The Reporter (Vacaville)

Homeless moms evicted from Oakland home may return

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OAKLAND >> Homeless mothers who were evicted last week from an Oakland, California, house where they were squatting plan to move back after speculator­s agreed to sell the property to a nonprofit organizati­on, it was announced Monday.

Wedgewood Inc. will sell the home to the Oakland Community Land Trust, which buys and fixes up property for affordable housing. The group plans to allow women from the group Moms 4 Housing to return, Mayor Libby Schaaf announced.

The city helped negotiate the agreement with the land trust and Wedgewood after a public outcry following the evictions.

“This is what happens when we organize, when people come together to build the beloved community,” Dominique Walker of

Moms 4 Housing said in a statement on the holiday honoring civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. “Today we honor Dr. King’s radical legacy by taking Oakland back from banks and corporatio­ns.”

Wedgewood also agreed to work with the city to negotiate a right-of-first-refusal program for all its other Oakland properties, a city statement said.

Wedgewood will give the city, the land trust or other community groups the first chance to buy the homes “so they remain permanentl­y affordable,” said Carroll Fife of the Alliance of California­ns for Community Empowermen­t.

Last week, following a court order, two women from Moms 4 Housing were evicted from the vacant house on Magnolia Street that they and their children had illegally occupied since November. Sheriff’s deputies used a battering ram to enter and arrested the women.

The incident highlighte­d California’s severe housing shortage, soaring housing costs and a rising rate of homelessne­ss. A one-night count of homeless in the San Francisco Bay Area city jumped 47% in two years to more than 4,000 last year.

The evicted women had said nobody should be homeless when investment companies are buying and fixing up properties to sell at a profit. Wedgewood, based in Southern California, has flipped 160 homes in Oakland over the past nine years, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

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