San Francisco Demands That Landlord Dismantle Veterans' Housing
The move would likely put at-risk tenants out on the street.
San Francisco officials are in a bind: Either kick poor tenants out of their homes, or don't enforce laws that officials insist are there to ensure those tenants have adequate living standards.
The city's Planning Department is demanding that Judy Wu—a San Francisco landlord who rents mostly to veterans—destroy 15 of the 49 units that she and her husband currently rent out. Officials say that Wu illegally subdivided single-family homes into separate flats.
"I don't want to remove any units, it's the city that is forcing me to do so," Wu told the San Francisco Examiner. "I don't want to displace any of our tenants."
San Francisco's Housing Rights Commission is opposed to doing away with the units. And one of Wu's tenants has asked the city to stop removing sinks and doors from the unit—a change required to bring the building up to code.
So far, the Planning Department has been unmoved, saying that the lots that Wu has turned into multi-unit housing are zoned for single-family use, and that her numerous building modifications violate city codes.
"While additional housing is desirable, the City also needs to maintain standards for the quality of dwelling units," says a July 20 departmental review.
Wu's violations were first discovered in July 2015 following some complaints from the neighbors, and in September she was ordered to bring her units into compliance. Wu appealed the order, making no claim that she had not violated city code but saying that she "felt encouraged by the City to create as many units as possible for low-income tenants."
One can forgive her for having that impression. In 2013 San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee held a press conference announcing a campaign to house 50 homeless vets in 100 days. "I can't think of a more patriotic thing to do than to find a homeless veteran their home," said Lee at the time.
Singled out praise at that conference was none other than Judy Wu, who was lauded for her efforts to house the very veterans San Francisco might now put back out onto the street.
It's not just the mayor that has good things to say about Wu. The San Francisco Chronicle said this in 2016, when the city first sued Wu for code violations:
Visits to Wu's properties and interviews with her tenants create a picture of a landlord who, while allegedly violating the city's zoning codes, also cares about housing veterans with few other options. She regularly leases to tenants whose eviction records made other landlords see them as off limits, and apparently is not quick to throw out those who fall behind on their rent, some tenants say.
The veterans advocacy group Swords to Plowshares praised Wu too, saying she was "wonderful to work with and has housed hundreds of vets over the years."
On Thursday San Francisco's Planning Commission will decide whether to force Wu to go through with dismantling her rental units and displacing her tenants.
Libertarians often argue that housing regulations raise prices while reducing the supply of housing for the disadvantaged. It's difficult to think of a clearer illustration of the principle than this one.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Christ, what a city of assholes.
How you like me now?
I ain't deaf and I didn't sign you.
I thought we all signed ours in the womb and now we're trapped forever
Have I been lied to?
Look Britschgi, if you're going to use that image and you want to maintain any kind of journalistic respectability, you're going to have include a Full House reference in the alt-text.
All I know about that show is Stamos and a pair of weird-looking twins were in it. Did anyone actually ever watch it?
I was too young to know what it meant yet, but Lori Loughlin made me feel some kind of way.
It's one of the worst shows I've ever seen. I have no idea how it became so popular.
Never underestimate the appeal of the Hawaii episode.
Fact: "mai linh doan" is Lao for "Whatever happened to predictability?"
On Thursday San Francisco's Planning Commission will decide whether to force Wu to go through with dismantling her rental units and displacing her tenants.
"It gives us no pleasure, Ms. Wu, but ...."
"... we must note that the PM Lynx are late again."
Just because you're poor doesn't mean you shouldn't get to enjoy all the government the rich folks do.
"The house that you are living in does not meet code. For your safety, we are kicking you out of the only unit you can afford and throwing you out on the street"
"And to save both of us some time, here's a one-way bus ticket to Stockton."
Objection, your Honor; violates constitutional restrictions on cruel and unusual punishment.
the Planning Department has been unmoved, saying that the lots that Wu has turned into multi-unit housing are zoned for single-family use
All your housing are belonging to us. //planningdeptnazi's
Christian, buddy, you shouldn't be writing posts in the late afternoon when you're on lynx duty. Give yourself a good two hour space to hit that 4:30 deadline. FOR US.
All work and no lynx make HV something something GO CRAZY
It's 1:30 in Cali, and he's just returning from a 3 cosmo lunch, cut him some slack. You're lucky he's not just posting random links from CNN, WaPo, NYT and HuffPo.
Of course. It seems like a lot of these kinds of stories involve some busy body neighbor complaining. I strongly suspect that most zoning laws are only really there in case a neighborhood busy body complains so that they have a way of fucking over whoever the nosy little cunt complains about. Most of the time the laws aren't enforced until someone complains.
Actually, they exist primarily to provide a way for local politicians to extract bribe money from developers and property owners.
-jcr
Are they "veterans" or "enablers"?
I admit to schadenfreude watching SF's revolution eat itself.
Libertarians often argue that housing regulations raise prices while reducing the supply of housing for the disadvantaged. It's difficult to think of a clearer illustration of the principle than this one.
Progressives often argue, that if Libertarians had their way, we'd return to the days of extreme poverty and slum living conditions with 12 people to a one bedroom flat.
Seems to me there's a workaround: Make those changes, & have some of the tenants live together. Like I'm co-renting a 1-family house now.
That is what I was thinking. Like "adjoining" rooms in a hotel....just keep the connecting door locked from both sides, and all ist gut..
SF has a "housing crisis" in that housing is too expensive, but every home put up for sale sells pretty quickly, so it's obvious the "housing crisis" exists only as a fantasy.
SF has a "homeless crisis" in that we have bum who live on the sidewalks and the streets. To solve the issue, the city government votes to spend more money on the bums and then is shocked when there are more bums this year than there were last year. So if there is a "homeless crisis", it is pretty much by design.
There are people who vote for the folks who make up that government, so there is definitely a "brain crisis".
my Aunty Violet just got a new blue MINI Cooper Clubvan Wagon only from working part-time off a pc at home... see here now ????
very nice post. I like it. Thanks for sharing this information.
Tinder is the best online chatting application. Try it.
http://www.tinder-pc-download.com/ tinder for pc
http://www.tinder-pc-download.com/ tinder download