What about jobs?
“Jobs” have been promised to the residents of Bayview-Hunters Point as part of every new development that’s been built in the community: Bayview Plaza, the Post Office, Indian Basin Industrial Park, the PG&E power generation facility, and the city sewage plant.
The promises have never been kept. That’s why community leaders pressed the mayor to put the promise of stadium jobs in writing. He refused.
Not that jobs are scarce in Bayview-Hunters Point. Anyone who has driven north on 101 and looked east as he’s passed the district has seen a sea of warehouses and light industrial facilities. The “flatlands” part of the area is the home to scores of employers who provide hundreds of jobs. There’s just one catch: local residents have not been successful in getting them. For the most part, these companies “hire from within” – outside of the neighborhood.
Not the most interesting scene, but there are blocks and blocks like this in Bayview-Hunters Point. I didn’t see one unoccupied commercial building
What about the projects?
Yes, there is public housing in Bayview-Hunters Point just as there is in Western Addition, North Beach, Hayes Valley, the Mission, and Chinatown. Some of it is well-managed and in good condition. Some of it is not.
Interestingly, the “special” polling places that were opened prior to the election in Bayview-Hunters Point were opened in projects with some of the worst problems like this one, Sunnydale. When tenants move out, instead of making room for new families, their units are boarded up.
Why, when this facility is obviously being “phased out,” was it hand-picked to be the site of a “special” polling place?
Contrary to the press image, Bayview-Hunters Point is booming and new houses are going up everywhere. Although the new construction is within the boundaries of Bayview/Hunters Point, the promoters seem to go out of their way to obscure the fact.
If Bayview-Hunters Point is such a “bad” area, why all the new, high-priced housing – and why are people snatching it up? I saw “sold” signs posted on half-finished houses
These new houses have a clear, unobstructed view of the bay from their living rooms
The secret, to everyone except the people who live there, is that Bayview-Hunters Point is quiet, safe, beautiful, and, until recently, an affordable neighborhood in one of the most expensive housing markets in the U.S.
Yes, there are problems in Bayview-Hunters Point, but most of them can be solved by a fair apportionment of tax revenue. Between the thousands of home owners and the hundreds of businesses in the area, Bayview-Hunters Point is one of San Francisco’s cash cows, but rather than give the community its fair share of services (bus service, public health, youth programs), the city withdraws services and leaves health-threatening environmental problems unaddressed.
Bayview-Hunters Point is the neighborhood that was supposed to have been wildly enthusiastic about the city giving a $100,000,000 city grant to the owner of the 49ers football team and receiving in return a “good faith effort only” offer of mall jobs. Espanola Jackson and other long-time residents active in the politics of the community say that neither the reported large turnout (on a rainy day no less) nor the extraordinarily high percentage of “Yes” votes make any sense.
I think anyone who has bothered to spend any time south of Army Street would have to agree.
One of the many beautiful, well-kept homes in the last African-American neighborhood in San Francisco
- If you don’t know anything about the election fraud case, educate yourself.
- If your head is spinning and you can’t imagine how a whole city could be conned into believing “up is down” and “down is up,” read this report.
- If you’d like to see what’s really behind the 49er stadium/mall/entertainment center, put in a quarter, pull on the lever, and become enlightened.