Tag Archives: mission housing

Community groups call for affordable housing at site of 2015 fatal fire

By Michael Toren : sfexaminer – excerpt (includes video)

Community leaders and a city supervisor gathered Friday morning in the Mission District to protest plans to build a nine-story condominium building on the site of a building destroyed in a fatal fire.

The lot at 22nd and Mission streets has been vacant since a four-alarm fire tore through a large, three-story mixed-use building there in January 2015, killing one resident and displacing some 60 others. That building was later demolished, leaving a fenced-off hole in the ground which can still be seen today… (more)

Canceled meeting on ‘Monster in the Mission’ development sparks dueling rallies

By Laura Waxmann : sfexaminer – excerpt

The sudden cancellation of a public hearing on a proposed 331-unit housing development at 1979 Mission St. laid bare deep divisions within the community over the project, despite recent revisions.

Plans for the development at the 16th and Mission Street Bart Plaza were first submitted by developer Maximus Real Estate Partners in 2013. From the onset they were challenged over their lack of affordability by community groups united as the Plaza 16 Coalition, who dubbed the project the “Monster in the Mission.”

Last year, the coalition asked the Planning Commission to hold a hearing on the project in the Mission District, so that community members could weigh in. But that meeting’s cancellation this week sparked two competing rallies Thursday — one led by Plaza 16, calling on the developer to provide a 100 percent affordable project, and the other organized by the Maximus-funded group Mission for All, aimed at moving the project forward as is… (more)

Security robot that deterred homeless encampments in the Mission gets rebuke from the city

By Alisha Green : bizjournals – excerpt

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This interloper patrols the empty parking garage across from the Warriors site. Photo by zrants.

San Francisco residents continue to rage against the machines.

While the city’s board of supervisors moves toward finalizing limits on robots that roam the sidewalks to deliver food and goods, it must also find a way to handle security robots that patrol public sidewalks.

The S.F. SPCA in the Mission started using a security robot about a month ago in its parking lot and on the sidewalks around its campus, which takes up a whole city block at Florida St. and 16th St. Last week, the city ordered the SPCA to keep its robot off the sidewalks or face a penalty of up to $1,000 per day for operating in the public right-of-way without a permit.

The security robot is just the latest in a growing list of uses for robots around the city, from rental agents to food couriers. The robot surge could draw local government into more questions about its role in regulating the machines, especially if they operate in the public right-of-way…

Having humans replace the robot’s 24/7 shift would be “cost prohibitive,” though, Scarlett said. The robot costs about $6 per hour to rent, she said. The minimum wage in San Francisco is $14 per hour…(more)

The real story here is that some people are setting up a battle between homeless humans and homeless pets by using robots to protect the pets from the humans. Homeless pets are in and homeless humans are out? Literally? The irony is that many pets live in the encampments with the homeless humans? Who chooses which pets get star treatment and are allowed in the fenced off dog run guarded by the robots? Is there a homeless pet housing lottery?

The other side of the story is that robots are taking over human jobs because they can always compete on the price level, in this case, by $8 dollars an hour. What happens to the $20 an hour jobs? Do robots charge $14 an hour for those?

Robots don’t pay rent or eat or shop. How this plays into our future job market is the big unknown and possibly explains the on-going city strike in Oakland and a general new interest in unions organizing. It is good that the city officials are starting to have conversations about the future of jobs now. We can’t afford to wait.

RELATED:
Bay Area real estate players react to the idea of robot rental agents

TUESDAY MAY 2 – THE MISSION TAKES CITY HALL Take 2

TUESDAY MAY 2  – THE MISSION TAKES CITY HALL Take 2

Sign the petition to Save the San Francisco Mission

Tuesday, June 2, 2 PM –
Room 250 City Hall Board of Supervisors – Campos Ordinance – Declaration of an emergency and a request  for a moratorium on market rate housing and PDR conversions will be heard. Send letters and comments and show up to support and end to evictions by calling a help. Ordinance details facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/events/1456369761322627/.

A sample letter is here: Support Campos Emergency Ordinance

THE MISSION TAKES CITY HALL Take 1

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K-HRXvNJ58U

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