occupysf_dwntwnsf.jpg4:56 PM: Occupy San Francisco protesters teamed up with legal and housing rights organizations today to advocate for housing rights throughout the city.

At 3 p.m., a few hundred protesters gathered at the Occupy SF encampment in Justin Herman Plaza after marching through four city neighborhoods that have been hard hit by unfair housing practices, Occupy SF Housing organizers said.

The group, which represents Occupy SF protesters and legal and housing organizations such as San Francisco Tenants Union and the Coalition on Homelessness, is targeting banks, landlords and organizations that have stifled “the 99 percent’s ability to live, work, raise families and grow old in San Francisco,” according to a statement.

By 4 p.m., Amitai Heller of the San Francisco Tenants Union estimated that five to six hundred people had gathered near the intersection of California and Sansome streets in front of the Building Owners and Management Association building.

Heller said the gathering, which also took place next to a Chase Bank branch, was the last stop on Occupy SF Housing’s citywide march and protest.

Muni spokesman Paul Rose said the protests had caused only intermittent delays to bus traffic.

Earlier in the afternoon, protesters and local fair housing advocates met in locations in the Bayview, Mission, Tenderloin and Castro districts.

In the Tenderloin, about three dozen people, including several local fair housing practices advocates, met at 1 p.m. at the Civic Center to hear speakers discuss unfair housing practices they said were plaguing the neighborhood.

“We want to let people know we’re fighting for their rights,” said Russel Slayton with the Central City Single Room Occupancy Collaborative, who lives in a city-managed SRO.

Slayton said many tenants of privately owned SROs throughout the city are subject to sub par living conditions and evictions without notice, regardless of whether they have paid their rent.

“They don’t know they have rights,” said 60-year-old Linda Harper, who lived in a privately owned SRO in the Tenderloin for eight years before being forced to leave when the building converted to a tourist hotel.

“People have that fear of their landlord – you shouldn’t be afraid of your landlord…or afraid to ask to get something fixed,” she said.

Harper said she has no complaints about the conditions at her new downtown studio, run by Glide Memorial Church.

But she said that other formerly homeless acquaintances who have been evicted from their rooms without notice have not been so lucky.

Laura Dixon, Bay City News

12:35 PM: Occupy San Francisco protesters are teaming up with local legal and housing rights organizations today to spread their message to a handful of local neighborhoods.

Members of Occupy SF Housing, including Occupy SF protesters and groups such as San Francisco Tenants Union, Coalition on Homelessness and Causa Justa, will meet at four city locations today to protest banks, predatory landlords and organizations “contributing to the degradation of the 99 percent’s ability to live, work, raise families and grow old in San Francisco,” according to a statement.

From there, protesters are set to meet at Justin Herman Plaza at 3 p.m.

“On December 3, we will continue the process of expanding the occupation with four city neighborhoods at the forefront of the struggle for affordable housing,” the statement reads.

Those areas include the Bayview District, where the first group of attendees will hear speakers at 11 a.m., and the Tenderloin, where protesters coming from events in the Mission, Castro and Bayview districts will gather at 1 p.m. before marching to Justin Herman Plaza.

Laura Dixon, Bay City News

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