Showing posts with label San Fran Tenants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Fran Tenants. Show all posts

Saturday, December 8, 2007

SF Journal San Fran Editorial 08/1977


SAN FRANCISCO JOURNAL

August 3, 1977 Vol.2 no. 3 p.4

Editorial

Tenants’ Spirit

"You know all those media stereotypes of Chinatown elderly being passive, weak,.. .etc., etc.? Forget them.

Forget the establishment newspapers that photograph the pioneers as one-dimensional shadows that have no spirit left in them.

The press conference called by the tenants of the San Fran Hotel last Sunday (see story, Page l) was full of spirit and determination.

Fifty years of restaurant work In the United States has not broken the spirit of tenant Jimmy Yee. His determination to fight for his home is shared with Mr. Lee, Mr. Jew, Mr. Fong, Mr. Leong and the other tenants of the San Fran Hotel on Clay Street.

Unintimidated by the expectation of establishment media that press conferences be conducted in English, Jimmy Yee gave a lifting speech in his native “thlee yip” (fourth) dialect even though he speaks fluent English.

Mrs. Lau of the Chinatown Tenants Organizing Committee also spoke in Chinese. The entire press conference was conducted bilingually to reach both Chinese-speaking and English-speakIng passersby who were attracted to the sidewalk presentation

No matter what language was used, the message was clear: the men and women who have worked long hours for so much of their 1ives are determjned to have decent housing In the community where they feel most comfortable-Chinatown.

One elderly tenant’s son who is financially successful, tried to convince his father to move out of the San Fran, but the tenant doesn’t want to move and has chosen to stay with his fellow tenants to fight for his 'home.'

Despite the fact that these pioneers are low-income, that doesn’t mean they don’t have pride. They know what they can afford and how stringently they have to budget every penny. They pay for the necessities—food and shelter—with the satisfaction that it is their own hard-earned money.

That is one of the reasons that landlords who raise their rents without justification and without providing maintenance have met with such assertive resistance from these longtime Californ’ pioneers.

We are proud of the elderly tenants who have taken on the negligent landlords and wholeheartedly support the struggle of the tenants."


SF Journal San Fran Tenants Fight August 1977

San Fran Tenants Sue Six Companies

Vol.2 no.3 August 3, 1977 p.1

by Katheryn M. Fong

"Tommy Yee, 68, has lived in the San Fran Hotel for 12 years. Out of his $340 a-month combined social security and welfare checks, the retired restaurant worker pays $70 a month for his room in the San Fran Hotel. He shares a communal bathroom with all the other tenants on his floor.

Up until 1973, there used to be telephone service; but after the new landlords leased the hotel from the Chinese Six Companies, all the phones were taken out. The new landlords, Wai-mln Tom and his uncle Foo Hum, also raised the rent 25 percent without making any improvements on the hotel.

Last May, the landlords raised all the tenants’ rents by $10 and asked for another $5 increment to be effective In August.

Rent Strike

In protest to the higher rents, fewer services and deteriorating facilities, the tenants collectively decided to go on a rent strike. Since May, all of their rents have gone into a bank account, to be held until the landlords agree to sign leases with the tenants.

In retaliation against the tenants, the landlords closed the communal kitchen used by the tenants, discontinued the biweekly linen service, and turned off the heat in the, hotel.

SUIT FILED

At a press conference Sunday, July 31, the tenants of the San Fran Hotel announced that they were filing a suit against Wai-min Tom, Foo Hum, and the Chinese Six Companies for damages inflicted upon the tenants.

The press conference was held in front of the gaudy front doorway of the Chinese Six Companies which owns the San Fran Hotel building.

Mr. Yee and about a dozen other tenants testified about the landlords’ acts of retaliation against them for insisting on building repairs and hotel services covered by their rents.

Mr. Jew said that there was no maintenance staff at the 51-room hotel and the ‘manager’ comes in for about an hour a day -- supposedly to clean up the hotel.

TENANTS

Mr. Yee said there are 40 men and six women living in single rooms In the hotel. All are older, mostly retired people on fixed Incomes from social security with the exception of the 16-year-old son of one of the tenants.

Yee, who has lived and worked in the United States for over fifty years, said that the rents are not uniform and no explanation was given for the discrepancies in the rates charged to tenants.

INSPIRATION

Despite the acute shortage of low-cost housing for elderly, .retired workers in Chinatown, the tenants at the San Fran reported that they were determined to go on rent strike and demand improvements even though the landlords threatened to lock tenants out of their rooms.

The tenants received Inspiration, from tenants at two other hotel-rooming houses in Chinatown --833 Kearny and 666 Sacramento--who won leases and building improvements after successful rent strikes forced landlords to deal with tenants’ complaints.

Mrs. Lau of the Chinatown Tenants Organizing Committee accused the Chinese Six Companies of soliciting money from the people and using these funds to purchase buildings such as the San Fran Hotel. She said the Six Companies, also known as the Chinese Benevolent Association, deceived the people.

The tenants of the San- Fran Hotel asked why those who claim to be the benevolent leaders of Chinatown do not stop the rent hike, reopen the kitchen, reinstate linen service and repair the building.

NO OTHER OPTIONS

The San Fran Hotel is no palace, but for Tommy Yee the San Fran -- like many other Chinatown hotels and rooming houses --offers the only housing option to low-income fixed-income people who cannot afford any other: housing.