This article was originally written and published by LEONARDO CASTAÑEDA and MARISA KENDALL of Bay Area News Group
There’s a home on South Jackson Avenue in San Jose’s Mayfair neighborhood that has it all: excellent location within walking distance of a school, parks and shops; a nearly acre-sized backyard; and — a rarity in California — a basement. But for at least a decade it has sat unoccupied — one of an estimated 46,000 such homes in the five-county Bay Area. It’s a surprising number in a region beset by a crippling housing shortage and a ballooning number of homeless residents, where vacant housing has become the latest flashpoint in an ongoing crisis. This estimated total comes from new data released by the U.S. Census Bureau in December. The bureau’s data is the best available, even though it includes some newly built homes that are not yet occupied. That makes it hard to know how many landlords are intentionally leaving houses vacant, although activists say even one empty home is too many. “They’re allowing their homes to sit there empty in the midst of the biggest humanitarian crisis we’ve seen of this kind in the United States,” said Needa Bee, an Oakland-based advocate for homeless residents’ rights. [caption id="attachment_64" align="aligncenter" width="934"]
Bay, Fremont and Curvy Hiking Trail of Mission Peak, Silicon Valley, California[/caption] In Oakland, the number of vacant homes became one of the rallying cries for Moms 4 Housing, an activist group that took over an empty home in West Oakland in November. The group said there were four vacant homes for every homeless resident in the city. That would be about 16,000. The census data
How Many Vacant Houses Are Really In The Bay Area?