San Francisco Chronicle

Latest Oakland firetrap underscore­s dilemma

- MATIER & ROSS

The tightrope that Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf is walking in the aftermath of the Ghost Ship warehouse fire became clear when Alameda County sheriff ’s deputies raided an abandoned East Oakland storefront where 28 people were living illegally — including a 5-year-old child who was being housed in a closet.

“They had a makeshift bed built for the child on a shelf, next to exposed wiring and debris,” said Sheriff ’s Office spokesman Sgt. Ray Kelly. “They had all sorts of nooks and crannies where people were sleeping. Electricit­y had been rigged up from the outside, and there was open sewage and all sorts of blight.

“It was a recipe for disaster,” Kelly said.

As with the Ghost Ship — where 36 people died Dec. 2 when fire broke out during a non-permitted concert — the storefront on the 6600 block of Bancroft Avenue appears to have gone undetected by Oakland fire and building inspectors, despite being on a busy street.

A disaster like the Ghost Ship blaze would have prompted a crackdown on illegal housing in most cities, but Oakland isn’t like most cities. Schaaf ’s celebratio­n of the art-warehouse culture was well-known before the fire, and she’s been careful since Dec. 2 to reassure artists and musicians that they won’t be chased out of town.

Unlike an artists warehouse, no one is going to raise a cry over a raid and evictions at a vacant East Oakland storefront. Most people living there when deputies arrived last week were parolees with suspected ties to the Norteños street gang. They were arrested on suspicion of gun and drug crimes and prostituti­on, and quickly found new homes in the Santa Rita jail. Building inspectors red-tagged the building.

But the raid does underscore the question of how — or whether — Oakland is looking for possible firetraps.

The Alameda County civil grand jury learned of one glaring issue when looking into the city’s fire inspection­s in 2014: The database the Fire Department used to identify buildings that needed checking was based on active business licenses — not the county tax assessor’s property reports that list all taxable real estate, and describe the property as being residentia­l,

commercial or industrial.

It’s uncertain if using the assessor records would have made a difference in the case of the Bancroft Avenue building, but it does mean that thousands of structures weren’t on the Fire Department’s to-do list.

“They made a major blunder, and put a system in place that will pretty much ensure missing people who want to fly under the radar,” said one source who was involved with the grand jury report, but who wasn’t authorized to speak for the record.

Schaaf ’s executive order last week laying out conditions for turning illegal residentia­l spaces into legal ones was notably silent on the question of who would be looking for buildings that lack permits.

You might think the Bancroft Avenue raid would have sounded alarms at City Hall that all was not well, more than a month after Ghost Ship. But despite the extensive

media coverage the raid received, Schaaf told us Friday that she hadn’t heard about it until we called.

“We are going to continue the proactive inspection program that I started a year ago and continue to respond to the increased number of complaints that we have received in the wake of the Ghost Ship tragedy,” Schaaf said.

Her spokeswoma­n, Erica Terry Derryck, later said, “The situation on Bancroft Avenue where alleged gang members were reportedly using a vacant building to shield criminal activity is not at all the same as the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the (Ghost Ship) fire ... and no one should be led to believe that they are.”

Dee-fense: Tough week off the court for the Golden State Warriors — starting with the social media shredding of the team’s hiring of former San Francisco Police Chief Greg Suhr as a security consultant.

Hard to say which was worse for the team: the uproar from police critics who blame Suhr for a rash of fatal SFPD shootings or the backlash from Suhr fans angered when the Warriors quickly pulled the plug on his contract.

And judging by the closed-door discussion­s that went on Friday over at the Oakland Alameda County Coliseum Authority, things may get a bit bumpier for the San Francisco-bound Warriors.

We’re told the authority — joined by its newest member, former Oakland City Councilman Ignacio De La Fuente — was busy drawing up a new two-year lease extension for the team aimed at making it pay a price for its planned move.

According to sources in the know, the proposed contract calls for the team to be hit with a “significan­t” bump in rent, pay the Coliseum Authority a bigger slice of the Oracle Arena naming rights, and continue to pay down the building’s debt, to the tune of $7.5 million a year.

But the most important clause may be the one covering what to do about the $51 million in building debt once the Warriors head across the bay. As it stands, each side contends the other is responsibl­e for paying it — but the proposed contract calls for the dispute to be settled through binding arbitratio­n.

Warriors spokesman P.J. Johnston declined to discuss terms of the contract, but said given the team’s successes, it undoubtedl­y “will be a good two years for the authority.”

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