San Francisco Chronicle

Mission nonprofits build housing hope

- By J.K. Dineen

Affordable housing developmen­t is about to go from zero to 733 units in the Mission District.

A decade after dysfunctio­n and political infighting brought low-income housing production in the neighborho­od to a standstill, the Mission is about to become the city’s busiest neighborho­od for constructi­on of new belowmarke­t-rate units, with complexes popping up along Folsom Street, Mission Street and South Van Ness Avenue over the next three years.

Six affordable housing projects, four of them within a two-block area of the Inner Mission, are set to start constructi­on over the next two years. The projects will inject 733 units into an area that is becoming as known for gentrifica­tion and upscale dining as it is for burritos, progressiv­e

politics and Latino culture.

And more is probably coming, according to Karoleen Feng, director of community real estate for the Mission Economic Developmen­t Agency, known as Meda.

“We are trying to put another 1,000 units in our pipeline,” Feng said. “We are looking at sites across the Mission that we can land-bank.”

The coming burst of affordable housing constructi­on would not be possible were it not for big changes occurring at two neighborho­od nonprofits: Meda and Mission Housing Corp.

For decades Meda was focused on helping neighborho­od residents — mostly Spanish-speaking immigrants — with everything from computer training to business developmen­t to tax preparatio­n to English as a second language. Over the past few years, however, it became clear that housing had become the top challenge facing families. In a 2015 survey of 1,600 Mission families with children, Meda found that more than 60 percent were spending half their income on housing.

“They said that their main challenge was not their kids’ academic success — that was important — but the fact that tomorrow they might not have a roof over their head,” Feng said. “That hit home for Meda.”

Since 2000, the Mission has lost about 27 percent of its Latino population, almost 8,000 people, according to a 2015 report by city chief economist Ted Egan.

Feng, who had previously worked with the East Bay Asian Local Developmen­t Corp., was brought on board, and the Mayor’s Office of Housing, which controls the city’s housing funds, gave Meda a chance to get into the housing business. First, the city picked Meda, together with Bridge Housing, to take over ownership and operation of 420 former San Francisco Housing Authority senior affordable units, which needed to be rehabilita­ted. Then, with Chinatown Community Developmen­t Center and the Tenderloin Neighborho­od Developmen­t Corp., Meda was chosen to co-develop four properties of affordable housing.

Meanwhile, Mission Housing Corp. has rebounded in a big way. A successful affordable housing developer from its founding in 1971 into the 1990s, Mission Housing ran into trouble in the early 2000s when its board of directors fired a longtime executive director and most of its staff quit.

The city cut off housing developmen­t funds to the group, and by 2012 it was facing likely bankruptcy when Sam Moss took over as executive director. Moss was able to keep Mission Housing afloat by refinancin­g its 1,600-unit portfolio and regaining the trust of city housing officials, who tapped the group to develop two projects in the Mission, 1950 Mission St. and 490 S. Van Ness Ave., as well as the Upper Yard, a parking lot next to the Balboa BART station.

“The company that we are becoming now is the company we should have been all along,” Moss said. “If that had been the case, the Mission wouldn’t be dealing with quite the gentrifica­tion bomb that has gone off over the last few years.”

The six new buildings will include 50,000 square feet of commercial space, which Feng says is almost as important as the housing. At a time when nonprofits and mom-and-pop businesses are being squeezed out to make room for upscale restaurant­s, Meda’s space will provide homes for arts, afterschoo­l programs, and affordable retailers that can’t afford the high rents charged in trendy areas like along Valencia Street.

“We are looking at how we can re-establish the Mission as a family-oriented, Latino culture, whereas right now it’s transition­ing very quickly to a young profession­al culture,” Feng said.

Supervisor Hillary Ronen, who represents the Mission, said affordable housing, along with combatting homelessne­ss, is at the top of her agenda.

“Just like we want Chinatown to be Chinatown, we want our Latino cultural district to be a thriving businessan­d-arts district where actual Latino people will be able to continue to live and work,” Ronen said. “It’s a unique neighborho­od in the entire world.”

Getting Meda and Mission Housing into the housing developmen­t business has taken time and effort, but has been worth it, she said.

“Having two strong developers in the neighborho­od is exactly what we need to continue what I believe is the pace of affordable housing that we need in order to stop further gentrifica­tion of the Mission,” she said.

While gentrifica­tion, and the role housing developmen­t plays in a changing neighborho­od, is a politicall­y charged topic in the Mission, nonprofit developers such as Meda benefit from market-rate developmen­t even as they often oppose individual projects.

Two of Meda’s affordable projects, 2070 Bryant St. and 1296 Shotwell St., will be built on parcels that market-rate developers donated to the Mayor’s Office of Housing. Oyster Developmen­t donated the Shotwell Street parcel to meet its affordable housing obligation on Vida at 2558 Mission St., the most upscale condo complex built in the Mission to date. Developer Nick Podell gave the city a 21,000-square-foot site on Bryant Street to satisfy the affordable housing requiremen­ts of the adjacent 2000 Bryant St., which opponents had attacked as the Beast on Bryant.

Feng said that Meda is not opposed to market-rate housing but wants to make sure affordable units are added at a similar pace as higher-end units.

“The Mission has gone from being one of the most affordable neighborho­ods in San Francisco to one of the least affordable,” she said. “San Francisco can’t be a sanctuary city if nobody making less than $200,000 a year can afford to live here.”

While the ground-up developmen­t projects regularly take three to five years to finance and build, Meda is also trying to stem the flight of low-income families by buying up existing rent-controlled buildings through Mayor Ed Lee’s small sites acquisitio­n program, which provides funds for multifamil­y buildings of between five and 25 units. Meda bought six containing 44 units last year, and it has an additional eight buildings in escrow, all apartment complexes with longtime rent-controlled tenants that were on the market and seemed ripe for eviction. The program received $25 million in funding for the current fiscal year.

Keeping on top of a hot apartment building market means scouring the neighborho­od for buildings that are in transition. Feng and colleague Dario Romero look for run-down buildings that are suddenly being giving a fresh coat of paint.

“If your landlord is painting and asking for permission to do constructi­on, you know they are probably looking to sell,” Romero said.

In those cases, Meda tries to get to the seller before a building hits the market.

Beatriz Garduño, who lives with her teenage daughter at 3800 Mission St., said she was sure she would be evicted when she saw a for-sale sign go up. But she and the other tenants persuaded the landlord — a friend and fellow Mexican immigrant — to go with Meda, even though another investor was offering slightly more money, $1.9 million versus $1.85 million.

“I told her, ‘Why do you want to make so much money? You know our story. You have known me since I came here,’ ” she said. “It’s not my building, I don’t own it, but after 24 years it feels like home.”

 ?? Lea Suzuki / The Chronicle ?? Karoleen Feng (center) and Feliciano Vera of the Mission Economic Developmen­t Agency check out a property at 1990 Folsom St. that is slated for developmen­t of 143 affordable housing units.
Lea Suzuki / The Chronicle Karoleen Feng (center) and Feliciano Vera of the Mission Economic Developmen­t Agency check out a property at 1990 Folsom St. that is slated for developmen­t of 143 affordable housing units.
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