The Pandemic Makes Clear What We Already Knew: The Rent Is Too Damn High
Terra Thomas, a florist in Oakland, California, doesn鈥檛 know when she鈥檒l receive her next paycheck, a concerning predicament millions of Americans are now facing.
鈥淚t鈥檚 terrifying for sure,鈥 she says.
Even before Bay Area officials announced a shelter-in-place order on March 16鈥攖o start the next day鈥擳homas was already noticing her event鈥檚 calendar thinning out. As a florist, she had weddings, graduations, and other special occasions booked for the rest of the year, but as the news of the coronavirus spread, her clients started canceling.
Because of her precarious situation, Thomas, a member of the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment, who had been initially striking against her corporate landlord Mosser Companies Inc. over repairs and other negligence with her neighbors before quarantining, decided to withhold paying her April rent.
鈥淚 need to allocate my money for food, health care and other necessities, not to pay rent to corporate landlords,鈥 she says.
Thomas pays $833 a month in rent. She鈥檚 lived in her building for seven years and is under rent control. Still, even with rent control, coming up with that kind of cash without income is a prospect Thomas never saw herself having to consider.
The Bay Area continues to be one of the most expensive places to rent in the country, with the a month for a one-bedroom apartment in San Francisco. Many low-income renters live paycheck-to-paycheck. Like Thomas, a growing number of tenants in the Bay Area, around California, and a beginning of a movement throughout the country are rent striking鈥攑roactively choosing to not pay rent.
鈥淭enants are fighting for a cancellation of rent rather than a mountain of accumulating debt,鈥 explains Deepa Varma, the Executive Director of the San Francisco Tenants Union in an email. 鈥淩ent strikes are just one of the ways that tenants are demonstrating that they have been placed in an untenable situation in an already failing housing system.鈥
Many are unable to pay rent because they are unable to work either because of illness, layoffs, or large scale public orders that have been instituted to protect all of us, Varma adds.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom on March 27, banning evictions for nonpayment of rent from taking place until after May 31. As a surety against eviction, according to the order, the tenant needs to provide documentation to their landlord that they are unable to pay because of the pandemic. Two days earlier, Newsom ordered a temporary delay on mortgage payments, 鈥渨ith the objective of maximizing consistency and minimizing hurdles faced potentially faced by borrowers.鈥 Nothing was mentioned about renters.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not fair,鈥 says Lenea Maibaum an organizer with the nonprofit Housing Rights Committee of San Francisco. 鈥淚f you are going to cancel mortgages, you need to cancel the rent as well. It doesn鈥檛 make sense.鈥
To support tenants organizing in San Francisco, Maibaum and Brad Hirn, also an organizer with HRC, have their sights set on buildings owned by Veritas Investments, one of San Francisco鈥檚 . Starting to organize, especially in a pandemic where few people can meet face-to-face, remains a challenge.
鈥淲hen we talk about rent strikes we quickly realized, even in San Francisco, the idea is new and scary for many people,鈥 Hirn says. For a rent strike to be successful, according to Hirn, about 75% of the tenants in a building need to stop paying rent to the landlord. 鈥淭hat threshold is necessary for strength in numbers. It鈥檚 a demonstration of power.鈥
Station 40, an anarchist collective in San Francisco, was buildings in the Bay Area to publicly declare they were on strike. The collective鈥檚 11 tenants didn鈥檛 see another course of action after most of them lost their jobs because of the shelter-in-place order. 鈥淲e have no other recourse,鈥 says Cassandra, a Station 40 tenant, who asked to be identified by only her first name. After they realized they would be out of work for the foreseeable future, she says, they emailed their landlord and told them they weren鈥檛 going to pay April鈥檚 rent, almost $5,000 for the two-story building.
鈥淭he relationship that they have with us, they know we are not playing around,鈥 she says about their landlord. 鈥淚f they are intelligent they must understand, that because we are not able to work, we are unable to pay.鈥
Few other buildings in San Francisco and the Bay Area ended up striking against paying April鈥檚 rent, but Hirn and other housing advocates are hopeful the movement will gain ground by May 1. Members of the tenants union are taking selfies with calls to cancel rent and posting them on their social media accounts. Organizers such as Hirn and Maibaum are leaving notes and letters for renters in Veritas-owned buildings, feeling out who would like to join the strike, and speaking with tenants鈥攁 lot conversations are with people behind a closed door, they say鈥攚ho also might just not be able to pay.
鈥淭he necessity is to realize we are more powerful together. I know it鈥檚 a clich茅, but it鈥檚 just the facts,鈥 Cassandra says.
The goal of the rent strike is complete rent forgiveness for the duration of the pandemic crisis. No back rent paid. No evictions or other retaliation by landlords for nonpayment. It can happen at the landlord level or at the state level with an executive order.
Striking, if successful, will relieve renters from more undue economic hardship while the world is shut down. For some, it is a starting point to envision larger changes.
Thomas would like to see more tenant-owned buildings and a push for the creation of more community land trusts. Hirn and Maibaum want to curb Veritas鈥 profiteering鈥攖he kind that inevitably occurs when large corporate landlords buy up property from mom and pop owners. 鈥淸Striking] questions the basic fairness of the system, just [like] labor strikes,鈥 Hirn says. 鈥淭enants at this moment can trigger the kind of society-wide change that benefit people everywhere.鈥
For strikers like Cassandra, it鈥檚 not really about what may happen in a few months, but what鈥檚 happening now. 鈥淭rying to think long-term is a measure of control and ego that humans want to cling to,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e only have control of right now. We have no idea how it鈥檚 going to play out, and it鈥檚 not important that we know. We need to work from this standpoint.鈥
And organizers like Nick Thacker with the East Bay Tenant and Neighbor Councils, a tenant鈥檚 group, don鈥檛 care how rent forgiveness happens, but that it does happen. 鈥淢any people are spending half of their incomes or more for rent,鈥 Thacker says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not a tenable situation.鈥
This is why those like Thomas look out for their neighbors.
鈥淚 feel inspired to be an in a situation where they might not be able to advocate for themselves,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 feel motivated to keep this going by thinking of the millions of people that are facing this. I鈥檓 glad that things are changing everyday. Things need to change.鈥
Carly Nairn
is a freelance journalist based in San Francisco. Her work has been published with Guernica, National Geographic, and Sierra magazine, among others.
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