City Government
As Oakland Allows Luxury Development, Advocates Question ‘Trickle-Down Housing’

In the wake of a Nov. 5 City Council meeting during which the City of Oakland denied the East 12th Street Coalition’s (E12SC) appeal to stop UrbanCore from building a luxury housing tower on public land next to Lake Merritt, housing justice advocates are questioning the city’s ongoing plans to construct far more market-rate units than affordable ones.
“We are advocating for maximizing affordable housing on this precious piece of public land and Mayor Libby Schaaf and half the City Council is ensuring that a luxury tower will be put in our community,” said Dunya Alwan, a member of E12SC and a neighbor to the site. She says the luxury tower would contribute to “trickle-down gentrification” in her neighborhood, which she describes as “the single remaining working-class community by the lake.”
Her statements came after Schaaf gave a final vote to deny E12SC’s appeal, clearing the way for UrbanCore’s luxury housing tower. Schaaf’s vote was necessary as a tie-breaker as Council President Rebecca Kaplan and councilmembers Nikki Fortunato Bas, Noel Gallo and Sheng Thao voted to approve the appeal, while Council Members Larry Reid, Lynette Gibson-McElhaney, Loren Taylor, and Dan Kalb voted to deny the appeal.
UrbanCore’s luxury tower plans to have 253 market-rate housing units and 18 units for those that make 80 to 120 percent of the area median income. On the same public land, the East Bay Asian Local Development Corporation will build a mid-rise building with 90 affordable units. The E12SC had proposed an alternate development that would have 133 homes housing nearly 700 people entirely in affordable housing.
Schaaf’s vote aligns with public statements she has recently made claiming that constructing market-rate housing for those moving into Oakland helps to keep Oakland residents from being displaced and helps the city to construct more affordable units.
“New people are moving to Oakland…and we’re Oakland, we welcome all,” said Schaaf during a Sept. 18 recording of the Podcast “Gimme Shelter: The California Housing Crisis.”
“If I don’t build new housing for the new people, they are going to push you out and price you out of the lovely Lake Merritt apartment you have today. That is a rule of supply and demand.”
Peter Cohen, who for 10 years has co-directed the Council of Community Housing Organizations — a non-profit coalition that promotes developing permanently low-income housing — said Schaaf’s method is called “filtering.”
He said the method could be effective in helping to create affordable housing in some suburbs where land is cheaper and development is slower but it doesn’t work in crowded cities with expensive land. Some advocates have called filtering “trickle down housing.” The Alliance for California Community Empowerment Action (ACCE Action) has planned the March For Housing Now which is calling for East Bay residents to come to Mosswood Park on Nov. 23 to protest against “trickle-down solutions” to housing.
“When people throw filtering out there as a validation for market-rate development policy,” said Cohen, “it’s essentially a fallacy when you’re mostly talking about urban markets.”
Councilmember Bas called filtering into question at the Nov. 5 council meeting.
“Over the last four years we have approved over 9,000 units of luxury housing,” Bas said, “in that same time our homeless population has doubled. Luxury housing is not working in terms of fixing our housing affordability and displacement crisis.”
The Mercury News reported in March that in the last three years only 7 percent of new Oakland housing units were affordable, although Schaaf had originally pledged that 28 percent of new housing construction would be affordable.
Despite the shortfall, Schaaf has stuck to her plan and has begun adopting impact fees for market-rate developers to help create affordable units.
“Market-rate units create a need for protected affordable units,” said Schaaf in the Gimme Shelter Podcast, “so developers have to include protected affordable units in those new buildings or they have to write a nice big check to our affordable housing fund.”
Cohen is weary of relying on market-rate developers to fund affordable housing.
“[Local mayors] have started this narrative that market-rate housing is how you pay for affordable housing,” said Cohen. “I don’t agree with that, but I also think it’s a very risky place to go…because what it means for housing advocates is you’re now putting all your outcomes (dependent on) the private real estate market.”
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Oakland Post: Week of May 21 – 27, 2025
The printed Weekly Edition of the Oakland Post: Week of May 21 – 27, 2025

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IN MEMORIAM: Nate Holden, State Senator and Longtime Los Angeles Councilmember, Dies at 95
Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn described Holden as “a lion” in the State Senate and a force to be reckoned with on the Los Angeles City Council.” Hahn added that she learned a lot working with Holden when she was a new councilmember.

By Bo Tefu, California Black Media
Former Los Angeles City Councilmember Nathaniel “Nate” Holden, a prominent figure in the city’s politics, passed away at the age of 95, his family confirmed on May 7.
Holden, who represented South Los Angeles for 16 years on the City Council and served one term in the California State Senate, was widely regarded as a forceful advocate for his community.
Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn described Holden as “a lion” in the State Senate and a force to be reckoned with on the Los Angeles City Council.”
Hahn added that she learned a lot working with Holden when she was a new councilmember.
Holden’s journey to political prominence began in the segregated South, where he was born in Macon, Georgia, in 1929. He often recalled the childhood moment when he first heard the governor of Georgia vowing to continue suppressing Black people.
“Doing the best you can for the people. Law and order. Make sure that people’s communities are safe. I did it all,” said Holden, reflecting on his legacy.
Holden is survived by his sons, including former California Assemblymember Chris Holden, who represented a district in Southern California that includes Pasadena and Altadena in Los Angeles County and cities in San Bernardino County.
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Oakland Hosts Town Hall Addressing Lead Hazards in City Housing
According to the city, there are 22,000 households in need of services for lead issues, most in predominantly low-income or Black and Latino neighborhoods, but only 550 to 600 homes are addressed every year. The city is hoping to use part of the multimillion-dollar settlement to increase the number of households served each year.

By Magaly Muñoz
The City of Oakland’s Housing and Community Development Department hosted a town hall in the Fruitvale to discuss the efforts being undertaken to remove lead primarily found in housing in East and West Oakland.
In 2021, the city was awarded $14 million out of a $24 million legal settlement from a lawsuit against paint distributors for selling lead-based paint that has affected hundreds of families in Oakland and Alameda County. The funding is intended to be used for lead poisoning reduction and prevention services in paint only, not water or other sources as has been found recently in schools across the city.
The settlement can be used for developing or enhancing programs that abate lead-based paint, providing services to individuals, particularly exposed children, educating the public about hazards caused by lead paint, and covering attorney’s fees incurred in pursuing litigation.
According to the city, there are 22,000 households in need of services for lead issues, most in predominantly low-income or Black and Latino neighborhoods, but only 550 to 600 homes are addressed every year. The city is hoping to use part of the multimillion-dollar settlement to increase the number of households served each year.
Most of the homes affected were built prior to 1978, and 12,000 of these homes are considered to be at high risk for lead poisoning.
City councilmember Noel Gallo, who represents a few of the lead-affected Census tracts, said the majority of the poisoned kids and families are coming directly from neighborhoods like the Fruitvale.
“When you look at the [kids being admitted] at the children’s hospital, they’re coming from this community,” Gallo said at the town hall.
In order to eventually rid the highest impacted homes of lead poisoning, the city intends to create programs and activities such as lead-based paint inspections and assessments, full abatement designed to permanently eliminate lead-based paint, or partial abatement for repairs, painting, and specialized cleaning meant for temporary reduction of hazards.
In feedback for what the city could implement in their programming, residents in attendance of the event said they want more accessibility to resources, like blood testing, and information from officials about lead poisoning symptoms, hotlines for assistance, and updates on the reduction of lead in their communities.
Attendees also asked how they’d know where they are on the prioritization list and what would be done to address lead in the water found at several school sites in Oakland last year.
City staff said there will be a follow-up event to gather more community input for programming in August, with finalizations happening in the fall and a pilot launch in early 2026.
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