This article originally
appeared in POOR
Magazine, dedicated to reframing the news,
issues and solutions from low and no income communities,
as well as providing society with a perspective usually
not heard or seen within the mainstream media. The deep sounds of never ending, mind
numbing, headache generating traffic bombarded the weather beaten
glass of the 6 Motel (not to be confused with the pricier Motel
6), as I sat with displacement survivor and former Valencia Gardens
tenant Linda William.
Driving up Highway 80 East,
I kept referring to my friend and fellow PNN writer's careful
directions. "It’s
sort of near Vallejo," she had said quietly on the phone,
the weight of her horrendous dilemma flooding her voice. "I
couldn't actually afford a motel in Vallejo. They were too expensive,
and all the cheap ones were filled," she concluded wearily.
It had been almost two years since Linda took
the "sweet
deal" offered by the San Francisco Housing Authority to move
out of her long-time residence at Valencia Gardens in San Francisco,
Valencia being one of many hundreds of public housing projects
in the Bay Area and across the nation labeled “bad” and targeted
for “redevelopment,” which resulted in massive displacement of
low-income tenants from public housing to essentially “a piece
of paper.” That is, these tenants were handed a Section 8 voucher
and a lot of promises of available market-rate or privately owned
low-income housing projects but ended up, like Linda, homeless.
As those of us in the know say, public housing is better than no
housing.
"They gave me a Section
8 certificate and said I could go anywhere with it. Of course,
I had always
had a dream of moving out of the city with my two kids, and I
thought this was my big chance."
As Linda spoke, the hairs
stood up on the back of my neck. I, too, was relying on a pending
Section
8 certificate to stabilize the ever unstable housing of myself,
my mother and my 9-month-old son, but from all the recent reports
out of the Bush administration, this "stable housing" might
remain a dream.
"So with that certificate, I started
the search for housing in Vallejo and Fairfield and Marin." Linda
continued her story, unphased by my uh huhs and head nodding. "Well,
whadya know, I found closed wait lists on almost all the low-income
housing units in all of those places, and all the rest of the
landlords wouldn't even return my calls when I told them I had
Section 8."
As Linda continued to explain
how she transferred her certificate to Alameda County hoping
for better
luck in Oakland, I remembered the hideously classist and racist
experience of trying to find an apartment when I told landlords
that I was on Section 8. "Ohhhhh noooo, I don't think so," they
would say, dreams of welfare moms dancing in their land-holding
heads.
"Eventually, I found a place in
the middle of so much gang-mess that one of my babies almost
got shot last month, so I gave up and moved to this motel. And
now my Section 8 worker is telling me that it doesn't matter
anyway, ‘cause due to the Bush-inspired cuts they probably won't
have any money left in the Section 8 program to fund another
apartment for me anyway…and I'll end up homeless…" Her voice
trailed off into sadness, and the whoosh of the highway filled
the room’s silence.
Linda was referring to
the very serious cuts that the Section 8 program is facing due
to the Bush administration’s
cuts to the program of $1.6 billion, causing places like New
York City to lose millions of dollars for existing Section 8
vouchers and Alameda County not having enough money in May even
to cover the rents of vouchers already in use.
"And now I hear that people are
being offered more sweet deals by the Housing Authority to move
out of the Bay View so rich people like Newsom and his buddies
can make big bucks redeveloping the Bay View." Linda paused
to hold back an onslaught of tears. "All I can say to those
folks is, ‘Don't be fooled. Hold onto what you have. Valencia
Gardens had its problems, but it was still my home…it was still
housing…"
To tell your story of eviction or
displacement, call PNN at (415) 863-6306. To get involved in
fighting the effort to redevelop the Bay View, call Bianca
Henry at Family Rights and Dignity, (415) 346-3740. To read
more stories on issues of poverty and racism written by the
folk who experience it first-hand, go on-line to www.poormagazine.org. |