By
Louis Henry
The
Connecticut Tenants Union and its working-class allies have launched
a boycott of Alpha Capital. In a petition to support the
boycott, the Tenants Union is calling on all people to refuse to
engage in business with Alpha Capital. Refuse to rent
apartments, refuse to buy condos, refuse to sell or buy properties
with this horrible landlord, they say.
Over the last
year, tenant unions in Southeast Connecticut have gone public,
demanding that their landlord, Alpha Capital Funds, come to the table
to negotiate fair leases and address tenant needs. In response,
Alpha is trying to bust organized, multi-racial, and
multi-generational communities.
Tenant
Union representatives from New London and East Lyme assembled
alongside their working-class allies to announce the boycott and to
explain why this next stage of struggle is necessary.
Landlord
wants $318,000 from each tenant
The
Bay Point Tenant Union called on all people to boycott Alpha Capital
because that landlord won’t recognize their union, and their homes
are at risk of being bought out from under them.
Tonya, a
disabled member of the Bay Point Tenant Union, explained that after
her tenant union went public over the summer, Alpha Capital responded
by trying to convert the apartments to condominiums. Alpha
Capital told the residents they would have to pay $318,000 to keep
their home, or their unit would be sold off.
Chris,
an 82-year-old member of the Bay Point Tenant Union, said he is cold
at night because the building is in disrepair and Alpha won’t make
repairs.
Judy,
a retiree who’s lived in the building for 23 years, told the
assembly that “We’re not going to put up with it, we’re being
gouged.” She said her union is going to stick together and
fight until Alpha Capital CEO Tyler Smith comes to the table to
negotiate fair and equitable leases.
The
New London Tenant Unions called on all people to boycott Alpha
Capital because that landlord will not recognize their union and will
not stop trying to evict union members.
Daz,
speaking on behalf of the New London tenants, explained that the
union was able to protect their members from eviction. When
Alpha Capital bought their building, the new landlord immediately
sent eviction notices to all of the tenants—half of whom are
elderly and disabled. The tenants quickly mobilized to form a
union and asserted Connecticut’s law that shields the elderly and
disabled from no-fault eviction.
In
response to organizing, Alpha violated state law by retaliating
against the union members with a demand for 40% rent increases.
Again, the union mobilized and filed complaints with the New London
Fair Rent Commission. The Fair Rent Commission asserted that
tenant organizing is a protected act and Alpha Capital violated the
law by retaliating. The Commission ordered rents frozen for the
next six months and ordered Alpha to give the tenants new leases.
Community
support
Rev.
Perry of Mount Olive Church in New London explained that his
community is in crisis. The temperature was below freezing, and
children and seniors were homeless and suffering on our streets.
He said it was important for all moral people to support housing as a
human right and to put people before profit.
New
London City Councilwoman Shineika Fareus explained that the eviction
and homelessness crisis in Connecticut is not an accident. She
said mega-landlords like Alpha Capital are violating our human rights
by treating housing as a commodity.
Commenting
on Alpha’s behavior, she said, “Eviction is not a development
tool, it’s displacement.” She said working-class power
exists. She called on working people to join the boycott and that
collective bargaining is a form of racial and disability justice.
State
Representative Nick Gauthier spoke in solidarity with the Connecticut
Tenants Union and joining the boycott against Alpha Capital. He
said private equity firms harm humanity. He called for a ban on
private equity in housing and healthcare.
State
Representative Dan Gaiewski also spoke in support of joining the
boycott and supporting the Union. He said it was his job to
support tenant organizing by passing Just Cause legislation that
would protect all tenants from arbitrary eviction.
In
her closing remarks, CT Tenants Union President Hannah Srajer held up
ten feet of paper bearing hundreds of signatures of people who have
already signed the petition to Boycott Alpha Capital. She spoke
into the cameras and said for the last six years the CT Tenants Union
has been organizing to put people before corporate greed.
“We
pay the bills,” she said, explaining that Alpha Capital needs
working people to pay their rents, to buy their condos, to do
business with their company, in order to continue to service their
predatory loans and mortgages. If working people can put a dent
in Alpha Capital’s income, they can bring Alpha Capital to its
knees. “The people will win, the boycott has begun!”