structure required total rebuilding, he said. 
               
              Then, rains this  past winter invited mold in all the other buildings, Silver said. Despite  relocating residents to other units during repairs, the mold problem persisted.  Further investigation, including a demolition on the C and D buildings in May,  led experts to conclude it was unsafe and dangerous for families to live in the  complex. 
               
              Owners decided  to move all tenants out for a complete rebuild prior to the coming winter  rains, Silver said. 
   
  Here’s the  “fact-sheet” sent by Silver:CREEKVIEW  CONDOMINIUMS 
            
              - PMI       Companies has been associated with the city of Richmond for 27 years and       has been in business for 40 years. We are proud members of every community       where we have properties, this includes Richmond.
 
              - The       Creekview Condominiums were built to provide safe housing for the       residents seeking to rent/lease units.
 
              - The       entire complex includes nine buildings with a total of 194 units.
 
              - As       most of the residents became aware, on December 14, 2014, the       managers of Creekview discovered a significant water intrusion issue in       Building “H,” attributable to the original construction of the building in       the early 1990s.
 
              - Substantial       “destructive testing,” and inspections by construction professionals,       found that a quick fix to the problem was not practical or possible. There       was mold within the walls of the building and it was getting worse because       moisture from rain leaked into the building causing the mold growth to       accelerate.
 
              - The       consensus of these experts were that the repair necessitated striping the       Building “H” to its studs, which is the wooden skeleton of the building,       and rebuilding the entire structure after the molds were extrapolated from       the walls in each unit.
 
              - The       experts included engineers, architects, mold specialists and health       specialists. They all agreed, once seeing the unhealthy mold within the       structure, it required a total rebuilding.
 
              - During       the rains this past winter, some units in all the other buildings in the       complex, including at Buildings “C,” “D,” “A,” “B,” “E,” “F,” and “G,”       began displaying mold. Residents were relocated to other units and       temporary repairs were undertaken to the units they vacated with the       belief that they would be able to be promptly occupied again without       further water intrusion related incidences. These units were leased, but       despite the substantial remediation work done to these units, the mold       came back after subsequent rains had occurred. The residents were       relocated to other apartments.
 
              - As       the remediation work on the first building, “H”, proceeded to the interior       walls, the experts found that the mold was much more extensive than       originally believed and that it was pervasive inside the wall cavities and       existed in all of the units in the building. Having gained a comprehensive       understanding of the conditions that existed in the H building, and upon       further investigation during the demolition  process that commenced       in May, 2016 on the C&D buildings,  combined with the recurrence       of mold that occurred the previous winter in the units where temporary       fixes to stop water intrusion in units that were located in all the other       buildings in the complex had been performed , the experts concluded that       it was unsafe and dangerous for families living there during the rainy       season that was fast approaching, and consequently the ownership decided       to vacate all of the units for health reasons and rebuild from ground up.
 
              - We       have worked closely with the City of Richmond Building staff who have       approved the permits to remediate the mold and reconstruct all of the       buildings to cure the sources of water intrusion, and we are doing our       best in balancing the needs of residents and our obligations as the property       owner as communicated to us by the City of Richmond.
 
              - We       started the rebuilding process to rid potentially dangerous, harmful molds       from the buildings in 2015, and we do not expect the project to be       completed before the end of 2018.
 
              - During       these years of rebuilding, we are losing millions in rents and investing       millions to make the entire 194 units safe to live in.
 
              - Outside       agitators who have not lived in, paid any taxes to, or created any jobs       for the City of Richmond as we have, insist that it is because       of the rent-control measure being voted on November 8th in the       election. Nothing could be further from the truth.
 
              - This       has nothing to do with a rent control initiative on the ballot. To lose significant sums in rent and having to invest       millions of dollars more to repair the building than it originally cost us       originally to build it from the ground up just to make it safe and       habitable again for residents just to beat rent-control does NOT make       financial or business sense.
 
              - We       needed to vacate all the units and to start doing the work because when       the rains start again in a few weeks, we will have the same problems with       molds and will be substantially delayed in finishing all of the units.
 
              - Additionally,       AND THIS IS IMPORTANT, insurance does not cover molds to rebuild. Consequently, we have to invest millions of dollars       to rebuild all 194 units.
 
              - Since       the entire complex will be fully vacant for a substantial period of time       while the property is being reconstructed, we will be receiving no,       or limited income for a period of many years; but we will still be       obligated to continue to pay all of the costs of operating the property.       No easy task, but we decided to do the right thing for the residents and       the City of Richmond
 
              - All       residents will receive back their security deposits and we are helping       them find other locations to move to and accommodate them in doing so.
 
              - Mayor       Tom Butt has lived in Richmond since 1973, is the only city council member       who has a business in Richmond, is a UCLA-educated architect, and has       served as a council member, vice mayor and now mayor since 1995,       understands the gravity of the situation and why we need to rebuild. 
 
              - In       a recent E-Forum editorial, The Mayor, supported what we are doing and       unveiled the opposition’s unscrupulous accusations against us and       project. It is included below.
 
              - Read       it and understand what we are trying to do to help the City of Richmond       and how the other side is using the tactics of Saul Alinsky, who wrote the       book, “Rules for Radicals,” which is the school of negative and       unscrupulous agitation publicly with the made-up positions just to get       media attention, not the truth.
 
                        
                        
            Creekview –  Another False Rent Control and Just Cause Poster Child  
              By Mayor Tom  Butt 
               
              The Richmond  Progressive Alliance and twelve other organizations known as Fair  and Affordable Richmond are backing Measure L on the November 8  ballot that will impose rent control and just cause on Richmond and set  up a multimillion bureaucracy to run it. 
               
              As the latest  poster child to support their campaign, they cite recent actions by Creekview  Apartments not to renew the month-to-month rentals of a large number of  tenants. RPA members Gayle McLaughlin and Melvin Willis have recently  participated in demonstrations at Creekview to protest the action, and they  claim that The Richmond Fair Rent, Just Cause For Eviction And  Homeowner Protection Ordinance would have prevented this. 
               
              The problem is  that this is simply not true. The Creekview Condominiums (actual name, even  though they are rented) is vacating units in order to make significant repairs  on the buildings that would not be possible with tenants present. Because of a  combination of design flaws and construction defects, the buildings have been  subjected to massive water damage that has resulted in widespread mold. 
               
              The Just Cause  part of the proposed ordinance allows eviction for repairs (11.100.050(a) (5)), so it would not have prevented vacation of units at  Creekview. It also requires relocation payment  “…amounts shall be  determined by the City Council through a Relocation Ordinance,” but there is no  “Relocation Ordinance,” and no amount specified for relocation payments.  Determination of relocation payments are not in the list of powers and duties  of the Rent Board. This is one of many examples of how the rent control and  just cause ordinance is flawed. It was hastily drafted by amateurs without any  public input. 
               
              The repair  project started in 2014 with Building H (“Richmond tenants battle Beverly Hills developer to keep  their homes,” December 18, 2014, Richmond Confidential). On  December 9, 2015, and June 22, 2106, the City of Richmond Design Review Board  conducted public hearings “… to consider a design review permit for phase II  consisting of exterior renovation to existing multifamily Residential buildings  (building A to G), including deck repair, Window and roof replacement, and  removal of siding for new exterior stucco.” No one showed up to protest. 
               
              A building  permit was issued on November 30, 2015, for the exterior renovation of Building  H (a 3-Story, 30-Unit Residential Structure) and the Club House (a 2-Story  Community Space). The last building inspection was on July 12, 2016. The owner  mentioned that subsequently it was found extensive mold damage in the interior  of the apartments and the scope of the work has been extended.  A second  building permit was issued on June 21, 2016, for phase II for the remaining  buildings; work is currently underway. 
               
              The bottom line  is that the work has to be done, and the buildings have to be vacated to do it.  The tenants are victims of bad design and shoddy construction, as is the owner,  who is also suffering significant losses. You can’t insure against this type of  damage. 
               
              Notwithstanding  the inconvenience, this would be far less of a tragedy if sufficient housing  units existed nearby for tenants to relocate. But the market is tight, and it  is getting tighter all the time because of the fear of rent control and just  cause. Housing developers are bypassing Richmond in favor of more  business-friendly places. That not only constricts supply, but it drives up  rents, a significant unintended consequence of rent control and just cause. 
               
            In the end, rent  control and just cause, if it passes in Richmond, may benefit a few people for  a while, but in the long term it will hurt Richmond renters and the City of  Richmond big time. The people who drafted and now back The Richmond Fair Rent, Just Cause For Eviction And  Homeowner Protection Ordinance are well meaning and compassionate,  but they don’t understand real estate economics, the real estate marketplace or  the construction industry. They continue to put ideology ahead of practicality.  | 
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