Law Inspired By Moms 4 Housing Helps Grandmother Stay in Her Pinole Home

SB 1079 says foreclosed homes must be sold one at a time, in order to prevent speculators from buying up foreclosed homes in bulk

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A grandmother in the East Bay managed to stop a private equity firm from buying the home she was living in with the help from a new state law inspired by the Moms 4 Housing movement.

β€œIt really makes me feel good that I can see the results of a bill that I carried,” said State Senator Nancy Skinner. 

She referred to SB 1079, which says foreclosed homes must be sold one at a time, in order to prevent speculators from buying up foreclosed homes in bulk. 

β€œThis house was so important to me,” said Jocelyn Foreman, a formerly homeless grandmother with little savings to beat out speculators who wanted to buy the foreclosed home in Pinole. β€œIt was important because it was my opportunity to break cycles for myself and for my children.”

The law also gives tenants or non-profits 45 days to find the money to either match or exceed a winning bid. Foreman had to come up with the money fast. 

β€œWe had three weeks to get $600,000 dollars,” said Francis Mcllveen of Northern California Land Trust. 

So she started Jocelyn’s Corner – a community fundraising effort with the help of the Berkeley Public Schools Fund. On Friday, Foreman signed an agreement with the Northern California Land Trust. 

β€œIt will become a community land trust home. this house will be permanently affordable both to Jocelyn and for everyone that comes after her for the next 198 years,” said Mcllveen.

But this was a unicorn case. Skinner said that for SB1079 to help more low-income families at risk of losing their homes, the state needs to fund the law. 

β€œI’m going to do my best this year to try to get funding so that we can support people doing this,” she said. 

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