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DESCRIPTION:Redevelopment Planning Land Grab In Hunters Point, a Gentrification 
 Plan\nby Maurice Campbell & Barbara George Thursday November 27, 2003 at 
 04:34 PM\nmecsoft@pacbell.net 415.468-8964 \n\nWe need to moblize for the 
 SFRA Commission meeting at City Hall on December 2nd @ 4pm. 
 \n\nRedevelopment Planning Land Grab In Hunters Point, a Gentrification 
 Plan \nWe have just learned that Redevelopment is making a move to grab the 
 whole neighborhood!! \n\nWe were tracking special interest efforts to ram 
 through the DDA (Disposition and Development Agreement) for Lennar to 
 develop the Ship Yard, when we also discovered Redevelopment’s plot to 
 gentrify practically all of BVHP. It appears as an Amendment to the current 
 Hunters Point Redevelopment Project, so they can avoid a public process 
 that would reveal the full dimensions of this total land grab (putting it 
 out in local newspapers for comment). \nThis takes away the whole Hill and 
 other huge chunks of the neighborhood, and once they’re gone, you won’t 
 have an opportunity to get them back. \n\nYou need to go down to the 
 Redevelopment meeting on December 2nd because both of these issues affects 
 your future very seriously. You can comment on both —the neighborhood 
 takeover “Amendment” and the Lennar Development agreement for the Ship 
 Yard (the “DDA” — Disposition and Development Agreement). 
 \n\n\nREDEVELOPMENT COMMISSION MEETING \n4 PM, December 2, 2003 \nAt City 
 Hall Room 416 \n\n• Ask them to put in writing Guaranteed Housing for 
 anyone evicted because of this Amended Project Area Plan, and a Guaranteed 
 Right of Return (at the same prices) for everyone currently living in the 
 Hunters Point Amended Redevelopment Project Area \n• The Redevelopment 
 Commission plans to vote on the Disposition and Development Agreement (DDA) 
 for Lennar’s plan at this meeting. Ask them to wait until the community 
 is more familiar with what they’re voting on. \n\n• CALL SAN FRANCISCO 
 SUPERVISORS TODAY AND ASK THEM TO HOLD AN INFORMATIONAL HEARING BEFORE ANY 
 VOTE BY THE REDEVELOPMENT COMMISSION!! Let’s have Redevelopment, the City 
 Attorney, and Lennar come down and answer questions about the DDA and this 
 “Amendment” to redevelop the whole neighborhood! \n\nTwo Redevelopment 
 Plans — Neither Benefits BVHP Residents \nThe general outline of 
 Redevelopment’s plan for the Ship Yard has been known for a while, but 
 the devil is in the details. That’s why it is so important for the 
 Supervisors to review the agreement with Lennar (the “DDA”) before 
 Redevelopment votes to approve it. What BVHP residents want most — 
 business development providing long term jobs for local residents — may 
 be delayed for years, while upscale housing is the main focus. \nBusiness 
 is what generates jobs, not expensive homes which many people in the 
 community can’t afford. \n\nNow this new “Amendment” of the Hunters 
 Point Redevelopment Project would clear away the low-income Black 
 population from the area around the Ship Yard — and add to the future 
 value of Lennar’s housing. \n\nNeither of these two Redevelopment 
 projects helps the people who live here. If so ask them to explain how? 
 \n\nRedevelopment’s “Amendment” to Gentrify BVHP \nThe proposed San 
 Francisco Redevelopment Agency Plan Amendment dated November 4, 2003 adds 
 1600 acres to the current 137 acre Hunters Point Redevelopment Project 
 area. It includes Public Housing bordering on the Ship Yard, and other 
 sections of the neighborhood all the way to Bayshore (see map). \n\nNotice 
 the only areas of BVHP that are not included are labeled “Project areas 
 to be amended” meaning they could be added later! Being “amended” 
 means being declared “blighted,” then bulldozed and rebuilt by 
 developers. \n\nThe Black population in SF has gone from over 14% to less 
 than 6% in this City. If you look at Redevelopment’s brochure describing 
 the Amended Project Area, all the people in the pictures look White. 
 \n\nWell we are not Western Addition, where Redevelopment wiped out the 
 Black population! We need to make that clear to the powers that be we 
 don’t want to be gentrified. We want and will maintain our multicultural 
 diversity which includes Black people. \n\nLet the Redevelopment Commission 
 know on December 2nd that you want to be heard, and you don’t want any 
 rush vote for acceptance of the Project Area Amendment or the DDA — you 
 want time to review the recommendations, since it affects your future, and 
 you want the Board of Supervisors involved. \n\nDo you remember lately that 
 many residents were concerned about eviction and the Hope Vl program, and 
 after a hearing at a Board of Supervisors committee, it was found Tenants 
 were not given enough notice to comment, which really terrorized them 
 because they thought they were going to be evicted shortly? \n\nDon’t be 
 swayed by special interests because they have been bought and paid for many 
 times over. Don’t get suckered into rushing or any form of pressure that 
 would make us regret our decision. \n\nLet them know that if you get rushed 
 by the Redevelopment Commission you will get even at the ballot box in the 
 Mayoral Election and other future elections. \n\nRedevelopment Wants to 
 Lock in Lennar \nRedevelopment’s agreement with Lennar Corporation for 
 the first phase of development of Hunters Point Ship Yard is called the 
 Disposition Development Agreement, or “DDA.” It is not yet a done deal, 
 but the lame duck administration is pressuring everyone to approve the DDA 
 without seriously examining it. \n\nRather than rushing to approve the DDA, 
 this is our only opportunity for negotiation, to get more benefit for the 
 community. Once the commission votes it then becomes a legally binding 
 document and it is almost impossible to be undone. The DDA locks Lennar 
 into place. \n\nThe DDA is an enormously complicated document, over 1000 
 pages, but they wanted the Citizens Advisory Committee (CAC) to ok it in 
 “30 days”. Some of us who are on the CAC said hey, there’s a lot of 
 attachments that aren’t even here, and there’s other information 
 promised and not delivered. The community should know what’s being 
 signed, and it’s our responsibility as the CAC to find out. 
 \n\nEverything got divided into subcommittees to look at different pieces 
 and we had more than 26 meetings in just the last month, because they’re 
 in such a hurry! We’ve spent over 60 days reviewing it and making 
 recommendations but we’re still just getting the recommended changes and 
 additions to the DDA right. \n\nThe CAC worked really hard to get as much 
 community comments as possible included. “Not enough community outreach 
 for the workshops,” “not enough of the community was notified,” 
 “being micro managed,” “rush to judgment,” “pressured to meet a 
 deadline.” “Not getting answers from Redevelopment, written and 
 oral.” “Not seeing a very important document from Redevelopment until 
 6pm 11/24/03 the time of our final meeting.” \n\nThis document is 
 Redevelopment staff’s description of the CAC recommendations to the 
 Commission. It breaks down the recommendations into three areas: (1) 
 acceptable to Redevelopment, (2) acceptable to the developer and (3) other 
 — not acceptable or requires further discussion — that area especially 
 would have to be argued by the public at the next commission meeting. 
 \n\nThis is unfair to the CAC members who should have gotten more time to 
 review the changes, and be able to provide specific responses. \n\nThe DDA 
 includes the basic obligations of the developer, the City and the Navy such 
 as toxic cleanup and employment opportunities, and sets up the 
 “horizontal” development (“horizontal” means the infrastructure 
 like roads, water and sewers). This includes the important decisions on 
 open space, community facilities and housing density. \n\nThe DDA is a 
 legally binding document. The Board of Supervisors has no say, and the 
 decision is left up to the Redevelopment Commission. \n\nSF Redevelopment 
 is a quasi State Agency — unlike most redevelopment agencies that are 
 part of city governments, some time back this one was placed under State 
 control, so it is much harder for local people to influence. This is why we 
 need the San Francisco Supervisors to get involved. \n\nWhat’s the Rush?? 
 \nWhat’s the big hurry, really, it will be months before anybody can 
 build anything. They’re acting like Lennar is doing us a big favor to 
 come here and develop our Shipyard. The reality is that it is a valuable 
 property and a number of developers that are capable with good reputations 
 have expressed interest. Lennar has built on its own Toxic sites in 
 Florida. \n\nIt is the DDA along with the ENA (The Exclusive Negotiating 
 Agreement) that locks in Lennar as the Master Developer. The Exclusive 
 Negotiating Agreement comes up for review by the Board of Supervisors in 
 December. If we can head off Redevelopment approval of the DDA until then, 
 we could examine the relationship with Lennar very closely. If we get a 
 chance to “play the field” then other developers can come to the 
 community with a better deal. Instead of taking us for granted, Lennar 
 would have to do better, and others would not doubt offer the community 
 much more than Lennar. \n\nThe Developer Must Wait for Clearance from the 
 Navy and the Regulators \nWhat mystifies us about this big rush is there 
 are a lot of obstacles in the way of starting work on developing the Ship 
 Yard. There can be no transfer of land to the City from the Navy because 
 the following conditions have not been met: the Conveyance Agreement 
 between the City of San Francisco, the Community and the Navy has not been 
 signed, and the Regulators — EPA (Environmental Protection Agency), DTSC 
 (Department of Toxic Substance Control), Water Resource Board, have not yet 
 signed off on a FOST (Finding Of Suitability for Transfer) for Parcel A. In 
 addition, the Record of Decision on Parcel B just recently went through its 
 five year review where community comments were received, and there is still 
 a lot of work to be done on Parcel B. \n\nSome of the problems that are 
 holding up the transfer are: \n(1) There is a methane problem on Parcel E 
 (where they had the fire). Parcel E is an “adjacent” parcel of land (in 
 other words, “next to” the Redevelopment area) and it is covered in the 
 plan through “adjacency” issues. It is also in the Conveyance 
 agreement. \n(2) The HRA (Historical Radiological Assessment) has not been 
 released and may not be released until first quarter 2004 or later. (This 
 document is also about the thickness of two phone books, more than 800 
 pages.) \n\nIt is better to take our time and make sure the community gets 
 the very best deal. You know the more you study the details, the more you 
 understand what’s being offered and what is not there, and then you can 
 negotiate a better deal. Many of you have bought Cars, Homes — or 
 Cellphone plans. Did you cave in to the high pressure sales person and 
 regret it later?, Well this is about the future of Hunters Point, this is 
 about the whole community where you live \n\nWe know this is right here in 
 the midst of all the Holidays and everybody’s really busy but this is the 
 time to take a stand. Give the Children something they can be proud of — 
 a Community for all the people who live here, not a Gentrified Community 
 for somebody else. \n\nPlease read Arrested Development by Lisa Davis in 
 the SF Weekly. It provides a lot of background to what is going on. 
 http://www.sfweekly.com/issues/2003-11-19/feature.html/1/index.html \n\nYou 
 can look at the DDA online at http://www.hunterspointshipyard.com/dda.html 
 \n\n\n\nwww.sfbayview.com/112603/redevelopment112603.shtml\n\n \n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2004/02/03/27633.php
SUMMARY:Redevelopment Mtg: Stop the Land Grab in Hunters Point
LOCATION:At City Hall Room 416 \n
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2004/02/03/27633.php
DTSTART:20031203T000000Z
DTEND:20031203T020000Z
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