Houston Chronicle

‘Housing is a human right’: Group protests evictions

Demonstrat­ors turn out to demand a halt to evictions and aid to landlords and tenants

- By Sarah Smith STAFF WRITER sarah.smith@chron.com

As the economic fallout of the coronaviru­s pandemic puts Houstonian­s at risk of losing their homes, the Houston Tenants Union and others protested in front of one of Harris County’s 16 eviction courts.

About 50 protesters spread out along the sidewalks outside of the Precinct 5, Place 1 courthouse in Gulfton. They held signs like “HOUSING IS A HUMAN RIGHT,” “STOP EVICTIONS NOW” and “TENANT POWER.” They whooped at every car that honked its approval. In the parking lot behind them, a constable’s deputy watched in his car.

“We’re here to cause a disturbanc­e in the court,” said grassroots organizer Antonella Henao, 21, who darted along the protest lines handing out chant cards. “Our No. 1 goal is to stop all the evictions.”

The eviction crisis looms nationwide as people with jobs and hours slashed by the pandemic burn through their savings to pay rent — if they had savings to begin with.

The federal eviction moratorium expired, as did a moratorium imposed by the Texas Supreme Court.

While some Texas cities implemente­d an eviction grace period, Houston’s Mayor Turner has not put one on the City Council agenda.

Judge Russ Ridgway, whose court served as the protest site, did not respond to a request for comment.

Just before the docket was set to begin, protesters began a calland-response chant through their face masks. (“As loud as you can,” instructed Henao. “Make sure they can hear us. Make sure their

eardrums hurt by the end of the day.”)

“HEY HEY.”

“HO HO.”

“JUDGE RIDGWAY HAS GOT TO GO.”

Henao said the group picked Ridgway’s court because it had one of the day’s busiest eviction dockets.

“Mayor Turner and the city of Houston have failed its tenants,” she said. “There’s no reason why during a pandemic over which we have no control, people should be worried about losing their livelihood­s.”

The group swelled to around 100 by 8:30 a.m. and moved from the sidewalk to circling the parking lot outside of the courthouse entrance, chanting: “NO JUSTICE, NO PEACE!” “F— YOUR RENT F— YOUR LEASE!”

The protesters stood in a line in front of the courthouse entrance, still chanting.

A protester named Austin who declined to give their last name shouted into a megaphone: “Judge Ridgway is up for election. We want him to know that he’s accountabl­e to us as voters.”

The crowd took up the chants again.

“What we need is a judge to hold landlords accountabl­e. It’s as simple as choosing not to hold eviction cases,” said Austin, pacing the line.

Maya Nicole, 24, came out to the protest after she saw it advertised on Instagram.

The pandemic has turned her into an activist: She’s attended protests against the police budget and the city reopening, and the marches for George Floyd and Breonna Taylor.

“I just have the desire to feel like I have the power to do something about this huge injustice,” she said. “I mean, it’s just been like thing after thing after thing on top of another that keep piling up and it’s really burying people.”

Felix Kapoor, 32, is an organizer with advocacy group West Street Recovery and a native Houstonian. He came out to (short term) stop the day’s evictions and (long term) urge the city to put more resources toward helping landlords and tenants through the pandemic.

“I think it’s funny that they’re telling people to stay at home, but they’re also not providing enough resources,” he said. “So they’re essentiall­y telling people to move out and onto the streets.”

 ?? Photos by Steve Gonzales / Staff photograph­er ?? Demonstrat­ors hold signs and chant during a protest Friday over evictions going on at the Precinct 5, Place 1 Harris County court, 6000 Chimney Rock in Houston. The group targeted Judge Russ Ridgway because of his eviction docket.
Photos by Steve Gonzales / Staff photograph­er Demonstrat­ors hold signs and chant during a protest Friday over evictions going on at the Precinct 5, Place 1 Harris County court, 6000 Chimney Rock in Houston. The group targeted Judge Russ Ridgway because of his eviction docket.
 ??  ?? The eviction crisis looms nationwide as people with jobs slashed by the pandemic burn through any savings to pay rent.
The eviction crisis looms nationwide as people with jobs slashed by the pandemic burn through any savings to pay rent.

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