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           | Last night,  the City Council considered a moratorium on rent increases and evictions placed  on the agenda by the Richmond Progressive Alliance (RPA). The RPA knew full  well that the six votes would not be there to pass it. The sole purpose was to  use a City Council meeting as a venue to create a demonstration supporting rent  control, and demonstrate they did. 
            After hearing  45 speakers, the City Council voted 4-3 as expected. Then the City Council  chamber erupted in a loud demonstration led by RPA and ACCE members. The  disturbance was so great that I had to recess the meeting for nearly half an  hour for things to calm down. 
            I was asked  by Councilmember Vinay Pimple to publish the following. For those who don’t  know, Vinay is totally blind, but despite his disability, he graduated with a  law degree from UC Berkeley and is a licenses attorney. He is probably  the smartest person on the Richmond City Council. 
            
              
                A New Low From The RPA 
                   
                  Unfortunately, we have become used to the RPA  turning council meetings into political theater. But yesterday marked a new low  that I hope we don't see again.
                 
                For the Nth time, the RPA+Myrick placed a  rent moratorium on the agenda, and as with all the other times, they got 4  instead of the required 6 votes. What followed was different. The dissenting  votes were drowned out by shouts of "shame" from the audience and  from the dais. Mayor Butt had to adjourn  the meeting to a 5 minute  recess. 
                Council Member Beckles turned around and  started screaming in Council Member Bates' face. After a while, she started  screaming in my face. When she was done with calling me "disgusting"  and other such, she started screaming in my face, the coarse messages on the  RPA banners "Vinay is the Pimple on Tom's Butt." Despite Council  Member Bates' repeated urgings "That isn't necessary," she kept  screaming it multiple times in my face. She added loudly and multiple times  that she wanted to tell me about the things I couldn't see. A friend told me  later that Council Member Beckles was jamming her finger at me during this  torrent of abuse. During this entire display, I sat quietly, not speaking a  single word. Indeed, I hadn't spoken during the entire discussion on the item  because it would only have resulted in upsetting or enraging those who had no  interest in what I had to say. 
                My objection to strict rent control has  always come purely from a social justice and empathetic perspective. 15 years  ago, when I was living on my own, I had to move 8 times within 4 years. This  was largely due to problems with our immigration system, and the tremendous  discrimination against the blind in the housing market (Measure L will make it  virtually impossible for the disabled to rent in our city). 3 of my moves were  coast to coast relocations. And the lack of friends to help me shop/deliver a  mattress, had meant that I slept on my carpet throughout my first year of law  school, for example. 
                
                  - Measure L applies "Just Cause" to Section 8  housing. Talk to any public housing professional, and they will tell you that  it will cause Section 8 providers to withdraw from Section 8. This is already  happening in Richmond, and will eventually leave several hundred families  without a home.
 
                  - To see just how much rent control advantages whites over  minorities, see the ethnicity table from this report prepared for the SF Board  of Supervisors. http://sfrb.org/Modules/ShowDocument.aspx?documentid=1885
 
                  - To see how the 4 bay area strict rent control cities (SF,  Berkeley, Oakland, and East Palo Alto) are among the 5 most segregated bay area  cities with significant African-American populations, follow this link, and  make the necessary selections. CensusScope -- Racial  Segregation Statistics for Cities and Metropolitan Areas
 
                  - I don't think I need to provide any links to show the  high rents in "rent control" cities.
 
                 
                I should mention that among the four options  studied by city staff last year, city staff classed rent control as the least  recommended option. I had supported all the other three options. 
                Returning to the abusive conduct during last  night's meeting, the RPA's whipping up of a self-righteous hysteria should make  us rethink the way we do politics. Clearly, for someone like Council Member  Beckles, politics is little more than a self-indulgence. By what other measure  does it make sense to call police "racists" and "executioners"  as she has done in the past? In what universe would such language help with  community policing? 
                The RPA has made a habit of using tragedies  to whip up a self-righteous hysteria that they manipulate for political  purposes. And what about the groups whose tragedies the RPA hasn't converted  into political mileage? On the evidence of yesterday, those groups serve as  targets for abuse and for taunts related to their disabilities 
               
             
            I  agree with Vinay. The RPA is increasingly turning to the tactics Corky Booze  once made famous, packing the City Council chambers with rude, angry people who  shout down anyone who doesn’t agree with them.  
            We saw a  similar example of RPA tactics against an 82-year old Hispanic woman who was  erroneously accused of being greedy landlord: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IDKUMK2hSTc&feature=youtu.be.  
            The problem  with the RPA is that they are so self-righteous; they believe they are always  right, that no one else has a reasonable solution for a problem and that debate  and compromise is surrender. Do you really want the RPA to control the Richmond  City Council after the November election? 
            Tom Butt 
            Richmond council  fails to pass emergency rent moratorium  
              By Karina Ioffee | kioffee@bayareanewsgroup.com  
              PUBLISHED:  September 13, 2016 at 10:36 pm | UPDATED: September 14, 2016 at 4:12 am 
               
                
              A  supporter of an emergency moratorium on rents waits outside Richmond City Hall  Tuesday.   
               
              Despite pleas  from dozens of residents facing rent increases and evictions, the Richmond City  Council failed Tuesday to approve a temporary emergency moratorium to halt rent  increases and no-cause evictions, 45 days before residents are to vote on  a rent control measure. 
               
              Over the past  year, many renters in this working class city have seen their rents increase by  as much as $500 a month. Many others have  received notices giving them 60 days to move out of their units,  without a reason. 
               
              “We are facing a  wave of evictions in Richmond,” said Councilwoman Gayle McLaughlin, author of  the emergency moratorium. “Whether or not you support the rent control measure  in the fall, supporting this now is the right thing to do for the  stability of our community.” 
               
              More than three  dozen residents spoke at a packed meeting Tuesday to urge the council to vote  for the emergency provision that would have immediately halted evictions and  rent increases in this city of 110,000. Many shared stories of having to  hastily look for housing, change their children’s schools mid-year, and having  to leave Richmond after receiving sudden increases or being asked to move  out of units they have lived in for decades. 
               
              “Everyone who is  not wealthy is being squeezed out and I can’t just stand by and see my  neighbors being affected and do nothing,” said Tarnel Abbott, a Richmond  resident and local activist. “Kids won’t be able to keep going to their  schools. Constant moving around has everything to do with economic insecurity.” 
               
              Despite the wide  condemnation by speakers, the council could not garner the six votes needed to  pass the emergency ordinance, with council members Nat Bates, Vinay Pimple and  Mayor Tom Butt voting ‘no.’ A super majority is required in order to  approve an emergency measure. Following the vote, angry residents chanted  “Shame on you,” forcing the council to call for a break. 
               
              “We won’t forget  this in November,” yelled one woman who said she was facing eviction. Both  Pimple and Bates are up for reelection. 
               
              Richmond is not  the first city in the Bay Area to attempt to deal with skyrocketing housing  prices through an emergency rent moratorium. Earlier this year, Alameda  and Oakland both passed such moratoriums. There are currently  five ballot measures for rent control around the Bay Area, including  in Alameda, Mountain View, Burlingame, Richmond and San Mateo. 
               
              The problem is  perhaps especially acute in Richmond, which is home to a large number of  low-income residents, including many Latinos and blacks. With rents soaring,  many worry that low-income renters are being pushed out, changing  the fabric of the community. 
               
              “This  is not a radical thing, but a basic type of protection for a community to  put into place while they’re considering these options,” said a visibly  frustrated Councilman Jael Myrick. “Why does Richmond have to dig our heels in  and make everything a battle royale?” 
               
              Several  landlords also spoke at the meeting, arguing that property owners often have no  choice but to raise rents to afford repairs. They disagreed with the opponents’  characterization of landlords as “greedy,” saying many counted on  their properties for retirement income. Under the rent control ordinance on the  November ballot, rent increases would be capped at 3 percent a year. 
               
              “Three percent  is not terrible if there aren’t crises, no legal problems or large fixes,” said  Ilona Clark, who owns a duplex in Richmond. “That’s a lot of ‘ifs’… Mom and pop  landlords need protections.” 
               
              Mayor Tom Butt,  a vociferous opponent of rent control, portrayed Richmond’s housing crisis  as a supply and demand problem. 
               
              “We simply have  more people looking for housing than we have houses,” he said. “It’s not about  who has compassion and who doesn’t.” 
               
              He  added that the impending vote on rent control has “thrown landlords into a  panic” creating a “manufactured crisis.” 
               
              Many booed upon  hearing that, criticizing the mayor for having a conflict of interest. The  mayor owns a single family rental home and a duplex, but neither would be  subject to rent control. Ultimately, many supporters tried to appeal to  the council members’ sense of justice, asking them to overlook their own  objections to rent control and listen to the will of the people. 
               
            “How can you  turn a deaf ear to the people who are suffering?” asked Millie Cleveland, a  Richmond resident. “You have an obligation to the people living here.”
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