Updates and Events


June 16, 2021

Open Letter: 1921 Walnut St Tenants Speak Out Against UC Berkeley’s Mishandling and Announce Lawsuit to Get Information

Berkeley+Architectural+Heritage+Association+BAHA+spring+2021+cover+1921+Walnut+St+Berkeley.jpg
 

1921 Walnut St. is featured in the

Spring 2021 issue of the BAHA Newsletter!

*click here to read more

follow us on twitter

@save1921walnut

Save-1921-Walnut-April-24-2021-poster-663x1024.jpg
 

Join us April 24 at noon at 1921 Walnut St. to march to People’s Park.


Save+walnut+street+poster-3.png
 

Join us March 17, 2021

at 1921 Walnut St. in Berkeley, California.


October 23, 2020 Update:
In Open Letter, UC Students Reject New Housing Plans in Favor of Social Responsibility

 UC Berkeley student representatives have published an open letter decrying UC’s plans to demolish 1921 Walnut St. and build student housing on the parcel. While students desperately want more student housing, they reject the idea that housing should be built at all costs to the community. UC purchased 1921 Walnut St. in July 2020 and since April 2020, UC has openly stated their intentions to demolish the rent-controlled building.

 The students criticize both the project itself and the strong-arm tactics of UC administrators to push through their plans without substantive community engagement. The project as currently planned will displace long-term tenants and destroy affordable housing stock in Berkeley. Despite those detrimental outcomes, UC has refused to meet with the tenants of the building and has continued their planning process without meaningfully engaging the communities who will be most affected by the project. The tenants themselves, Berkeley City Council, Berkeley Rent Board, Berkeley Mayor Arreguin have all denounced UC’s plans at 1921 Walnut St. in formal letters.  

Now, the students themselves are directly taking on UC administrators in an escalating effort to steer UC towards more socially conscious housing and development policies. While UC as an institution espouses ideals of integrity, inclusivity and progressive values, in reality UC’s dismissive actions towards 1921 Walnut St. has left the students disillusioned and embittered. In an effort to shape the public education institution they are enrolled in, UC Berkeley students reject the stance that student housing should be built at the expense of the Berkeley community. In their open letter, the students methodically lay out community concerns for the project, the history of the project itself and reasonable alternatives. Most saliently, the students point out that UC does not need to displace the tenants at 1921 Walnut St. nor does UC have to demolish this building in order to create more student housing. UC is choosing to pursue the displacement of these tenants and not only is that choice heartless, it is also the opposite of being a community partner.

While the UCB students are showing that they embody the values that UC as an institution espouses and represents, why isn’t the UC administration being a better steward of its own legacy? UC is failing to provide moral leadership or accountability to the students, the Berkeley community and the stakeholders of the UC system. In that vacuum, the student themselves are taking on the responsibility to guide the UC administration on ethical housing policies by demanding UC live up to its ethos of inclusion, public service and transparency.


Monday August 3, 2020 @ 4pm

in front of the building of UC Regents’ Office at:
1111 Franklin St. in Oakland.

Please note: This protest will follow social-distancing and mask-wearing guidelines. Questions? Contact us here

IMG-8212.JPG

Thank you allies and media for attending the protest on Monday June 29, 2020!
The event was a tremendous success!

 

Protest to Stop Eviction of 1921 Walnut St. Tenants

When: 4:00 pm Monday, June 29, 2020

Where: 1921 Walnut St, Berkeley OUTSIDE in front of the building

Attendees: Berkeley Mayor Jesse Arreguin, Councilmember Kate Harrison, local tenant and housing organizations, The 1921 Walnut St. Association and more

 The tenants at 1921 Walnut St are facing eviction and displacement from their rent-controlled apartments and unwittingly find themselves in a “David v's Goliath” struggle with the Regents of the University of California.

This struggle will have potentially devastating consequences for the tenants personally, many of whom have lived here for over a decade, and for affordable/rent controlled housing across California. The University is in the process of buying the property and has notified tenants their intent is to evict all tenants from the property in order to further develop the entire block of Walnut St.

 The Walnut St. tenants first became aware of this forced displacement via a letter sent to them at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic. UC Berkeley may not be subject to local zoning and rent stabilization jurisdiction, and it is not known what their commitment to making the tenants "whole" would be. In addition to permanently displacing long-term tenants, there may be far reaching implications for the City of Berkeley and other cities across California if UC continues along this path. Will UC be allowed to purchase, demolish and permanently remove affordable/rent controlled housing stock across the State of California, regardless of local regulations? Many believe Senate Bill 330, also known as the Housing Crisis Act of 2019, codified the need to preserve, protect and build new affordable housing across California. Should UC still be allowed to displace vulnerable residents and permanently destroy affordable/rent controlled housing stock, ignoring local rent ordinances and tenant protections? Or should UC recognize the values, the voters’ wishes and the existing tenant protections that Berkeley has built over the years and be a respectful member of the Berkeley community? 1921 Walnut St in downtown Berkeley is the epicenter of this question. 

Event Info: There will be a small, physically distanced action OUTSIDE in front of 1921 Walnut St. with local tenant and housing organizations, Berkeley Mayor Jesse Arreguin, Councilmember Kate Harrison AND the tenants of 1921 Walnut St. on the afternoon of Monday, June 29. We welcome media attention and coverage, and will have a spokesperson(s) available before, during, and after the event for media to contact. Prior to the event, questions can be sent to 1921WalnutStAssociation@gmail.com with a copy to John Selawsky of the Berkeley Tenants Union, who can be reached via e-mail at: websky66@gmail.com

 

Background and Citations:

 1921 Walnut St is a 111-year-old, rent controlled apartment building in the heart of downtown Berkeley, consisting of eight 2-bedroom apartments. The building has historical significance. Some tenants have lived here for over 25 years.  

 April 17, 2020, in the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic and during a ‘shelter-at-home’ order, all tenants at 1921 Walnut St received a letter from UC Regents informing them that the "Regents" propose to undertake the redevelopment of the Property in which they live. UC has given no other details or information of their plans. The tenants of 1921 Walnut have asked UC directly of any plans or intentions and UC has responded by stating the property is for “eventual, unspecific, future use”. 

 However, it is clear that UC is planning a student housing project on our block called "Housing Project #1" or the "Gateway Project". Housing Project #1 was originally planned to be built 'around'1921 Walnut St as recently as Jan 22, 2020 1. Sometime after Jan 22, 2020, UC began including 1921 Walnut St as part of their Long Range Development Plan2 and the prospect of acquiring and demolishing 1921 Walnut St is now a serious reality.  

 UC can alternatively build student housing on other sites that do not displace Berkeley residents or permanently destroy affordable housing units from Berkeley. UC has other sites in the vicinity already scoped out. As part of their Long Range Development Plan, UC has identified 12 other sites in Berkeley to build housing3, many of which would not displace Berkeley tenants. UC has the ability to build housing in Berkeley without displacing tenants and permanently destroying affordable/rent-controlled housing units. Alternatively, UC can build their housing while also offering to replace the existing rent-controlled units on a 1-for-1 basis and make the current tenants of 1921 Walnut St “whole” by offering new units in UC’s housing developments at current rents or helping to relocate tenants into other units with the same rents and unit details.

The tenants at 1921 Walnut St have formed an association called “The 1921 Walnut St Association”. The Association has weekly zoom call meetings and are engaging with the community. They have reached out to the Mayor of Berkeley, Jesse Arreguin, Councilmember Kate Harrison, The City Council as a whole, The Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board, UC Regents and many tenant advocacy groups. They have retained the services of a private attorney Erik Bauman. 

 On June 8, 2020, the Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board wrote a letter to UC “Re: Purchase of 1921 Walnut St., Berkeley, California / Preservation of Affordable Housing” which supports “the preservation of this property and the local rent-control status of its tenants or, in the alternative, that should the property be removed from the protections of the local rent control ordinance, either via sale, demolition or other means, that the Regents commit to replacing these eight units on a one-to-one basis with comparable affordable units. In addition, should the tenants at Walnut St. be displaced from their homes we urge that they be relocated into units of comparable size and rents”4.

1.            https://regents.universityofcalifornia.edu/regmeet/jan20/f12.pdf

2.            https://lrdp.berkeley.edu/scoping-meeting

3.            Potential University Housing Locations, Note Page 12: https://lrdp.berkeley.edu/sites/default/files/2020-04-27_lrdp-hsgprojects_eir-scopingmeeting_final.pdf

4.            Copies of this letter can be given to interested media. Please email us 1921WalnutStAssociation@gmail.com