Contributions to Wikipedia edit

Gentrification of San Francisco: I created the entire page and did everything on there except for the section titled "Regional Analysis on Gentrification in San Francisco"

Gentrification: I created the new subsection for San Francisco on this page. The only sentence that is not 100% mine is "Private shuttle buses operated by companies such as Google have driven up rents in areas near their stops, leading to some protests.[86"

Ellis Act: I added the subsection titled "criticism and response"

Gentrification of San Francisco edit

The Gentrification of San Francisco has been an ongoing topic of contention between longtime 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 in the 1990s, creating a strong demand for skilled tech workers from local start ups 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]

Gentrification Debate edit

Gentrification has both negative and positive effects, though it benefits the wealthy more than the poor. Those who advocate for gentrification believe it decreases crime rates in neighborhoods, creates new jobs, and allows for more innovation.[4] Furthermore, pro-gentrification academics argue that gentrification is proof that cities and neighborhoods can progress upwards rather than deteriorate in quality downwards. Gentrification is good for the city in general: increasing the number of affluent people who live in a city will also ensure that more residents are able to pay their rent, taxes, and buy local goods and services thus contributing to the local economy. They argue that low-income communities losing housing because of increased rent prices is not due to gentrification itself, but due to the fact that the government fails to provide its residents with affordable housing.[5] It is also viewed as a simple change in economic state: gentrification is the result of economic changes, in which there is "an increased demand for housing in some cities beyond what the market can supply to formerly marginal neighborhoods.[6][7]

Gentrification is a term that is regularly used in negative connotation because it benefits the wealthy at the cost of the poor. Most low-income families and small businesses are displaced as a result of gentrification because they cannot afford the higher rents or competition from large corporations. Thus, many individuals and families lose their jobs and homes. There are also arguments stating that neighborhoods do not need to be gentrified in order to be revitalized.[8][9][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[11] According to the American Community Survey, during this same period, an average of 60,000 people both migrated to San Francisco and migrated out.[12] The people who left the city were more likely to be nonwhite, 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.[13] Migration and demographic patters 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%.[14][15] Of all multifamily rental units constructed from 2012-2014, 85% of new real estate construction in San Francisco is has been luxury.[16]

Presence of Technology Companies 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 protests from locals in the area.[17]

Technology Firms and Venture Capital edit

The presence of technology companies in San Francisco is growing exponentially and is spurred from the influx of venture capital to the city from around the world. In 2015, 60% of all new leased office spaces in San Francisco were for rented out by technology companies.[18] In 2014, of the $26.8 billion of venture capital funding invested in California companies, 41 percent, or $11 billion, of it went to San Francisco based hi-tech firms.[19] As of January 2016, 15% of all global venture capital has gone to the San Francisco metropolitan area. Although it is nowhere near the top ranking of cities by economic power through a variety of measures, San Francisco is the undisputed leader of all cities around the world by Venture Capital Rank.[20][21] In 1990, technology jobs accounted for only 1 percent of San Francisco’s economy and have since grown to 8 percent as of 2013. The technology sector accounted or more than 30% of San Francisco's added jobs since 2010.[22] This does not include the thousands of technology jobs that residents in San Francisco commute to outside of the city.

Social Impact edit

Many of the people living in San Francisco do not work in the city. 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.[23] Of these shuttles, over 200 of them travel exclusively between San Francisco County and Santa Clara County.

Consequences and Community Response 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.[24]

In retaliation to the rapidly changing socioeconomic landscape of San Francisco accelerated by the influx of high paying technology jobs, the anti-eviction movement is one of many movements that have emerged as a way to voice community concerns over the desire to stay in their homes in the face of rising rent prices. 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 “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.[24] The movement has focused on mitigating evictions from "no-fault" evictions such as those caused by the Ellis Act. On November 2014 a ballot measure was put forward which would put a tax on real estate speculation.[25] 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.[26]

Politics edit

San Francisco Tech companies such as Uber and AirBnb are actively involved in city politics to fight legislation and introduce measures to protect their influence 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 dollars to defeat a single proposition in San Francisco that would restrict the number of rentals in San Francisco.[27] In September, AirBnb began the process to sue the City of San Francisco to retaliate against new regulations.[28]

Uber spends more on lobbyists in California than Wal-Mart, Bank of America or Wells Fargo.[29]

Gentrification edit

San Francisco edit

Further information: Gentrification of San Francisco

A major driver of gentrification in Silicon Valley cities such as San Francisco has been attributed with the Dot-Com Boom in the 1990's, creating a strong demand for skilled tech workers from local start ups and close by Silicon Valley businesses leading to rising standards of living.[85] Private shuttle buses operated by companies such as Google have driven up rents in areas near their stops, leading to some protests.[86] 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.[87] During this time San Francisco began a transformation eventually culminating in it becoming the most expensive city to live in the United States.[88]

From 1990-2010, 18,000 African Americans left San Francisco, while the White, Asian, and Hispanic populations saw grew in the city.[89] From 2010 to 2014, the number of households making $100,000 grew while households making less than $100,000 declined.[90][91] According to the American Community Survey, during this same period, an average of 60,000 people both migrated to San Francisco and migrated out. The people who left the city were more likely to be nonwhite, 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.[92]

Ellis Act edit

Criticism and Response edit

Tenant groups in San Francisco and Los Angeles claim that California landlords commonly misuse the Ellis Act "to bypass rent control"[8][9] and cash-in during peak housing market periods[10] by managing rent-stabilized properties to vacancy, after which they might demolish buildings to build pricey condominiums, retenant newly vacated units at top-market rents, or resell buildings at much higher prices than they bought once they are no longer value-encumbered by the presence of long-term, rent-stabilized tenants.

The Ellis Act has been the focus of many tenants rights groups other anti-eviction movements in San Francisco. On November 2014, Proposition G was proposed to add a tax on real estate speculation in order to slow down the number of no-fault evictions caused by the Ellis Act.[11] Groups have argued that the rising number of evictions due to the Ellis Act is contributing to the Gentrification of San Francisco.