After months of negotiations that temporarily extended their stays, the remaining residents of President Hotel Apartments in Palo Alto will have to move out of the historic building by the end of January, according to a letter they received from the new building owner.
The letter, which the residents received from Timothy Franzen, president of Graduate Hotels, arrived three days after the council's Dec. 10 decision not to pass an urgency ordinance that would have aided the proposed conversion of the apartment building into a hotel. The ordinance would have removed a "grandfather facilities" provision that planning staff was adopted by accident and that requires historic buildings undergoing renovations to retain the same use.
Adventurous Journeys Capital Partners, the parent company of Graduate Hotels, is also hoping that the city will scrap the existing downtown cap on non-residential development, which presents another obstacle to its conversion plan. On Oct. 26, it reached an agreement with residents that would allow them to stay in their apartments until June 16. The stay, however, was contingent on the council removing both the downtown cap and the "grandfather facilities" clause by Dec. 18.
City officials had initially signaled their willingness to negotiate by scheduling discussions of both items for Dec. 3. The council ultimately moved the office-cap item to Dec. 10 and deferred the downtown-cap discussion until early 2019, effectively dashing the residents' hopes for a June extension.
"From the actions of the City Council on this past Monday night, it appears that the City will not be taking the measures necessary for you to receive the benefits from us of additional time to reside in the building and additional relocation assistance payments for which you had negotiated," Franzen's Dec. 13 letter stated. "Therefore, pursuant to the terms of the Tenant Relocation Assistance Agreement, and unless the City Council takes unexpected action before December 18, 2018, you and all other remaining tenants will be required to vacate your units by January 31, 2019, which date we extended from the original date of November 12, 2018 as a show of good faith."
The letter also informs residents that they will not be getting the "voluntary assistance payments" that AJ Capital had agreed to provide if the council were to change the city's laws to aid the company's conversion plan.
The company's announcement, while not unexpected, dashed the last remaining hopes of the few residents who still live in the 75-unit building at 488 University Ave. Dennis Backlund was one of two residents who urged the council on Dec. 17, its final meeting of the year, to reach out to AJ Capital and try to obtain an extension for the residents.
The timeframe for the evictions, Backlund said, is "at the height of rainy season." He said he doesn't know how he will be able to manage his move with his disability, which requires him to use a walker. A former historical-preservation planner for the city, Backlund recalled the regular salons that he held in his apartment, where guests would discuss art, literature, philosophy and film.
"While we do regret losing our closely-knit community at the President, we are proud of the activities we did there," Backlund told the council.
Iqbal Sarang, an architect who has lived at the President Hotel for 25 years, said the residents were hoping that AJ Capital would extend their stay until June.
"It was a surprise, especially with the holiday season, that this deadline was shortened to January 31," Sarang told the council. "Many of us hoped and were under the impression that we'd get a little bit of a reprieve at least, at the behest of the City Council."
In his letter to the residents, Franzen said AJ Capital feels that the October agreement was "fair to both parties in that each received considerations that were valuable to them, but neither party received everything they had hoped for." The agreement prohibited residents from voicing any opposition to the conversion plan in exchange for more relocation assistance and an extension of their leases until the end of January (or mid-June, if the city approved the zone changes AJ Capital was seeking).
Franzen said the company also plans to pay $15,000 to the residents' attorney, Scott Emblidge, to reimburse residents for the legal expenses they incurred in negotiating the agreement.
Related content:
• VIDEO: President Hotel resident Dennis Backlund reflects on uncertain future
• Documents reveal secret dealings over President Hotel
• Facing tight housing market, tenants worry over uncertain future
Comments
Downtown North
on Jan 4, 2019 at 11:12 pm
on Jan 4, 2019 at 11:12 pm
Would it make sense to encourage visitors to boycott of the President Hotel due to their egregious eviction of 75 longtime Palo Alto families?
Registered user
Crescent Park
on Jan 5, 2019 at 8:19 am
Registered user
on Jan 5, 2019 at 8:19 am
QUOTE: Would it make sense to encourage visitors to boycott of the President Hotel due to their egregious eviction of 75 longtime Palo Alto families?
No...because chances are that future guests to the newly revamped President Hotel will be more concerned about reservation confirmations/pricings, room service & the interior amenities rather than whatever transpired earlier.
Another Palo Alto neighborhood
on Jan 5, 2019 at 11:08 am
on Jan 5, 2019 at 11:08 am
@Boycott
What you can do is get people to realize that the push for denser development is what has attracted developers to displace people like at BV, Casa Olga, and the President, all of which survived other economic booms. This time companies have really overgrown and taken over downtown, and they want the hotel rooms. Downtown has been hollowed out of ordinary civic life, as Palo Alto becomes these companies’ office park and day gym. Those entry level workers and transient visitors don’t have any interest in the diversity of businesses and economic and civic life they have displaced, and they don’t care about how they have devastated the quality of life for local residents in the last decade.
The rules allowing densification ostensibly for affordable housing have enabled this, the zone busting has enabled this, making the land more attractive to developers, to displace existing residents whose homes survived other booms. It’s no accident that the big developer at Buena Vista pulled out right after Measure D made it so improbable that they would be able to upzone at BV, and without any other big developer having the prospect of upzoning, preventing displacement was at least possible. The highly maligned (also no accident) neighbors were aware of the impact of what they were doing to the effort to save the homes of those living there.
Unless supposed affordable housing advocates realize that the game has changed, how they are being used by developers and those who just want to keep densifying for their own purposes (against all the needs of ordinary and diverse civic life, including affordable housing), displacements like at the President Hotel will only continue and accelerate. In San Francisco, they are losing one home of affordable housing for every two that is produced, and I suspect the actual number may even be even or negative given how the existing affordable homes and displacements are counted. This despite the frenzy of building that has been enabled by the zone busting in the name of “affordability” and the manufactured “crisis” resulting from companies that want to keep their growth completely laissez faire, while making the public mostly pay for all the many negative consequences of their unchecked growth.
At BV, many supposed affordable housing advocates made the argument that they could put in far more housing on that spot, forgetting that it would be luxury housing (with far less actually affordable housing there afterward), and that affordable spots is not the same as people — the people there, the longtime community there, just as at the President, would have been completely displaced. They forget, too, that giving a greater toehold to the companies trying to grow when they really should be moving would only accelerate displacement in other ways. San Francisco has gone from 15% African American to 5% in the last decade. Low-income spaces are not interchangeable with low-income people and economic diversity, and what is called “affordable” is its own game.
Affordable housing advocates really need to find a way to partner with the homeowners they have previously maligned, and extract concessions for new affordable housing that way. Even the worst NIMBYs would welcome affordable developments over wholesale destruction of the town by manhattanization that has been happening. And many in the community are not NIMBYS, and have welcomed affordable developments before. The saddest thing about what happened at Maybell was how that opportunity was lost because no one realized how the game has changed. Preventing displacement of existing low-income residents will only come from protecting zoning, protecting places from being transformed into more densely more urban office parks.
The other leg of solving the problem is to figure out how to create another center of innovation or two to reduce infinite demand for here. This is becoming increasingly urgent in light of global warming and California’s water problems, arid nature, and wildfires. We cannot forever ignore the conflict between being laissez faire about everyone who wants to crowd into this place and the limits of infrastructure and resources.
Bill Gates has announced that Microsoft is building a town outside of Phoenix, but there needs to be more. Silicon Valley is not the only center of innovation and tech that has boomed beyond what is healthy, other places like San Antonio are bursting at the seams. Our nation really needs the better distribution of resources, and the multiplying of job centers and centers of innovation that would come from companies moving, but that would take someone making the investments.
Ever since Reagan, companies and the most successful have developed this idea that those at the top never have to pay back for the many public investments that enabled their success: the roads, the highway system, the airports, the ports, the traffic system, the military that enabled the stability, the justice system that they avail themselves of disproportionately, the patent and intellectual property protection structure, the public works, the second-to-none educational system that brings them already-educated workers, the public health system that gives them healthy customers and workers and care for their own families, the national laboratories that allow scientific advancements that can only happen from major pooled investments, the public works that make potable water magically appear out of taps everywhere, etc etc etc. There is a reason that companies are not flocking to the Sudan to start up.
Those at the top have come to expect those things that were paid for largely by ordinary people, but they aren’t expected to pay back when they achieve their success, and they expect it is their right NOT to pay to make the investments that ordinary people need to succeed, like education, healthcare, etc. Thus our nation has been making fewer and fewer investments like those in the ‘50s, and job centers have become more and more concentrated even as so many parts of our nation are becoming hollowed out.
Better distribution of economic life, meaning, multiplying the centers of innovation across our nation, is better for our nation, it’s better for national security from an economic standpoint, it’s better environmentally (note that this works AGAINST sprawl in existing too-dense areas), it’s better from a food security standpoint, better for economic diversity and housing affordability. But it will require more than Bill Gates making a designer town. Companies like being near a university, they like taking over all the things the public built — they really have to come to terms with getting together and giving back to the public for their success and also making those investments themselves.
Since that is unlikely to happen, the public needs to wake up (and grab a few pitchforks) to push for it to happen before it’s too late to save the places that are being impacted now. Every example around the world like Hong Kong shows that density does not produce affordability, you can’t solve the problems of density through building by transit, etc, but density does have its own gravity and accelerate densification. And thus accelerate displacements like at the President. You may not be able to prevent this displacement, but it is possible still to prevent the next ones.
Adobe-Meadow
on Jan 5, 2019 at 12:34 pm
on Jan 5, 2019 at 12:34 pm
[Portion removed.] Everyone has to relocate at certain points in their lives (even multiple times) and for these President residents to think (or even believe) that they have a right to permanent low-cot rental housing in Palo Alto is ludicrous.
[Portion removed.]
Adobe-Meadow
on Jan 5, 2019 at 12:37 pm
on Jan 5, 2019 at 12:37 pm
[Post removed.]
Downtown North
on Jan 5, 2019 at 3:14 pm
on Jan 5, 2019 at 3:14 pm
I agree that visitors to the future President Hotel may not care about its unsavory history. However, locals can refuse to work there in protest. It's already difficult for hotels in Palo Alto to recruit low-wage workers.
Adobe-Meadow
on Jan 5, 2019 at 3:34 pm
on Jan 5, 2019 at 3:34 pm
> However, locals can refuse to work there in protest. It's already difficult for hotels in Palo Alto to recruit low-wage workers.
Then chances are the hotel workers will come from elsewhere.
What many Palo Altans consider 'low-wage' is a semi-living wage to those from poorer socio-economic backgrounds. Ideally, the New President Hotel will pay their workers better by charging more to the eventual lodgers.
Registered user
Duveneck/St. Francis
on Jan 5, 2019 at 4:20 pm
Registered user
on Jan 5, 2019 at 4:20 pm
From the article:
______
Iqbal Sarang, an architect who has lived at the President Hotel for 25 years, said the residents were hoping that AJ Capital would extend their stay until June.
"It was a surprise, especially with the holiday season, that this deadline was shortened to January 31," Sarang told the council. "Many of us hoped and were under the impression that we'd get a little bit of a reprieve at least, at the behest of the City Council."
______
The residents all had 1-month leases. AJ informed them last June that they would have to leave, and gave them 5 months to do so. This has now been extended by another 2 months to 7 months.
It would appear that the residents had very generous notice that they had to move.
I am surprised that an architect, who presumably has had some experience with construction, landlords, and cities, would think that the landlord is going to allow this to continue further.
Community Center
on Jan 5, 2019 at 4:57 pm
on Jan 5, 2019 at 4:57 pm
Under the longtime city renter protection ordinance, the property owners are required by law to offer the tenants one year leases. That requirement has not been met by AJ Capital. Unfortunately, that provision requires individual residents to pursue its very expensive enforcement in court. AJ is counting on the tenants not having the resources to enforce their legal rights.
Worse yet, AJ has tried to coerce the the city into making significant zoning rule changes that would have broad implications for the downtown area. Because the city has not abided by their demands, they have reneged on their commitments to the remaining tenants, even though they have are many months at best before they would need the tenants out to begin their renovations.
This goes beyond property owner rights. Their actions are bullying, mean and dependent on tenants not have the dollars to defend their legal rights. How is that defensible?
Registered user
Crescent Park
on Jan 5, 2019 at 5:31 pm
Registered user
on Jan 5, 2019 at 5:31 pm
QUOTE: It would appear that the residents had very generous notice that they had to move.
California AB 1169 = 60 days notice if a tenant has rented for over 12 months & 30 days notice if less than one year (12 months).
The residents of the President Hotel got their pending evictions extended well past the legal deadlines + relocation assistance. Of the original 75 President Hotel tenants, 45 relocated & 30 are still complaining. What is their excuse?
Registered user
Evergreen Park
on Jan 6, 2019 at 7:37 pm
Registered user
on Jan 6, 2019 at 7:37 pm
My daughter and son-in-law were given a 30 day eviction notice when living in one of several cottages on a property on Lincoln that was sold. However, having been there for about eight years they waited until the 29th day to tell the landlord that he had to give them 60 days notice. The owner and the architect turned up and, among other things, angrily told him he should be glad that that they were going to build a nice new house. He responded, "Oh, you mean I'm going to live in it?"
Downtown North
on Jan 7, 2019 at 10:44 am
on Jan 7, 2019 at 10:44 am
Let's set the record straight. One-third of the residents remain at the President. Most assumed that the June timeframe would hold and made appropriate plans. We acknowledge that AJ Caoital together with the City Ordinance passed last summer have been generous financially.
We now ask the City, the new City Manager and Council to make this a priority so that the residents can have their original time frame reinstated. We need your help.
Thank you.
Registered user
Leland Manor/Garland Drive
on Jan 7, 2019 at 10:52 am
Registered user
on Jan 7, 2019 at 10:52 am
And here I always thought taking hostages was illegal.
Registered user
Professorville
on Jan 7, 2019 at 11:00 am
Registered user
on Jan 7, 2019 at 11:00 am
Don't be EVIL Companies,
I'm so sorry to hear that your life has been "devastated" by the success of Palo Alto. You should consider leaving to a less devastating place, maybe Stockton.
Registered user
Duveneck/St. Francis
on Jan 7, 2019 at 11:39 am
Registered user
on Jan 7, 2019 at 11:39 am
The "original timeframe" for departure was this last November, and the residents were given that timeframe last June. The possibility of extending to this coming June was contingent upon events that did not occur. AJ has now given them until the end of January, for a total of 7 months.
I can imagine myself, if I were the landlord (thankfully I am not!) offering the tenants a further extension provided they actually left at that new time. The problem is that it is clear that some of the tenants don't ever plan to leave, and simply use extensions as an opportunity to find a new plan for the next extension. And so so.
This is probably very stressful for the remaining tenants, not knowing exactly what is going to happen, and spending their time romanticizing about their current housing i.e., "home", and how they are being cheated by an evil landlord. What a waste of time.
They would likely be better off to get on with their lives and find new housing here or elsewhere.
Registered user
College Terrace
on Jan 7, 2019 at 11:50 am
Registered user
on Jan 7, 2019 at 11:50 am
Why is the landlord in such a hurry to kick out the tenants?
Does he have a building permit to start renovations? If not, why not just let these people rent
until AJ is ready to build. Otherwise, we will have an empty building for years....
Registered user
Duveneck/St. Francis
on Jan 7, 2019 at 12:24 pm
Registered user
on Jan 7, 2019 at 12:24 pm
@eileen:
Letting people stay for a while sounds like a reasonable thing to do.
In practice, this doesn't work. The tenants consider the delay a victory and simply regroup and keep try to stave off eviction. Having a discussion about the future of the property in such a context becomes impossible since it is framed as the tenants' "home". AJ already tried something like this and the city didn't provide the desired outcome.
From the owner's perspective, the best thing to do is to clear out the tenants.
I would contend that, from the tenants' best interests, moving on with their lives rather than becoming a cause celebre is the best thing.
There are a number of famous historical examples including the history of the San Francisco International Hotel.
Professorville
on Jan 7, 2019 at 12:40 pm
on Jan 7, 2019 at 12:40 pm
I am sick about this, and completely puzzled about how the city council could go against zoning to let this happen. With all of the hand-wringing about affordability of local housing, how could it be possible that we would allow the destruction of 75 units, and the attendant community, right in the heart of PA? We are ripping out the threads in a community fabric that cannot be replaced. Who can't live here? Teachers, waiters, plumbers, home health providers, shopkeepers, you name it - the people who are the glue that make a community a community and not just a resort town where everyone is a consumer of services provided by folks coming in from the outside (who increasingly are finding it too far and expensive to travel). This is literally sickening, and I don't understand how the council could allow it without a clear alternative for these folks, of which there appears to be none.
Greendell/Walnut Grove
on Jan 7, 2019 at 12:47 pm
on Jan 7, 2019 at 12:47 pm
Re Do No Evil....Whether one agrees with writer or not, I appreciate the many thoughtful comments and general over-view of so many significant changes to Palo Alto --the city and lifestyle. I believe long time residents have mixed emotions as to the successes and drawbacks of living in Silicon Valley. There was much food for thought in the writer's long look at "our town"--neither a full rant nor rave--which has helped inform my own views. San Francisco offers a comparable view of the plus/minus effects of growth and progress. My concern is the effects on the "middle class" that tempers the extremes and bridges the old and new.
Barron Park
on Jan 7, 2019 at 12:55 pm
on Jan 7, 2019 at 12:55 pm
>The problem is that it is clear that some of the tenants don't ever plan to leave, and simply use extensions as an opportunity to find a new plan for the next extension. And so so.
>They would likely be better off to get on with their lives and find new housing here or elsewhere.
>I would contend that, from the tenants' best interests, moving on with their lives rather than becoming a cause celebre is the best thing.
The remaining President Hotel residents are now promoting squatter's rights.
No sympathy for squatters who received an extended deadline + a moving-out bonus.
Did they even have the gall to keep the money from AJ?
The remaining hotel residents are pushing the patience and compassion of their most ardent supporters...the tide will soon turn against them as no one appreciates or respects a privileged whiner.
Registered user
Duveneck/St. Francis
on Jan 7, 2019 at 1:12 pm
Registered user
on Jan 7, 2019 at 1:12 pm
@Cnocerned about the Community,
The Weekly had an article two weeks ago in which they noted that we are losing 1 housing complex and are gaining 1 in the last year. The 1 we are losing is of course the President Hotel.
From the perspective of providing affordable housing, we should not be concerned about the loss of the President Hotel. [This is not to say that it is not hard on the tenants.] I am concerned about the fact that we only have one new housing project moving forward.
So the question is: how do we get additional housing built and open? The best answer would seem that we need to get builders and landlords into the community. Who else will do it?
The whole experience of the President Hotel would seem to be a cautionary tale for investors who might otherwise build new housing here. We are giving plenty of warning signals to landlords about how they will be treated by the community. They will be called "greedy" and laws will be passed restricting their uses of the property and even forcing them to lose money.
We are focusing on punishing landlords rather than on getting more housing and more competition.
As to the current displaced residents, most of them seem to have found solutions.
Palo Verde
on Jan 7, 2019 at 1:12 pm
on Jan 7, 2019 at 1:12 pm
I think that there are two issues here.
1. Can the new owner cancel existing leases?
2. Can the new owner convert the property back to a hotel?
I believe that the answer to (1) is Yes. If as it was said, all the tenants were on month-to-month arrangements, then they were given proper notice. Indeed, effectively 7 months notice. One may not like a landlord doing such a thing, but if the landlord acts within the current legal constraints (length of notice, compensation for moving, etc.) then it is permissible.
As to (2), I believe that the key point here is "the council's Dec. 10 decision not to pass an urgency ordinance that would have aided the proposed conversion of the apartment building into a hotel. The ordinance would have removed a "grandfather facilities" provision that planning staff was adopted by accident and that requires historic buildings undergoing renovations to retain the same use." Without such a change I do not see that the property can be converted into a hotel (unless the owner brings and wins legal action against the City which contends that the 'grandfather clause' is illegal to enforce).
Community Center
on Jan 7, 2019 at 1:35 pm
on Jan 7, 2019 at 1:35 pm
@jr
I will try to be more clear. AJ Capital is violating city law by not having offered the tenants a one year lease when they took over the property six months ago. The obligation to offer one year written leases rolled over to AJ upon their acquisition. There is no exemption. The tenants are legally entitled to stay until this June, but not longer. However, under current city law the tenants would have to sue AJ to enforce the law in civil court and they do not have the financial resources to take on AJ.
As far as messages to developers, the message should be that if developers propose projects according to existing codes and rules, those projects will go forward. If developers think they can get what they want by coercing or threatening tenants or the city into changing codes to suit their financial gains, then they should know that won’t work.
As far as the net gain of housing, I think most homeowners and residents would greatly prefer retaining existing market rate affordable housing over building new luxury units to replace lost units, but your sympathies seem to align more with the developers than the tenants. We differ on that one.
Mayfield
on Jan 7, 2019 at 4:00 pm
on Jan 7, 2019 at 4:00 pm
To Resident, my understanding of the PA municipal code regarding tenancy is that a landlord or property management company must offer each tenant a new lease at renewal, after they have rented through a lease term. And, that is if the owner or property management company wants the tenant to continue to have the tenant lease at the site. If the landlord/owner does not want to continue the lease, then they must give proper notice based on how long the tenant has resided in the unit, either 30 day or 60 day notice. This is state statute. If the owner/property management company wants to extend the lease term,, they must offer to the tenant a new lease term that is equivalent to the former lease term. If the tenant desires to have a month to month tenancy, or a shorter lease term for whatever reason, then the owner/property management can honor the tenant's request. In the case of a new owner purchasing a property, in general, they must simply honor the existing leases that are in effect for each tenant. It sounds like the former ownership of The President Hotel probably failed to offer the proper leases to the tenants at each renewal, because it is doubtful that all tenants would accept a month to month agreement. In Palo Alto and surrounding cities, it is very common for landlords to automatically roll over to month to month after lease expiry, instead of following their respective municipal code.
Please feel free to provide any additional information.
Another Palo Alto neighborhood
on Jan 8, 2019 at 10:44 am
on Jan 8, 2019 at 10:44 am
Loss of 75 units of housing, plus, an increase in the number of jobs of ___ ? Somebody who knows the figures please let us know how many square feet of office space need to be decommissioned to make this jobs/housing neutral.
Registered user
Mountain View
on Jan 8, 2019 at 8:49 pm
Registered user
on Jan 8, 2019 at 8:49 pm
[Portion removed.]
On a bigger issue: you cannot the laws of Supply and Demand. Keep workers at a un-livable wage,they will go to a place that has a livable wage.
I just saw an ad for room rates at a hotel group: $99 A DAY. That is cheaper than most rentals in Palo Alto and you get room service, WiFi and cable too. Here is another thought that relates to supply and demand: More drawing power.Our prisons are better places to live in than the hovels these people left in their own country. Killing an Americano means a place to stay, three hots and a cot FOR THE REST OF THEIR LIFE.
[Portion removed.]
Old Palo Alto
on Jan 9, 2019 at 9:01 am
on Jan 9, 2019 at 9:01 am
I would like to believe that everyone is welcome in America, even the ones that some conservatives consider freeloaders and illegals.
Undocumented immigrants and RV transients are OK in my book providing they are not breaking the law.
The Native Americans were once appaled at the increasingly larger number of newcomers crossing and settling on their native lands. They could not prevent this migration and eventual land grab. And they did not attempt to build a wall.
So we too must accept the consequences of change as America in the 21st century is different that that of the 20th, 19th, 18th and so on.
The President Hotel renters will simply have to move on to make way for the future hotel guests who will be visiting Palo Alto. Life and history is change.
University South
on Jan 9, 2019 at 1:18 pm
on Jan 9, 2019 at 1:18 pm
One floor of the newly revamped President Hotel should be reserved for the workers employed there. How's that for PA residential and economic equality?
No additional encumbrances for any hotel employee commute or their cars for that matter.
Another Palo Alto neighborhood
on Jan 9, 2019 at 1:34 pm
on Jan 9, 2019 at 1:34 pm
@common
“I'm so sorry to hear that your life has been "devastated" by the success of Palo Alto. You should consider leaving to a less devastating place, maybe Stockton.”
Unfortunately, what a few very rich developers and companies feel is “the success of Palo Alto” is not success by anyone else’s measure, and certainly not success from the standpoint of the tens of thousands of ordinary people who have sacrificed over many decades to put down roots here.
What is this so-called “success”? Palo Alto has long had successful tech companies. If anything, recent stresses on the City because of overdevelopment and overcrowding by companies that really should move to grow (as Facebook did) have made it much harder for startups coming out of Stanford. It has long had a reputation as a nice place to live. It has, unfortunately, also long been very expensive, but so has the rest of the area.
But in the last decade, companies have crowded into Palo Alto in a way that has created overdevelopment and overcrowding of office space, traffic problems that have cut off normal use of the town (and even the region during some hours, many people won’t even go near Palo Alto anymore or venture out for educational, recreation, family, or other business opportunities that used to be normal when the population wasn’t overstraining the infrastructure), devastated or even eliminated the business districts that long had good resident-serving retail businesses. There is more traffic, more pollution, less livability, less sunlight and daylight plane in development, less safety for students going to school, more time spent in cars/buses/trains, less civility, fewer resources for families, way fewer resident-serving businesses, more resources that only cater to the very richest, far more displacements than ever in the history of our town. All because of rich companies who are making those they are harming pay, since they don’t really contribute to the wellbeing of the town and civic life. The Weekly did a story about how the big developers aren’t even paying for the cost of the City services they are using, residents are footing the bill.
There have been significantly more accidents and casualties in recent years in the Bay Area because of the overdevelopment and traffic, one an old, dear friend, related to the worsening traffic - just that alone has been worse than devastating. Trying to displace ordinary residents in favor of businesses that really should move to grow is wrong; companies should be considering the whole of their negative impact. There will be a downturn in the business cycle, too, and what companies have done to Palo Alto in the last decade will significantly exacerbate the invariable hardships when it does.
To @Boycott,
A couple more things you can do.
One, you can get together with other fed up residents — you will need to form coalitions — and start enforcing codes so that the downtown and Cal Ave areas can no longer be used as research parks or office parks (!!). Los Altos wouldn’t even let a store front, during the recession, be used for theater classes by students, they strictly enforced their rules for retail, and now their downtown is still nice and usable, and Palo Alto hardly even has one for residents anymore. If residents had done this sooner, perhaps the President would remain — who do people think wants those hotel rooms? Certain companies think the City is their own private playground now. It’s getting late, but motivated residents can still do something about it.
You can also put forward referenda to better protect retail and existing residential areas for residents. And put forward something to force the City to restore retail areas that have been lost, such as Alma Plaza. The residents there were promised a park, and indeed the City code promises a certain amount of urban open space for development — force the City to honor that, too, and strengthen those rules. When Eric Filseth was running, he had a tally of what open space the City owed residents, but he’s been awfully quiet about it since. Remind him now that he is mayor, because you know he’s being leaned on by the overdevelopment faction.
Put forward some ethics referenda — something that would have automatically ousted Fein from office, for example, just for what was deemed by the FPPC as “misleading” the public during the election. You could try to recall him, if you don’t want such a smug arrogant ideologue as mayor next year, but better to put in place rules to make it harder for people serving the interests of their companies or developers to get into power by deceiving the public in elections. Make the consequence of such clear deception instant removal from office.
Get the City to finally create a business tax that is highest for any companies occupying parts of the City they shouldn’t, by code, be occupying, such as downtown. Get the City to create a fund to start buying the land in the business areas, in order to stabilize prices the way Stanford has done, allowing its employees still to buy their houses but affordably, and allowing the City to offer the longterm lease of the land at lower prices in exchange for higher wages of workers. Everyone wins, as businesses will then be able to pay better wages and retain their workforces, the City wins because people who would otherwise be low-income can earn a living wage (and this benefit only increases over time at no cost to the City). If such a thing had been done, the President hotel would not now be under threat.
This will not be cheap — for the City to buy the retail areas -- it never is in the beginning. But Midtown plaza was purchased recently for only $15 million, a drop in the bucket for a town that is paying for three-quarters of a billion in school facilities bonds. This is how ordinary people have always put down roots here, they make huge, huge sacrifices for extended periods of time, in order to stabilize their housing situations. Stanford has that ability because they own all that land, and if the City does the same, the City can stabilize Civic Life the way it can the parks or the schools — because the district owns the land on which the schools sit — by owning the major retail areas in the City. This allows many of the same benefits Stanford has on their land.
There is a LOT you can do. Probably not for the residents of the President, but all of the above, had residents begun working on them, would have prevented this, and will help prevent further displacement and hopefully start protecting civic life before this becomes an office park monoculture.
Oh, lastly, you can start pressuring the Democratic Party to resist the specious arguments of the overdevelopment crowd — those who use false arguments about affordability or a fake “crisis” that is really only hurting the environment, accelerating displacement of residents and making housing less affordable through densification — because they will ruin the party’s reputation forever if it is seen to be just as dishonest and prone to being used by rich interests against ordinary people, as Republicans are. Kounalakis and Newsom are both promising to overlook common sense to keep pushing the overdevelopment.
Another Palo Alto neighborhood
on Jan 9, 2019 at 1:45 pm
on Jan 9, 2019 at 1:45 pm
Posted by Keeping It Simple, a resident of University South, 25 minutes ago
>> One floor of the newly revamped President Hotel should be reserved for the workers employed there. How's that for PA residential and economic equality?
>> No additional encumbrances for any hotel employee commute or their cars for that matter.
Does anyone know how many employees the revamped President Hotel will employ? Or, how to estimate fairly accurately based on similar high-service hotels?
Downtown North
on Jan 9, 2019 at 2:38 pm
on Jan 9, 2019 at 2:38 pm
SO do I have this right? There are TWO laws preventing the conversion and the new owner developers "generously" decided to allow the residents a couple of extra months if the city gave in on both laws?
The city did exactly what they should have done, which is to tell the developer to pound sand, and now by evicting the tenants, the developers have lost all leverage.
This project will be stuck in litigation for a decade.
Registered user
Downtown North
on Jan 22, 2019 at 5:56 pm
Registered user
on Jan 22, 2019 at 5:56 pm
This reminds me of the standoff between developers and the people in 1974 at 848 Kearney in San Francisco, the I- Hotel.
Are the developers going to demand that Police and Sheriffs drag our friends and neighbors by their hair?
We should act to protect the renters at 488 University.
Come on people now, smile on your brothers...right now.
another community
on Jan 23, 2019 at 10:38 am
on Jan 23, 2019 at 10:38 am
> Are the developers going to demand that Police and Sheriffs drag our friends and neighbors by their hair?
Evictions are carried out by the Santa Clara County Sheriff's Department. Evictions within the SC county boundaries is their jurisdiction.
A 5-Day Notice to Vacate is posted. After 5 days, the deputies can and will physically remove tenants in violation of this notice.
A special 'eviction task force' is assigned for this purpose. They arrive wearing bullet-proof vests and following the eviction process, post signs saying that any former tenant attempting to re-enter the premises will be subject to arrest.
University South
on Jan 23, 2019 at 2:23 pm
on Jan 23, 2019 at 2:23 pm
If the soon-to-be former tenants at the President Hotel are issued an Unlawful Detainer petition for exceeding their notices to vacate, they can fight the evictions in Superior Court...but will probably lose in the end.
In any event, the UD process will yield another 2-3 weeks of residency for response filings + court scheduling. This combined with an official notice to vacate will give them another 3-4 weeks to live there.
Anyone who has had a landlord/tenant squabble knows this strategy.
another community
on Jan 23, 2019 at 8:31 pm
on Jan 23, 2019 at 8:31 pm
The timeline:
(1) a posted 30-60 Notice to Vacate (depending upon length of occupancy)
(2) if still tenant remains, an Unlawful Detainer is filed & served by the landlord (tenant has 5 days to file a court response or default).
(3) hearing scheduled within 14-21 days of joint filings
(4) hearing determination
(5) upon receiving notice, tenant has 5 days to vacate premises (or be physically removed by sheriff's deputies)
(6) like a DUI, eviction goes on record and future landlords can access this information prior to renting out their property
best for 30 remaining President Hotel residents to vacate as they have been ther long enough, received bonuses and extended stay. no sympathy as the other 45 have already moved out.
> We should act to protect the renters at 488 University.
what for? then we might as well protect the transient RVs too.
a squatter is a squatter.