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{{unbalanced|date=March 2019}}
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[[File:6th and Market, San Francisco (6001096396).jpg|thumb|350px|6th and Market, San Francisco]]
[[File:6th and Market, San Francisco (6001096396).jpg|thumb|350px|6th and Market, San Francisco]]
{{Living spaces}}
The '''gentrification of San Francisco''' has been an ongoing source of contention between renters and working people who live in the city and real estate interests. A subset of this conflict has been an emerging antagonism between longtime working-class residents of the city and the influx of new tech workers. A major increase of [[gentrification]] in [[San Francisco]] has been attributed with the [[Dot-com boom|Dot-Com Boom]] in the 1990s, creating a strong demand for skilled tech workers from local [[Startup company|startups]] and close by [[Silicon Valley]] businesses leading to rising standards of living.<ref>{{cite web |first1=Mitchell |last1=Schwarzer |url=http://spur.org/documents/010701_article_03.shtm |website=San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association |title=San Francisco by the Numbers: Planning After the 2000 Census |date=2005-02-11 |access-date=2016-10-06 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20050211032911/http://spur.org/documents/010701_article_03.shtm |archivedate=2005-02-11 }}</ref> As a result, a large influx of new workers in the internet and technology sector began to contribute to the gentrification of historically poor immigrant neighborhoods such as [[Mission District, San Francisco|the Mission District]].<ref>{{cite news |last1=Nieves |first1=Evelyn |title=Mission District Fights Case of Dot-Com Fever |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2000/11/05/us/mission-district-fights-case-of-dot-com-fever.html |work=The New York Times |date=5 November 2000 }}</ref> During this time San Francisco began a transformation eventually culminating in it becoming the most expensive city to live in the United States.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.businessinsider.com/americas-20-most-expensive-cities-for-renters-2015-8/#2-new-york-city-new-york-the-average-rent-for-a-one-bedroom-here-is-3100-a-month-1111111119|title=America's 20 most expensive cities for renters|newspaper=Business Insider|access-date=2016-10-20}}</ref>
The '''gentrification of San Francisco''' has been an ongoing source of tension between renters and working people who live in the city as well as real estate interests. A result of this conflict has been an emerging antagonism between longtime working-class residents of the city and the influx of new tech workers. A major increase of [[gentrification]] in [[San Francisco]] has been attributed to the [[Dot-com boom|Dot-Com Boom]] in the 1990s, creating a strong demand for skilled tech workers from local [[Startup company|startups]] and close by [[Silicon Valley]] businesses leading to rising standards of living.<ref>{{cite web |first1=Mitchell |last1=Schwarzer |url=http://spur.org/documents/010701_article_03.shtm |website=San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association |title=San Francisco by the Numbers: Planning After the 2000 Census |date=2005-02-11 |access-date=2016-10-06 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20050211032911/http://spur.org/documents/010701_article_03.shtm |archivedate=2005-02-11 }}</ref> As a result, a large influx of new workers in the internet and technology sector began to contribute to the gentrification of historically poor immigrant neighborhoods such as [[Mission District, San Francisco|the Mission District]].<ref>{{cite news |last1=Nieves |first1=Evelyn |title=Mission District Fights Case of Dot-Com Fever |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2000/11/05/us/mission-district-fights-case-of-dot-com-fever.html |work=The New York Times |date=5 November 2000 }}</ref> During this time San Francisco began a transformation eventually culminating in it becoming the most expensive city to live in the United States.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.businessinsider.com/americas-20-most-expensive-cities-for-renters-2015-8/#2-new-york-city-new-york-the-average-rent-for-a-one-bedroom-here-is-3100-a-month-1111111119|title=America's 20 most expensive cities for renters|newspaper=Business Insider|access-date=2016-10-20}}</ref>


== Causes ==
== Causes ==


=== Technology firms and venture capital ===
=== Technology firms and venture capital ===
Many locals in San Francisco attribute the negative effects of [[gentrification]] to the large number of [[Technology company|technology companies]] in the surrounding metropolitan area. Private shuttle buses operated by companies such as [[Google]] have driven up rents in areas near their stops, leading to the [[San Francisco tech bus protests]] from locals in the area.<ref>de Koning, Rosanne. [http://dare.uva.nl/cgi/arno/show.cgi?fid=545104 "Google Bus and Spatial Justice: A Call for Greater Social Responsibility in Urban Governance"]. ''Digital Academic Repository of the University of Amsterdam''. [[University of Amsterdam]]. Retrieved 4 March 2015.</ref>
Many locals in San Francisco attribute the negative effects of [[gentrification]] to the large number of [[Technology company|technology companies]] in the surrounding metropolitan area. Private shuttle buses operated by companies such as [[Google]] have driven up rents in areas near their stops, leading to the [[San Francisco tech bus protests]] from locals in the area.<ref>de Koning, Rosanne. [http://dare.uva.nl/cgi/arno/show.cgi?fid=545104 "Google Bus and Spatial Justice: A Call for Greater Social Responsibility in Urban Governance"]. ''Digital Academic Repository of the University of Amsterdam''. [[University of Amsterdam]]. Retrieved 4 March 2015.</ref> It is clear to see that there is a strong connection between the technological sphere and the city as opposed to the city and the people that they are meant to serve; existing/current residents.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Maharawal |first=Manissa McCleave |date=May 19, 2014 |title=Protest of Gentrification and Eviction Technologies in San Francisco |pages=20–21 |work=Planners Network |url=http://www.plannersnetwork.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/PPM_Sp2014_-Mahawaral.pdf |access-date=May 29, 2022}}</ref> However, this does not mean that [[Big Tech|big tech]] is to blame, as in most cases the goal of gentrification is to increase the wealth of a city. Therefore, the city will make connections or changes with whoever has the most wealth at a given time, which in this case happened to be big tech companies as the hope was to increase both job opportunities and the economic well-being of San Francisco.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Onishi |first=Norimitsu |date=2012-06-05 |title=New San Francisco Tech Boom Brings Jobs but Also Worries |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/05/us/san-francisco-tech-boom-brings-jobs-and-worries.html |access-date=2022-05-29 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref>


=== Rent control ===
=== Rent control ===
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In 1994, San Francisco voters passed a [[ballot initiative]] which expanded the city's existing rent control laws to include small multi-unit apartments with four or less units, built prior to 1980. (about 30% of the city's rental housing stock at the time).
In 1994, San Francisco voters passed a [[ballot initiative]] which expanded the city's existing rent control laws to include small multi-unit apartments with four or less units, built prior to 1980. (about 30% of the city's rental housing stock at the time).
{{ r | SF_RC_study_2017 | p=7 | q="These small multi-family structures made up about 30% of the rental housing stock in 1990..." }}
{{ r | SF_RC_study_2017 | p=7 | q="These small multi-family structures made up about 30% of the rental housing stock in 1990..." }}
{{ r | MN_RC | p=1 | q=When San Francisco residents voted in 1994 to expand the city’s rent-control policies, they granted protections to legions of renters living in duplexes and other small, "mom and pop" apartment buildings constructed before 1980 — 30 percent of the city’s rental housing stock. }}
{{ r | MN_RC | p=1 | q=When San Francisco residents voted in 1994 to expand the city's rent-control policies, they granted protections to legions of renters living in duplexes and other small, "mom and pop" apartment buildings constructed before 1980 — 30 percent of the city's rental housing stock. }}
{{ r | BizJournal_RC | p=1 | q=Rent control started in San Francisco in 1979, when economic pressures and the passage of Prop. 13, which limited property tax increases, led then-Mayor Dianne Feinstein to sign the policy into law for properties built before 1980. An exemption was given to "mom and pop" landlords, or owner-occupied buildings with four or less units. These made up around 30 percent of the city’s rental housing stock at the time. To skirt rent control, large corporations starting buying up those properties and selling a portion back to a live-in representative. This is turn led to a successful ballot initiative in 1994 to remove the exemption. The Stanford researchers looked at the effects on tenants who received rent control because of the ballot initiative versus tenants living in similar properties who were not subject to the new rule. }}
{{ r | BizJournal_RC | p=1 | q=Rent control started in San Francisco in 1979, when economic pressures and the passage of Prop. 13, which limited property tax increases, led then-Mayor Dianne Feinstein to sign the policy into law for properties built before 1980. An exemption was given to "mom and pop" landlords, or owner-occupied buildings with four or less units. These made up around 30 percent of the city's rental housing stock at the time. To skirt rent control, large corporations starting buying up those properties and selling a portion back to a live-in representative. This in turn led to a successful ballot initiative in 1994 to remove the exemption. The Stanford researchers looked at the effects on tenants who received rent control because of the ballot initiative versus tenants living in similar properties who were not subject to the new rule. }}
In 2017, [[Stanford]] [[economics]] researcher Rebecca Diamond and others published a study which examined the effects of this specific rent control law on the rental units newly controlled compared to similar style units (multi-unit apartments with four or less units) not under rent control (built after 1980), as well as this law's effect on the total city rental stock, and on overall rent prices in the city, covering the years from 1995 to 2012.
In 2017, [[Stanford]] [[economics]] researcher [[Rebecca Diamond (economist)|Rebecca Diamond]] and others published a study which examined the effects of this specific rent control law on the rental units newly controlled compared to similar style units (multi-unit apartments with four or less units) not under rent control (built after 1980), as well as this law's effect on the total city rental stock, and on overall rent prices in the city, covering the years from 1995 to 2012.
{{ r | MN_RC | BizJournal_RC | SFGate_RC}}
{{ r | MN_RC | BizJournal_RC | SFGate_RC}}
{{ r | Gov_RC | p=1 | q=The report focused on San Francisco, where a 1994 ballot measure expanded rent control to certain smaller multifamily apartment buildings constructed before 1980. Because units built after 1980 were not included in the expansion, the result was what researchers call a "natural experiment" in which the newer units could act as a control group. The researchers then tracked tenants&apos; housing as well as changes in the housing stock and rents. }}
{{ r | Gov_RC | p=1 | q=The report focused on San Francisco, where a 1994 ballot measure expanded rent control to certain smaller multifamily apartment buildings constructed before 1980. Because units built after 1980 were not included in the expansion, the result was what researchers call a "natural experiment" in which the newer units could act as a control group. The researchers then tracked tenants&apos; housing as well as changes in the housing stock and rents. }}
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{{ r | SF_RC_study_2017 | p=3 }}
{{ r | SF_RC_study_2017 | p=3 }}
{{ r | MN_RC }}
{{ r | MN_RC }}
{{ r | BizJournal_RC | p=1 | q="This substitution toward owner-occupied and high-end new construction rental housing likely fueled the gentrification of San Francisco, as these types of properties cater to higher income individuals," according to the study. ... "Taken together, we see rent controlled increased property investment, demolition and reconstruction of new buildings, conversion to owner-occupied housing and a decline in the number of renters per building. All of these responses lead to a housing stock, which caters to higher-income individuals. Rent control has actually fueled the gentrification of San Francisco, the exact opposite of the policy’s intended goal," the researchers concluded. }}
{{ r | BizJournal_RC | p=1 | q="This substitution toward owner-occupied and high-end new construction rental housing likely fueled the gentrification of San Francisco, as these types of properties cater to higher income individuals," according to the study. ... "Taken together, we see rent controlled increased property investment, demolition and reconstruction of new buildings, conversion to owner-occupied housing and a decline in the number of renters per building. All of these responses lead to a housing stock, which caters to higher-income individuals. Rent control has actually fueled the gentrification of San Francisco, the exact opposite of the policy's intended goal," the researchers concluded. }}
{{ r | SFGate_RC | Gov_RC }}
{{ r | SFGate_RC | Gov_RC }}
{{ r | CityLab_RC | p=1 | q=The rent control policy therefore "likely fueled the gentrification of San Francisco," the paper concluded, contributing to "a higher level of income inequality in the city overall." }}
{{ r | CityLab_RC | p=1 | q=The rent control policy therefore "likely fueled the gentrification of San Francisco," the paper concluded, contributing to "a higher level of income inequality in the city overall." }}
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The authors also noted that "...forcing landlords to provide insurance against rent increases leads to large losses to tenants. If society desires to provide social insurance against rent increases, it would be more desirable to offer this subsidy in the form of a government subsidy or tax credit. This would remove landlords’ incentives to decrease the housing supply and could provide households with the insurance they desire."
The authors also noted that "...forcing landlords to provide insurance against rent increases leads to large losses to tenants. If society desires to provide social insurance against rent increases, it would be more desirable to offer this subsidy in the form of a government subsidy or tax credit. This would remove landlords’ incentives to decrease the housing supply and could provide households with the insurance they desire."
{{ r | SF_RC_study_2017 | p=44 }}
{{ r | SF_RC_study_2017 | p=44 }}
{{ r | MN_RC | p=1 | q=Diamond and McQuade’s findings offer a word of caution as local and state officials consider how to respond to the affordability crisis. The economists note that San Francisco’s policy is popular with tenants in rent-controlled apartments, who save between $2,300 and $6,600 each year because of it — $393 million annually, altogether, according to their estimates. But, they say, the same policy caused rents citywide to rise 7 percent, costing San Francisco renters $5 billion. A better way "to provide social insurance against rent increases," they suggest, could be to offer tax credits or government subsidies to renters. That solution, of course, does not come cheap. The nonpartisan Legislative Analyst’s Office estimated this year that meeting the need for housing subsidies statewide would cost California tens of billions of dollars annually — roughly what the state spends on Medi-Cal. }}
{{ r | MN_RC | p=1 | q=Diamond and McQuade's findings offer a word of caution as local and state officials consider how to respond to the affordability crisis. The economists note that San Francisco's policy is popular with tenants in rent-controlled apartments, who save between $2,300 and $6,600 each year because of it — $393 million annually, altogether, according to their estimates. But, they say, the same policy caused rents citywide to rise 7 percent, costing San Francisco renters $5 billion. A better way "to provide social insurance against rent increases," they suggest, could be to offer tax credits or government subsidies to renters. That solution, of course, does not come cheap. The nonpartisan Legislative Analyst's Office estimated this year that meeting the need for housing subsidies statewide would cost California tens of billions of dollars annually — roughly what the state spends on Medi-Cal. }}
{{ r | BizJournal_RC | p=1 | q=The Stanford researchers have a different solution to the problem of rising rents. They propose creating a government subsidy or tax credit, which could act as a kind of insurance against rent increases for tenants, while also disincentivizing landlords from decreasing the rental housing supply and increasing prices. }}
{{ r | BizJournal_RC | p=1 | q=The Stanford researchers have a different solution to the problem of rising rents. They propose creating a government subsidy or tax credit, which could act as a kind of insurance against rent increases for tenants, while also disincentivizing landlords from decreasing the rental housing supply and increasing prices. }}
{{ r | SFGate_RC | p=1 | q=Renters impacted by a decreased housing supply could be protected against with governmental insurance, such as subsidies or tax credit, against large rent increases, the study authors say, which would shift responsibility from landlords. }}
{{ r | SFGate_RC | p=1 | q=Renters impacted by a decreased housing supply could be protected against with governmental insurance, such as subsidies or tax credit, against large rent increases, the study authors say, which would shift responsibility from landlords. }}
{{ r | Gov_RC | p=1 | q=But Diamond, the co-author of the study, doesn&apos;t buy that argument: "Why are landlords the ones who have to subsidize tenants? Why do they have to bear that cost?" Her study instead suggests that the costs of keeping housing affordable should be shared by society, through a tax credit or a government subsidy that protects low- and middle-income families against large rent increases. "This," the Stanford paper concludes, "would remove landlords&apos; incentives to decrease the housing supply and could provide households with the insurance they desire. }}
{{ r | Gov_RC | p=1 | q=But Diamond, the co-author of the study, doesn&apos;t buy that argument: "Why are landlords the ones who have to subsidize tenants? Why do they have to bear that cost?" Her study instead suggests that the costs of keeping housing affordable should be shared by society, through a tax credit or a government subsidy that protects low- and middle-income families against large rent increases. "This," the Stanford paper concludes, "would remove landlords&apos; incentives to decrease the housing supply and could provide households with the insurance they desire. }}
{{ r | CityLab_RC | p=1 | q=Rent control has other benefits besides the monetary gains: The policy can give vulnerable tenants the tools to organize against evictions, for example. But given its significant failures, how should the policy be reformed? According to Diamond, a more effective policy to make rents affordable for low-income renters requires a different type of funding source and more government subsidies. "If we’re really serious as a society about ensuring that rents remain affordable to tenants, we potentially should share that cost burden," she said. "You could imagine raising revenue through a tax … and providing rental subsidies in tax credit, but making landlords pay 100 percent of those costs in a world where they can avoid paying those costs really undermines the goals of policy." }}
{{ r | CityLab_RC | p=1 | q=Rent control has other benefits besides the monetary gains: The policy can give vulnerable tenants the tools to organize against evictions, for example. But given its significant failures, how should the policy be reformed? According to Diamond, a more effective policy to make rents affordable for low-income renters requires a different type of funding source and more government subsidies. "If we're really serious as a society about ensuring that rents remain affordable to tenants, we potentially should share that cost burden," she said. "You could imagine raising revenue through a tax … and providing rental subsidies in tax credit, but making landlords pay 100 percent of those costs in a world where they can avoid paying those costs really undermines the goals of policy." }}
{{ r | StanfordGSB_RC | p=1 | q=Diamond argues there may well be a better way. A city could protect renters by offering subsidies or tax credits to offset at least some of their rent increases. If landlords don’t have to absorb the entire cost of rent control, she suggests, they won’t be under as much pressure to pull out of the rental market. "If there’s a way to give tenants some protection against rent increases, without having to make the landlords pay for it, we might be able to have the benefits of rent control without creating the distortions that make things worse for others." }}
{{ r | StanfordGSB_RC | p=1 | q=Diamond argues there may well be a better way. A city could protect renters by offering subsidies or tax credits to offset at least some of their rent increases. If landlords don't have to absorb the entire cost of rent control, she suggests, they won't be under as much pressure to pull out of the rental market. "If there's a way to give tenants some protection against rent increases, without having to make the landlords pay for it, we might be able to have the benefits of rent control without creating the distortions that make things worse for others." }}


As of 2014, about 75% of all rental units in San Francisco are rent controlled.<ref name=SFGate_RC />
As of 2014, about 75% of all rental units in San Francisco are rent controlled.<ref name=SFGate_RC />
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=== Demographics ===
=== Demographics ===
From 1990-2010, San Francisco gained 2,000 white residents, 32,000 Asian residents, and 13,000 Hispanic residents while the African American population decreased by 18,000 people.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.bayareacensus.ca.gov/counties/SanFranciscoCounty.htm|title=Bay Area Census -- San Francisco City and County|website=www.bayareacensus.ca.gov|access-date=2016-10-20}}</ref> According to the [[American Community Survey]], during this same period, an average of 60,000 people both migrated to San Francisco and migrated out.{{fact|date=August 2020}} The people who left the city were more likely to have lower education levels, and have lower incomes than their counterparts who moved into the city. In addition, there was a net annual migration of 7,500 people age 35 or under, and net out-migration of over 5,000 for people 36 or over. For all of these demographic statistics, the rate of change has accelerated from 2005-2007 to 2010-2014.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://priceonomics.com/quantifying-the-changing-face-of-san-francisco/|title=Quantifying the Changing Face of San Francisco|newspaper=Priceonomics|access-date=2016-11-13}}</ref> Migration and demographic patterns are continuing to rapidly shift in San Francisco.
From 1990–2010, San Francisco gained 2,000 white residents, 32,000 Asian residents, and 13,000 Hispanic residents while the African American population decreased by 18,000 people.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.bayareacensus.ca.gov/counties/SanFranciscoCounty.htm|title=Bay Area Census -- San Francisco City and County|website=www.bayareacensus.ca.gov|access-date=2016-10-20}}</ref> According to the [[American Community Survey]], during this same period, an average of 60,000 people both migrated to San Francisco and migrated out.{{citation needed|date=August 2020}} The people who left the city were more likely to have lower education levels, and have lower incomes than their counterparts who moved into the city. In addition, there was a net annual migration of 7,500 people age 35 or under, and net out-migration of over 5,000 for people 36 or over. For all of these demographic statistics, the rate of change has accelerated from 2005-2007 to 2010-2014.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://priceonomics.com/quantifying-the-changing-face-of-san-francisco/|title=Quantifying the Changing Face of San Francisco|newspaper=Priceonomics|access-date=2016-11-13}}</ref> Migration and demographic patterns are continuing to rapidly shift in San Francisco.


=== Economics ===
=== Economics ===
From 2010 to 2014, the number of households making $100,000 or more saw an average growth rate of 17% while households making less than $100,000 saw an average growth rate of -3%.{{fact|date=August 2020}} Of all multifamily rental units constructed from 2012–2014, 85% of new real estate construction in San Francisco has been luxury.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Kusisto |first1=Laura |title=San Francisco Rejects, Luxury Housing Moratorium |url=https://blogs.wsj.com/developments/2015/06/02/san-francisco-to-vote-on-luxury-housing-moratorium/ |work=WSJ |date=2 June 2015 }}</ref>
From 2010 to 2014, the number of households making $100,000 or more saw an average growth rate of 17% while households making less than $100,000 saw an average growth rate of -3%.{{citation needed|date=August 2020}} Of all multifamily rental units constructed from 2012–2014, 85% of new real estate construction in San Francisco has been luxury.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Kusisto |first1=Laura |title=San Francisco Rejects, Luxury Housing Moratorium |url=https://blogs.wsj.com/developments/2015/06/02/san-francisco-to-vote-on-luxury-housing-moratorium/ |work=WSJ |date=2 June 2015 }}</ref>


Many of the people living in San Francisco do not work in the city. Many more live in the suburbs and commute into San Francisco every day. High rents in Silicon Valley and other factors have contributed to a phenomenon where many tech workers choose not to live closer to work in Silicon Valley and instead stay in San Francisco. A survey conducted by the [[Bay Area Council]] and the Metropolitan Transportation Commission has found that 35 shuttle services operate a fleet of more than 800 buses that ferry 34,000 commuters every single day around the San Francisco Metropolitan Area.<ref>United States. Bay Area Council and Metropolitan Transportation Commission. [http://mtc.ca.gov/sites/default/files/2016%20Bay%20Area%20Shuttle%20Census.pdf ''2016 Bay Area Shuttle Census''.] N.p.: METROPOLITAN TRANSPORTATION COMMISSION, 2016.</ref> Of these shuttles, over 200 of them travel exclusively between San Francisco County and [[Santa Clara County, California|Santa Clara County]].
Many of the people living in San Francisco do not work in the city. Many more live in the suburbs and commute into San Francisco every day. High rents in Silicon Valley and other factors have contributed to a phenomenon where many tech workers choose not to live closer to work in Silicon Valley and instead stay in San Francisco. A survey conducted by the [[Bay Area Council]] and the Metropolitan Transportation Commission has found that 35 shuttle services operate a fleet of more than 800 buses that ferry 34,000 commuters every single day around the San Francisco Metropolitan Area.<ref>United States. Bay Area Council and Metropolitan Transportation Commission. [http://mtc.ca.gov/sites/default/files/2016%20Bay%20Area%20Shuttle%20Census.pdf ''2016 Bay Area Shuttle Census''.] N.p.: METROPOLITAN TRANSPORTATION COMMISSION, 2016.</ref> Of these shuttles, over 200 of them travel exclusively between San Francisco County and [[Santa Clara County, California|Santa Clara County]].


=== Evictions ===
=== Evictions ===
One major observed consequence to the Gentrification of San Francisco has been the rising number of eviction notices seen all throughout the city. Since 2009, the number of evictions has been increasing every single year in San Francisco and from 2014-2015 there were over 2,000 eviction notices filed with the rent board. This period represents a 54.7% increase in evictions over the five previous years.<ref name=":0">''[http://www.antievictionmappingproject.net/FINAL%20DRAFT%204-20.pdf SAN FRANCISCO’S EVICTION CRISIS 2015]''. Rep: SAN FRANCISCO ANTI-DISPLACEMENT COALITION</ref> Houses in San Francisco, with a median listing price of $1,000,000,<ref>{{cite web|title=Real Estate Data for San Francisco|url=https://www.trulia.com/real_estate/San_Francisco-California/market-trends/|website=Trulia|accessdate=28 November 2017}}</ref> lead low and middle classes to conform the list of renters being therefore the most impacted by the escalating number of evictions.<ref>{{cite thesis |last1=Garcia |first1=Jessica Christina |title=The Rise of the Millennial Cohort: A Case Study of the Effects on San Francisco's Rental Housing Market |date=May 2015 |hdl=2152/46727 |hdl-access=free }}</ref>
One major observed consequence to the Gentrification of San Francisco has been the rising number of eviction notices seen all throughout the city. Since 2009, the number of evictions has been increasing every single year in San Francisco and from 2014–2015 there were over 2,000 eviction notices filed with the rent board. This period represents a 54.7% increase in evictions over the five previous years.<ref name=":0">''[http://www.antievictionmappingproject.net/FINAL%20DRAFT%204-20.pdf SAN FRANCISCO’S EVICTION CRISIS 2015]''. Rep: SAN FRANCISCO ANTI-DISPLACEMENT COALITION</ref> Houses in San Francisco, with a median listing price of $1,000,000,<ref>{{cite web|title=Real Estate Data for San Francisco|url=https://www.trulia.com/real_estate/San_Francisco-California/market-trends/|website=Trulia|accessdate=28 November 2017}}</ref> lead low and middle classes to conform the list of renters being therefore the most impacted by the escalating number of evictions.<ref>{{cite thesis |last1=Garcia |first1=Jessica Christina |title=The Rise of the Millennial Cohort: A Case Study of the Effects on San Francisco's Rental Housing Market |date=May 2015 |hdl=2152/46727 |hdl-access=free }}</ref>


== Community response ==
== Community response ==
In retaliation to the rapidly changing socioeconomic landscape of San Francisco, accelerated by the influx of high paying technology jobs, anti-eviction movements such as the San Francisco Tenants Union,<ref>{{cite web|title=San Francisco Tenants Union|url=https://www.sftu.org/|website=San Francisco Tenants Union|accessdate=23 November 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last1=Murphy|first1=Katy|title=Rent-control policy 'likely fueled the gentrification of San Francisco,' study finds As California debates rent caps, economists offer a cautionary note.|url=http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/11/02/rent-control-policy-likely-fueled-the-gentrification-of-san-francisco-study-finds/|accessdate=23 November 2017|agency=Bay Area News Group|issue=November 2, 2017 at 10:46 am|newspaper=The Mercury News}}</ref>[[Causa Justa :: Just Cause]], [[Right to the City Alliance]], and People Organizing to Demand Environmental and Economic Rights (PODER)<ref name="oxfordreference.com">{{cite book|title=The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in the United States|url=http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780195156003.001.0001/acref-9780195156003-e-715?rskey=evOKUx&result=712|website=Oxford Reference|publisher=People Organizing to Demand Environmental and Economic Rights (PODER)|accessdate=28 November 2017|doi=10.1093/acref/9780195156003.001.0001|year=2005|isbn=9780195156003|editor1-last = Oboler|editor1-first = Suzanne|editor2-last = González|editor2-first = Deena J}}</ref> have been created by the local community as a measure to hinder the effects of gentrification. Besides tenants' rights, social, economic, environmental and cultural public concerns have also been addressed by The Mission Anti-displacement Coalition (MAC),<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Cespedes|first1=Sydney|last2=Crispell|first2=Mitchell|last3=Blackston|first3=Christina|last4=Plowman|first4=Jonathan|last5=Graves|first5=Edward|title=Community Organizing and Resistance in SF's Mission District|journal=Center for Community Innovation, University of California, Berkeley|issue=June 2015|pages=30|url=http://iurd.berkeley.edu/uploads/Mission_District_Final.pdf|accessdate=23 November 2017}}</ref> an organization created by PODER to counteract the effects of gentrification in the late 1990s due to the raise of tech jobs.<ref name="oxfordreference.com"/>


=== General background on Bay Area anti-gentrification movements. ===
In the broadest strokes of the matter, scholars have described anti-gentrification groups as all finding themselves more or less opposed to the Bay Area’s ‘mainstream liberal establishment.’ <ref name=":9" /> According to historian Nancy Mirabal, in the eyes of anti-gentrification leaders, San Francisco city officials exert the “collective belief… that gentrification, despite all of its potential drawbacks, was a positive… byproduct of growing Bay Area prosperity.”<ref name=":10" />

In retaliation to the rapidly changing socioeconomic landscape of San Francisco, accelerated by the influx of high paying technology jobs, anti-eviction movements such as the San Francisco Tenants Union,<ref>{{cite web |title=San Francisco Tenants Union |url=https://www.sftu.org/ |accessdate=23 November 2017 |website=San Francisco Tenants Union}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Murphy |first1=Katy |title=Rent-control policy 'likely fueled the gentrification of San Francisco,' study finds As California debates rent caps, economists offer a cautionary note. |newspaper=The Mercury News |agency=Bay Area News Group |issue=November 2, 2017 at 10:46 am |url=http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/11/02/rent-control-policy-likely-fueled-the-gentrification-of-san-francisco-study-finds/ |accessdate=23 November 2017}}</ref>[[Causa Justa :: Just Cause]], [[Right to the City Alliance]], and People Organizing to Demand Environmental and Economic Rights (PODER)<ref name="oxfordreference.com">{{cite book |url=http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780195156003.001.0001/acref-9780195156003-e-715?rskey=evOKUx&result=712 |title=The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in the United States |website=Oxford Reference |publisher=People Organizing to Demand Environmental and Economic Rights (PODER) |year=2005 |isbn=9780195156003 |editor1-last=Oboler |editor1-first=Suzanne |doi=10.1093/acref/9780195156003.001.0001 |editor2-last=González |editor2-first=Deena J |accessdate=28 November 2017}}</ref> have been created by the local community as a measure to hinder the effects of gentrification. Besides tenants' rights, social, economic, environmental and cultural public concerns have also been addressed by The Mission Anti-displacement Coalition (MAC),<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Cespedes |first1=Sydney |last2=Crispell |first2=Mitchell |last3=Blackston |first3=Christina |last4=Plowman |first4=Jonathan |last5=Graves |first5=Edward |title=Community Organizing and Resistance in SF's Mission District |url=http://iurd.berkeley.edu/uploads/Mission_District_Final.pdf |journal=Center for Community Innovation, University of California, Berkeley |issue=June 2015 |pages=30 |accessdate=23 November 2017}}</ref> an organization created by PODER to counteract the effects of gentrification in the late 1990s due to the rise of tech jobs.<ref name="oxfordreference.com" />

Opillard has written that while most of today’s local organizing came into being during the early successes of the dot-com boom, several of today’s most prominent anti-gentrification dissenters only began to gain currency in the wake of the Occupy movement.<ref name=":9" />

Karl Beitel has written about how this traditionally progressive faction has monopolized the most visible levels of anti-gentrification discourse— showing up at city council meetings, maintaining large Twitter followings, and organizing frequent street protests.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Beitel |first=Karl |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/841171268 |title=Local protest, global movements : capital, community, and state in San Francisco |date=2013 |isbn=978-1-4399-0996-6 |location=Philadelphia |oclc=841171268}}</ref> Still, more extremist anti-gentrification groups-- such as GAY SHAME and The Lucy Parsons Project-- have also had a large impact on the public art and street protests which have colored the Bay Area's anti-gentrification movement in recent years.<ref>{{Cite web |title=YIMBY=DEATH – GAY SHAME |url=https://gayshame.net/index.php/home/ |access-date=2023-03-19 |language=en-US}}</ref>

=== Politics ===
The top five leading justifications for evictions are:
The top five leading justifications for evictions are:


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Relative to all evictions, evictions with the five justifications above increased by 82.5% over the same five-year period.<ref name=":0" /> These movements have also focused on mitigating evictions from "no-fault" evictions such as those caused by the [[Ellis Act]]. In November 2014 a ballot measure was put forward which would put a tax on real estate speculation.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20140910222010/http://www.sfgov2.org/ftp/uploadedfiles/elections/ElectionsArchives/Meeting_Information/BSC/agendas/2014/November/11-A%20FINAL%20digest%20-%20Transfer%20Tax.pdf ''San Francisco Elections Office'', "San Francisco Ballot Simplification Committee Digest for Proposition G," archived September 9, 2014]</ref> Proposition G led to a virtual halt of Ellis Act evictions in the months leading up to the election. After the proposition was narrowly defeated, the number of evictions from the Ellis Act more than doubled from 2014-2015.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.antievictionmappingproject.net/ellis.html|title=Ellis Act Evictions - Anti-Eviction Mapping Project|last=Project|first=Anti-Eviction Mapping|website=www.antievictionmappingproject.net|access-date=2016-11-16}}</ref>
Relative to all evictions, evictions with the five justifications above increased by 82.5% over the same five-year period.<ref name=":0" /> These movements have also focused on mitigating evictions from "no-fault" evictions such as those caused by the [[Ellis Act]]. In November 2014 a ballot measure was put forward which would put a tax on real estate speculation.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20140910222010/http://www.sfgov2.org/ftp/uploadedfiles/elections/ElectionsArchives/Meeting_Information/BSC/agendas/2014/November/11-A%20FINAL%20digest%20-%20Transfer%20Tax.pdf ''San Francisco Elections Office'', "San Francisco Ballot Simplification Committee Digest for Proposition G," archived September 9, 2014]</ref> Proposition G led to a virtual halt of Ellis Act evictions in the months leading up to the election. After the proposition was narrowly defeated, the number of evictions from the Ellis Act more than doubled from 2014-2015.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.antievictionmappingproject.net/ellis.html|title=Ellis Act Evictions - Anti-Eviction Mapping Project|last=Project|first=Anti-Eviction Mapping|website=www.antievictionmappingproject.net|access-date=2016-11-16}}</ref>


San Francisco-based technology companies such as [[Airbnb]] are actively involved in city politics to advance their interests in the city. In response to Airbnb's impact on the housing market in San Francisco, housing activists have called for restrictions on the company's listing practices to limit the number of short-term rentals in the city. Airbnb spent more than $8 million to defeat a single proposition in San Francisco that would restrict the number of rentals in San Francisco.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Prop-F-Measure-to-restrict-Airbnb-rentals-6609176.php|title=Prop. F: S.F. voters reject measure to restrict Airbnb rentals|newspaper=SFGate|access-date=2016-11-18}}</ref> In September, Airbnb began the process to sue the City of San Francisco to retaliate against new regulations.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.mercurynews.com/2016/09/18/airbnb-fights-unfriendly-regulations-wave-lawsuits-san-francisco/|title=Airbnb throws first punch against regulation-happy cities|date=19 September 2016 |access-date=2016-11-18}}</ref>
=== Politics ===
San Francisco-based technology companies such as [[Airbnb]] are actively involved in city politics to advance their interests in the city. In response to Airbnb's impact on the housing market in San Francisco, housing activists have called for restrictions on the company's listing practices to limit the number of short-term rentals in the city. Airbnb spent more than $8 million to defeat a single proposition in San Francisco that would restrict the number of rentals in San Francisco.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Prop-F-Measure-to-restrict-Airbnb-rentals-6609176.php|title=Prop. F: S.F. voters reject measure to restrict Airbnb rentals|newspaper=SFGate|access-date=2016-11-18}}</ref> In September, Airbnb began the process to sue the City of San Francisco to retaliate against new regulations.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.mercurynews.com/2016/09/18/airbnb-fights-unfriendly-regulations-wave-lawsuits-san-francisco/|title=Airbnb throws first punch against regulation-happy cities|access-date=2016-11-18}}</ref>


== By neighborhood ==
== By neighborhood ==
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=== Chinatown ===
=== Chinatown ===
[[Chinatown, San Francisco]] is an area in which many immigrants and small business owners reside and have been subject to mass gentrification. Due to the free landscape and convenient location of Chinatown, large businesses are attracted to the area and many small businesses in the area have been unable to make ends meet as a result. There have been multiple attempts through policy initiatives to try to preserve cultural value in Chinatown and slow down gentrification. The Chinatown Resource Center made an attempt to prevent developers who want to purchase land in Chinatown to create offices; however, 1,700 previously occupied residential units were still converted into office space. As a response, the Chinatown Resource Center created a proposal to make structural changes in land use policy to decrease or slow "revitalization."<ref name=":02">{{cite book |title=We are here: oral histories San Francisco |date=2015 |publisher=Anti-Eviction Mapping Project |oclc=957169839 }}{{pn|date=August 2020}}</ref> Furthermore, Chinatown Core's Planning department created the 1986 Rezoning Plan, which prohibited demolition and converting residential buildings in Chinatown Core for alternative needs.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.heart-of-the-city.org/|title=HEART OF THE CITY|website=HEART OF THE CITY|access-date=2016-11-11}}</ref> However, all other parts of Chinatown, such as the Chinatown North and Polk Gulch were not protected by this plan (only Chinatown Core was). Thus, many Asian communities in non-Chinatown Core areas suffered from threats of buyouts and eviction. For example, the number of Asian residents in Chinatown's Polk Gulch neighborhood decreased from 3,519 to 2,527 from 1980 to 2013. In addition, the majority of these Asian residents were replaced by white residents.<ref name=":1">{{cite book |last1=Yee |first1=Cameron Y |title=There goes the neighborhood: a regional analysis of gentrification and community stability in the San Francisco Bay Area |date=1999 |publisher=Urban Habitat Program |oclc=43838575 }}{{pn|date=August 2020}}</ref><ref name=":2">{{cite thesis |last1=Casique |first1=Francisco Diaz |date=2013 |title=Race, Space and Contestation: Gentrification in San Francisco's Latina/o Mission District, 1998–2002 |s2cid=128660820 |oclc=858268946 |url=https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5c84f2hc }}</ref> Though policy initiatives have slowed down gentrification in Chinatown, it has not prevented it.
[[Chinatown, San Francisco]] is an area in which many immigrants and small business owners reside and have been subject to mass gentrification. Due to the free landscape and convenient location of Chinatown, large businesses are attracted to the area and many small businesses in the area have been unable to make ends meet as a result. There have been multiple attempts through policy initiatives to try to preserve cultural value in Chinatown and slow down gentrification. The Chinatown Resource Center made an attempt to prevent developers who want to purchase land in Chinatown to create offices; however, 1,700 previously occupied residential units were still converted into office space. As a response, the Chinatown Resource Center created a proposal to make structural changes in land use policy to decrease or slow "revitalization."<ref name=":02">{{cite book |title=We are here: oral histories San Francisco |date=2015 |publisher=Anti-Eviction Mapping Project |oclc=957169839 }}{{page needed|date=August 2020}}</ref> Furthermore, Chinatown Core's Planning department created the 1986 Rezoning Plan, which prohibited demolition and converting residential buildings in Chinatown Core for alternative needs.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.heart-of-the-city.org/|title=HEART OF THE CITY|website=HEART OF THE CITY|access-date=2016-11-11}}</ref> However, all other parts of Chinatown, such as the Chinatown North and Polk Gulch were not protected by this plan (only Chinatown Core was). Thus, many Asian communities in non-Chinatown Core areas suffered from threats of buyouts and eviction. For example, the number of Asian residents in Chinatown's Polk Gulch neighborhood decreased from 3,519 to 2,527 from 1980 to 2013. In addition, the majority of these Asian residents were replaced by white residents.<ref name=":1">{{cite book |last1=Yee |first1=Cameron Y |title=There goes the neighborhood: a regional analysis of gentrification and community stability in the San Francisco Bay Area |date=1999 |publisher=Urban Habitat Program |oclc=43838575 }}{{page needed|date=August 2020}}</ref><ref name=":2">{{cite thesis |last1=Casique |first1=Francisco Diaz |date=2013 |title=Race, Space and Contestation: Gentrification in San Francisco's Latina/o Mission District, 1998–2002 |s2cid=128660820 |oclc=858268946 |url=https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5c84f2hc }}</ref> Though policy initiatives have slowed down gentrification in Chinatown, it has not prevented it.


==== Resistance to gentrification in Chinatown ====
==== Resistance to gentrification in Chinatown ====
Both Asian American Chinatown residents and Asian American individuals who do not live in Chinatown have protested gentrification in the Chinatown area in order to preserve the culture and history of the space.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Opillard |first1=Florian |title=Resisting the Politics of Displacement in the San Francisco Bay Area: Anti-gentrification Activism in the Tech Boom 2.0 |journal=European Journal of American Studies |date=31 December 2015 |volume=10 |issue=3 |doi=10.4000/ejas.11322 |doi-access=free }}</ref> Many community-based organizations have also worked together in protest. For example, the Chinatown Community Development Center (CCDC) and the 1,000 member Community Tenants Association work together on cases such as evictions towards elderly or people with disabilities in Chinatown. Furthermore, many Chinatown residents use their own social networks to preserve culture in their spaces. Local Chinese newspapers are often utilized to notify community members of open places for rent as opposed to mainstream outlets such as Craigslist to ensure information is safe and protected amongst community members only.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Montojo |first=Nicole |date=July 2015 |chapter=Chinatown Case Study |url=http://www.urbandisplacement.org/sites/default/files/images/case_studies_on_gentrification_and_displacement-_full_report.pdf |title=Case Studies on Gentrification and Displacement in the San Francisco Bay Area }}</ref>
Both Asian American Chinatown residents and Asian American individuals who don't live in Chinatown have protested gentrification in the Chinatown area in order to preserve the culture and history of the space.<ref name=":9">{{cite journal |last1=Opillard |first1=Florian |title=Resisting the Politics of Displacement in the San Francisco Bay Area: Anti-gentrification Activism in the Tech Boom 2.0 |journal=European Journal of American Studies |date=31 December 2015 |volume=10 |issue=3 |doi=10.4000/ejas.11322 |doi-access=free }}</ref>


=== Mission District ===
=== Mission District ===
[[Mission District, San Francisco]] is heavily populated with Latino communities and has historically been subject to gentrification from growth and expansion of technology. For example, the cost of living and rent prices in the Mission District increased in the late 1990s after the [[Dot-com bubble]] boom. The Mission District was chosen as a place for many higher-income, white tech workers to reside because of the culture of the Mission District, the high density of the neighborhood and the multiple forms of transportation infrastructures available in the area to the Financial District and Silicon Valley. Along with an increase in rent prices, the value of the Northeast Mission Industrial Zone (NEMIZ) decreased and was replaced by tech-based work.<ref name=":4">{{cite thesis |last1=Phillips |first1=Lucy |title=Revitalized Streets of San Francisco: A Study of Redevelopment and Gentrification in SoMa and the Mission |date=20 April 2012 |url=https://scholarship.claremont.edu/scripps_theses/99/ }}</ref> The dot-com boom is also known as the Mission District's first wave of gentrification. After the dot-com bubble burst, the Mission District experienced less gentrification during the period of economic recovery, however, it remained an area with an increasing influx of high-income, tech workers. Since 1980, the Latino population in the Mission District decreased from 44% to 38% in 2013. This was coupled with an increase in the population of white folks in the Mission District from 36% in 1980 to 43% in 2013. Furthermore, the number of residents in the Mission District without a high school diploma decreased from 41% in 1980 to 17% in 2003, while the number of residents in the Mission District with a four-year college degree increased from 18% in 1980 to 52% in 2003.<ref name="Cespedes et al 2015">{{Cite book |last1=Cespedes |first1=Sydney |last2=Crispell |first2=Mitchell |last3=Blackston |first3=Christina |last4=Plowman |first4=Jonathan |last5=Graves |first5=Edward |date=July 2015 |chapter=The Mission District Case Study |url=http://www.urbandisplacement.org/sites/default/files/images/case_studies_on_gentrification_and_displacement-_full_report.pdf |title=Case Studies on Gentrification and Displacement in the San Francisco Bay Area }}</ref><ref name=":3">{{cite web|url=http://missionlocal.org/2016/06/gentrification-shadow-concerns-for-16th-and-mission-housing-project/|title=Gentrification, Shadows Concern for Mission and Housing Project|last1=Barros|first1=Joe Rivano|newspaper=MissionLocal|accessdate=26 October 2016}}</ref>
[[Mission District, San Francisco]] is heavily populated with Latino communities and has historically been subject to gentrification from growth and expansion of technology. For example, the cost of living and rent prices in the Mission District increased in the late 1990s after the [[Dot-com bubble]] boom. The Mission District was chosen as a place for many higher-income, white tech workers to reside because of the culture of the Mission District, the high density of the neighborhood and the multiple forms of transportation infrastructures available in the area to the Financial District and Silicon Valley. Along with an increase in rent prices, the value of the Northeast Mission Industrial Zone (NEMIZ) decreased and was replaced by tech-based work.<ref name=":4">{{cite thesis |last1=Phillips |first1=Lucy |title=Revitalized Streets of San Francisco: A Study of Redevelopment and Gentrification in SoMa and the Mission |date=20 April 2012 |url=https://scholarship.claremont.edu/scripps_theses/99/ }}</ref> The dot-com boom is also known as the Mission District's first wave of gentrification. After the dot-com bubble burst, the Mission District experienced less gentrification during the period of economic recovery, however, it remained an area with an increasing influx of high-income, tech workers. Since 1980, the Latino population in the Mission District decreased from 44% to 38% in 2013. This was coupled with an increase in the population of white residents in the Mission District from 36% in 1980 to 43% in 2013. Furthermore, the number of residents in the Mission District without a high school diploma decreased from 41% in 1980 to 17% in 2003, while the number of residents in the Mission District with a four-year college degree increased from 18% in 1980 to 52% in 2003.<ref name="Cespedes et al 2015">{{Cite book |last1=Cespedes |first1=Sydney |last2=Crispell |first2=Mitchell |last3=Blackston |first3=Christina |last4=Plowman |first4=Jonathan |last5=Graves |first5=Edward |date=July 2015 |chapter=The Mission District Case Study |url=http://www.urbandisplacement.org/sites/default/files/images/case_studies_on_gentrification_and_displacement-_full_report.pdf |title=Case Studies on Gentrification and Displacement in the San Francisco Bay Area }}</ref><ref name=":3">{{cite web|url=http://missionlocal.org/2016/06/gentrification-shadow-concerns-for-16th-and-mission-housing-project/|title=Gentrification, Shadows Concern for Mission and Housing Project|last1=Barros|first1=Joe Rivano|newspaper=MissionLocal|date=10 June 2016 |accessdate=26 October 2016}}</ref>


==== Resistance to gentrification in the Mission District ====
==== Resistance to gentrification in the Mission District ====
San Francisco's Mission District has historically been a working-class area. From the early 1960s onward the Mission has been predominantly populated by working and low-income people whose first language is Spanish, many of them recent immigrants. The dot-com boom of the mid to late 1990s saw an intense acceleration of Mission gentrification. Residents of the Mission who have felt threatened by gentrification responded in various ways. A notorious example of resistance was the 'Mission Yuppie Eradication Project,' an anti-capitalist direct action group which advocated and committed acts of vandalism and sabotage of expensive vehicles, luxury housing, and bars and dining establishments catering to wealthy newcomers. The MYEP aimed at defining gentrification in terms of irreconcilable conflict between classes and elicited a considerable amount of media coverage.<ref>{{cite web|title=When San Francisco Rebelled Against The Techies|url=https://www.buzzfeed.com/justinesharrock/san-franciscos-last-rebellion-against-the-techies|website=BuzzFeed|accessdate=2017-10-26}}</ref> Mission gentrification has also triggered responses from a variety of organizations, movements and artistic expressions. Street art can be seen on roads and alley-ways in the Mission District describing the negative effects of gentrification. For example, street art on the corner of 19th and San Carlos depicting ten sea turtles says: "Latino Art Only," indicating discontent from gentrification as well as from the influx of white folks in what has been a primarily Latino neighborhood.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://missionlocal.org/2016/05/anti-gentrification-graffiti-paints-picture-of-artists-struggle-for-space/|title=Anti-Gentrification Graffiti Paints Picture of Artists' Struggle for Space|newspaper=MissionLocal|access-date=2016-11-20}}</ref> The Mission District is also the heart of San Francisco's protests. The [[San Francisco tech bus protests]] occurred in the Mission District, to fight against gentrification and displacement caused by the tech boom, as well as rising prices of rental housing.
San Francisco's Mission District has historically been a working-class area. From the early 1960s onward the Mission has been predominantly populated by working and low-income people whose first language is Spanish, many of them recent immigrants. The dot-com boom of the mid to late 1990s saw an intense acceleration of Mission gentrification. Residents of the Mission who have felt threatened by gentrification responded in various ways. A notorious example of resistance was the 'Mission Yuppie Eradication Project,' an anti-capitalist direct action group which advocated and committed acts of vandalism and sabotage of expensive vehicles, luxury housing, and bars and dining establishments catering to wealthy newcomers. The MYEP aimed at defining gentrification in terms of irreconcilable conflict between classes and elicited a considerable amount of media coverage.<ref>{{cite web|title=When San Francisco Rebelled Against The Techies|url=https://www.buzzfeed.com/justinesharrock/san-franciscos-last-rebellion-against-the-techies|website=BuzzFeed|accessdate=2017-10-26}}</ref>
Mission gentrification has also triggered responses from a variety of organizations, movements and artistic expressions. Street art can be seen on roads and alley-ways in the Mission District describing the negative effects of gentrification. For example, street art on the corner of 19th and San Carlos depicting ten sea turtles says: "Latino Art Only," indicating discontent from gentrification as well as from the influx of white folks in what has been a primarily Latino neighborhood.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://missionlocal.org/2016/05/anti-gentrification-graffiti-paints-picture-of-artists-struggle-for-space/|title=Anti-Gentrification Graffiti Paints Picture of Artists' Struggle for Space|newspaper=MissionLocal|access-date=2016-11-20}}</ref> The Mission District is also the heart of San Francisco's protests. The [[San Francisco tech bus protests]] occurred in the Mission District, to fight against gentrification and displacement caused by the tech boom, as well as rising prices of rental housing. However, Latino families continued to be displaced despite all of the protesting and other efforts to keep them from having to leave.<ref name=":10">{{Cite journal |last=Mirabal |first=Nancy Raquel |date=2009-05-01 |title=Geographies of Displacement: Latina/os, Oral History, and The Politics of Gentrification in San Francisco's Mission District |url=https://online.ucpress.edu/tph/article/31/2/7/90169/Geographies-of-Displacement-Latina-os-Oral-History |journal=The Public Historian |language=en |volume=31 |issue=2 |pages=7–31 |doi=10.1525/tph.2009.31.2.7 |pmid=19824231 |s2cid=32698180 |issn=0272-3433}}</ref>


== Gentrification of the Greater Bay Area Region ==
== Gentrification of the Greater Bay Area Region ==
Silicon Valley's technological rise has also led to gentrification of the broader Bay Area. This includes East Palo Alto, where Hispanic and African Americans have begun to move out in face of rising costs. The flourishing of technology sector at [[Silicon Valley]] and rapid recovery from the Great Recession have caused for the job market to skyrocket for popular professions, while others decline.<ref name="Cespedes et al 2015"/> Burlingame, Mountain View, San Jose, and Santa Clara are also affected by Silicon Valley's growth, as the region has no defined bounds and continues to proliferate along the central coast.<ref name=":7">{{cite news |id={{ProQuest|1941842853}} |last1=Waters |first1=Richard |title=The great Silicon Valley land grab |url=https://www.ft.com/content/82bc282e-8790-11e7-bf50-e1c239b45787 |work=Financial Times |date=24 August 2017 }}</ref>
Silicon Valley's technological rise has also led to gentrification of the broader Bay Area. This includes [[East Palo Alto, California|East Palo Alto]], where Hispanic and African Americans have begun to move out in the face of rising costs. The flourishing of technology sector at [[Silicon Valley]] and rapid recovery from the Great Recession have caused for the job market to skyrocket for popular professions, while others decline.<ref name="Cespedes et al 2015"/> [[Burlingame, California|Burlingame]], [[Mountain View, California|Mountain View]], [[San Jose, California|San Jose]], and [[Santa Clara, California|Santa Clara]] are also affected by Silicon Valley's growth, as the region has no defined bounds and continues to proliferate along the central coast.<ref name=":7">{{cite news |id={{ProQuest|1941842853}} |last1=Waters |first1=Richard |title=The great Silicon Valley land grab |url=https://www.ft.com/content/82bc282e-8790-11e7-bf50-e1c239b45787 |work=Financial Times |date=24 August 2017 }}</ref>


African Americans comprised almost half of homeowners and renters in North Oakland in 1990s, yet by 2011, this number have dropped by almost 30%.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Levin |first1=Sam |title=The Fight to Develop West Oakland |url=https://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/the-fight-to-develop-west-oakland/Content?oid=4013953 |work=East Bay Express |date=8 July 2014 }}</ref> Even though African Americans represent the majority of the population in Bay area cities,{{citation needed|date=October 2019}} they are more likely to be displaced and gentrified due to low socioeconomic status and less financial wealth.<ref>Atkinson, Rowland (2012). "[http://neighbourhoodchange.ca/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/Atkinson-2002-Gentrification-Review.pdf Does Gentrification Help or Harm Urban Neighborhoods? An Assessment of the Evidence-Base in the Context of the New Urban Agenda]" (PDF). ''ESRC Centre For Neighborhood Research''.</ref> In fact, there is a strong correlation between gentrification and the susceptibility of people of color being evicted and facing housing suppression.<ref name=":5">{{cite journal |last1=Whittle |first1=Henry J. |last2=Palar |first2=Kartika |last3=Hufstedler |first3=Lee Lemus |last4=Seligman |first4=Hilary K. |last5=Frongillo |first5=Edward A. |last6=Weiser |first6=Sheri D. |title=Food insecurity, chronic illness, and gentrification in the San Francisco Bay Area: An example of structural violence in United States public policy |journal=Social Science & Medicine |date=October 2015 |volume=143 |pages=154–161 |doi=10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.08.027 |pmid=26356827 |url=https://escholarship.org/uc/item/52p9f6gt }}</ref> For instance, West Oakland used to be the center for Black cultural life on an international scale in the late 1900s, however, only 28% of the African American community made up the whole Oakland population in 2010.<ref name=":6">{{cite thesis |last1=Irvin |first1=Karessa |title=Maintaining community roots : understanding gentrification through the eyes of long-standing African American residents in West Oakland |date=1 January 2016 |url=https://scholarworks.smith.edu/theses/1686/ }}</ref>
African Americans comprised almost half of homeowners and renters in North Oakland in the 1990s, yet by 2011, this number has dropped by almost 30%.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Levin |first1=Sam |title=The Fight to Develop West Oakland |url=https://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/the-fight-to-develop-west-oakland/Content?oid=4013953 |work=East Bay Express |date=8 July 2014 }}</ref> Even though African Americans represent a significant demographic minority in East Bay cities,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Bay Area Census -- Bay Area Data |url=http://www.bayareacensus.ca.gov/bayarea.htm |access-date=2023-02-07 |website=www.bayareacensus.ca.gov}}</ref> they are more likely to be displaced and gentrified due to low socioeconomic status and less financial wealth.<ref>Atkinson, Rowland (2012). "[http://neighbourhoodchange.ca/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/Atkinson-2002-Gentrification-Review.pdf Does Gentrification Help or Harm Urban Neighborhoods? An Assessment of the Evidence-Base in the Context of the New Urban Agenda]" (PDF). ''ESRC Centre For Neighborhood Research''.</ref> In fact, there is a strong correlation between gentrification and the susceptibility of people of color being evicted and facing housing suppression.<ref name=":5">{{cite journal |last1=Whittle |first1=Henry J. |last2=Palar |first2=Kartika |last3=Hufstedler |first3=Lee Lemus |last4=Seligman |first4=Hilary K. |last5=Frongillo |first5=Edward A. |last6=Weiser |first6=Sheri D. |title=Food insecurity, chronic illness, and gentrification in the San Francisco Bay Area: An example of structural violence in United States public policy |journal=Social Science & Medicine |date=October 2015 |volume=143 |pages=154–161 |doi=10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.08.027 |pmid=26356827 |url=https://escholarship.org/uc/item/52p9f6gt }}</ref> For instance, while West Oakland used to be the center for Black cultural life on an international scale in the late 1900s, only 28% of Oakland's citywide population identified as African American in the 2010 census.<ref name=":6">{{cite thesis |last1=Irvin |first1=Karessa |title=Maintaining community roots : understanding gentrification through the eyes of long-standing African American residents in West Oakland |date=1 January 2016 |url=https://scholarworks.smith.edu/theses/1686/ }}</ref>


=== Waves of gentrification in the Bay Area ===
=== Waves of gentrification in the Bay Area ===
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'''Second wave (2000- 2015)''': The transition of housing market dynamics in the Bay Area then did not just create housing crisis, but an intensification of gentrification also known as the second wave.<ref name=":8" /> This period is characterized by a drastic increased in borrowing [[predatory loan]]s by residents in order to combat the effects of gentrification. However, many of the loans offered did not include income [[Verifiability Principle|verifiability]] so many homes were foreclosed, affecting thousand homeowners and tenants living in the Bay Area.<ref>{{cite thesis |id={{ProQuest|1558183794}} |last1=Cadji |first1=Joshua Harris |year=2014 |title='Seeds of Destruction, Seeds of Creation': Implications in and Resistance to Gentrification at the North Oakland Farmers Market }}</ref>
'''Second wave (2000- 2015)''': The transition of housing market dynamics in the Bay Area then did not just create housing crisis, but an intensification of gentrification also known as the second wave.<ref name=":8" /> This period is characterized by a drastic increased in borrowing [[predatory loan]]s by residents in order to combat the effects of gentrification. However, many of the loans offered did not include income [[Verifiability Principle|verifiability]] so many homes were foreclosed, affecting thousand homeowners and tenants living in the Bay Area.<ref>{{cite thesis |id={{ProQuest|1558183794}} |last1=Cadji |first1=Joshua Harris |year=2014 |title='Seeds of Destruction, Seeds of Creation': Implications in and Resistance to Gentrification at the North Oakland Farmers Market }}</ref>


'''Third wave (2015- current):''' The Bay Area is now currently facing a new wave of gentrification caused by the expansion of technology industry and investment of private business developers.<ref name=":7" /> New businesses open everywhere to replace long-term communities, and causes the constant migration of tenants all over the Bay Area. This period is marked by the heightened eviction, displacement rates that contribute to the growing [[Economic inequality|inequity]] and exacerbated [[poverty rate]]s.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Atkinson |first1=Rowland |title=Losing One's Place: Narratives of Neighbourhood Change, Market Injustice and Symbolic Displacement |journal=Housing, Theory and Society |date=2 October 2015 |volume=32 |issue=4 |pages=373–388 |doi=10.1080/14036096.2015.1053980 |s2cid=129995849 |doi-access=free }}</ref>
'''Third wave (2015- current):''' The third wave of gentrification is often due to a change in the economic culture and the status quo at a given time.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Hackworth |first1=Jason |last2=Smith |first2=Neil |date=November 2001 |title=The changing state of gentrification |url=https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467-9663.00172 |journal=Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie (Journal of Economic & Social Geography) |volume=92 |issue=4 |pages=464 |doi=10.1111/1467-9663.00172}}</ref> Meaning that the next big thing that will attract wealth will dictate the change that we witness in a certain area or neighborhood. Often those who do not fit within the new changes will be forcefully displaced and left to fend for themselves, and often these are [[Low income|low-income]] residents who have resided in the neighborhood for decades'''.'''<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Whittle |first1=Henry J. |last2=Palar |first2=Kartika |last3=Hufstedler |first3=Lee Lemus |last4=Seligman |first4=Hilary K. |last5=Frongillo |first5=Edward A. |last6=Weiser |first6=Sheri D. |date=2015-10-01 |title=Food insecurity, chronic illness, and gentrification in the San Francisco Bay Area: An example of structural violence in United States public policy |url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0277953615300794 |journal=Social Science & Medicine |language=en |volume=143 |pages=154–161 |doi=10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.08.027 |pmid=26356827 |issn=0277-9536}}</ref> This is specifically what occurred in San Francisco during its third wave of gentrification, as it took a great interest in increasing the city's wealth and revenue by making the city more appealing to tourists and investors.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Gowan |first=Teresa |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Gpf3DwSwxZcC&pg=PR7 |title=Hobos, Hustlers, and Backsliders: Homeless in San Francisco |date=2010 |publisher=U of Minnesota Press |isbn=978-0-8166-4869-6 |language=en}}</ref> The Bay Area is now currently facing a new wave of gentrification caused by the expansion of technology industry and investment of private business developers.<ref name=":7" /> New businesses open everywhere to replace long-term communities{{Citation needed|date=June 2022}}, and causes the constant migration of tenants all over the Bay Area{{Citation needed|date=June 2022}}. This period is marked by the heightened eviction {{Citation needed|date=June 2022}}, displacement rates that contribute to the growing [[Economic inequality|inequity]] and exacerbated [[poverty rate]]s.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Atkinson |first1=Rowland |title=Losing One's Place: Narratives of Neighbourhood Change, Market Injustice and Symbolic Displacement |journal=Housing, Theory and Society |date=2 October 2015 |volume=32 |issue=4 |pages=373–388 |doi=10.1080/14036096.2015.1053980 |s2cid=129995849 |doi-access=free }}</ref> The overall goal appears to be a hastily attempt to pursue the economic advancement of the city{{Citation needed|date=June 2022}}, while the displacement of original or low-income residents is left on the back-burner{{Citation needed|date=June 2022}}, which will be dealt with at a later time.{{Citation needed|reason=Verbiage presents opinion as fact.|date=June 2022}}


== See also ==
== See also ==
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{{Reflist|refs=
{{Reflist|refs=


<ref name=SF_RC_study_2017 >{{ cite web | url=https://www.nber.org/papers/w24181 | doi= | title=The Effects of Rent Control Expansion on Tenants, Landlords, and Inequality: Evidence from San Francisco | last1=Diamond | first1=Rebecca | last2=McQuade | first2=Tim | last3=Qian | first3=Franklin | publisher=[[National Bureau of Economic Research]] | date=2017-10-11 | accessdate=2018-08-07 }}</ref>
<ref name=SF_RC_study_2017 >{{ Cite journal | url=https://www.nber.org/papers/w24181 | doi= 10.3386/w24181| title=The Effects of Rent Control Expansion on Tenants, Landlords, and Inequality: Evidence from San Francisco | last1=Diamond | first1=Rebecca | last2=McQuade | first2=Tim | last3=Qian | first3=Franklin | publisher=[[National Bureau of Economic Research]] | date=2017-10-11 | accessdate=2018-08-07 }}</ref>


<ref name=MN_RC >{{cite news | url=https://www.mercurynews.com/2017/11/02/rent-control-policy-likely-fueled-the-gentrification-of-san-francisco-study-finds/ | title=Rent-control policy 'likely fueled the gentrification of San Francisco,' study finds - As California debates rent caps, economists offer a cautionary note. | last=Murphy | first=Katy | newspaper=[[The Mercury News|The San Jose Mercury News]] | date=2017-11-02 | accessdate=2018-08-07 | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20180104192451/https://www.mercurynews.com/2017/11/02/rent-control-policy-likely-fueled-the-gentrification-of-san-francisco-study-finds/ | archive-date=2018-01-04 | url-status=live }}</ref>
<ref name=MN_RC >{{cite news | url=https://www.mercurynews.com/2017/11/02/rent-control-policy-likely-fueled-the-gentrification-of-san-francisco-study-finds/ | title=Rent-control policy 'likely fueled the gentrification of San Francisco,' study finds - As California debates rent caps, economists offer a cautionary note. | last=Murphy | first=Katy | newspaper=[[The Mercury News|The San Jose Mercury News]] | date=2017-11-02 | accessdate=2018-08-07 | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20180104192451/https://www.mercurynews.com/2017/11/02/rent-control-policy-likely-fueled-the-gentrification-of-san-francisco-study-finds/ | archive-date=2018-01-04 | url-status=live }}</ref>
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{{US housing by state}}
{{US housing by state}}

[[Category:Gentrification in the United States|San Francisco]]
[[Category:Gentrification in the United States|San Francisco]]
[[Category:San Francisco]]
[[Category:San Francisco]]

Latest revision as of 21:00, 4 March 2024

6th and Market, San Francisco

The gentrification of San Francisco has been an ongoing source of tension between renters and working people who live in the city as well as real estate interests. A result of this conflict has been an emerging antagonism between longtime working-class residents of the city and the influx of new tech workers. A major increase of gentrification in San Francisco has been attributed to the Dot-Com Boom in the 1990s, creating a strong demand for skilled tech workers from local startups and close by Silicon Valley businesses leading to rising standards of living.[1] As a result, a large influx of new workers in the internet and technology sector began to contribute to the gentrification of historically poor immigrant neighborhoods such as the Mission District.[2] During this time San Francisco began a transformation eventually culminating in it becoming the most expensive city to live in the United States.[3]

Causes[edit]

Technology firms and venture capital[edit]

Many locals in San Francisco attribute the negative effects of gentrification to the large number of technology companies in the surrounding metropolitan area. Private shuttle buses operated by companies such as Google have driven up rents in areas near their stops, leading to the San Francisco tech bus protests from locals in the area.[4] It is clear to see that there is a strong connection between the technological sphere and the city as opposed to the city and the people that they are meant to serve; existing/current residents.[5] However, this does not mean that big tech is to blame, as in most cases the goal of gentrification is to increase the wealth of a city. Therefore, the city will make connections or changes with whoever has the most wealth at a given time, which in this case happened to be big tech companies as the hope was to increase both job opportunities and the economic well-being of San Francisco.[6]

Rent control[edit]

In 1994, San Francisco voters passed a ballot initiative which expanded the city's existing rent control laws to include small multi-unit apartments with four or less units, built prior to 1980. (about 30% of the city's rental housing stock at the time). [7]: 7 [8]: 1 [9]: 1 In 2017, Stanford economics researcher Rebecca Diamond and others published a study which examined the effects of this specific rent control law on the rental units newly controlled compared to similar style units (multi-unit apartments with four or less units) not under rent control (built after 1980), as well as this law's effect on the total city rental stock, and on overall rent prices in the city, covering the years from 1995 to 2012. [8][9][10] [11]: 1 [12]: 1 [13]

They found that while San Francisco's rent control laws benefited tenants who had rent controlled units, it also resulted in landlords removing 30% of the units in the study from the rental market, (by conversion to condos or TICs) which led to a 15% citywide decrease in total rental units, and a 7% increase in citywide rents. [7]: 1,44  [8] [9]: 1 [10][11]

The authors stated that "This substitution toward owner occupied and high-end new construction rental housing likely fueled the gentrification of San Francisco, as these types of properties cater to higher income individuals." [7]: 3  [8] [9]: 1 [10][11] [12]: 1

The authors also noted that "...forcing landlords to provide insurance against rent increases leads to large losses to tenants. If society desires to provide social insurance against rent increases, it would be more desirable to offer this subsidy in the form of a government subsidy or tax credit. This would remove landlords’ incentives to decrease the housing supply and could provide households with the insurance they desire." [7]: 44  [8]: 1 [9]: 1 [10]: 1 [11]: 1 [12]: 1 [13]: 1

As of 2014, about 75% of all rental units in San Francisco are rent controlled.[10]

Impact[edit]

Rising prices, immigration, and the tech boom led to a cultural and demographic shift in the city.

Demographics[edit]

From 1990–2010, San Francisco gained 2,000 white residents, 32,000 Asian residents, and 13,000 Hispanic residents while the African American population decreased by 18,000 people.[14] According to the American Community Survey, during this same period, an average of 60,000 people both migrated to San Francisco and migrated out.[citation needed] The people who left the city were more likely to have lower education levels, and have lower incomes than their counterparts who moved into the city. In addition, there was a net annual migration of 7,500 people age 35 or under, and net out-migration of over 5,000 for people 36 or over. For all of these demographic statistics, the rate of change has accelerated from 2005-2007 to 2010-2014.[15] Migration and demographic patterns are continuing to rapidly shift in San Francisco.

Economics[edit]

From 2010 to 2014, the number of households making $100,000 or more saw an average growth rate of 17% while households making less than $100,000 saw an average growth rate of -3%.[citation needed] Of all multifamily rental units constructed from 2012–2014, 85% of new real estate construction in San Francisco has been luxury.[16]

Many of the people living in San Francisco do not work in the city. Many more live in the suburbs and commute into San Francisco every day. High rents in Silicon Valley and other factors have contributed to a phenomenon where many tech workers choose not to live closer to work in Silicon Valley and instead stay in San Francisco. A survey conducted by the Bay Area Council and the Metropolitan Transportation Commission has found that 35 shuttle services operate a fleet of more than 800 buses that ferry 34,000 commuters every single day around the San Francisco Metropolitan Area.[17] Of these shuttles, over 200 of them travel exclusively between San Francisco County and Santa Clara County.

Evictions[edit]

One major observed consequence to the Gentrification of San Francisco has been the rising number of eviction notices seen all throughout the city. Since 2009, the number of evictions has been increasing every single year in San Francisco and from 2014–2015 there were over 2,000 eviction notices filed with the rent board. This period represents a 54.7% increase in evictions over the five previous years.[18] Houses in San Francisco, with a median listing price of $1,000,000,[19] lead low and middle classes to conform the list of renters being therefore the most impacted by the escalating number of evictions.[20]

Community response[edit]

General background on Bay Area anti-gentrification movements.[edit]

In the broadest strokes of the matter, scholars have described anti-gentrification groups as all finding themselves more or less opposed to the Bay Area’s ‘mainstream liberal establishment.’ [21] According to historian Nancy Mirabal, in the eyes of anti-gentrification leaders, San Francisco city officials exert the “collective belief… that gentrification, despite all of its potential drawbacks, was a positive… byproduct of growing Bay Area prosperity.”[22]

In retaliation to the rapidly changing socioeconomic landscape of San Francisco, accelerated by the influx of high paying technology jobs, anti-eviction movements such as the San Francisco Tenants Union,[23][24]Causa Justa :: Just Cause, Right to the City Alliance, and People Organizing to Demand Environmental and Economic Rights (PODER)[25] have been created by the local community as a measure to hinder the effects of gentrification. Besides tenants' rights, social, economic, environmental and cultural public concerns have also been addressed by The Mission Anti-displacement Coalition (MAC),[26] an organization created by PODER to counteract the effects of gentrification in the late 1990s due to the rise of tech jobs.[25]

Opillard has written that while most of today’s local organizing came into being during the early successes of the dot-com boom, several of today’s most prominent anti-gentrification dissenters only began to gain currency in the wake of the Occupy movement.[21]

Karl Beitel has written about how this traditionally progressive faction has monopolized the most visible levels of anti-gentrification discourse— showing up at city council meetings, maintaining large Twitter followings, and organizing frequent street protests.[27] Still, more extremist anti-gentrification groups-- such as GAY SHAME and The Lucy Parsons Project-- have also had a large impact on the public art and street protests which have colored the Bay Area's anti-gentrification movement in recent years.[28]

Politics[edit]

The top five leading justifications for evictions are:

  1. Breach of lease - Under the Rent Ordinance tenants may be evicted for violating any terms of their signed lease agreement.
  2. Nuisance - Tenants who regularly disrupt "the comfort, safety or enjoyment of the landlord or tenants in the building" are subject to eviction.
  3. Owner Move In - Landlords are entitled to a unit in their complexes for them or an immediate relative to use as their residence
  4. Ellis Act - The California law permits evicting all tenants if the owner intends to stop renting.
  5. Illegal Use - An eviction method used to get rid of tenants engaged in illegal activities. This justification is now used to evict tenants from "illegal" units that exist because a landlord failed to get permits.

Relative to all evictions, evictions with the five justifications above increased by 82.5% over the same five-year period.[18] These movements have also focused on mitigating evictions from "no-fault" evictions such as those caused by the Ellis Act. In November 2014 a ballot measure was put forward which would put a tax on real estate speculation.[29] Proposition G led to a virtual halt of Ellis Act evictions in the months leading up to the election. After the proposition was narrowly defeated, the number of evictions from the Ellis Act more than doubled from 2014-2015.[30]

San Francisco-based technology companies such as Airbnb are actively involved in city politics to advance their interests in the city. In response to Airbnb's impact on the housing market in San Francisco, housing activists have called for restrictions on the company's listing practices to limit the number of short-term rentals in the city. Airbnb spent more than $8 million to defeat a single proposition in San Francisco that would restrict the number of rentals in San Francisco.[31] In September, Airbnb began the process to sue the City of San Francisco to retaliate against new regulations.[32]

By neighborhood[edit]

As the fourth most populous city in California, and the 13th-most populous in the United States, with a 2016 census-estimated population of 870,887, San Francisco has multiple neighborhoods that experienced gentrification during different time periods. Below are a few of the areas that have been most gentrified in San Francisco.

Chinatown[edit]

Chinatown, San Francisco is an area in which many immigrants and small business owners reside and have been subject to mass gentrification. Due to the free landscape and convenient location of Chinatown, large businesses are attracted to the area and many small businesses in the area have been unable to make ends meet as a result. There have been multiple attempts through policy initiatives to try to preserve cultural value in Chinatown and slow down gentrification. The Chinatown Resource Center made an attempt to prevent developers who want to purchase land in Chinatown to create offices; however, 1,700 previously occupied residential units were still converted into office space. As a response, the Chinatown Resource Center created a proposal to make structural changes in land use policy to decrease or slow "revitalization."[33] Furthermore, Chinatown Core's Planning department created the 1986 Rezoning Plan, which prohibited demolition and converting residential buildings in Chinatown Core for alternative needs.[34] However, all other parts of Chinatown, such as the Chinatown North and Polk Gulch were not protected by this plan (only Chinatown Core was). Thus, many Asian communities in non-Chinatown Core areas suffered from threats of buyouts and eviction. For example, the number of Asian residents in Chinatown's Polk Gulch neighborhood decreased from 3,519 to 2,527 from 1980 to 2013. In addition, the majority of these Asian residents were replaced by white residents.[35][36] Though policy initiatives have slowed down gentrification in Chinatown, it has not prevented it.

Resistance to gentrification in Chinatown[edit]

Both Asian American Chinatown residents and Asian American individuals who don't live in Chinatown have protested gentrification in the Chinatown area in order to preserve the culture and history of the space.[21]

Mission District[edit]

Mission District, San Francisco is heavily populated with Latino communities and has historically been subject to gentrification from growth and expansion of technology. For example, the cost of living and rent prices in the Mission District increased in the late 1990s after the Dot-com bubble boom. The Mission District was chosen as a place for many higher-income, white tech workers to reside because of the culture of the Mission District, the high density of the neighborhood and the multiple forms of transportation infrastructures available in the area to the Financial District and Silicon Valley. Along with an increase in rent prices, the value of the Northeast Mission Industrial Zone (NEMIZ) decreased and was replaced by tech-based work.[37] The dot-com boom is also known as the Mission District's first wave of gentrification. After the dot-com bubble burst, the Mission District experienced less gentrification during the period of economic recovery, however, it remained an area with an increasing influx of high-income, tech workers. Since 1980, the Latino population in the Mission District decreased from 44% to 38% in 2013. This was coupled with an increase in the population of white residents in the Mission District from 36% in 1980 to 43% in 2013. Furthermore, the number of residents in the Mission District without a high school diploma decreased from 41% in 1980 to 17% in 2003, while the number of residents in the Mission District with a four-year college degree increased from 18% in 1980 to 52% in 2003.[38][39]

Resistance to gentrification in the Mission District[edit]

San Francisco's Mission District has historically been a working-class area. From the early 1960s onward the Mission has been predominantly populated by working and low-income people whose first language is Spanish, many of them recent immigrants. The dot-com boom of the mid to late 1990s saw an intense acceleration of Mission gentrification. Residents of the Mission who have felt threatened by gentrification responded in various ways. A notorious example of resistance was the 'Mission Yuppie Eradication Project,' an anti-capitalist direct action group which advocated and committed acts of vandalism and sabotage of expensive vehicles, luxury housing, and bars and dining establishments catering to wealthy newcomers. The MYEP aimed at defining gentrification in terms of irreconcilable conflict between classes and elicited a considerable amount of media coverage.[40]

Mission gentrification has also triggered responses from a variety of organizations, movements and artistic expressions. Street art can be seen on roads and alley-ways in the Mission District describing the negative effects of gentrification. For example, street art on the corner of 19th and San Carlos depicting ten sea turtles says: "Latino Art Only," indicating discontent from gentrification as well as from the influx of white folks in what has been a primarily Latino neighborhood.[41] The Mission District is also the heart of San Francisco's protests. The San Francisco tech bus protests occurred in the Mission District, to fight against gentrification and displacement caused by the tech boom, as well as rising prices of rental housing. However, Latino families continued to be displaced despite all of the protesting and other efforts to keep them from having to leave.[22]

Gentrification of the Greater Bay Area Region[edit]

Silicon Valley's technological rise has also led to gentrification of the broader Bay Area. This includes East Palo Alto, where Hispanic and African Americans have begun to move out in the face of rising costs. The flourishing of technology sector at Silicon Valley and rapid recovery from the Great Recession have caused for the job market to skyrocket for popular professions, while others decline.[38] Burlingame, Mountain View, San Jose, and Santa Clara are also affected by Silicon Valley's growth, as the region has no defined bounds and continues to proliferate along the central coast.[42]

African Americans comprised almost half of homeowners and renters in North Oakland in the 1990s, yet by 2011, this number has dropped by almost 30%.[43] Even though African Americans represent a significant demographic minority in East Bay cities,[44] they are more likely to be displaced and gentrified due to low socioeconomic status and less financial wealth.[45] In fact, there is a strong correlation between gentrification and the susceptibility of people of color being evicted and facing housing suppression.[46] For instance, while West Oakland used to be the center for Black cultural life on an international scale in the late 1900s, only 28% of Oakland's citywide population identified as African American in the 2010 census.[47]

Waves of gentrification in the Bay Area[edit]

First Wave (1950s-1990s): The First Wave of gentrification occurred during the period of blooming technology, and rapid modernization of the society.[48] The discourse surfaced when San Francisco emerged as the center of technological development that gave rise to rapid job growth and transformation of the housing market dynamics.[49] Communities of color in the Bay Area began to see the arrival of new millionaires, which gave landowners opportunities to engage in the process of evictions and drastically increase in rent.[50] Numerous reports state that during this period of time, the number of faultless evictions in Oakland tripled while rent increased more than 100 percent.[47]

Second wave (2000- 2015): The transition of housing market dynamics in the Bay Area then did not just create housing crisis, but an intensification of gentrification also known as the second wave.[48] This period is characterized by a drastic increased in borrowing predatory loans by residents in order to combat the effects of gentrification. However, many of the loans offered did not include income verifiability so many homes were foreclosed, affecting thousand homeowners and tenants living in the Bay Area.[51]

Third wave (2015- current): The third wave of gentrification is often due to a change in the economic culture and the status quo at a given time.[52] Meaning that the next big thing that will attract wealth will dictate the change that we witness in a certain area or neighborhood. Often those who do not fit within the new changes will be forcefully displaced and left to fend for themselves, and often these are low-income residents who have resided in the neighborhood for decades.[53] This is specifically what occurred in San Francisco during its third wave of gentrification, as it took a great interest in increasing the city's wealth and revenue by making the city more appealing to tourists and investors.[54] The Bay Area is now currently facing a new wave of gentrification caused by the expansion of technology industry and investment of private business developers.[42] New businesses open everywhere to replace long-term communities[citation needed], and causes the constant migration of tenants all over the Bay Area[citation needed]. This period is marked by the heightened eviction [citation needed], displacement rates that contribute to the growing inequity and exacerbated poverty rates.[55] The overall goal appears to be a hastily attempt to pursue the economic advancement of the city[citation needed], while the displacement of original or low-income residents is left on the back-burner[citation needed], which will be dealt with at a later time.[citation needed]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

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