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Community Organizer

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication -- Solution

Here's what you could say:

The company that wants to buy the property has said that it will keep your units around. So you could keep on living here if the sale goes through. But the company wants to add 700 units of moderate-income housing to the building. That would take two years to complete, and all of you would have to move out for that time.

So you can see why the city is against that idea right now. They do not want to look like they are endorsing a company that displaces poor people for two years so that it can make money off richer people. It would make the city look pretty bad. And it has even said that it may go to court and force the current owner to sell this building to the city housing authority. That would keep everything as it is right now.

But I wouldn't hold my breath. I don't think the city will find a judge who will rule that way, should it actually follow through on the threat.

So we should start looking for other ways to help ourselves. And there are a couple of ways. We could organize support from all the other subsidized housing units and stage a large rally. That would attract media attention, and hopefully, swing public opinion our way. Or we could negotiate with the current players along a strict set of points.

"Most definitely, it's essential to be able to communicate your ideas and to be able to communicate on a level that invites people into your world," says community organizer Yusef Bunchy Shakur. "Communication definitely would be number one in the manuals of community organizers."