Sections Housing

Homeless moms call owner’s paid shelter offer ‘an insult’

One of the homeless mothers living in a vacant West Oakland house since Nov. 18 scoffed Saturday night at an offer by the house’s owner to pay to move them out and shelter them for the next two months, calling the offer “an insult.”

Dominique Walker, one of the mothers staying at this Magnolia Street house, owned by the real estate investment firm Wedgewood Properties, said:

“It is deeply disingenuous for this multi-million-dollar corporation, through their multi-million-dollar public relations firm, to pretend to be concerned about the well being of black families. … Wedgewood CEO Greg Geiser is desperate to avoid taking responsibility for how this company has contributed to the housing crisis that is causing families like mine to be homeless and for participating in an industry that has robbed Black and marginalized communities of land and wealth for generations.”

Earlier Saturday, Wedgewood said it’s offering to pay for the women’s move to a shelter run by a nonprofit and pay for them to stay there for two months.

Sam Singer, a spokesman for Wedgewood Properties, said:

“We urge the group to leave peacefully and voluntarily. We will pay Catholic Charities of the East Bay, one of the leading providers of homeless services in Oakland, to provide shelter and assistance to the moms for the next two months.”

That offer came a day after an Alameda County Superior Court judge ruled Walker and Sameerah Karim, 41, who both belong to a group called Moms 4 Housing, have no valid claim of possession to the house at 2928 Magnolia St. The judge’s ruling means the mothers have five business days before the Alameda County Sheriff will evict them.

After Friday’s court ruling, Moms 4 Housing posted Saturday evening on Twitter:

Last modified January 11, 2020 8:42 pm

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