September 7, 2017
Oakland fire captain charged with sharing more than 600 child porn images, including toddlers
http://www.eastbaytimes.com/2017/09/07/oakland-fire-captain-arrested-on-suspicion-of-child-porn-possession/
OAKLAND — An Oakland fire captain was arrested Wednesday night and charged with sharing more than 600 images of child pornography after investigators searching his fire house found illegal materials on his personal laptop and other storage devices, authorities said.
Capt. Richard Chew, 58, is being held in Contra Costa jail in Martinez on $200,000 bail for the two felonies — distributing child porn and possessing it. At his first appearance Thursday afternoon in a Contra Costa Superior Court in Martinez, Chew stood mostly hidden in a courtroom holding cell while Judge John Laettner denied lowering his bail or releasing him on his own recognizance. He could face up to five years in prison if found guilty of the felonies.
“Over 600 images are alleged,” the judge said in his reasoning behind denying a release. “The court needs to look at the injuries to victims … and the child exploitation of many children.”
According to a search warrant affidavit, on Aug. 19 Chew allegedly shared 195 files with an undercover sheriff’s deputy and at least three of those files contained images or video of children ages 4 to 8 performing sex acts.
“The fact that the children are of that age is dangerous to me,” prosecutor Jordan Sanders said outside court. “Because they are so young speaks volumes to the exploitative nature.”
Investigators and detectives with the Contra Costa Sheriff’s Office and District Attorney’s Office searched his Lafayette home on Aug. 29, seizing an external hard drive and Samsung cell phone but did not find child pornography on the devices, according to court records.
During the search, they interviewed his live-in girlfriend, who said she was out of town on a business trip on Aug. 19 and that Chew was supposedly the only person home, Minh Vu, a detective with the sheriff’s office, wrote in a search warrant affidavit.
“(The girlfriend) stated that he owned and used a personal black laptop which had a fire department logo sticker on it,” Vu wrote. “Richard was known to take it to work with him at the fire station.”
Two days later, members of the Contra Costa Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force located the laptop while searching Station 15 at 455 27th St. in Oakland, according to court records. The laptop contained illegal material, authorities said. They also seized two thumb drives which contained child porn.
Interim fire Chief Darin White, in a statement issued Thursday morning, said Chew was immediately placed on administrative leave once Oakland officials learned of the investigation.
“I am appalled by the disturbing nature of these charges,” White said. “If the allegations are true, this criminal behavior violates our community’s standard of decency and breaches the standard of conduct we uphold in the Oakland Fire Department.”
Chew, who has worked for the Oakland department for 28 years, had no prior personnel issues and once raised an alarm about a dangerous building.
His efforts made headlines in March after four people died in a San Pablo Avenue halfway house fire. Emails obtained by this newspaper show that Chew, along with other Oakland firefighters, repeatedly warned fire inspectors that the building had serious fire danger issues, but they were ignored until just a few days before the deadly fire.
“I recommend that we consider shutting this building down immediately due to the danger to life safety,” Chew wrote in a Jan. 8 email about 2551 San Pablo Ave. that was forwarded to Fire Marshal Miguel Trujillo and Assistant Fire Marshal Maria Sabatini. Chew also reported open piles of garbage in the structure and a padlocked fire escape.
The building was finally inspected March 24, only three days before the deadly blaze. The Chew email and others helped prompt a massive overhaul of the fire department’s inspection bureau, including hiring more inspectors.
From 2011 to early this year, Chew made 49 referrals to fire inspectors to check up on fire dangers at Oakland properties, according to department data.
Last year, he had a total compensation package of $300,000, according to Transparent California.
In 2009, the Oakland city council honored Chew and other firefighters for their swift water rescue at a fatal traffic accident scene at Hegenberger Road and Hamilton Street on Nov. 1, 2008.
At Thursday’s court appearance, Chew’s defense attorney Peter Orth asked the judge to release his client, citing his long Oakland Fire Department tenure, lack of criminal record and Army service. Orth said Chew had received an Army Commendation Medal.
Orth declined to comment outside of court.
“Despite his accolades, he’s still actively downloading child pornography,” Sanders told the judge.
Chew spoke briefly when waiving his right to a speedy arraignment, saying “Yes, your honor” twice. He will appear back in court Sept. 17.
Staff writer Nate Gartrell contributed to this report.
An expansion of my twitter post related to Oakland Fire and the complete failure of Oakland, CA leadership Let's talk about #Oakland for a moment.. and a little more behind #OaklandFire and the complete failure of Oakland leadership
Thursday, September 7, 2017
Tuesday, July 18, 2017
151 City of Oakland - 'Huge Failure' 80% of Oakland Firefighter warnings of unsafe buildings go unchecked
East Bay Times July 16, 2017
OAKLAND — In what an expert calls a “huge failure,” hundreds of residential and commercial buildings across Oakland were never inspected after firefighters flagged fire dangers and referred them for followup, including more than 200 apartment buildings housing thousands of residents, an investigation by the Bay Area News Group has found.
Records acquired from the city covering 2011 until early this year show that firefighters referred 879 properties for fire code issues to the Bureau of Fire Prevention, a number that includes the apartment buildings, plus commercial buildings and several schools.
But 696 (79 percent) of the properties flagged for referral were never inspected by the bureau, a cross-check of the data obtained through multiple public records requests show. Only 183 (21 percent) of the referred properties had subsequent inspections, and only a handful of them were conducted within the first month. It often took months or years before the visits occurred.
Without followup visits, the city has no way of knowing whether the flagged problems were fixed, and no ability to force a property owner to comply.
The information shows the referral problem was far more widespread than officials acknowledged, even as Mayor Libby Schaaf promised this spring to more than double the number of inspectors and fix problems. At the time, Oakland had six inspectors for the entire city, which included those responsible for inspecting hills properties for overgrown vegetation.
“It’s a huge failure,” John DeHaan, a veteran fire investigator who runs a consulting business, said of the 79 percent failure-to-inspect rate. “What’s the point of having firefighters say, ‘Hey, there’s a problem,’ and not having anyone do something about it? That’s terrible.
“I’m staggered that 79 percent of notices never got checked,” he said.
And those are just the buildings that caught someone’s attention. Many commercial buildings throughout the city have never been inspected, according to records of 179,000 inspections performed since 2010 obtained by this news organization, despite city law requiring that it be done annually After the Ghost Ship fire, the requirement was changed to every two years.
In fact, the complete disarray in the city’s fire-inspection services might have continued if not for the Dec. 2 Ghost Ship fire. The blaze broke out during a late-night dance party at the warehouse-turned-arts colony in the city’s Fruitvale District, trapping 36 people who perished trying to find a way out. The building on 31st Avenue, which was being illegally used for residences, had never been inspected and there are no records that it was ever referred to the fire prevention bureau even though fire personnel had been inside.
While investigating another fire in a four-story San Pablo Avenue halfway house in which four people died on March 27, this news organization also uncovered that a software program used by the fire department to make referrals does not work.
A firefighter who had been in the building in 2015 marked the referral box on his online report, but nothing was done because it didn’t get transmitted by the faulty software.
Fire officials are now blaming flaws in the OneStep software database program and a lack of staff as the reasons referred properties go unnoticed.
Fires, no inspections
The analysis by this news organization found that there were fires in 15 other buildings where a referral was made but no inspection occurred. The blazes ranged from minor stove fires to a torched church and machinery business as well as a hazardous materials incident.
One of those fires involved a vacant convalescent home on Bancroft Avenue in East Oakland. It had been flagged with a referral in February 2016, but no one got there before the building, wedged between an apartment complex and a house, burned early on the morning of Dec. 11, some 10 months later.
A man who lives next door with his sister recalled the two-alarm blaze, which forced him to flee his home as flames came within feet of his residence.
“It was scary,” said the man, who would only give his name as Sebastian. Next door, burned junk, including charred wheelchairs, was piled in front of the scorched building, its windows covered with plywood. More than seven months after the fire, with the cause still undetermined, the smell of burned building materials lingered as the building awaits demolition.
“This building has burned at least three times in the past and been red-tagged and condemned,” Oakland Fire Lt. Ryan Meineke wrote in his report of the December fire. “I called for a board up crew and the city building inspector again.”
The report noted the building’s sprinkler system failed to operate because it was turned off.
Asked if the fire department’s failure to inspect the building worried him, Sebastian replied, “It does. I didn’t know about that.
“I guess this is Oakland,” he added. “You can’t really expect it.”
Staffing shortages, miscommunication
Firefighters can make referrals for a variety of reasons. They may notice something amiss during a medical call to a building, for example. Often, they make the referrals for additional scrutiny during routine, city-required inspections of commercial properties and state-required inspections of apartment buildings, medical facilities and schools.
Ideally, those referrals lead to visits from civilian fire inspectors, well-versed in the fire code, who conduct a more thorough investigation, forcing an owner to correct violations or shut the building down.
Fire department sources said the referrals are made only for serious problems that could start fires or impede people fleeing a blaze. Such problems include a lack of sprinklers, smoke detectors, or fire extinguishers; improperly marked or inaccessible emergency exits; or improperly stored flammable materials.
“If referrals are coming from line firefighters … that should be top priority,” said Mark Grissom, a former city inspector who is now a wildlands firefighter for the federal government. “That should be inspected by a competent inspector within 24 to 48 hours.
“It’s totally shocking…. I would not be surprised if there’s another major fire in Oakland down in the flats or in the hills before all this is settled,” Grissom added.
Interim fire Chief Darin White would not agree to an interview but did respond via email. White blamed the lack of staff in the fire department and fire-prevention bureau for the failure to perform timely inspections and for the department not upgrading the software.
“We are addressing these issues in part through the adoption of the new Accela data management platform and by building in backup redundancies as we strategically grow our staff,” he wrote. “The city has retained a consulting firm to assess inspection processes, and replacing the database is also a part of overall system improvements.”
Fire Marshal Miguel Trujillo, head of the fire prevention services, did not return multiple messages.
Neither a statement by the fire chief, nor one made on his behalf by a spokesman, directly addressed what inspection data show: Hundreds of referrals made as many as six years ago were ignored or lost.
Six senior department officers, all lieutenants and captains, each made more than 40 referrals, topped by Capt. Sean Laffan, who made 63. Laffan didn’t return messages.
Before the San Pablo Avenue fire, Laffan exchanged emails with assistant fire marshal Maria Sabatini, who explained that there’s an ongoing miscommunication between firefighters and inspectors on how to properly refer buildings for inspection.
“Sean, when you say the inspection was referred to the (Fire Prevention Bureau) on a specific date, can you tell me what that means to most (firefighters)?” Sabatini wrote. “I’ve learned some (firefighters) think that when the ‘referred’ tab is clicked in OneStep, that an inspector is automatically notified. (This is not true). Do you think it means someone picked up the phone and called the FPB, or sent an email? Not looking to hang anyone here, just really trying to figure out how to smooth this out.”
She added how busy and short-staffed inspectors were, and how she would work on creating proper referral “reporting guidelines.”
Based on his experience with the department, Grissom said safety wasn’t the bottom line. He sat in meetings where Oakland inspectors were told to give priority to higher-end buildings with modern or upgraded fire-prevention systems because property owners paid for those inspections.
Checking sprinklers and alarms are high-revenue generators for the department with strong likelihood of receiving payment, compared to rundown, older properties owned by people who cannot or will not pay, he said. California law allows departments to charge fees for routine inspections the state fire code requires they perform.
Residents alarmed
Standing outside a Fruitvale Avenue apartment building that was referred to the Fire Prevention Bureau in 2011 but never inspected, a tenant called the situation “Awful. But I can’t afford anywhere else.”
That tenant, who asked not to be identified because of fear of retribution from the building’s owner, said there are no fire extinguishers there, which state law requires in apartment buildings. The tenant has never seen fire inspectors visit the building, even after a fire destroyed one unit and damaged others more than five years ago. She said she must run extension cords throughout her unit due to an outdated electrical system.
The referral dead-ends are only the most recent department woes to come to light.
In 2015, the state stripped the Oakland Fire Department of its responsibility to inspect hazardous material sites after years of problems. An Alameda County grand jury in 2014 found deep flaws in a program to inspect commercial properties, saying more than a third had not been inspected. The Oakland City Auditor in 2013 criticized the lax enforcement of Oakland hills vegetation inspections, which were designed to prevent a repeat of the 1991 conflagration that killed 25 people and destroyed 3,000 homes. Then-fire Chief Teresa Deloach Reed even threatened to sue a resident who criticized her and the hills inspection program at a public meeting in January.
At an eight-unit apartment building on Park Boulevard that was referred for a follow-up inspection in January 2012 but not visited since, resident Decovan Rhem, 45, said he was concerned by the lack of action and also that the city did not have enough inspectors to cover Oakland’s thousands of apartment buildings.
His neighbors, Doug Alexander and Shirley Moore, agreed.
“This is very troubling,” Alexander said. Moore, who’s lived in the building more than 20 years, said: “I haven’t seen the fire department in as long as I can say. I wish they would come around.”
Correction: July 16, 2017: Due to an editing error, an earlier version of this story understated the number of referred unsafe properties that were never inspected. Of the 879 unsafe properties referred for inspections, 696 were never inspected and 183 were subsequently inspected.
The data show:
Fire department employees made 879 referrals between Jan. 4, 2011 and March 6, 2017, but 79 percent of the properties were never inspected.
* Referrals were made at 13 school buildings. Only four of them were inspected since the order was submitted, one of them 39 months later.
* Referrals at 273 apartment buildings resulted in only 57 inspections. Of those, eight occurred within a month.
* Fires occurred in three residential buildings that were referred but never inspected. Each appeared to be minor. and it was not clear if any of them were caused by problems that firefighters specifically flagged.
* Referrals were made at 530 commercial properties ranging from industrial sites in the Port of Oakland to small businesses, which Oakland inspects under a city ordinance in addition to annual inspections of apartment buildings, schools and medical facilities mandated by state law. Of those commercial properties, 419 never received an inspection.
* Fires broke out at 10 of the commercial properties that never received follow-ups, including a 2-alarm blaze at a closed convalescent home on Bancroft Avenue and a downtown office building on Webster Street in 2012 that gutted two floors. That fire came five months after a referral that received no follow-up.
150 City of Oakland - The bar has been set so low, residents have stopped expecting basic municipal services
East Bay Times
July 18, 2016
http://www.eastbaytimes.com/2017/07/18/editorial-this-is-how-low-the-bar-has-sunk-in-oakland/
There seems no end to Oakland’s government dysfunction.
Over a six-year period, fire inspectors failed to examine nearly 80 percent of buildings firefighters had referred to them for followup of dangerous conditions, according to a Bay Area News Group data analysis.
The acting fire chief’s response: A refusal to answer questions and a canned statement that the problems were due primarily to staffing shortages and computer database problems.
But if you want a sense of the community’s response, consider the comments of a man who lived next door to a building that burned down — one of those that was supposed to be inspected but never was.
“I guess this is Oakland,” he said. “You can’t really expect it.”
That’s how low the bar has sunk in the Bay Area’s third largest city. Residents have stopped expecting basic municipal services: Fire inspections. Police showing up when you call. Decent roads. Responsible management of public money.
Instead, this is the city where 36 people died in the infamous Ghost Ship warehouse inferno after firefighters ignored the dangerous conditions — and some had even attended a party there.
This is the city where four died in a fire at a halfway house, where 16 months earlier a firefighter had requested an inspection that never happened, and a few months before the blaze a fire captain had urged that the building be shut down, only to be overruled. The city where hillside fire inspection reports were apparently faked.
Where the police department is in its 14th year of federal court oversight, yet cops cavorted with a sexually exploited teenager and their behavior was first swept under the rug by fellow officers who conducted an inept investigation.
Where basic road maintenance is abandoned, allowing streets to deteriorate so badly that it will take $443 million, paid mostly with a new property tax, to fix it.
Where City Council members and mayors — be they named Dellums, Quan or Schaaf — cannot contain spending to the available funds despite the city’s high tax rates, including a hidden levy for pensions.
The outrages just keep coming.
On Friday, the new police chief, hired to restore stability to a badly mismanaged department, promoted people who oversaw the bungled sex-scandal investigation to top positions.
Chief Anne Kirkpatrick, in a departure from past practice, barred news coverage of the promotion ceremony. So much for transparency with the community.
On Sunday came news from reporters Thomas Peele, Matthias Gafni and David DeBolt about the fire inspection failures. Their in-depth analysis of city data shows that firefighters had referred 879 properties for fire code violations, but 696 were never inspected.
That includes more than 200 apartment buildings housing thousands of residents, commercial buildings and several schools. Of those that weren’t inspected, 16, including the halfway house, were scenes of subsequent fires.
Is this the best residents can expect? It’s time to raise the bar.
Tuesday, June 20, 2017
149 City of Oakland Bldg Dept - Inspectors issued hand written notices rather than issue official violations
2 Investigates: New complaints, enforcement questions about troubled East Bay hotel
April 2015
http://www.ktvu.com/news/4277269-story
2 Investigates found records where an inspector chose to issue "hand written" notices to the hotel's manager, rather than issue an official violation, but Oakland's Director of Building and Planning, Rachel Flynn, defended her inspector's actions.
OAKLAND, Calif. (KTVU) - People who live at the Empyrean Towers in downtown Oakland say problems threatening their health and safety continue to plague the hotel after a KTVU investigation in February and numerous visits from city code enforcement inspectors since then.
The conditions have some housing advocates calling for Oakland to take legal action against the owners of the property.
In February, attorneys with the non-profit Eviction Defense Center documented a number of problems at the Empyrean Towers with cell phone video of broken doors in the common bathrooms, cracked windows, faulty plumbing and incomplete repair jobs.
One of the videos revealed the doors to some vacant rooms at the hotel had been nailed shut.
Attorney Amy Sekany, who's representing a number of tenants at the Empyrean Towers, returned to the hotel after 2 Investigates documented unsafe and unsanitary conditions in January.
"To come back and to find out that just walking the building myself, there are all these terrible conditions still in place? It's just really disturbing," said Sekany.
Some of the problems found by KTVU, including holes in the walls and garbage in the hallways, have been fixed, but tenants say many other issues remain.
Notices of violation
Oakland code enforcement issued 20 notices of violation, or NOV's, to the Empyrean Towers over a couple of days in late February, according to documents obtained by KTVU through the California Public Records Act.
Inspectors documented damaged smoke detectors, broken faucets, cracked windows and more than 90 other violations.
Those NOV's start a clock, giving a property owner 30 days to make repairs before facing fines. In some cases, code enforcement officials say Empyrean Towers managers fixed the problems, but others issues have yet to be resolved.
2 Investigates found records where an inspector chose to issue "hand written" notices to the hotel's manager, rather than issue an official violation, but Oakland's Director of Building and Planning, Rachel Flynn, defended her inspector's actions.
"They're going in, apartment by apartment, to get everything up to code and it's actually working," said Flynn. "So, this is one of those success stories where it came to our attention, we have knowledge about how to get a building up to code and maintain it properly and we have a cooperative owner who's allowing us in."
The owner, identified by the city as Alice Tse, refused to speak with KTVU when first contacted her in January. Her attorney has not returned several phone calls and emails requesting comment since then.
Records show the city issued only four violation notices to the hotel in all of 2014. Complaint logs indicate inspectors sometimes chose not to write up official notices when they found violations.
"If we send a notice of violation, or NOV, they have 30 days to address it. So, if we have someone who's cooperative and they're going to address it in a week or two, why send an NOV?" said Flynn.
Tenants frustrated
Maria Anast and her husband, Don, are among the tenants who have been most vocal about ongoing problems at the Empyrean Towers. Despite managers making some repairs to their room, such as fixing a broken window, Anast isn't satisfied with the city's response to her complaints.
"I would like to see one fine for one room? [The inspector has] been in this room at least ten times. No fines. Nothing's done," said Anast.
Code enforcement inspectors could not tell KTVU whether any fines have been issued to the owner of the hotel.
Tenants told KTVU some of the repairs that have been made were incomplete or poorly done.
"It's like putting a band aid over a gash," said single mom, Kia'Ora Henson.
Henson and her son, Nehemiah, say they've been living in a small room at the hotel about seven months. They showed 2 Investigates how they have to use a can to prop open a broken window frame.
The seven story hotel's elevator also remains off limits to tenants, causing the most trouble for elderly residents such as 81 year-old Katherine Bergman, who lives on the fourth floor.
"I fell!" said Bergman. "I fell three weeks ago. I was sore for three weeks."
The frustration tenants are feeling is nothing new. In 2011, federal authorities arrested the hotel's former owner, Richard Singer, who later admitted to paying someone to try to burn down the building, which was already the subject of numerous complaints and lawsuits.
Inspections continue
An inspector returned to the Empyrean Towers on March 27. The inspector, Gene Martinelli, declined an interview, but told KTVU's Eric Rasmussen he was following up on complaints and that he had "an entire floor" to inspect.
Rasmussen asked why no fines had been issued to the hotel owners, despite repeated violations. "There's reasons for it and they're good reasons," said Martinelli, who did not elaborate.
After the inspection, which lasted more than two hours, Martinelli told KTVU the hotel managers are "moving in the right direction."
Some tenants are not convinced.
"They're just doing enough to get by," said Anast. "To satisfy [the inspector]."
Sekany wants to see the city take over the building.
"We would like to see is a receivership put in place here, so a third party could step in and help facilitate the repairs, take control of the building," said Sekany.
Code enforcement managers warn, the situation is "complicated."
"Say we condemn the building," said Flynn. "Where are those families going to go? Then we hear about that. 'City puts 50 families on the street.' And we don't want to do that."
April 2015
2 Investigates found records where an inspector chose to issue "hand written" notices to the hotel's manager, rather than issue an official violation, but Oakland's Director of Building and Planning, Rachel Flynn, defended her inspector's actions.
OAKLAND, Calif. (KTVU) - People who live at the Empyrean Towers in downtown Oakland say problems threatening their health and safety continue to plague the hotel after a KTVU investigation in February and numerous visits from city code enforcement inspectors since then.
The conditions have some housing advocates calling for Oakland to take legal action against the owners of the property.
In February, attorneys with the non-profit Eviction Defense Center documented a number of problems at the Empyrean Towers with cell phone video of broken doors in the common bathrooms, cracked windows, faulty plumbing and incomplete repair jobs.
One of the videos revealed the doors to some vacant rooms at the hotel had been nailed shut.
Attorney Amy Sekany, who's representing a number of tenants at the Empyrean Towers, returned to the hotel after 2 Investigates documented unsafe and unsanitary conditions in January.
"To come back and to find out that just walking the building myself, there are all these terrible conditions still in place? It's just really disturbing," said Sekany.
Some of the problems found by KTVU, including holes in the walls and garbage in the hallways, have been fixed, but tenants say many other issues remain.
Notices of violation
Oakland code enforcement issued 20 notices of violation, or NOV's, to the Empyrean Towers over a couple of days in late February, according to documents obtained by KTVU through the California Public Records Act.
Inspectors documented damaged smoke detectors, broken faucets, cracked windows and more than 90 other violations.
Those NOV's start a clock, giving a property owner 30 days to make repairs before facing fines. In some cases, code enforcement officials say Empyrean Towers managers fixed the problems, but others issues have yet to be resolved.
2 Investigates found records where an inspector chose to issue "hand written" notices to the hotel's manager, rather than issue an official violation, but Oakland's Director of Building and Planning, Rachel Flynn, defended her inspector's actions.
"They're going in, apartment by apartment, to get everything up to code and it's actually working," said Flynn. "So, this is one of those success stories where it came to our attention, we have knowledge about how to get a building up to code and maintain it properly and we have a cooperative owner who's allowing us in."
The owner, identified by the city as Alice Tse, refused to speak with KTVU when first contacted her in January. Her attorney has not returned several phone calls and emails requesting comment since then.
Records show the city issued only four violation notices to the hotel in all of 2014. Complaint logs indicate inspectors sometimes chose not to write up official notices when they found violations.
"If we send a notice of violation, or NOV, they have 30 days to address it. So, if we have someone who's cooperative and they're going to address it in a week or two, why send an NOV?" said Flynn.
Tenants frustrated
Maria Anast and her husband, Don, are among the tenants who have been most vocal about ongoing problems at the Empyrean Towers. Despite managers making some repairs to their room, such as fixing a broken window, Anast isn't satisfied with the city's response to her complaints.
"I would like to see one fine for one room? [The inspector has] been in this room at least ten times. No fines. Nothing's done," said Anast.
Code enforcement inspectors could not tell KTVU whether any fines have been issued to the owner of the hotel.
Tenants told KTVU some of the repairs that have been made were incomplete or poorly done.
"It's like putting a band aid over a gash," said single mom, Kia'Ora Henson.
Henson and her son, Nehemiah, say they've been living in a small room at the hotel about seven months. They showed 2 Investigates how they have to use a can to prop open a broken window frame.
The seven story hotel's elevator also remains off limits to tenants, causing the most trouble for elderly residents such as 81 year-old Katherine Bergman, who lives on the fourth floor.
"I fell!" said Bergman. "I fell three weeks ago. I was sore for three weeks."
The frustration tenants are feeling is nothing new. In 2011, federal authorities arrested the hotel's former owner, Richard Singer, who later admitted to paying someone to try to burn down the building, which was already the subject of numerous complaints and lawsuits.
Inspections continue
An inspector returned to the Empyrean Towers on March 27. The inspector, Gene Martinelli, declined an interview, but told KTVU's Eric Rasmussen he was following up on complaints and that he had "an entire floor" to inspect.
Rasmussen asked why no fines had been issued to the hotel owners, despite repeated violations. "There's reasons for it and they're good reasons," said Martinelli, who did not elaborate.
After the inspection, which lasted more than two hours, Martinelli told KTVU the hotel managers are "moving in the right direction."
Some tenants are not convinced.
"They're just doing enough to get by," said Anast. "To satisfy [the inspector]."
Sekany wants to see the city take over the building.
"We would like to see is a receivership put in place here, so a third party could step in and help facilitate the repairs, take control of the building," said Sekany.
Code enforcement managers warn, the situation is "complicated."
"Say we condemn the building," said Flynn. "Where are those families going to go? Then we hear about that. 'City puts 50 families on the street.' And we don't want to do that."
148 City of Oakland - Empyrean Towers gets paint and art, while electric problems and holes in walls and ceilings remain.
Oakland: Changes coming to troubled residential hotel
March 2016
http://www.mercurynews.com/2016/03/24/oakland-changes-coming-to-troubled-residential-hotel/
OAKLAND — At long last, change is afoot at one of Oakland’s most troubled residential hotels.
This month, a U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge approved the sale of Empyrean Towers to a local nonprofit planning a costly makeover of the decaying 96-unit building into livable affordable housing.
For the most part, the days when 344 13th St. was crawling with rats and bedbugs and street people slept in hallways and common rooms are gone. Even so, tenants of the downtown building on Wednesday complained about holes in ceilings and floors, electrical problems and the broken elevator in the seven-story building.
“It was hell for a while,” said 35-year-old Brandon Gunn, who lives with his wife and 10-month-old son on the third floor. “Don’t get me wrong; it’s gotten better.”
The Empyrean, formerly known as the Menlo Hotel, is one of several single room occupancy hotels in downtown Oakland that are part of the city’s affordable housing stock. A recent survey showed that there are 1,224 SRO rooms downtown, said city spokeswoman Karen Boyd in an email.
Conditions in the Empyrean’s three towers and its poor management have been the source of complaints for years. In 2011, landlord Richard Singer, of Tiburon, was sentenced to 27 months in prison after admitting to trying to hire an arsonist to torch the building.
Last year, Oakland City Attorney Barbara Parker sued the new owner of Empyrean, Alice Tse, based on code violations and asked for a court order to require Tse to comply with building codes. The city also last year temporarily evacuated the building due to contaminated water supply.
Tse later declared bankruptcy, and Alameda County Superior Court turned the property over to a trustee, which today serves as its manager. Tse’s lawyer, Steve Whitworth, did not return a call seeking comment.
On Wednesday, workers were hanging art in the newly-furnished and painted lobby. More workers were in the stairwell, painting the hallways a light blue color. Outside on 13th Street, three-year tenant Maria Anast said the work amounted to window-dressing. Step inside the units, and you can find holes in ceilings and residents who walk up flights of stairs because the elevator is broken, she said.
“It’s not even a Band-Aid; they are just painting over things,” Anast said, as a homeless man left feces near the building’s entrance. “This is a Third World country, this building. It’s a joke; it’s a sad, sad joke.”
On the third floor, Gunn pointed to his broken bath tub and said his power frequently goes out because he shares a circuit breaker with three other units.
“Every time I want to cook, (with a hot plate or toaster) I have to knock on the neighbor’s door” to make sure they aren’t cooking, Gunn said.
Anne Omura of Oakland’s Eviction Defense Center has represented the tenants and is optimistic things will change once Berkeley-based nonprofit Resources for Community Development takes over.
“We have our fingers crossed,” Omura said. “If it does go through, it’s nothing short of amazing.”
The March 4 ruling by Judge Roger Efremsky allows RCD the option to purchase the building and maintain it as affordable housing for 55 years, keeping low-cost housing in a city that badly needs it.
Carolyn Bookhart, RCD’s director of housing development, said they plan on converting all the units to new studio and one-bedroom apartments with kitchens and bathrooms. Most of the rooms do not have bathrooms and none have kitchens.
It’s a herculean face-lift: the building is in need of a new elevator and repairs to the plumbing, electrical and heating systems, Bookhart said. She estimates the construction cost at $10 million; the building’s price tag is $4.5 million.
The nonprofit is currently raising money to buy the building and finish the project, she said. The purchase agreement is in effect until Oct. 15. At half occupancy, Bookhart believes it can work on the building without displacing current residents, she said. Work will begin in spring 2017; the grand reopening is set for summer 2018.
Parker, the city attorney, called the bankruptcy court ruling a “landmark decision.”
“The court’s order makes it possible to ensure that this property is preserved as part of Oakland’s critical low-income housing stock and that the horrendous conditions at the Empyrean Towers are remedied,” she said in a statement.
David DeBolt covers Oakland. Contact him at 510-208-6453. Follow him at Twitter.com/daviddebolt.
March 2016
http://www.mercurynews.com/2016/03/24/oakland-changes-coming-to-troubled-residential-hotel/
OAKLAND — At long last, change is afoot at one of Oakland’s most troubled residential hotels.
This month, a U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge approved the sale of Empyrean Towers to a local nonprofit planning a costly makeover of the decaying 96-unit building into livable affordable housing.
For the most part, the days when 344 13th St. was crawling with rats and bedbugs and street people slept in hallways and common rooms are gone. Even so, tenants of the downtown building on Wednesday complained about holes in ceilings and floors, electrical problems and the broken elevator in the seven-story building.
“It was hell for a while,” said 35-year-old Brandon Gunn, who lives with his wife and 10-month-old son on the third floor. “Don’t get me wrong; it’s gotten better.”
The Empyrean, formerly known as the Menlo Hotel, is one of several single room occupancy hotels in downtown Oakland that are part of the city’s affordable housing stock. A recent survey showed that there are 1,224 SRO rooms downtown, said city spokeswoman Karen Boyd in an email.
Conditions in the Empyrean’s three towers and its poor management have been the source of complaints for years. In 2011, landlord Richard Singer, of Tiburon, was sentenced to 27 months in prison after admitting to trying to hire an arsonist to torch the building.
Last year, Oakland City Attorney Barbara Parker sued the new owner of Empyrean, Alice Tse, based on code violations and asked for a court order to require Tse to comply with building codes. The city also last year temporarily evacuated the building due to contaminated water supply.
Tse later declared bankruptcy, and Alameda County Superior Court turned the property over to a trustee, which today serves as its manager. Tse’s lawyer, Steve Whitworth, did not return a call seeking comment.
On Wednesday, workers were hanging art in the newly-furnished and painted lobby. More workers were in the stairwell, painting the hallways a light blue color. Outside on 13th Street, three-year tenant Maria Anast said the work amounted to window-dressing. Step inside the units, and you can find holes in ceilings and residents who walk up flights of stairs because the elevator is broken, she said.
“It’s not even a Band-Aid; they are just painting over things,” Anast said, as a homeless man left feces near the building’s entrance. “This is a Third World country, this building. It’s a joke; it’s a sad, sad joke.”
On the third floor, Gunn pointed to his broken bath tub and said his power frequently goes out because he shares a circuit breaker with three other units.
“Every time I want to cook, (with a hot plate or toaster) I have to knock on the neighbor’s door” to make sure they aren’t cooking, Gunn said.
Anne Omura of Oakland’s Eviction Defense Center has represented the tenants and is optimistic things will change once Berkeley-based nonprofit Resources for Community Development takes over.
“We have our fingers crossed,” Omura said. “If it does go through, it’s nothing short of amazing.”
The March 4 ruling by Judge Roger Efremsky allows RCD the option to purchase the building and maintain it as affordable housing for 55 years, keeping low-cost housing in a city that badly needs it.
Carolyn Bookhart, RCD’s director of housing development, said they plan on converting all the units to new studio and one-bedroom apartments with kitchens and bathrooms. Most of the rooms do not have bathrooms and none have kitchens.
It’s a herculean face-lift: the building is in need of a new elevator and repairs to the plumbing, electrical and heating systems, Bookhart said. She estimates the construction cost at $10 million; the building’s price tag is $4.5 million.
The nonprofit is currently raising money to buy the building and finish the project, she said. The purchase agreement is in effect until Oct. 15. At half occupancy, Bookhart believes it can work on the building without displacing current residents, she said. Work will begin in spring 2017; the grand reopening is set for summer 2018.
Parker, the city attorney, called the bankruptcy court ruling a “landmark decision.”
“The court’s order makes it possible to ensure that this property is preserved as part of Oakland’s critical low-income housing stock and that the horrendous conditions at the Empyrean Towers are remedied,” she said in a statement.
David DeBolt covers Oakland. Contact him at 510-208-6453. Follow him at Twitter.com/daviddebolt.
147 City of Oakland - Empyrean Towers Tenants sickened by coliform bacteria contimination
2 Investigates: Displaced tenants of troubled hotel await water test results
http://www.ktvu.com/news/4593168-story
OAKLAND, Calif. (KTVU) - Tenants in a seven-story residential hotel remained out of their homes Friday while city inspectors await the test results of water samples taken from the building.
On Thursday, Oakland code enforcement red tagged the hotel, deeming it unsafe. East Bay Municipal Water District investigators found contamination from coliform bacteria in one of the pipes.
It's the latest problem at the downtown property since 2 Investigates began looking into tenants' complaints in January.
"The plan is to go have a plumber come through the system and see where the contamination is coming from," said City of Oakland inspector Gene Martinelli on Friday morning.
Later in the day, Martinelli told KTVU stagnant water found in the pipes running through a vacant office on the first floor of the building might be a potential cause of the contamination.
Until water samples from the building get a clean bill of health, management of the Empyrean Towers agreed to pay for displaced residents to stay a Motel 6 in Oakland, about seven miles away. Crews flushed the system of pipes on Friday and more test results were expected as soon as Saturday.
"Traumatic, scary, unbearable," is how tenant Lydia Hamilton described the experience of suddenly being forced out of her home. Hamilton is among several residents who said they became sick from drinking the water at the hotel in the last week.
Steve Whitworth, attorney for the Empyrean Towers owner, Alice Tse, e-mailed a statement to KTVU Friday morning:
"The Empyrean Towers Management remains and has been committed to the welfare of all law abiding, lawfully residing tenants at 344 13th Street Oakland California. Working with Oakland and the City Attorney Office we were / are happy to provide temporary shelter at a local Motel, a temporary Per Diem for each tenant, and transportation to all tenants displaced by this unfortunate event. Empyrean Towers looks forward to the tenants returning to their residences as soon as possible."
Other residents, such as Curtis Davis, who depend on the hotel for basic shelter, aren't satisfied.
"This constant battle of people homeless, people sick? It's frustrating and ridiculous," said Davis.
http://www.ktvu.com/news/4593168-story
OAKLAND, Calif. (KTVU) - Tenants in a seven-story residential hotel remained out of their homes Friday while city inspectors await the test results of water samples taken from the building.
On Thursday, Oakland code enforcement red tagged the hotel, deeming it unsafe. East Bay Municipal Water District investigators found contamination from coliform bacteria in one of the pipes.
It's the latest problem at the downtown property since 2 Investigates began looking into tenants' complaints in January.
"The plan is to go have a plumber come through the system and see where the contamination is coming from," said City of Oakland inspector Gene Martinelli on Friday morning.
Later in the day, Martinelli told KTVU stagnant water found in the pipes running through a vacant office on the first floor of the building might be a potential cause of the contamination.
Until water samples from the building get a clean bill of health, management of the Empyrean Towers agreed to pay for displaced residents to stay a Motel 6 in Oakland, about seven miles away. Crews flushed the system of pipes on Friday and more test results were expected as soon as Saturday.
"Traumatic, scary, unbearable," is how tenant Lydia Hamilton described the experience of suddenly being forced out of her home. Hamilton is among several residents who said they became sick from drinking the water at the hotel in the last week.
Steve Whitworth, attorney for the Empyrean Towers owner, Alice Tse, e-mailed a statement to KTVU Friday morning:
"The Empyrean Towers Management remains and has been committed to the welfare of all law abiding, lawfully residing tenants at 344 13th Street Oakland California. Working with Oakland and the City Attorney Office we were / are happy to provide temporary shelter at a local Motel, a temporary Per Diem for each tenant, and transportation to all tenants displaced by this unfortunate event. Empyrean Towers looks forward to the tenants returning to their residences as soon as possible."
Other residents, such as Curtis Davis, who depend on the hotel for basic shelter, aren't satisfied.
"This constant battle of people homeless, people sick? It's frustrating and ridiculous," said Davis.
146 City of Oakland - Empyrean Towers Tenants - 2+ years later are still waiting for safe living conditions
Empyrean Towers in Oakland a step closer to rehab: 2 Investigates
March 2017
http://www.ktvu.com/news/234658169-story
OAKLAND (KTVU) -- More than two years after 2 Investigates first exposed unsanitary and unsafe conditions at the trouble Empyrean Towers hotel in Oakland, the property is now one step closer to being rehabilitated.
The City Council on Tuesday night approved a resolution giving the city authorization to negotiate a deal to have the property deemed a historical site, through the California State Historic Preservation Officer (SHPO). That would free up funds as part of the rehabilitation process.
According to the proposal, “the purpose of entering into the Agreement is to minimize, reduce or avoid adverse effects on the historic building” while it is being rehabilitated and eventually sold to a non-profit that plans to turn it into affordable housing.
Last March, a bankruptcy judge approved the potential sale of the property to the Berkeley-based affording housing non-profit group Resources for Community Development (RCD), paving the way for what tenants and their attorneys hope is reform at the hotel.
Part of the court’s decision requires that the building is maintained as affordable housing for at least 55 years.
But the building that some tenants called a “nightmare” is still far from a dream. 2 Investigates visited the Empyrean Towers on Wednesday to find holes in the walls haven’t been fixed, and the elevator is still not functioning.
Resident Katherine Bergman, 83, says she is forced to climb flights of stairs to her home. And due to faulty plumbing, Bergman says she resorted to bathing with baby wipes during cold snaps.
2 Investigates first exposed dangerous and unsanitary conditions at the Empyrean Towers more than two years ago. Uncover camera footage revealed fire damage, broken toilets, missing smoke detectors, and uncollected garbage among the problems on a long list of complaints reported by tenants.
In March, it already appeared that a major facelift was well underway. At that time, the building had new paint, light fixtures, a heating system and hot water heater.
Nearly two years ago, tenants were forced out of the building by a serious health scare when investigators found coliform bacteria in the water in one of the pipes. Some residents told 2 Investigates by the time it was discovered they already drank the water and had gotten sick.
The City of Oakland filed suit against the owners of Empyrean Towers in April 2015, accusing management of illegal evictions, failing to make repairs and for creating a public nuisance. Inspectors documented dozens of problems including broken windows, faulty plumbing, and an elevator that was frequently out of service.
At that time, owner Alice Tse agreed to a deal that would provide $500,000 for a long list of overdue repairs. But shortly after, Tse had filed for bankruptcy and control of the property was handed over to a Chapter 11 trustee.
Lina Torio is an agent for the trustee overseeing the property while it's in transition. She says the elevator would cost $3 million to repair and her group is not authorized to spend that money during the bankruptcy.
Torio showed 2 Investigates a new water tank installed for the entire building and other upgrades. She said it’s not the trustee’s job to renovate, but rather keep the property safe until the ownership transfer is finalized. That is expected to happen in March 2017.
KTVU's 2 Investigates team was honored to receive a 2016 Edward R. Murrow Award for continuing coverage of the dangerous and unsanitary conditions at an Empyrean Towers.
Landlords show up to support embattled landlord of Oakland's Empyrean Towers:
2 Investigates
May 2017
http://www.ktvu.com/news/2-investigates/257674523-story
Dozens of volunteers gathered in front of Oakland City Hall on Friday to show support for a local landlord at the center of a legal fight over the unsanitary conditions at a residence hotel she used to own.
The city is suing Alice Tse over the conditions at the Empyrean Towers hotel after a series of 2 Investigates reports uncovered the unsafe conditions inside. Tse’s supporters say the city is treating the property owner unfairly.
“If this thing happened to Alice, it will happen on every property owner in the Bay Area,” said volunteer Alex Ko.
A crowd of about 30 people chanted in English and Chinese outside and carried signs, some saying “Alice is innocent,” before taking their protest inside City Hall.
Tse did not attend the rally herself, but for the first time her mother Jannny Tsui spoke publicly, through a translator, to defend her daughter.
“She says she doesn’t have money for living,” the translator said on behalf of Tsui. “She’s asking the questions ‘Why? What did I do wrong? What did my daughter do wrong?’”
Tsui said the city has seized some of her property as part of the legal claims against her daughter.
In 2015, the City of Oakland sued Tse and Empyrean Towers alleging years of code violations, illegal evictions, and even abuse of tenants. Later that year, a court-ordered receiver stepped in to run the day-to-day operations of the Empyrean Towers after a judge stripped control of the hotel from owners.
The move was one of the demands in the city’s lawsuit filed by City Attorney Barbara Parker. Parker's office credited 2 Investigates for exposing unsafe and unsanitary conditions at the property.
2 Investigates revealed video and pictures showing brown water in tenants’ sinks, holes in walls, broken doors in the common bathrooms, cracked windows, faulty plumbing, and incomplete repair jobs.
Cell phone video taken by an attorney representing some tenants revealed the doors to some vacant rooms at the hotel had been nailed shut.
When we asked Friday about the living conditions at Empyrean Towers, Tsui said her daughter was in the process of fixing the issues, but the city did not give Tse enough time. Although she could not provide proof, she said in some cases the tenants caused the damages themselves.
“The city already inspected it and the next week, they’d come back and it would be broken again,” Tsui said.
Friday’s protesters, some of who are landlords themselves, said they feared Tse’s case sets a dangerous precedent for all Bay Area landlords.
“We are afraid the government will do this to other owners too, and not giving them their fair chance” said Meina Young, a volunteer at the rally. “The government is trying to take over the property and that is not fair.”
In July 2015, Tse agreed to a deal that would have provided $500,000 to cover a long list of overdue repairs at Empyrean Towers. At the time, Tse also agreed not to oppose the decision to place the property into receivership. The funding and receivership ultimately fell through and Tse filed for bankruptcy that same month.
Last year, a federal bankruptcy judge approved the sale of the Empyrean Towers hotel to a Berkeley-based affordable housing non-profit group called Resources for Community Development (RCD), paving the way for what tenants and their attorneys hope is reform at the hotel.
2 Investigates reached out to Tse but did not receive a response before the time of publication. At a hearing in March, Tse also declined to speak to KTVU producers regarding the ongoing Empyrean Towers lawsuit with the city.
March 2017
http://www.ktvu.com/news/234658169-story
OAKLAND (KTVU) -- More than two years after 2 Investigates first exposed unsanitary and unsafe conditions at the trouble Empyrean Towers hotel in Oakland, the property is now one step closer to being rehabilitated.
The City Council on Tuesday night approved a resolution giving the city authorization to negotiate a deal to have the property deemed a historical site, through the California State Historic Preservation Officer (SHPO). That would free up funds as part of the rehabilitation process.
According to the proposal, “the purpose of entering into the Agreement is to minimize, reduce or avoid adverse effects on the historic building” while it is being rehabilitated and eventually sold to a non-profit that plans to turn it into affordable housing.
Last March, a bankruptcy judge approved the potential sale of the property to the Berkeley-based affording housing non-profit group Resources for Community Development (RCD), paving the way for what tenants and their attorneys hope is reform at the hotel.
Part of the court’s decision requires that the building is maintained as affordable housing for at least 55 years.
But the building that some tenants called a “nightmare” is still far from a dream. 2 Investigates visited the Empyrean Towers on Wednesday to find holes in the walls haven’t been fixed, and the elevator is still not functioning.
Resident Katherine Bergman, 83, says she is forced to climb flights of stairs to her home. And due to faulty plumbing, Bergman says she resorted to bathing with baby wipes during cold snaps.
2 Investigates first exposed dangerous and unsanitary conditions at the Empyrean Towers more than two years ago. Uncover camera footage revealed fire damage, broken toilets, missing smoke detectors, and uncollected garbage among the problems on a long list of complaints reported by tenants.
In March, it already appeared that a major facelift was well underway. At that time, the building had new paint, light fixtures, a heating system and hot water heater.
Nearly two years ago, tenants were forced out of the building by a serious health scare when investigators found coliform bacteria in the water in one of the pipes. Some residents told 2 Investigates by the time it was discovered they already drank the water and had gotten sick.
The City of Oakland filed suit against the owners of Empyrean Towers in April 2015, accusing management of illegal evictions, failing to make repairs and for creating a public nuisance. Inspectors documented dozens of problems including broken windows, faulty plumbing, and an elevator that was frequently out of service.
At that time, owner Alice Tse agreed to a deal that would provide $500,000 for a long list of overdue repairs. But shortly after, Tse had filed for bankruptcy and control of the property was handed over to a Chapter 11 trustee.
Lina Torio is an agent for the trustee overseeing the property while it's in transition. She says the elevator would cost $3 million to repair and her group is not authorized to spend that money during the bankruptcy.
Torio showed 2 Investigates a new water tank installed for the entire building and other upgrades. She said it’s not the trustee’s job to renovate, but rather keep the property safe until the ownership transfer is finalized. That is expected to happen in March 2017.
KTVU's 2 Investigates team was honored to receive a 2016 Edward R. Murrow Award for continuing coverage of the dangerous and unsanitary conditions at an Empyrean Towers.
Landlords show up to support embattled landlord of Oakland's Empyrean Towers:
2 Investigates
May 2017
http://www.ktvu.com/news/2-investigates/257674523-story
Dozens of volunteers gathered in front of Oakland City Hall on Friday to show support for a local landlord at the center of a legal fight over the unsanitary conditions at a residence hotel she used to own.
The city is suing Alice Tse over the conditions at the Empyrean Towers hotel after a series of 2 Investigates reports uncovered the unsafe conditions inside. Tse’s supporters say the city is treating the property owner unfairly.
“If this thing happened to Alice, it will happen on every property owner in the Bay Area,” said volunteer Alex Ko.
A crowd of about 30 people chanted in English and Chinese outside and carried signs, some saying “Alice is innocent,” before taking their protest inside City Hall.
Tse did not attend the rally herself, but for the first time her mother Jannny Tsui spoke publicly, through a translator, to defend her daughter.
“She says she doesn’t have money for living,” the translator said on behalf of Tsui. “She’s asking the questions ‘Why? What did I do wrong? What did my daughter do wrong?’”
Tsui said the city has seized some of her property as part of the legal claims against her daughter.
In 2015, the City of Oakland sued Tse and Empyrean Towers alleging years of code violations, illegal evictions, and even abuse of tenants. Later that year, a court-ordered receiver stepped in to run the day-to-day operations of the Empyrean Towers after a judge stripped control of the hotel from owners.
The move was one of the demands in the city’s lawsuit filed by City Attorney Barbara Parker. Parker's office credited 2 Investigates for exposing unsafe and unsanitary conditions at the property.
2 Investigates revealed video and pictures showing brown water in tenants’ sinks, holes in walls, broken doors in the common bathrooms, cracked windows, faulty plumbing, and incomplete repair jobs.
Cell phone video taken by an attorney representing some tenants revealed the doors to some vacant rooms at the hotel had been nailed shut.
When we asked Friday about the living conditions at Empyrean Towers, Tsui said her daughter was in the process of fixing the issues, but the city did not give Tse enough time. Although she could not provide proof, she said in some cases the tenants caused the damages themselves.
“The city already inspected it and the next week, they’d come back and it would be broken again,” Tsui said.
Friday’s protesters, some of who are landlords themselves, said they feared Tse’s case sets a dangerous precedent for all Bay Area landlords.
“We are afraid the government will do this to other owners too, and not giving them their fair chance” said Meina Young, a volunteer at the rally. “The government is trying to take over the property and that is not fair.”
In July 2015, Tse agreed to a deal that would have provided $500,000 to cover a long list of overdue repairs at Empyrean Towers. At the time, Tse also agreed not to oppose the decision to place the property into receivership. The funding and receivership ultimately fell through and Tse filed for bankruptcy that same month.
Last year, a federal bankruptcy judge approved the sale of the Empyrean Towers hotel to a Berkeley-based affordable housing non-profit group called Resources for Community Development (RCD), paving the way for what tenants and their attorneys hope is reform at the hotel.
2 Investigates reached out to Tse but did not receive a response before the time of publication. At a hearing in March, Tse also declined to speak to KTVU producers regarding the ongoing Empyrean Towers lawsuit with the city.
145 City of Oakland - Empyrean Towers Tenants also ignored by Bldg and Fire Inspectors
2 Investigates: Mounting problems, complaints at notorious Bay Area hotel
Feb 2015
OAKLAND, Calif. (KTVU) Fire damage, broken toilets, missing smoke detectors and uncollected garbage are just some of the problems on a long list of complaints reported by tenants of the Empyrean Towers in downtown Oakland, a KTVU investigation revealed.
http://www.ktvu.com/news/4156581-story
Inspection #1
https://s3.amazonaws.com/s3.documentcloud.org/documents/1569250/oct-14-fire-inspection-report.pdf
Inspection #2
https://s3.amazonaws.com/s3.documentcloud.org/documents/1569249/012315-reinspection.pdf
The seven-story building on 13th Street, formerly called The Menlo, has come under scrutiny before. In 2011, then-owner Richard Singer went to prison for paying someone to try to burn down the hotel in order to collect on the insurance.
Four years later, tenants and guests say many of the problems that plagued the hotel remain.
After reading scathing online reviews of the Empyrean Towers on several travel websites, KTVU's Eric Rasmussen booked a room at the hotel in January.
Upon checking in, an employee at the front desk said the elevator was broken. 2 Investigates recorded a number of holes in the walls while going up the stairs. Rasmussen also found garbage bags in several hallways.
On the seventh floor, a window leading to the fire escape had been nailed shut. An extension cord in the hallway appeared to be running power to one of the rooms.
After dark, Rasmussen needed a flashlight to navigate one of the stairwells where the lights were out.
A tenant shared cell phone video of a leaking ceiling in the lobby during rainy weather in December.
A last resort
A single mother and her two children say they moved into a room at the Empyrean Towers when they had nowhere else to turn. The mother, Nicol, says domestic abuse forced them out of their house.
At a rate of $260 a week, the family of three has no stove and must use a shared bathroom and shower in the hallway.
"Came into this room. Came into this hotel... and I cried. I did not know it was as bad as this," said Nicol. "When we first got here, my son took a shower and he said brown stuff was coming out of the water."
The family says heat in their room is intermittent. They say they've witnessed drug use in the hallways and say complaints to management are often ignored.
Nicol's daughter, "Dana," 16, says she's managed to keep straight A's in school, despite the cramped quarters.
"Sometimes when I want privacy, I go in the closet. I know it's ridiculous, but that's the only place I can go," she said. "I just hate it. It's so uncomfortable."
Tenants organizing
The Oakland non-profit Eviction Defense Center helped organize about 50 tenants of the Empyrean Towers to demand changes at the hotel.
At a meeting in January, residents complained about mold, missing smoke detectors and a rat infestation.
"Every floor has absolutely deplorable conditions, from top to bottom," said Eviction Defense attorney Amy Sekany. "I've heard rats running through the walls in the middle of the day."
Tenants made similar complaints and filed lawsuits in 2010. Around that time, the owner of the hotel, Richard Singer, hired someone to try to burn down the hotel, but the plan was interrupted by federal authorities and Singer was sentenced to prison for attempted arson.
Questions about ownership
In an email, Singer told KTVU he sold the hotel before going to prison in 2011. Documents show the property was purchased by a family trust, of which, Alice Tse is a member.
In a recent deposition, Tse denied she was the owner, but said she managed the property.
Tse blamed tenants for some of the damage. She also said some of the holes in the walls were left behind by firefighters responding to a fire at the hotel in July 2014.
When 2 Investigates tried to speak with Tse and her attorney in January, they declined to answer questions about the conditions at the hotel.
According to a lawsuit filed in 2014, Singer went on the payroll with Tse's realty company soon after he was released from prison. Singer also declined to speak to KTVU, but in an email, he denied any management or ownership interest in the Empyrean Towers.
Identifying problems
Records show fire inspectors with the City of Oakland have visited the Empyrean Towers at least five times since October 2014.
One inspection report found a long list of problems including those similar to the ones identified by 2 Investigates -- missing smoke detectors, sprinkler heads in need of repair and a blocked fire escape.
A re-inspection in January declared "no violations noted," but advocates for many tenants at the hotel insist more needs to be done.
"They've been crying out for a long time," said Sekany. "Something absolutely has to get done now."
Feb 2015
OAKLAND, Calif. (KTVU) Fire damage, broken toilets, missing smoke detectors and uncollected garbage are just some of the problems on a long list of complaints reported by tenants of the Empyrean Towers in downtown Oakland, a KTVU investigation revealed.
http://www.ktvu.com/news/4156581-story
Inspection #1
https://s3.amazonaws.com/s3.documentcloud.org/documents/1569250/oct-14-fire-inspection-report.pdf
Inspection #2
https://s3.amazonaws.com/s3.documentcloud.org/documents/1569249/012315-reinspection.pdf
The seven-story building on 13th Street, formerly called The Menlo, has come under scrutiny before. In 2011, then-owner Richard Singer went to prison for paying someone to try to burn down the hotel in order to collect on the insurance.
Four years later, tenants and guests say many of the problems that plagued the hotel remain.
After reading scathing online reviews of the Empyrean Towers on several travel websites, KTVU's Eric Rasmussen booked a room at the hotel in January.
Upon checking in, an employee at the front desk said the elevator was broken. 2 Investigates recorded a number of holes in the walls while going up the stairs. Rasmussen also found garbage bags in several hallways.
On the seventh floor, a window leading to the fire escape had been nailed shut. An extension cord in the hallway appeared to be running power to one of the rooms.
After dark, Rasmussen needed a flashlight to navigate one of the stairwells where the lights were out.
A tenant shared cell phone video of a leaking ceiling in the lobby during rainy weather in December.
A last resort
A single mother and her two children say they moved into a room at the Empyrean Towers when they had nowhere else to turn. The mother, Nicol, says domestic abuse forced them out of their house.
At a rate of $260 a week, the family of three has no stove and must use a shared bathroom and shower in the hallway.
"Came into this room. Came into this hotel... and I cried. I did not know it was as bad as this," said Nicol. "When we first got here, my son took a shower and he said brown stuff was coming out of the water."
The family says heat in their room is intermittent. They say they've witnessed drug use in the hallways and say complaints to management are often ignored.
Nicol's daughter, "Dana," 16, says she's managed to keep straight A's in school, despite the cramped quarters.
"Sometimes when I want privacy, I go in the closet. I know it's ridiculous, but that's the only place I can go," she said. "I just hate it. It's so uncomfortable."
Tenants organizing
The Oakland non-profit Eviction Defense Center helped organize about 50 tenants of the Empyrean Towers to demand changes at the hotel.
At a meeting in January, residents complained about mold, missing smoke detectors and a rat infestation.
"Every floor has absolutely deplorable conditions, from top to bottom," said Eviction Defense attorney Amy Sekany. "I've heard rats running through the walls in the middle of the day."
Tenants made similar complaints and filed lawsuits in 2010. Around that time, the owner of the hotel, Richard Singer, hired someone to try to burn down the hotel, but the plan was interrupted by federal authorities and Singer was sentenced to prison for attempted arson.
Questions about ownership
In an email, Singer told KTVU he sold the hotel before going to prison in 2011. Documents show the property was purchased by a family trust, of which, Alice Tse is a member.
In a recent deposition, Tse denied she was the owner, but said she managed the property.
Tse blamed tenants for some of the damage. She also said some of the holes in the walls were left behind by firefighters responding to a fire at the hotel in July 2014.
When 2 Investigates tried to speak with Tse and her attorney in January, they declined to answer questions about the conditions at the hotel.
According to a lawsuit filed in 2014, Singer went on the payroll with Tse's realty company soon after he was released from prison. Singer also declined to speak to KTVU, but in an email, he denied any management or ownership interest in the Empyrean Towers.
Identifying problems
Records show fire inspectors with the City of Oakland have visited the Empyrean Towers at least five times since October 2014.
One inspection report found a long list of problems including those similar to the ones identified by 2 Investigates -- missing smoke detectors, sprinkler heads in need of repair and a blocked fire escape.
A re-inspection in January declared "no violations noted," but advocates for many tenants at the hotel insist more needs to be done.
"They've been crying out for a long time," said Sekany. "Something absolutely has to get done now."
144 City of Oakland - Mass evictions at Oakland’s Empyrean Towers
Mass evictions at Oakland’s Empyrean Towers
December 2014
http://sfbayview.com/2014/12/mass-evictions-at-oaklands-empyrean-towers/
Oakland – Many of the residents of Empyrean Towers are being bullied and tossed out of their housing with eviction notices served by the management company called Innovistech Realty Co.
The Empyrean Towers, located in downtown Oakland at 344 13th St., used to be known as the Hotel Menlo and was owned by millionaire Tiburon resident Richard Singer. Singer landed in prison a few years ago after getting caught by the FBI in a sting operation for trying to hire an arsonist to burn down the occupied hotel as part of an insurance scam.
In August 2011, Singer was sentenced to 27 months in prison, fined $60,000 and received three years’ probation after his release from prison. It was an employee of Singer named Samuel Manning who worked with the FBI in a sting operation to nail Singer for the arson scam, after Manning faced charges for embezzling the Girl Scouts out of more than $50,000. Manning sought reduced charges against himself in return for helping the feds go after Singer for the arson scam.
Before he went to prison, Singer and the company that used to manage the hotel, known as RMD Services, were also sued by many of the residents because of slum-like conditions at the hotel. Singer has already been released from prison for the arson scam and is back in business buying and selling properties.
Fast forward a few years later, and the Hotel Menlo has allegedly been renovated and renamed the Empyrean Towers, and the owner-managers have been renting out rooms for $79 a night to a variety of people from all walks of life.
Others reside there as permanent month to month residents, and according to tenants facing eviction it is those tenants who are being run out of the building with evictions recently. Twenty or more residents have been facing eviction since a fire occurred in the building last July from a lit cigarette, tenants say.
Many of the residents of Empyrean Towers are being bullied and tossed out of their housing with eviction notices served by the management company called Innovistech Realty Co.
Additionally, according to public records with “corporation wiki,” Richard Singer has partnered with real estate broker Alice Tse to own and manage the building through Empyrean Towers LLC and Innovistech Realty Co.
As a real estate broker, Alice Tse has been buying properties for Singer for a number of years and she called me a few times around the beginning of 2014.
Over the phone Alice Tse stated a few times that she was buying properties for Singer, and that she was very concerned about Singer’s activities. Then on Feb. 21, 2014, I received a strange email from Alice Tse (alicetsesf@gmail.com) that said: “I have a new fraud case committed by Richard Singer who attempted to burn down the Menlo. Please call me at 650-526-2968 – Alice.”
I tried calling a few times but Alice did not respond to my call, and I wondered what happened. Only lately did I learn that she is partners at the Empyrean Towers with Richard Singer.
I received a strange email from Alice Tse (alicetsesf@gmail.com) that said: “I have a new fraud case committed by Richard Singer who attempted to burn down the Menlo. Please call me at 650-526-2968 – Alice.”
Recently evicted tenant Andrea Polega told me that among the problems she faced living there is that the sink in her room did not have a “U pipe,” and she had to keep a bucket under the sink to catch the water every time she used it. She had to pay $210 a week to stay there until management forced her out of her housing.
On Nov. 25, Andrea contacted me and said: “I am a tenant at Empyrean who is being kicked out at this very second after having a money order returned to me that was in their possession for more than 24 hours. They returned it at 11 a.m. telling me to be out by noon.
“This is directly following my physical incapacitation in the form of a ruptured Achilles tendon, which was directly caused by their negligence. I am on crutches in a six-story walkup and cannot go up or down the stairs unassisted, let alone move my belongings this way.
“At 2 p.m. they returned with police. I will be charged with trespassing if I do not leave. I have nowhere to go. I would be more than happy to go on record for any future articles against these bastards or any other media outlets to gain justice.”
On Nov. 26, I was advised by the Eviction Defense Center that they were assisting Andrea, they had extensive interaction with her while she was being evicted, and she is currently safe.
According to tenant Don Fisher: “The male resident manager, named Royce, beat up Andrea’s boyfriend, Donald, because he was sleeping in the lobby waiting for someone to come and get him and his girlfriend. I believe you are aware of the couple that Luis May kicked out, right after refusing to accept their rent payment.”
“Donald went to the hospital and Royce went to jail. If you can assist, I need to know who to contact to get a restraining order or similar relief to get this manager out of the hotel. Many people are now worried about being treated in the same manner.”
“There was blood from the floors to the doors from this, and Royce’s wife or girlfriend made threatening overtures to Maria. Maria asked why Royce simply did not call OPD and I had to intervene,” Don Fisher said.
Management of the Empyrean Towers has declined to reply to my requests for an interview in regards to the violence and evictions involving management at the building.
Additional information reveals how hard it is for the residents of Empyrean Towers. According to Towers website, there is no guarantee that the elevator of the seven-story building is available to the residents. The residents all have to pay in advance online before moving into the building and do not know what they are getting into until they move in.
Management of the Empyrean Towers has declined to reply to my requests for an interview in regards to the violence and evictions involving management at the building.
Tenants Don Fisher and Maria Anast moved into the Empyrean Towers on Dec. 16, 2013, after being hit by hard times in a tough economy. They lost their footing in the world of the middle class in America and moved from San Francisco to Oakland for cheaper housing.
Now they are both on a fixed income, are very poor and receive around $300 a month each from general assistance. They also receive food stamp assistance to help get by. But by the third week of the month, they are both pretty much broke and are getting hungry. “We only get around $4 dollars a day to live on from food stamps and that’s not nearly enough to survive in Oakland,” said Maria.
They live in a small room with a bed, a TV, small refrigerator, microwave and a hot plate. They are lucky to have their own bathroom in comparison to many others who have shared bathrooms in the old seven-story building.
“Life is very hard on us now, and we do not feel safe living in this building. There are drug dealers, crack heads and prostitutes living on the upper floors. The cops are here all the time. The locks are flimsy on our doors, and we keep a baseball bat handy just in case someone breaks our door down to enter our apartment.
“There is no heat. They do not allow the tenants to use the elevator. The building has bed bugs, rats and is loaded with flies and gnats from the garbage piled up at the property. Our toilet does not work, the shower barely drips any water out of it when we try to take a shower, and the building lacks smoke detectors in most of the apartments,” Maria and Don both explained in exasperated tones.
“We have been good tenants since moving in, are quiet, have paid our rent on time, and we were SHOCKED to find an eviction notice posted on our door recently after management refused to accept our rent anymore,” they said.
Don and Maria filed a response as a way to fight against the eviction, and they need to find an attorney. Others facing eviction from the Empyrean Towers have sought assistance at the Eviction Defense Center near 16th and Telegraph Avenue.
Don and Maria said, “Around 20 people or more are facing eviction because management wants to bring in higher income tenants willing to pay $79 a night to stay at this building.”
Don used to be an officer in the Navy and later worked in the tech industry for years. Maria spent many years happily working in the hospitality industry. They are in their 50s, and they raised two kids who became adults, including a son who entered the Navy recently and a daughter who lives in Santa Cruz.
“We don’t know what we will do if we get evicted,” said Maria. “We are thinking about buying a van, but we are too broke to do so. We are also thinking about buying a tent if we lose our housing, but we do not know where people camp out when they are made homeless in Oakland,’’ Maria said.
Don and Maria said, “Around 20 people or more are facing eviction because management wants to bring in higher income tenants willing to pay $79 a night to stay at this building.”
The Eviction Defense Center is representing at least five residents from various units facing eviction at the Empyrean Towers, in addition to Don and Maria. Attorney Andrew Wolff will assist in defending the tenants.
Management at Empyrean Towers did not respond to my request for information about the evictions. The phone number for Innovistech Realty Co. reached the Sweden Hotel in San Francisco, and the staff there claim that Alice Tse sold the property.
Patricia Singer, Richard Singer’s wife, stated that she is divorced from Richard and does not want to comment on his activities regarding Empyrean Towers. She also declined to pass on his phone number.
Eviction attorney Johanna Kwasniewski stated that she had no comment regarding my many questions about 20 tenants or more allegedly facing eviction by Richard Singer and Alice Tse. Then she reconsidered and said that she would contact Empyrean Towers LLC to see if she were allowed to make any comments. I have not heard from her since that discussion days ago.
December 2014
http://sfbayview.com/2014/12/mass-evictions-at-oaklands-empyrean-towers/
Oakland – Many of the residents of Empyrean Towers are being bullied and tossed out of their housing with eviction notices served by the management company called Innovistech Realty Co.
The Empyrean Towers, located in downtown Oakland at 344 13th St., used to be known as the Hotel Menlo and was owned by millionaire Tiburon resident Richard Singer. Singer landed in prison a few years ago after getting caught by the FBI in a sting operation for trying to hire an arsonist to burn down the occupied hotel as part of an insurance scam.
In August 2011, Singer was sentenced to 27 months in prison, fined $60,000 and received three years’ probation after his release from prison. It was an employee of Singer named Samuel Manning who worked with the FBI in a sting operation to nail Singer for the arson scam, after Manning faced charges for embezzling the Girl Scouts out of more than $50,000. Manning sought reduced charges against himself in return for helping the feds go after Singer for the arson scam.
Before he went to prison, Singer and the company that used to manage the hotel, known as RMD Services, were also sued by many of the residents because of slum-like conditions at the hotel. Singer has already been released from prison for the arson scam and is back in business buying and selling properties.
Fast forward a few years later, and the Hotel Menlo has allegedly been renovated and renamed the Empyrean Towers, and the owner-managers have been renting out rooms for $79 a night to a variety of people from all walks of life.
Others reside there as permanent month to month residents, and according to tenants facing eviction it is those tenants who are being run out of the building with evictions recently. Twenty or more residents have been facing eviction since a fire occurred in the building last July from a lit cigarette, tenants say.
Many of the residents of Empyrean Towers are being bullied and tossed out of their housing with eviction notices served by the management company called Innovistech Realty Co.
Additionally, according to public records with “corporation wiki,” Richard Singer has partnered with real estate broker Alice Tse to own and manage the building through Empyrean Towers LLC and Innovistech Realty Co.
As a real estate broker, Alice Tse has been buying properties for Singer for a number of years and she called me a few times around the beginning of 2014.
Over the phone Alice Tse stated a few times that she was buying properties for Singer, and that she was very concerned about Singer’s activities. Then on Feb. 21, 2014, I received a strange email from Alice Tse (alicetsesf@gmail.com) that said: “I have a new fraud case committed by Richard Singer who attempted to burn down the Menlo. Please call me at 650-526-2968 – Alice.”
I tried calling a few times but Alice did not respond to my call, and I wondered what happened. Only lately did I learn that she is partners at the Empyrean Towers with Richard Singer.
I received a strange email from Alice Tse (alicetsesf@gmail.com) that said: “I have a new fraud case committed by Richard Singer who attempted to burn down the Menlo. Please call me at 650-526-2968 – Alice.”
Recently evicted tenant Andrea Polega told me that among the problems she faced living there is that the sink in her room did not have a “U pipe,” and she had to keep a bucket under the sink to catch the water every time she used it. She had to pay $210 a week to stay there until management forced her out of her housing.
On Nov. 25, Andrea contacted me and said: “I am a tenant at Empyrean who is being kicked out at this very second after having a money order returned to me that was in their possession for more than 24 hours. They returned it at 11 a.m. telling me to be out by noon.
“This is directly following my physical incapacitation in the form of a ruptured Achilles tendon, which was directly caused by their negligence. I am on crutches in a six-story walkup and cannot go up or down the stairs unassisted, let alone move my belongings this way.
“At 2 p.m. they returned with police. I will be charged with trespassing if I do not leave. I have nowhere to go. I would be more than happy to go on record for any future articles against these bastards or any other media outlets to gain justice.”
On Nov. 26, I was advised by the Eviction Defense Center that they were assisting Andrea, they had extensive interaction with her while she was being evicted, and she is currently safe.
According to tenant Don Fisher: “The male resident manager, named Royce, beat up Andrea’s boyfriend, Donald, because he was sleeping in the lobby waiting for someone to come and get him and his girlfriend. I believe you are aware of the couple that Luis May kicked out, right after refusing to accept their rent payment.”
“Donald went to the hospital and Royce went to jail. If you can assist, I need to know who to contact to get a restraining order or similar relief to get this manager out of the hotel. Many people are now worried about being treated in the same manner.”
“There was blood from the floors to the doors from this, and Royce’s wife or girlfriend made threatening overtures to Maria. Maria asked why Royce simply did not call OPD and I had to intervene,” Don Fisher said.
Management of the Empyrean Towers has declined to reply to my requests for an interview in regards to the violence and evictions involving management at the building.
Additional information reveals how hard it is for the residents of Empyrean Towers. According to Towers website, there is no guarantee that the elevator of the seven-story building is available to the residents. The residents all have to pay in advance online before moving into the building and do not know what they are getting into until they move in.
Management of the Empyrean Towers has declined to reply to my requests for an interview in regards to the violence and evictions involving management at the building.
Tenants Don Fisher and Maria Anast moved into the Empyrean Towers on Dec. 16, 2013, after being hit by hard times in a tough economy. They lost their footing in the world of the middle class in America and moved from San Francisco to Oakland for cheaper housing.
Now they are both on a fixed income, are very poor and receive around $300 a month each from general assistance. They also receive food stamp assistance to help get by. But by the third week of the month, they are both pretty much broke and are getting hungry. “We only get around $4 dollars a day to live on from food stamps and that’s not nearly enough to survive in Oakland,” said Maria.
They live in a small room with a bed, a TV, small refrigerator, microwave and a hot plate. They are lucky to have their own bathroom in comparison to many others who have shared bathrooms in the old seven-story building.
“Life is very hard on us now, and we do not feel safe living in this building. There are drug dealers, crack heads and prostitutes living on the upper floors. The cops are here all the time. The locks are flimsy on our doors, and we keep a baseball bat handy just in case someone breaks our door down to enter our apartment.
“There is no heat. They do not allow the tenants to use the elevator. The building has bed bugs, rats and is loaded with flies and gnats from the garbage piled up at the property. Our toilet does not work, the shower barely drips any water out of it when we try to take a shower, and the building lacks smoke detectors in most of the apartments,” Maria and Don both explained in exasperated tones.
“We have been good tenants since moving in, are quiet, have paid our rent on time, and we were SHOCKED to find an eviction notice posted on our door recently after management refused to accept our rent anymore,” they said.
Don and Maria filed a response as a way to fight against the eviction, and they need to find an attorney. Others facing eviction from the Empyrean Towers have sought assistance at the Eviction Defense Center near 16th and Telegraph Avenue.
Don and Maria said, “Around 20 people or more are facing eviction because management wants to bring in higher income tenants willing to pay $79 a night to stay at this building.”
Don used to be an officer in the Navy and later worked in the tech industry for years. Maria spent many years happily working in the hospitality industry. They are in their 50s, and they raised two kids who became adults, including a son who entered the Navy recently and a daughter who lives in Santa Cruz.
“We don’t know what we will do if we get evicted,” said Maria. “We are thinking about buying a van, but we are too broke to do so. We are also thinking about buying a tent if we lose our housing, but we do not know where people camp out when they are made homeless in Oakland,’’ Maria said.
Don and Maria said, “Around 20 people or more are facing eviction because management wants to bring in higher income tenants willing to pay $79 a night to stay at this building.”
The Eviction Defense Center is representing at least five residents from various units facing eviction at the Empyrean Towers, in addition to Don and Maria. Attorney Andrew Wolff will assist in defending the tenants.
Management at Empyrean Towers did not respond to my request for information about the evictions. The phone number for Innovistech Realty Co. reached the Sweden Hotel in San Francisco, and the staff there claim that Alice Tse sold the property.
Patricia Singer, Richard Singer’s wife, stated that she is divorced from Richard and does not want to comment on his activities regarding Empyrean Towers. She also declined to pass on his phone number.
Eviction attorney Johanna Kwasniewski stated that she had no comment regarding my many questions about 20 tenants or more allegedly facing eviction by Richard Singer and Alice Tse. Then she reconsidered and said that she would contact Empyrean Towers LLC to see if she were allowed to make any comments. I have not heard from her since that discussion days ago.
143 City of Oakland Bldg Inspector: I am surprised you are applying logics [sic] to the City Of Oakland.
Post-Ghost Ship: Despite mayor’s promises, Oakland city inspectors are telling residents to leave unpermitted spaces
June 12, 2017
http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/06/18/in-post-ghost-ship-oakland-city-tells-artists-to-leave-livework-spaces-despite-mayors-promises/
OAKLAND — Just over a month after a horrific fire ripped through an East Oakland warehouse, killing 36 people, Mayor Libby Schaaf made a promise that city staff would work cooperatively with property owners to make their buildings safe without evicting the artists who live there.
The artists received an eviction notice in the immediate aftermath of the deadly Ghost Ship fire on December 2, 2016. Aric Crabb/Bay Area News Group)
Instead, it appears city inspectors are doing just the opposite. In the months since the fire, they have issued inspection reports explicitly stating tenants cannot reside in the buildings, while offering only vague instructions on what violations the owners or tenants need to correct, or throwing up bureaucratic road blocks to getting work done. At the same time, tenants of cultural and entertainment venues have complained about a heavy-handed approach that has made it difficult to stay in business.
On Feb. 21, city staff identified 18 properties in a report to the City Council, saying it had already begun the process of reaching out to property owners to craft compliance plans — a list of work that needs to be done and a timeline in which to do — so the city could bring the spaces up to code. But Darin Ranelletti, the city’s interim director of planning and building, admitted this week that the city had not in fact entered into a compliance plan with the owners of any of those properties.
Schaaf said she was “disappointed” more property owners have decided not to cooperate with the city.
“The city can’t force that choice,” she said. “It can only make it easier.”
At the Castle Von Trapp, a live/work space in West Oakland identified in the February report, a city inspector wrote in an April 20 report: “Discontinue residential occupancy and obtain commercial tenant improvement zoning approval and permits.”
It was a de facto eviction order, although the building was not red-tagged as an immediate risk to the residents. The inspection report was a direct contradiction to Schaaf’s Jan. 11 order, which states city inspectors should “avoid displacement of any individuals residing or working in the property if that can be accomplished without imminent life safety risk.”
“They’ve done everything but make it easy,” said Tom Dolan, the architect who wrote the city’s live/work conversion ordinance in 1999 and who has been volunteering his time with Safer DIY Spaces. The nascent group emerged in the wake of the Dec. 2 fire to help people make immediate safety improvements to unpermitted live/work buildings.
“The city has not actually explicitly red-tagged spaces, they’ve just made it very difficult for them to be lived in,” Dolan said. “There really has been very little cooperation.”
frustrating for Chris Spiteri, one of the tenants in the Castle Von Trapp. Along with her housemates, Spiteri had been working for several months to assuage the fears of their landlords, who were waiting for guidance from the city. A building inspector walked through the space in January but didn’t send an official report back on the violations until April. In March, the tenants said their landlords gave them an ultimatum: Buy the building or leave. One of the landlords, Yeon Lee, did not respond to a request for comment.
“In that time, we very much tried to keep open communication with our landlords to figure out if there was a path for us to move forward that didn’t result in us vacating the building,” she said. “So, it was frustrating, I’m sure on their part as much as ours, to be waiting so long for direction from the city only to find out the result is, because it’s an unpermitted residence, they want us to leave.”
Ranelletti said the onus is on building owners to enter into a compliance plan with the city, and the delays in issuing an inspection report were not an excuse because the property owners were informed of the executive order at the time of the inspection, he said, and can get information on what needs to be done in other ways.
“The information is … often communicated at the site, in the office; they can come in, in person,” he said. “Ultimately, it’s the responsibility of the property owner.”
SiteA (Todd) redacted p2of13Since the council’s report, inspectors have visited other live/work spaces that aren’t on the list of 18. At one live/work space in the city’s Brooklyn Basin neighborhood that is home to about dozen people, an official inspection report read: “Improper occupancy — All residential and non-residential buildings or structure or portion thereof … shall be considered ‘Substandard and a Public Nuisance.'”
The report continues, “Obtain permits, inspections and approvals and restore to original usage.”
The last line is worrisome, said Todd, a tenant whose last name this newspaper is not using because it would identify the building and increase his risk of eviction. Reverting to the original usage would mean people can’t live there. Even if a change of use was granted, the building would have to be upgraded to comply with modern earthquake and building codes, which could cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.
“That’s a real problem,” Todd said. “That’s when things get expensive.”
When she went to the city to see what needed to be done, Sinuba said she felt as though she were talking to a wall.
“For people who are still grieving, just being given this paper that (says) everything is wrong and we won’t tell you what to do … it’s scary,” she said. “We don’t know what this means. We could be kicked out, but there is no where else to live anymore. Everything is too expensive.”
Schaaf admits the city’s work is not done. She meets with staff regularly to discuss ways to make the process better, she said.
“Every two weeks, we work on something new to make the spirit of this order more effective,” she said.
That includes providing inspection reports to tenants, when, in the past, they were only given to landlords. And, staff is working on ways to red tag only part of the building, if that can be done safely, where inspectors would have ordered the entire building shut down before the executive order was issued.
But the Ghost Ship fire’s fallout is affecting permitted spaces, too. At Qilombo, a legal community space in West Oakland, David Keenan, another member of the Safer DIY Spaces group, said he had to fight an invalid inspector’s report that said the space had people living in it, despite the fact there was no evidence of habitation. The inspector based his report on a complaint and verified it when he couldn’t access one room during an inspection.
After a lengthy email exchange, the inspector, Wing Loo, agreed to change the report, but he still cited them for a missing structural support pole for an interior loft structure, as well as problems with a rear staircase that was built before Qilombo occupied the space. When Keenan tried to pull a building permit to fix the staircase, he couldn’t, because of the existing violation.
“You admit that nobody lives there but verified (the habitability complaint) because of some other structural condition that needed to be repaired and because you did, you actually blocked me from fixing the thing you are citing,” Keenan said of his interaction with Loo. “I don’t know how much more Kafkaesque you can get.”
In an email, Loo wrote to Keenan, “I am surprised you are applying logics [sic] to the City Of Oakland. I will reply within the next day or so. Have a good evening and continue to dream.”
June 12, 2017
http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/06/18/in-post-ghost-ship-oakland-city-tells-artists-to-leave-livework-spaces-despite-mayors-promises/
OAKLAND — Just over a month after a horrific fire ripped through an East Oakland warehouse, killing 36 people, Mayor Libby Schaaf made a promise that city staff would work cooperatively with property owners to make their buildings safe without evicting the artists who live there.
The artists received an eviction notice in the immediate aftermath of the deadly Ghost Ship fire on December 2, 2016. Aric Crabb/Bay Area News Group)
Instead, it appears city inspectors are doing just the opposite. In the months since the fire, they have issued inspection reports explicitly stating tenants cannot reside in the buildings, while offering only vague instructions on what violations the owners or tenants need to correct, or throwing up bureaucratic road blocks to getting work done. At the same time, tenants of cultural and entertainment venues have complained about a heavy-handed approach that has made it difficult to stay in business.
On Feb. 21, city staff identified 18 properties in a report to the City Council, saying it had already begun the process of reaching out to property owners to craft compliance plans — a list of work that needs to be done and a timeline in which to do — so the city could bring the spaces up to code. But Darin Ranelletti, the city’s interim director of planning and building, admitted this week that the city had not in fact entered into a compliance plan with the owners of any of those properties.
Schaaf said she was “disappointed” more property owners have decided not to cooperate with the city.
“The city can’t force that choice,” she said. “It can only make it easier.”
At the Castle Von Trapp, a live/work space in West Oakland identified in the February report, a city inspector wrote in an April 20 report: “Discontinue residential occupancy and obtain commercial tenant improvement zoning approval and permits.”
It was a de facto eviction order, although the building was not red-tagged as an immediate risk to the residents. The inspection report was a direct contradiction to Schaaf’s Jan. 11 order, which states city inspectors should “avoid displacement of any individuals residing or working in the property if that can be accomplished without imminent life safety risk.”
“They’ve done everything but make it easy,” said Tom Dolan, the architect who wrote the city’s live/work conversion ordinance in 1999 and who has been volunteering his time with Safer DIY Spaces. The nascent group emerged in the wake of the Dec. 2 fire to help people make immediate safety improvements to unpermitted live/work buildings.
“The city has not actually explicitly red-tagged spaces, they’ve just made it very difficult for them to be lived in,” Dolan said. “There really has been very little cooperation.”
frustrating for Chris Spiteri, one of the tenants in the Castle Von Trapp. Along with her housemates, Spiteri had been working for several months to assuage the fears of their landlords, who were waiting for guidance from the city. A building inspector walked through the space in January but didn’t send an official report back on the violations until April. In March, the tenants said their landlords gave them an ultimatum: Buy the building or leave. One of the landlords, Yeon Lee, did not respond to a request for comment.
“In that time, we very much tried to keep open communication with our landlords to figure out if there was a path for us to move forward that didn’t result in us vacating the building,” she said. “So, it was frustrating, I’m sure on their part as much as ours, to be waiting so long for direction from the city only to find out the result is, because it’s an unpermitted residence, they want us to leave.”
Ranelletti said the onus is on building owners to enter into a compliance plan with the city, and the delays in issuing an inspection report were not an excuse because the property owners were informed of the executive order at the time of the inspection, he said, and can get information on what needs to be done in other ways.
“The information is … often communicated at the site, in the office; they can come in, in person,” he said. “Ultimately, it’s the responsibility of the property owner.”
SiteA (Todd) redacted p2of13Since the council’s report, inspectors have visited other live/work spaces that aren’t on the list of 18. At one live/work space in the city’s Brooklyn Basin neighborhood that is home to about dozen people, an official inspection report read: “Improper occupancy — All residential and non-residential buildings or structure or portion thereof … shall be considered ‘Substandard and a Public Nuisance.'”
The report continues, “Obtain permits, inspections and approvals and restore to original usage.”
The last line is worrisome, said Todd, a tenant whose last name this newspaper is not using because it would identify the building and increase his risk of eviction. Reverting to the original usage would mean people can’t live there. Even if a change of use was granted, the building would have to be upgraded to comply with modern earthquake and building codes, which could cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.
“That’s a real problem,” Todd said. “That’s when things get expensive.”
When she went to the city to see what needed to be done, Sinuba said she felt as though she were talking to a wall.
“For people who are still grieving, just being given this paper that (says) everything is wrong and we won’t tell you what to do … it’s scary,” she said. “We don’t know what this means. We could be kicked out, but there is no where else to live anymore. Everything is too expensive.”
Schaaf admits the city’s work is not done. She meets with staff regularly to discuss ways to make the process better, she said.
“Every two weeks, we work on something new to make the spirit of this order more effective,” she said.
That includes providing inspection reports to tenants, when, in the past, they were only given to landlords. And, staff is working on ways to red tag only part of the building, if that can be done safely, where inspectors would have ordered the entire building shut down before the executive order was issued.
But the Ghost Ship fire’s fallout is affecting permitted spaces, too. At Qilombo, a legal community space in West Oakland, David Keenan, another member of the Safer DIY Spaces group, said he had to fight an invalid inspector’s report that said the space had people living in it, despite the fact there was no evidence of habitation. The inspector based his report on a complaint and verified it when he couldn’t access one room during an inspection.
After a lengthy email exchange, the inspector, Wing Loo, agreed to change the report, but he still cited them for a missing structural support pole for an interior loft structure, as well as problems with a rear staircase that was built before Qilombo occupied the space. When Keenan tried to pull a building permit to fix the staircase, he couldn’t, because of the existing violation.
“You admit that nobody lives there but verified (the habitability complaint) because of some other structural condition that needed to be repaired and because you did, you actually blocked me from fixing the thing you are citing,” Keenan said of his interaction with Loo. “I don’t know how much more Kafkaesque you can get.”
In an email, Loo wrote to Keenan, “I am surprised you are applying logics [sic] to the City Of Oakland. I will reply within the next day or so. Have a good evening and continue to dream.”
142 City of Oakland ‘Bulldozer’ Hit A Homeless Man While He Was Sleeping In A Tent Subhead”
City of Oakland ‘Bulldozer’ Hit A Homeless Man While He Was Sleeping In A Tent
June 1, 2017 - East Bay Express
Debris and garbage is increasingly an issue at homeless encampments. But homeless residents claim that the 'bulldozer' trashed and destroyed their personal belongings and valuables. 'It was horrible, just ridiculous.'
https://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/city-of-oakland-bulldozer-hit-a-homeless-man-while-he-was-sleeping-in-a-tent/Content?oid=7139007
A man says he was hit by what was a smaller, "Dingo" tractor-style vehicle during a clean-up at a different encampment in West Oakland on May 5.
Daryll Barker has lived for more than a year under a freeway overpass at 35th and Magnolia streets in West Oakland. Drugs, crime, pollution, extreme weather — it’s a rough life. But while asleep in his tent on the morning of May 5 shortly after 10 a.m., Barker says something happened that left him “scared as hell.”
Suddenly, Barker said he “was being dragged and pulled, the whole tent itself, everything in it. Just snatched and grabbed." The 51-year-old told the Express last week that he was thrown from his tent, after which he rolled across the asphalt for several feet.
When he looked up, Barker realized that he'd been hit by “a bulldozer.”
In recent weeks, the City of Oakland began using what is called a wheeled loader — a large, heavy-equipment bulldozer-like vehicle typically seen at construction sites — to help remove what officials say is an unprecedented amount of garbage and trash accumulating at several local homeless encampments.
“We want to clean up the garbage,” explained Joe DeVries, an assistant city administrator with the City of Oakland. “There’s so much debris, we want to get the stuff that people care about out of the way, so that we can” pick up the trash.
DeVries said he witnessed the incident on May 5, when he says a "Dingo" tractor ran into Barker's tent. "I don't know how he was in that tent," DeVries said. "I was scared for him."
ut many homeless residents called the bulldozer “overkill,” saying that they were stunned when the “aggressive” and “dangerous” vehicle showed up at the camps.
Before Barker was hit by the bulldozer on May 5, workers with Operation Dignity, a nonprofit that does homeless outreach as part of a contract with the city, allegedly told residents at the 35th and Magnolia site that Barker’s tent and others people’s belongings would be out of harms way, and that the wouldn’t need to move, according to Jeff Wozniak, an attorney representing Barker. “He was told his tent was safe where it was,” he explained.
“Then, he was woken up by a bulldozer literally crashing into his tent.”
Wozniak says his client was lucky. “Had that bulldozer approached his tent from the other side, it would have bulldozed his head. … There’s no question that this bulldozer could have killed him.”
After the incident, Barker says he was bleeding and in severe pain, so he was ambulanced to Highland Hospital, where he says he received X-rays and was treated for nearly 10 hours. Two weeks later, he says he’s still limping and sore.
Now, Barker is living with a neighbor, sharing a tent, near the encampment, which was formerly the site of Councilmember Lynette Gibson McElhaney’s “Compassionate Communities” tent-city pilot program, which housed at least thirty people earlier this year.
Barker said his tent was completely destroyed, and that he lost all of his clothing, his phone — pretty much everything he owns. “I’m just happy to be alive,” he said this past Saturday.
Wozniak hasn’t filed a claim or lawsuit on behalf of Barker yet. However, he is asking that the City of Oakland and Operation Dignity compensate Barker for his pain, suffering, medical expenses, and losses. “Darryl’s tent is not trash. It is personal property. And they should not be using a bulldozer anywhere near these tents, or these homes,” he said.
Representatives with Operation Dignity were not immediately available to discuss the specific incident.
In the past two weeks, other homeless campers have told the Express that, despite the city’s efforts, they too have lost valuables during these city clean-ups, including family photos, laptops, bikes, and DVD players.
On May 25, the city’s “bulldozer” also made an appearance at one of Oakland’s largest homeless encampments, on Northgate Avenue.
Marcus Emery said he has been living at the Northgate site for nine months, after he was displaced from a nearby apartment, where the landlord raised the rent to $2,100 a month. On that Thursday morning, the 53-year-old said he "woke up hearing a bulldozer": Oakland police and public-works department employees had shown up to remove debris and trash.
The city had given notice that they planned to clean the site, posting fliers along Northgate. But some of those fliers were removed, Emery and others claimed. And none of them were expecting the bulldozer.
City workers told Emery to move his tent and belongings from the western sidewalk and to the other side of the road, so that trash could be removed. The city also said it would be cleaning the sidewalk and gutters. But the day after the clean-up, Emery complained that he’d "lost all kinds of stuff," because he couldn't move his tent and valuables out of the way fast enough.
Specifically, he said he lost family photos, a DVD player, old coins, clothes — "stuff that you can't replace.”
After sharing his story, Emery lifted up his shirt to reveal stitches, from a knife wound he’d suffered while sleeping in his tent on the same street earlier in May. “I just got stabbed the other day,” he told the Express. “I can’t be moving this heavy stuff.”
Also at the Northgate encampment, Tonnell Williams says he too was startled by the “big ass tractor thing” when it arrived that Thursday morning. He says he tried to move most of his stuff, but that he lost a tent full of his clothes, plus his girlfriend’s clothes, bike frames, and more, when the bulldozer snagged and dumped it in the trash.
“They let us move some" of his belongings, he said. "But they didn't let us move all of it."
When the Express spoke with DeVries the day of the Northgate clean-up, he insisted that the City of Oakland’s mission was to not harass or hurt homeless people, or displace them from these encampments. “We weren’t bulldozing tents,” he said, referring to a video of a wheeled loader picking up trash at the Northgate site (see video, below).
DeVries also said that, during a recent camp cleanup, the city removed some 160 cubic yards of debris and garbage. “We don’t want to criminalize the homeless,” he said.
"We've been painstakingly careful to be compassionate."
On Tuesday, Oakland city council voted in favor of spending nearly half-a-million dollars for a “safe haven” transitional camp for homeless residents. The sanctioned camps would offer 40 small sheds for individuals to live in, and also would provide security, water, toilets and more for residents. There is also a motion to provide sanitation to 10 encampments, and also to keep the door open for additional funding for homelessness programs.
A recent "point in time" count of Oakland's homeless residents tallied 2,761 homeless individuals in the city, nearly 70 percent unsheltered — a roughly 26 percent increase over the count from 2015.
The Express reported last week that Oakland spent some $210,638 in 2016 and during the first few weeks of 2017 on cleaning and dismantling homeless encampments. Records indicate that there were 279 cleanings in 2016, and 33 from January 1 to February 14 this year.
As the Express wrote: “The city’s data shows that 1,475 yards of trash — but possibly also tents, clothing, and other possessions — were thrown away during this period.” DeVries says he's seen an unprecedented amount of trash and garbage at homeless camps in the past months.
The abatement of homeless encampments has been controversial. In December of last year, civil-rights activists filed a class-action lawsuit in state court alleging that Caltrans violates the Constitutional rights of homeless people during encampment sweeps in Oakland, Emeryville, and Berkeley, where homeless residents regularly lost valuables and property. That suit is ongoing.
Shawn Moses, who's lived at Northgate camp for three years, conceded that a significant amount of garbage and debris had piled up at the location, he said in part due to a public works strike against cleaning at the sites, which lasted several months, but also because of illegal dumping.
Moses said that he thought most camp residents didn’t lose any belongings on May 25, and he observed city workers "bag and tag" items from one man’s tent and space, because the owner was in jail and unable to move his tent.
But Moses also says that he lost some “junk that he didn’t really want” during the clean-up, and that city workers weren’t terribly careful not to throw away belongings. “We just worked really fast” to get things out of the bulldozer’s way, he explained.
He added that he and his fellow residents had to sweep the sidewalk underneath their tents themselves, and that the city didn’t even wash the concrete.
Moses said the clean-up on May 25 was the first time the city had came to clear the site in a year and a half. And, like others, Moses argued that the use of the bulldozer was harassment and overkill.
“Everybody was shocked by that bulldozer,” he said. “It was horrible, just ridiculous."
June 1, 2017 - East Bay Express
Debris and garbage is increasingly an issue at homeless encampments. But homeless residents claim that the 'bulldozer' trashed and destroyed their personal belongings and valuables. 'It was horrible, just ridiculous.'
https://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/city-of-oakland-bulldozer-hit-a-homeless-man-while-he-was-sleeping-in-a-tent/Content?oid=7139007
A man says he was hit by what was a smaller, "Dingo" tractor-style vehicle during a clean-up at a different encampment in West Oakland on May 5.
Daryll Barker has lived for more than a year under a freeway overpass at 35th and Magnolia streets in West Oakland. Drugs, crime, pollution, extreme weather — it’s a rough life. But while asleep in his tent on the morning of May 5 shortly after 10 a.m., Barker says something happened that left him “scared as hell.”
Suddenly, Barker said he “was being dragged and pulled, the whole tent itself, everything in it. Just snatched and grabbed." The 51-year-old told the Express last week that he was thrown from his tent, after which he rolled across the asphalt for several feet.
When he looked up, Barker realized that he'd been hit by “a bulldozer.”
In recent weeks, the City of Oakland began using what is called a wheeled loader — a large, heavy-equipment bulldozer-like vehicle typically seen at construction sites — to help remove what officials say is an unprecedented amount of garbage and trash accumulating at several local homeless encampments.
“We want to clean up the garbage,” explained Joe DeVries, an assistant city administrator with the City of Oakland. “There’s so much debris, we want to get the stuff that people care about out of the way, so that we can” pick up the trash.
DeVries said he witnessed the incident on May 5, when he says a "Dingo" tractor ran into Barker's tent. "I don't know how he was in that tent," DeVries said. "I was scared for him."
ut many homeless residents called the bulldozer “overkill,” saying that they were stunned when the “aggressive” and “dangerous” vehicle showed up at the camps.
Before Barker was hit by the bulldozer on May 5, workers with Operation Dignity, a nonprofit that does homeless outreach as part of a contract with the city, allegedly told residents at the 35th and Magnolia site that Barker’s tent and others people’s belongings would be out of harms way, and that the wouldn’t need to move, according to Jeff Wozniak, an attorney representing Barker. “He was told his tent was safe where it was,” he explained.
“Then, he was woken up by a bulldozer literally crashing into his tent.”
Wozniak says his client was lucky. “Had that bulldozer approached his tent from the other side, it would have bulldozed his head. … There’s no question that this bulldozer could have killed him.”
After the incident, Barker says he was bleeding and in severe pain, so he was ambulanced to Highland Hospital, where he says he received X-rays and was treated for nearly 10 hours. Two weeks later, he says he’s still limping and sore.
Now, Barker is living with a neighbor, sharing a tent, near the encampment, which was formerly the site of Councilmember Lynette Gibson McElhaney’s “Compassionate Communities” tent-city pilot program, which housed at least thirty people earlier this year.
Barker said his tent was completely destroyed, and that he lost all of his clothing, his phone — pretty much everything he owns. “I’m just happy to be alive,” he said this past Saturday.
Wozniak hasn’t filed a claim or lawsuit on behalf of Barker yet. However, he is asking that the City of Oakland and Operation Dignity compensate Barker for his pain, suffering, medical expenses, and losses. “Darryl’s tent is not trash. It is personal property. And they should not be using a bulldozer anywhere near these tents, or these homes,” he said.
Representatives with Operation Dignity were not immediately available to discuss the specific incident.
In the past two weeks, other homeless campers have told the Express that, despite the city’s efforts, they too have lost valuables during these city clean-ups, including family photos, laptops, bikes, and DVD players.
On May 25, the city’s “bulldozer” also made an appearance at one of Oakland’s largest homeless encampments, on Northgate Avenue.
Marcus Emery said he has been living at the Northgate site for nine months, after he was displaced from a nearby apartment, where the landlord raised the rent to $2,100 a month. On that Thursday morning, the 53-year-old said he "woke up hearing a bulldozer": Oakland police and public-works department employees had shown up to remove debris and trash.
The city had given notice that they planned to clean the site, posting fliers along Northgate. But some of those fliers were removed, Emery and others claimed. And none of them were expecting the bulldozer.
City workers told Emery to move his tent and belongings from the western sidewalk and to the other side of the road, so that trash could be removed. The city also said it would be cleaning the sidewalk and gutters. But the day after the clean-up, Emery complained that he’d "lost all kinds of stuff," because he couldn't move his tent and valuables out of the way fast enough.
Specifically, he said he lost family photos, a DVD player, old coins, clothes — "stuff that you can't replace.”
After sharing his story, Emery lifted up his shirt to reveal stitches, from a knife wound he’d suffered while sleeping in his tent on the same street earlier in May. “I just got stabbed the other day,” he told the Express. “I can’t be moving this heavy stuff.”
Also at the Northgate encampment, Tonnell Williams says he too was startled by the “big ass tractor thing” when it arrived that Thursday morning. He says he tried to move most of his stuff, but that he lost a tent full of his clothes, plus his girlfriend’s clothes, bike frames, and more, when the bulldozer snagged and dumped it in the trash.
“They let us move some" of his belongings, he said. "But they didn't let us move all of it."
When the Express spoke with DeVries the day of the Northgate clean-up, he insisted that the City of Oakland’s mission was to not harass or hurt homeless people, or displace them from these encampments. “We weren’t bulldozing tents,” he said, referring to a video of a wheeled loader picking up trash at the Northgate site (see video, below).
DeVries also said that, during a recent camp cleanup, the city removed some 160 cubic yards of debris and garbage. “We don’t want to criminalize the homeless,” he said.
"We've been painstakingly careful to be compassionate."
On Tuesday, Oakland city council voted in favor of spending nearly half-a-million dollars for a “safe haven” transitional camp for homeless residents. The sanctioned camps would offer 40 small sheds for individuals to live in, and also would provide security, water, toilets and more for residents. There is also a motion to provide sanitation to 10 encampments, and also to keep the door open for additional funding for homelessness programs.
A recent "point in time" count of Oakland's homeless residents tallied 2,761 homeless individuals in the city, nearly 70 percent unsheltered — a roughly 26 percent increase over the count from 2015.
The Express reported last week that Oakland spent some $210,638 in 2016 and during the first few weeks of 2017 on cleaning and dismantling homeless encampments. Records indicate that there were 279 cleanings in 2016, and 33 from January 1 to February 14 this year.
As the Express wrote: “The city’s data shows that 1,475 yards of trash — but possibly also tents, clothing, and other possessions — were thrown away during this period.” DeVries says he's seen an unprecedented amount of trash and garbage at homeless camps in the past months.
The abatement of homeless encampments has been controversial. In December of last year, civil-rights activists filed a class-action lawsuit in state court alleging that Caltrans violates the Constitutional rights of homeless people during encampment sweeps in Oakland, Emeryville, and Berkeley, where homeless residents regularly lost valuables and property. That suit is ongoing.
Shawn Moses, who's lived at Northgate camp for three years, conceded that a significant amount of garbage and debris had piled up at the location, he said in part due to a public works strike against cleaning at the sites, which lasted several months, but also because of illegal dumping.
Moses said that he thought most camp residents didn’t lose any belongings on May 25, and he observed city workers "bag and tag" items from one man’s tent and space, because the owner was in jail and unable to move his tent.
But Moses also says that he lost some “junk that he didn’t really want” during the clean-up, and that city workers weren’t terribly careful not to throw away belongings. “We just worked really fast” to get things out of the bulldozer’s way, he explained.
He added that he and his fellow residents had to sweep the sidewalk underneath their tents themselves, and that the city didn’t even wash the concrete.
Moses said the clean-up on May 25 was the first time the city had came to clear the site in a year and a half. And, like others, Moses argued that the use of the bulldozer was harassment and overkill.
“Everybody was shocked by that bulldozer,” he said. “It was horrible, just ridiculous."
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