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	<title>Comments on: Mission SRO Collaborative Community Event!</title>
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	<link>http://www.missionmission.org/2010/01/25/mission-sro-collaborative-community-event/</link>
	<description>Saluting San Francisco&#039;s Mission District</description>
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		<title>By: Bruce Allison</title>
		<link>http://www.missionmission.org/2010/01/25/mission-sro-collaborative-community-event/#comment-15588</link>
		<dc:creator>Bruce Allison</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 05 Dec 2010 05:50:30 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Housing frist: If you Build it thay will comeisn`t Just a Slogan

Mad Man Marlon - Posted on 14 October 2010
Author:
By Bruce Allison and Thornton Kimes

HOUSING FIRST: IF YOU BUILD IT THEY WILL COME ISN&#039;T JUST A SLOGAN

PNNscholar1 - Posted on 08 August 2010
 By Bruce Allison and Thornton Kimes
San Francisco has a “Housing First” policy. The (very extended) Patel family, which owns the vast majority of SRO hotel (Single Room Occupancy: a.k.a. Poor People Housing) properties in the city, is spitting in our faces by leaving SRO’s vacant for years. There is one in the Mission (22nd and Mission, above the Ritmo music store, with 40 units), and one in SOMA—the already earthquake code-improved 100-200 unit four-story Chronicle Hotel (across the street from the newspaper!) and the retail space under it.
Housing in the city translates into money spent in the city, including jobs for people staffing SRO hotels; of course, getting the empty Patel spaces clean and useable as living spaces would also generate those oh-so-wonderful short-term (a.k.a. temporary) jobs the “job creators” love to talk about (contractor stuff, construction…) too.
The SRO in the Mission only needs $500,000 (current costs) to be returned to service. The electrical wiring is up to code. Sinks and bathrooms would need to be installed. The SOMA space, abandoned for 20 years, used to have a blood plasma donation center on the ground floor. Bruce and Thornton remember it well. A lot more money would need to be sunk into it to make it liveable.
City services, funded by local, state, and federal taxes, would not be strained by an effort made to maximize housing for poor people, the tax base would be improved by it. This modest proposal would take approximately 200 people off the streets. More would be better.]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Housing frist: If you Build it thay will comeisn`t Just a Slogan</p>
<p>Mad Man Marlon &#8211; Posted on 14 October 2010<br />
Author:<br />
By Bruce Allison and Thornton Kimes</p>
<p>HOUSING FIRST: IF YOU BUILD IT THEY WILL COME ISN&#8217;T JUST A SLOGAN</p>
<p>PNNscholar1 &#8211; Posted on 08 August 2010<br />
 By Bruce Allison and Thornton Kimes<br />
San Francisco has a “Housing First” policy. The (very extended) Patel family, which owns the vast majority of SRO hotel (Single Room Occupancy: a.k.a. Poor People Housing) properties in the city, is spitting in our faces by leaving SRO’s vacant for years. There is one in the Mission (22nd and Mission, above the Ritmo music store, with 40 units), and one in SOMA—the already earthquake code-improved 100-200 unit four-story Chronicle Hotel (across the street from the newspaper!) and the retail space under it.<br />
Housing in the city translates into money spent in the city, including jobs for people staffing SRO hotels; of course, getting the empty Patel spaces clean and useable as living spaces would also generate those oh-so-wonderful short-term (a.k.a. temporary) jobs the “job creators” love to talk about (contractor stuff, construction…) too.<br />
The SRO in the Mission only needs $500,000 (current costs) to be returned to service. The electrical wiring is up to code. Sinks and bathrooms would need to be installed. The SOMA space, abandoned for 20 years, used to have a blood plasma donation center on the ground floor. Bruce and Thornton remember it well. A lot more money would need to be sunk into it to make it liveable.<br />
City services, funded by local, state, and federal taxes, would not be strained by an effort made to maximize housing for poor people, the tax base would be improved by it. This modest proposal would take approximately 200 people off the streets. More would be better.</p>
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		<title>By: Joshua Vining</title>
		<link>http://www.missionmission.org/2010/01/25/mission-sro-collaborative-community-event/#comment-15587</link>
		<dc:creator>Joshua Vining</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 26 Jan 2010 22:32:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://missionmission.wordpress.com/?p=10682#comment-15587</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Thanks for posting Kat.  The event today was fantastic despite the weather, and there was coverage from newspapers, tv, bloggers, magazines.  Supervisor Campos is also introducing an ordinance today that would require that SRO owners post an approved notice explaining the new 311 system.  The community teach-in portion was also a success with tenants knowing their rights regarding safe, dignified housing, the police, and immigration authorities.]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Thanks for posting Kat.  The event today was fantastic despite the weather, and there was coverage from newspapers, tv, bloggers, magazines.  Supervisor Campos is also introducing an ordinance today that would require that SRO owners post an approved notice explaining the new 311 system.  The community teach-in portion was also a success with tenants knowing their rights regarding safe, dignified housing, the police, and immigration authorities.</p>
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