USA TODAY International Edition

SILICON VALLEY’S ACUTE HOMELESS PROBLEM IS ON THE BALLOT

San Francisco, home to Airbnb, ranks 5th in U. S. homelessne­ss

- Jon Swartz

The images are startling: Homeless men, women and children huddled on the streets of the San Francisco Bay Area — often in the shadows of start- ups and high- tech behemoths generating billions of dollars in wealth.

It’s a stark contrast that has gripped the region, and prompted four county measures on the Nov. 8 ballot to generate $ 3 billion over the next 25 years for affordable housing and services.

Under the most- ambitious measure, San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee has proposed a 0.75% increase in the sales tax, to 9.5%, to raise $ 50 million a year. Propositio­ns J and K would generate $ 1.2 billion for the next quarter- century via a simple majority.

“There is clearly not enough affordable housing, or housing at any level,” says Kevin Zwick, CEO of Housing Trust Silicon Valley. It supports Measure A, which needs a two- thirds vote to invest $ 950 million in bond money into affordable housing in Santa Clara County, which is less dense than San Francisco but where homelessne­ss has become more visible.

County officials’ decision in late 2014 to shutter homeless encampment­s along the Guadalupe River, Los Gatos Creek and Coyote Creek in San Jose and Los Gatos, called “The Jungle,” flushed the destitute into suburbs and freeway off- ramps, not far from the campuses of Adobe Systems, eBay and Netflix.

“This ( measure) is a gamechangi­ng opportunit­y,” Zwick says. “It would help us out of a huge hole we’ve dug into.”

Meanwhile, a handful of investors, including Sequoia Capital Chairman Michael Moritz and angel investor Ron Conway, have donated to Propositio­n Q, a controvers­ial measure that would rid San Francisco of homeless encampment­s. If passed, the city would give residents of tent encampment­s 24 hours’ notice to relocate to a shelter or accept a bus ticket out of town. Law enforcemen­t would be permitted to seize tents and other belongings.

The region’s homeless popula- tion has been relatively flat for several years, though the severity of the problem is obvious to any visitor to San Francisco’s downtown. Between the aforementi­oned four counties, there are 19,000 homeless in what is one of the most- expensive metropolit­an areas in the U. S. San Francisco, home to Twitter, Salesforce, Uber and Airbnb headquarte­rs, ranks fifth nationally in its homeless- ness rate, with 772 people without shelter for every 100,000, according to Census data.

Just 13% of San Francisco households can afford a medianpric­ed home in the city, the report said. The news isn’t much better in the rest of the Bay Area: in San Mateo County, it’s 14%, and Marin County, 18%.

In San Francisco, you need to make at least $ 269,000 annually to buy a median- priced home, three times the median household income of $ 84,160, according to Paragon Real Estate Group.

Rents have skyrockete­d, with steep increases in San Francisco creating a ripple effect in the area. In nearby Oakland, average rents are $ 2,270 for a one- bedroom apartment, according to Zumper’s National Rent Report for October. San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose are three of the six most expensive U. S. cities to rent in, according to the report.

“I’ve been ostracized, harassed by police, and had to figure out how to survive while going broke,” says Dan Gailey, who lost his home last year while trying to build his own artificial- intelligen­ce company, Asteria, in San Francisco.

Voters in San Mateo and Alameda counties will also decide on affordable housing measures.

In San Mateo County, home to Facebook, Oracle and Electronic Arts, Measure K extends a halfcent sales tax for 20 years to raise $ 300 million. It requires a simple majority.

A two- thirds vote for Alameda’s Affordable Housing Bond, or A1, would pump $ 580 million into affordable homes for low- income renters, down- payment assistance for first- time home buyers and an “innovation fund” for new solutions. Alameda, on the east side of the Bay Bridge from San Francisco, includes Oakland and Berkeley.

All told, the measures could create more than 20,000 affordable apartments.

Silicon Valley’s flourishin­g tech companies have largely been bystanders on the issues. Google and Twitter are among the few to donate money and resources.

“This ( measure) is a game- changing opportunit­y. It would help us out of a huge hole we’ve dug into.” Kevin Zwick, CEO of Housing Trust Silicon Valley

 ?? TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY ?? Tom is a native San Franciscan who spends his days standing outside the market inside Twitter headquarte­rs asking young tech workers for spare change, holding out his rough- hewn hands.
TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY Tom is a native San Franciscan who spends his days standing outside the market inside Twitter headquarte­rs asking young tech workers for spare change, holding out his rough- hewn hands.
 ?? JON SWARTZ, USA TODAY ?? Just 13% of San Francisco households can afford a medianpric­ed home there. You’d need to make at least $ 269,000 a year.
JON SWARTZ, USA TODAY Just 13% of San Francisco households can afford a medianpric­ed home there. You’d need to make at least $ 269,000 a year.

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