The Mercury News

Apartments

- Contact Marisa Kendall at 408-920-5009.

of the project.

The owner of the Royal Viking Apartments has the right to get out of the rental business, Clark pointed out.

“We can’t force them to stay in business and rent to you all in perpetuity until the building falls down,” he said.

Most of the Royal Viking residents are Latino and work low or middle-income jobs as nannies, constructi­on workers, receptioni­sts and nursing assistants. They pay about $2,000 a month to rent twobedroom apartments, which would typically cost $3,395 in Mountain View, according to RentCafe.

“This will be the last Christmas that I will probably get to spend with my parents, which is heartbreak­ing and sad,” 25-yearold Royal Viking resident Rocio Carrillo said after the vote.

Carrillo, who was born and raised in Mountain View and still has family there, said she likely will have to move out of the area.

Josh Vrotsos, a representa­tive of the developer, Tuesday emphasized that though his proposed town home plan would reduce the overall number of housing units on the site, it would increase the number of bedrooms from 40 to 43. Residents have been offered the city’s required three months of market-rate rent, plus an additional year’s rental subsidy to make up the difference between what they are paying now and market-rate rent, and help finding a new place to live. Vrotsos estimated Royal Viking tenants will receive an average payout of $25,000 or $26,000 per family.

The new town houses likely will sell for $1.3 million and up, he said.

Tuesday evening, one tenant after another told council members that the payout offered isn’t enough for them to uproot their lives and families. Dozens of residents and their neighbors and supporters packed the council chambers and spilled into the aisles, waving Daniel Saver, center, senior housing attorney with Community Legal Services in East Palo Alto, speaks to the Royal Viking Apartments residents and supporters following the Mountain View City Council meeting.

signs supporting affordable housing while they waited for their turn to speak.

“If we move, then it’s going to be really stressful finding a new home,” said 13-year-old Royal Viking resident Ashley Morales, the youngest of more than 30 people to speak. “And homes are really expensive and we might not have enough money for that. So we want to keep living in our apartments because we grew up there as little kids.”

Before Tuesday’s council meeting, Royal Viking tenants and supporters congregate­d outside City Hall to protest the proposed town homes, chanting “sí se puede” and holding aloft homemade signs that read “We love living in Mountain View” and “No more forced displaceme­nt.”

Janet Werkman, a 68-year-old Mountain View homeowner, was there to protest the displaceme­nt of low-income renters that she said is ripping her community apart.

“I’m very, very troubled by what’s happening here,” she said. “They’re very important members of our community. They work here. Their kids go to school here.”

In addition to saving Royal Viking Apartments, the protesters also hoped to convince the City Council

to temporaril­y suspend demolition of all apartments within Mountain View, in an effort to prevent developers from converting additional affordable rental units into market-rate, owner-occupied homes. That proposal didn’t get much traction from city leaders Tuesday.

In an effort to replenish the region’s short supply of homes available for purchase, Mountain View officials have been green-lighting projects that promise to build more for-sale homes, even if it means bulldozing existing rental units to do it. The number of tenant households that received a notice to vacate because their building was being redevelope­d or remodeled jumped from four in 2014 to 350 last year, according to the city. So far this year, 135 households have received such notices.

Despite the fact that the city has approved similar developmen­ts in the past, Mayor Lenny Siegel called the plan to force the Royal Viking tenants out of their homes “wrong.”

“We have people who are the backbone of our community,” Siegel said, “who, based on the evidence I’ve seen, will be forced to leave Mountain View or live on the streets.”

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