Affordable Housing is a Human Right!

by on September 20, 2010 · 2 comments

in Civil Rights, Economy, Environment, Health, Organizing

housing3By Rocky Neptune

Every human right has had to be fought for against powerful interests who profit from the subjugation and misuse of their fellow persons.

The right to vote was opposed by kings and emperors and is still occasionally nullified by millionaire judges, as in the 2000 Presidential Florida vote count and in San Diego, when Donna Frye was elected Mayor by a majority vote only to have a judge hand the victory to a fellow judge. The right to decent working conditions was a fight which saw many decent people jailed, beaten and slaughtered. People died for advocating an 8-hour work-day, unemployment insurance, and the right to form associations of workers.

African-Americans in the South were told that segregation was the “way things were and nothin’ could be done about it,” while women in the early Twentieth Century were jailed and beaten for asking for their rights as equal human beings.

housing1The right to affordable housing is a right recognized by the United Nations and several progressive national governments like Canada and England. However, in the United States powerful corporate interests and landlord associations, manipulate the political system, bribe corporate owned media, cozy up to wealthy judges – all of whom are homeowners, mostly millionaires – to create a wall of sanctity around rent extortion.

Everyone must live somewhere; occupy some physical space. If a person has no money or high income job to purchase a house, then they must rent. The oligarchy which controls San Diego, economically, politically and, even, to some extent, culturally will tell you that there is nothing an individual can do about the rental housing market. Driven by the greed and power of the banking, insurance and wall street cartels in New York and Washington, they will tell you that wealthy investors in these institutions deserve bail-outs to the tune of $700 billion in tax payer money; that socialism for the rich is ok through hand-outs, tax cuts, tax loop-holes, mortgage deductions, interest credits and a hundred other give-away programs conjured up by an army of lobbyists, lawyers, and accountants.

These titans of greed, with their corporate-owned capitalism, have destroyed the free enterprise system, torn away the fabric of main street economies, decimated our mom and pop stores, obliterated the family farm, bought off independent journalism, and continue to peddle their snake-oil economics which favors monopolies, cartels, the demolition of competition and the dismantling of democracy.

Now, they will tell you that you are helpless against the forces of the market economy; that profit is more important than the needs of the community, that the right of your family and neighbors for affordable housing is not possible – given “market conditions.”

The San Diego Renters Union declares we cannot continue to rely on our present political and economic systems to solve the problems of the 21st Century because, mostly, they are the problem. These systems are simply human arrangements. Yet they have been seized by wealthy speculators who have hired lobbyists to buy off politicians and judges to make sure they have free reign to oppress those without the funds to buy property.

They would have us compete for shelter, rather than build cooperative housing projects, because – like the sickos who bet at a cock fight – they can profit from the struggle. They would have us alone, each family at the mercy of a landlord or property manager, helpless, forced to pay their extortion payments, with no recourse to fairness or justice.

where-am-i-supposed-to-liveIn March, 2010 the United Nations heard its envoy report that the United States’ housing rights violations were “staggering.” The UN Special Rapporteur on Adequate Housing informed the world body that “there is a human rights crisis in the US that can no longer be ignored…millions of Americans are unable to secure one their most basic rights – the right to adequate housing.”

Her report, following a two-week visit to the US, blasted all levels of government and called for urgent measures to address the housing crisis. “All human rights start at home, but only if you have one, “the report said.

The Geneva-based Centre on Housing Rights and Evictions, reacting to the report called on the US government to recognize housing as a human right and ratify the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (often called the ICESCR Treaty).

The conclusions of the report presented a tragic failure of public policy:

  • about 12.7 million US children (one in six) live in households spending more than half their income on housing. The HUD definition of affordable housing is a family spend no more than 30 percent of its income on housing.
  • cuts in government funding for low-income housing, along with the demolition of thousands of public housing units, have led to a decrease in the quality and availability of subsidized housing for the poorest American families.
  • the economic crisis and significantly increasing numbers of foreclosures are driving up homeless rates across the US.

housing2“The conclusions in the UN report provide further evidence – if any is needed – that the United States’ citizens desperately need the protections afforded by the International Treaty on Housing Rights” said Salih Booker of the world housing watchdog group.

Beginning after the 1st of the year, the Renters Union will be holding a series of public meetings with tenant organization leaders from throughout the state and rent control board members from other cities in California, to plan a strategy for the upcoming struggle to secure the right to affordable housing for every San Diegan.

The San Diego Renters Union will struggle in any way we can to get the right to affordable housing implemented in San Diego both in the laws of our city and in practice through a Rent Stabilization Board.

Any landlord, developer, investor or speculator who enters into a project in the public domain for profit has a responsibility to the community to be fair and just. Only a regulatory agency, like those who monitor our utility costs and increases, can safeguard every tenant the right of affordable housing.

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

tj September 20, 2010 at 9:31 am

The greedy affluent have always despised the USA middle-class – & lusted after their success – now they’ve finally succeeded in destroying it.

But their greedy acts compromise their own peace & safety – how’s that for dumb?

But then, who ever said GREED was intelligent?

Oh, contraire.’

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Dustin D. Delon September 20, 2010 at 5:06 pm

Rocky Neptun, our director, didn’t mention how folks can join the effort for rent control in San Diego. We are in the process of putting together a website in the next few weeks, so in the meantime you can contact me at dustyddelon@yahoo.com.

Dusty Delon, Communications Director
San Diego Renters Union

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