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Service of
Legal Documents:
The authorized person
designated for service
is Tim Larsen, Attorney,
for the SFHA. Mr. Larsen
is located at 440 Turk St.
San Francisco, CA 94102
during regular business
hours: 8:30pm to 5:00pm.
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San Francisco Housing Authority's Profile
- The mission of the San Francisco Housing Authority (SFHA) is to provide safe, sanitary, affordable, and decent housing to very low-income families, senior citizens and persons with disabilities.
There are approximately 3,200 local housing authorities across the nation, and the SFHA is the 17th largest. New York City is the largest with 181,000 public housing units.
The SFHA is the oldest housing authority in California.
In 1940, the SFHA opened Holly Courts, the City's first low-income development, for 118 families.
The SFHA has grown to include 51 developments with 6,262 public housing units of which 2,027 are senior/disabled units.
The SFHA also administer 7,409 Section 8 Vouchers and 2,521 other Federally subsidized Voucher Programs.
The Mayor appoints the seven members of the SFHA Board of Commissioners.
The seven member Board of Commissioners appoints an Executive Director to lead the SFHA workforce of more than 358 employees in various executive, administrative, and craft occupations.
Virtually all of the funding for SFHA is derived from the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development (HUD) and rents paid by residents. Residents pay approximately 30% of their income for rent.
The total budget for the SFHA is over $218 million.
For more information, go to SFHA internet website at www.sfha.org.
Organizational Chart
Board of Commissioners
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 President Reverend Amos Brown |
 Vice-President Neola Gans |
 George R Brown |
 Millard Larkin III |
 Jane Hsu |
 Matthew Schwartz |
 Dwayne Jones |
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Executive Office
Interim Executive Director
Mirian Saez |
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Executive Office
Deputy Executive Director
Naja Boyd |
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Office of General Counsel
Assistant General Counsels
Tim Larsen / Roger Crawford |
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Public Housing Operations Dept.
Deputy Executive Director
Naja Boyd |
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Finance Department
Financial Consultant
Michael Perlas
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Section 8 Housing Department
Administrator
Tony Ucciferri |
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Management Services and Support Administrator
Rene Latosa |
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Housing Development & Modernization
Administrator
Barbara Smith |
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Office of Fair Housing & Resident Relations
Acting Administrator
Belinda Jeffries |
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The San Francisco Housing Authority Major Funding Sources
$57.7 M
Annually |
$146.8 M
Annually |
$118.5 M
To Date |
$14.4 M
Annually |
Operating Fund Program
Day-to-day management and maintenance of 51 developments.
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Section 8 Program:
Housing Assistance Payments (HAP)** to landlords Admin. Fees |
HOPE VI*** Program Demolition and new construction of housing stock with private sector contribution of $186 million. |
Capital Fund Program:
Housing stock rehabilitation; monies distributed to PHA's by Federal formula. |
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* Includes: Salaries, Fringe Benefits, Insurance & Utilities.
Variable Items Includes: Supplies, Materials and Contract Services.
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** Voucher Program, MOD Rehab, Pension Fund, HOPWA & Shelter Care.
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*** Competitive
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SFHA PROGRAM UNIT BREAKDOWN
| PUBLIC HOUSING PROGRAM* |
| Description |
Units |
Total Units in Stock |
6,262 |
Less: Non-Dwelling Units |
79 |
Less: Employee Units |
0 |
Less: Deprogammed Units |
12 |
Less: Units Under Modernization |
124 |
Less: Special Conditions Units |
46 |
Equal: Units Available for Occupancy |
6001 |
Less: Vacant Units |
357 |
Equal: Total Occupied Units |
5,644 |
Occupancy Percentage |
94.1% |
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| SECTION 8 PROGRAMS* |
| Program Description |
Units |
Voucher |
7,409 |
Moderate Rehabilitation |
1,161 |
New Construction |
00 |
Substantial Rehabilitation |
0 |
Pension Funds |
80 |
Shelter Plus Care |
400 |
HOPWA Program |
280 |
Total Authorized Units |
9,330 |
Total Leased Units |
8,953 |
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| * As of September 27, 2007
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TENANT DEMOGRAPHIC HIGHLIGHTS *
DESCRIPTION |
PUBLIC HOUSING |
SECTION 8 |
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Total Number of Households* |
5,644 |
8,953 |
Total Number of Residents* |
11,959 |
19,703 |
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Race Composition |
African-American |
41.6% |
31.8% |
Asian/Pacific Islander |
26.8% |
30.0% |
Caucasian |
18.6% |
28.1% |
Hispanic |
10.6% |
9.1% |
Native American |
0.5% |
0.7% |
Others |
1.9% |
0.3% |
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Average Tenant Rent |
$286.95 |
$466.11 |
Average Household Income |
$13,206 |
$17.548 |
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Number of Households on Waiting List |
29,235 |
21,110 |
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Total Number of Units 6,262 |
Total Number of Developments 51 |
* As of September 27, 2007
SECTION 8 PAYMENT STANDARD |
BEDROOM SIZE |
HUD Fair Market Rent
Effective Oct 2007 | SFHA Payment Standard
Effective Oct 2007 |
SRO |
$776 | $853 |
Studio |
$1035 | $1,138 |
One |
$1,272 | $1,399 |
Two* |
$1,592 | $1,751 |
Three |
$2,125 | $2,337 |
Four |
$2,246 | $2,470 |
Five |
$2,582 | $2,840 |
Six |
$2,919 | $3,210 |
Seven |
$3,256 | $3,581 |
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* The Average Rent for a Two Bedroom Unit in San Francisco is $1,825 per Month
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HOPE VI Revitalization
- SFHA revitalized five obsolete public housing sites with 1,149 units of new public and affordable housing with 2,607 bedrooms. Eight more sites are planned under the City's HOPE SF Program.
The SFHA received $118.6 million in HUD HOPE VI grants that leveraged $188.9 million in other private and public funds. The combined revitalization funding $307 million:
Valencia Gardens HOPE VI |
$23.2 M HOPE VI Funds and $50.7 M other Funds |
$74 M |
North Beach HOPE VI |
$23.3 M HOPE VI Funds and $82.8 M other Funds |
$106.1 M |
Plaza East HOPE VI |
$20.2 M in HOPE VI Funds and $23 M other Funds |
$43.2 M |
Bernal Dwellings HOPE VI |
$29.8 M HOPE VI Funds and $11.9 M other Funds |
$41.8 M |
Hayes Valley HOPE VI |
$22.1 M HOPE VI Funds and $20.4 M other Funds |
$42.5 M |
HAYES VALLEY: HOPE VI
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Hayes Valley before demolition
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A 195 unit mixed income family housing development located three blocks from the San Francisco Civic Center. It replaces 294 small severely distressed public housing units built at angles to the right of way and facing away from the community, with hidden passages and anonymous open spaces.
New defensible design features include front doors off right of way, eyes on the street and secured backyard areas. Each unit has an alarm system and modern amenities.
McCormack Baron Associates was the development partner.
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After - Completed and Occupied in 1999
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BERNAL DWELLINGS: HOPE VI
208 Units Before Demolition
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Bernal Dwellings was a 208 unit severely distressed public housing high rise development in the Mission District. The 160 new townhouses and flats were completed in September 2001 The site has childcare space, a computer learning center, resident business incubator space, a multi-purpose facility, accessible paths of travel and 30 fully accessible units.
During construction resident apprentices worked along with union workers to complete the construction of the site on time and on budget. The SFHA requires that public housing residents work 25% of construction work force hours.
Defensible design features include front door off right of way, private back yards, secured trash access areas and fenced-in play yards.
Developed by the San Francisco Housing Authority
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After - Completed and Occupied in 2001
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Before demolition, the high rises had 276 units
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PLAZA EAST: HOPE VI
193 new public housing townhouses and flats were completed in December 2001 in the Western Addition.
Defensible design features include front door off right of way, private back yards, secured trash access areas and fenced-in play yards.
McCormack Baron Salazar Developer Partners with SFHA
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After - Completed and occupied since 2002
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NORTH BEACH PLACE: HOPE VI
229 Units Before Demolition.
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Completed in 2004 with 341 mixed income family and senior housing units along with retail and commercial space Ð an award winning affordable housing development.
One of the most visible developments with an upscale appearance surrounding San Francisco's historic cable car line adjacent to Fisherman's Wharf.
Defensible design features include front doors off right of way, private decks, extensive lighting, and surveillance cameras on a secured podium over retail/ commercial areas.
BRIDGE Housing, The John Stewart Company and EM Johnson Interests developers in partnership with SFHA
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New pedestrian-friendly residential apartments (left) with commercial space (center)
and the new Cable Car turnaround and a view of the Bay Street façade at Taylor Street (right).
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VALENCIA GARDENS: HOPE VI
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Valencia Gardens multiple buildings before demolition
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Location: Mission District, in the core of San Francisco's commercial and residential ethnically diverse community
Design: 260 mixed income family townhouses and and senior apartments units with multi-purpose facilities and family, senior, childcare and community centers. Defensible design features include front door off right-of-way, private back yards and decks, secured trash access areas and fenced-in play yards
Completion: 2006, 576 bedrooms
Development Partner: Mission Housing Development Corporation
The new children, family and senior-friendly community has a permanent exhibit of the Berniamino Bufano sculptures.
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The new entrance at Valencia Street and 15th Street.
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