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Young woman of Purépecha origin receives Harvard scholarship

Elizabeth is a young Mexican woman who, thanks to her effort and tal­ent, managed to be accepted and also received a scholar­ship to study at the presti­gious Harvard University

by Mexico Desconocido

Elizabeth is a young stu­dent of Purépecha origin who, thanks to her outstanding tal­ent, obtained a full scholar­ship to study at the univer­sity of her dreams: Harvard. Also, the long-awaited news went viral thanks to Eliza­beth’s emotional reaction upon hearing the news. Here we give you more details!

Mexican talent never ceases to amaze us. And although we have already told you several stories about it (such as Adhara, the Mexican girl with an IQ higher than that of Ein­stein and Hawking), now it is Elizabeth Esteban’s turn.

Is about a young woman who resides in the United States with her parents. These are Purépecha migrants from Michoacán who were forced to emigrate to the neighbor­ing country. Currently, ac­cording to NBC, the fam­ily lives in a mobile home in the state of California.

However, despite the multiple difficulties that the family of indigenous origin has had to face (both econom­ic and cultural), in recent days it received news that has made all the efforts worthwhile.

And it is that, with only 17 years, Elizabeth knew that she had obtained a full scholarship to study Po­litical Science at Harvard University, thus fulfilling one of her greatest dreams.

While she found out, Elizabeth’s reaction was re­corded and was so emotional that it went viral on social networks. Thanks to this, the young woman has already received multiple congratu­lations from Internet users. This is definitely a case of Mexican pride! (Shared from Unknown World).

Harvard – is consistently ranked among the top five universities in the world – despite initially believing she wouldn’t stand a chance.

Harvard’s acceptance rate is 4.7 per cent, while only 12.7 per cent of the student popu­lation is Hispanic or Latino.

The student, who lives in a mobile home in the desert settlement of Mecca, Southern California, has battled constant internet is­sues, making it almost im­possible to learn online dur­ing the Covid lockdown.

In addition, she almost lost her chance at Har­vard altogether when her WiFi cut out during her interview for a place at the prestigious institution, NBC Palm Springs reports.

JACKIE ROBINSON DAY

Seventy-four years ago, on April 15, 1947, Jackie Robinson broke the baseball color barrier when he made his historic major league debut. Each year on April 15, Baseball honors Jackie’s legacy by celebrating his life, values, and accomplishments.

By proudly wearing the “42,” Baseball demonstrates a powerful and unified tribute to Jackie Robinson’s legacy. The Giants and Marlins will wear “42” on Friday, April 16 to honor Jackie. Learn more by visiting mlb.com/42

Our path forward to advance racial equity

by Brian Lamb Global Head of Diversity & Inclusion at JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Over the past year, and up until recently, we have seen numerous reminders that systemic racism brings devastating consequences for individuals, families and communities. The COVID-19 pandemic is tearing through both Latino and Black communities across the country, disproportionately impacting people in these communities at a much higher rate than white Americans, while leaving a trail of lost jobs (https://projects.propublica.org/coronavirus-unemployment/) and shuttered Latino and Black-owned businesses (https://www. jpmorganchase.com/institute/research/small-business/report-small-businessfinancial-outcomes-duringthe-covid-19-pandemic) in its wake. This, along with  the killing of George Floyd and so many others, has sparked an outpouring of corporate support for Latino and Black Americans in recent months, and we’ve seen numerous examples of companies stepping up to make concrete changes to the way they do business in an effort to advance racial equity around the world. As the largest bank in the United States, it’s long past time for JPMorgan Chase to own its part in creating economic opportunity and inclusion for communities that have been historically marginalized. Systemic racism is a tragic part of America’s history. It’s a congenital defect of our society that’s resulted in racial gaps across virtually every walk of American life, including wealth, homeownership, educational outcomes, health care, incarceration rates and life expectancy. Real lives that matter are impacted by these gaps, and it’s our responsibility to do something about it, given the role of banks in the financial health of the communities we serve.

HOW JPMORGAN CHASE IS COMBATTING THE RACIAL WEALTH DIVIDE

Over the past few months, we’ve reviewed our business practices, products and the role we play in communities across this country to understand the changes we need to make to address the largest drivers of the racial wealth divide. We’ve been especially focused on developing ways to expand affordable lending and housing, increase credit and capital for Latino and Black-owned small businesses, and improve access to tools that will help people in these communities save money and get on a path to sustained financial health. This work led us to make a $30 billion commitment over the next five years to provide economic opportunities in underserved communities — with a special focus on Latino and Black communities. These commitments include loans, equity, and direct funding to promote homeownership and affordable housing. We’ve set a goal of originating an additional 40,000 home purchase loans for Latino and Black households. To do this we’ve committed $8 billion toward mortgages. We also want underserved communities to be able to take advantage of historically low interest rates, and we’ve committed $4 billion toward helping Latino and Black households refinance their home loans.

 

CREATING PATHWAYS TO FINANCIAL HEALTH

Through our own research, we know that Latino and Black households tend to have lower savings and higher debt burdens than other groups. Historically, these communities have been forced to grapple with less access to credit, and often have to pay higher financing fees. Too many Latino and Black Americans are completely unbanked as well, which increases the likelihood of turning to predatory alternative financial services like check cashing and payday lenders. To combat this challenge, we aim to help one million people open lowcost checking and savings accounts. To accomplish this, we must build stronger connections to underserved communities, so we’ve committed to hiring 150 new community managers. We’re also planning to open new Community Center branches in the areas that need them most, and increase our marketing outreach to our communities to raise awareness of these efforts.

LEANING IN ON LA TINO AND BLACK ENTREPRENEURSHIP

NTREPRENEURSHIP If we are to make meaningful progress in closing the racial wealth divide, entrepreneurship must be a key part of the equation. We’re committed to helping the job creators in our communities gain access to the credit they need to launch, grow and scale their businesses. As part of this effort, we’ve committed to delivering $2 billion in loans, and to spending an additional $750 million with Latino and Black companies that can supply products and services to JPMorgan Chase. We’re also going to expand our Entrepreneurs of Color Fund to support more Latino and Blacker smallbusiness owners nationwide. As we move forward with these efforts, we know we must hold ourselves accountable if they’re going to achieve their intended impact. We are going to continually assess how these commitments are performing and will adjust when necessary. Ultimately, we know that no single company can close the racial wealth gap, but it is our responsibility to try — and to work with other companies and policymakers along the way. We’re owning our part in this — and we’re just getting started. Sponsored content from JPMorgan Chase & Co. – Visit JPMorganChase. com/Pathforward to learn more about our efforts to advance racial equity, which include affordable housing, minority-owned businesses, financial health, workforce diversity and more.

CARAVANA: Mobilizing Central American Art (1984-Present

Compiled by the El Reportero’s staff

CARAVANA seeks to humanize and uplift the experiences of recently arrived migrant youth among teenagers and young college students who wish to better understand the context for recent caravanas, or organized groups of migrants. Central American artists on the frontlines, speaking their truths from their perspective and their home base community.

The last thing we want is for an entire generation of Central Americans living in the U.S. to internalize the xenophobic messages spread by mainstream media and by recent political administrations, which undermine their creativity, resourcefulness, and determination.

On March 10 – April 15, at SOMArts, 934 Brannan Street, San Francisco, on Friday from 3 to 5 p.m., and 5:30–7:30 p.m. Saturday/Sunday: 12:00–2:00 p.m., 2:30–4:30 p.m. Virtual Opening | Film Screening. Jazz Caliente Band Live at Riggers Loft Guitarist and composer Lee Waterman’s band, Jazz Caliente, infuses its music with lively Afro-Cuban and Brazilian rhythms. This is an all-star ensemble whose members have appeared with such luminaries as Dizzy Gillespie, Pete Esovedo, Linda Ronstadt, Michael Bolton, and the Temptations. The band’s repertoire ranges from Lee’s original compositions to tunes by Miles Davis, Tito Puente, Duke Ellington, and Sergio Mendes. Friday, April 30, 2021 – 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Cost: $5. At Riggers Loft Wine Company, 1325 Canal Blvd, Richmond, California 94804 San Jose Jazz innovates with stateof-the-art new venue “The Break Room” Set to Debut with “SJZ New Works Fest 2021” for International Jazz Day

San Jose Jazz recently announced its most forward-thinking program to date: The SJZ Break Room. A state-of-the-art pop-up video recording and performance venue inside the nonprofit’s downtown San Jose office, The SJZ  Break Room launches with its inaugural production the SJZ New Works Fest 2021 set to celebrate International Jazz Day from April 29 – May 8, 2021. The SJZ Break Room hosts leading-edge jazz artists on stage (indoors) while live performances are projection-mapped with Ultra-Short Throw Projectors onto high-end projection fabric that fills a 35 x 14 feet bank of floor-to-ceiling windows (SJZ digital video wall) providing a safe, socially-distanced outdoor experience of the concerts.

The SJZ New Works Fest 2021 is a ticketed livestreaming concert (tickets $10 – $20: available at sanjosejazz.org); there will be no in-person audience indoors at The Break Room due to COVID-19 restrictions. Outdoor viewing is for the general public; no tickets will be sold for viewing the shows from San Carlos Street. Would you be interested in highlighting San Jose Jazz’s latest innovative venture The SJZ Break  Room and forthcoming SJZ New Works Fest 2021? The SJZ New Works Fest 2021 features SJZ commissioned compositions from 11 SF Bay Area artists (out of a total of 33 grantees) who were recently awarded $1,000 grants through the nonprofit’s SJZ Jazz Aid Fund. The artist lineup includes GRAMMY Awardwinner Oran Etkin as the headliner (International Jazz Day: April 30 – Free

Livestream – 7:30 p.m.), as well as Bay Area musicians Kev Choice, Javier Santiago, Tammy Hall, Ten Spencer, Vân-Ánh Võ, Chris Cain, Claudia Villela, Justin Ouellet, Howard Wiley, Robbie Benson, and Ian Santillano. Bio information for all artists is listed below and available at sanjosejazz.org.

For detailed information regarding The SJZ Break Room and SJZ New Works Fest 2021, please see the press release below.

Our path forward to advance racial equity

By Brian Lamb Global Head of Diversity & Inclusion at JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Over the past year, and up until recently, we have seen numerous reminders that systemic racism brings devastating consequences for individuals, families and communities.

The COVID-19 pandemic is tearing through both Latino and Black communities across the country, disproportionately impacting people in these communities at a much higher rate than white Americans, while leaving a trail of lost jobs and shuttered Latino and Black-owned businesses in its wake. This, along with the killing of George Floyd and so many others, has sparked an outpouring of corporate support for Latino and Black Americans in recent months, and we’ve seen numerous examples of companies stepping up to make concrete changes to the way they do business in an effort to advance racial equity around the world.

As the largest bank in the United States, it’s long past time for JPMorgan Chase to own its part in creating economic opportunity and inclusion for communities that have been historically marginalized. Systemic racism is a tragic part of America’s history. It’s a congenital defect of our society that’s resulted in racial gaps across virtually every walk of American life, including wealth, homeownership, educational outcomes, health care, incarceration rates and life expectancy. Real lives that matter are impacted by these gaps, and it’s our responsibility to do something about it, given the role of banks in the financial health of the communities we serve.

HOW JPMORGAN CHASE IS COMBATING THE RACIAL WEALTH DIVIDE

Over the past few months, we’ve reviewed our business practices, products and the role we play in communities across this country to understand the changes we need to make to address the largest drivers of the racial wealth divide. We’ve been especially focused on developing ways to expand affordable lending and housing, increase credit and capital for Latino and Black-owned small businesses, and improve access to tools that will help people in these communities save money and get on a path to sustained financial health.

This work led us to make a $30 billion commitment over the next five years to provide economic opportunities in underserved communities — with a special focus on Latino and Black communities. These commitments include loans, equity, and direct funding to promote homeownership and affordable housing.

We’ve set a goal of originating an additional 40,000 home purchase loans for Latino and Black households. To do this we’ve committed $8 billion toward mortgages. We also want underserved communities to be able to take advantage of historically low interest rates, and we’ve committed $4 billion toward helping Latino and Black households refinance their home loans.

CREATING PATHWAYS TO FINANCIAL HEALTH

Through our own research, we know that Latino and Black households tend to have lower savings and higher debt burdens than other groups. Historically, these communities have been forced to grapple with less access to credit, and often have to pay higher financing fees.

Too many Latino and Black Americans are completely unbanked as well, which increases the likelihood of turning to predatory alternative financial services like check cashing and payday lenders.

To combat this challenge, we aim to help one million people open lowcost checking and savings accounts. To accomplish this, we must build stronger connections to underserved communities, so we’ve committed to hiring 150 new community managers. We’re also planning to open new Community Center branches in the areas that need them most, and increase our marketing outreach to our communities to raise awareness of these efforts.

LEANING IN ON LATINO AND BLACK ENTERPRENEURSHIP

If we are to make meaningful progress in closing the racial wealth divide, entrepreneurship must be a key part of the equation.

We’re committed to helping the job creators in our communities gain access to the credit they need to launch, grow and scale their businesses. As part of this effort, we’ve committed to delivering $2 billion in loans, and to spending an additional $750 million with Latino and Black companies that can supply products and services to JPMorgan Chase.

We’re also going to expand our Entrepreneurs of Color Fund to support more Latino and Black small business owners nationwide. As we move forward with these efforts, we know we must hold ourselves ac- countable if they’re going to achieve their intended impact. We are going to continually assess how these commitments are performing and will adjust when necessary. Ultimately, we know that no single company can close the racial wealth gap, but it is our responsibility to try — and to work with other companies and policymakers along the way. We’re owning our part in this — and we’re just getting started. Sponsored content from JPMorgan Chase & Co. –

Visit JPMorganChase.com/Pathforward to learn more about our efforts to advance racial equity, which include affordable housing, minority-owned businesses, financial health, workforce diversity and more.

Mission Neighborhood Centers Inc. Receives $1 Million Grant

by Business Wire

 

SAN FRANCISCO–(BUSINESS WIRE)–A $1 million grant from Jack Dorsey’s philanthropic initiative, #StartSmall, has been awarded to San Francisco’s premier Latino Community non-profit agency: Mission Neighborhood Centers (MNC), for Vital Community Services.

“MNC’s board of directors and staff are most grateful to #StartSmall and Jack Dorsey for a visionary and generous investment in supporting essential services for the City’s low-income families” stated Richard Ybarra, MNC’s newly appointed chief executive officer. MNC Board President Beverly Hayon added, “We applaud #StartSmall for working with MNC to improve the daily lives of the communities we serve early care for children, seniors who have helped build this City, and young women who are its future. Together we make a difference.”

First, the resources provided by #StartSmall will enable MNC through its Mission Girls (MG) program to provide opportunities for girls of color to overcome extraordinary obstacles and fulfill their academic and social potential. The program prioritizes serving girls and young women so they can actively engage in leadership development activities designed to allow them the opportunity to achieve their dreams for themselves and society. MG, launched in 1989, is dedicated to women’s empowerment and advancement.

Second, #StartSmall grant funds will help MNC’s Senior Center programs, which provide one-on-one assistance to hundreds of diverse seniors. These programs help seniors navigate overly complex systems by streamlining resources based on needs – including food, housing and social services – and apply for naturalization/citizenship from local agencies to ensure our seniors have full access to social good and safety net programs.

Thirdly, the #StartSmall award comes at a most challenging and timely juncture in the pandemic recovery effort to help with environments that connect our children to in-person early learning programming.

MNC recently launched a major effort aimed at retrofitting its early care and education facilities to increase capacity and its commitment to bilingual, play-based learning from cradle to preschool. Making it possible for young children to have access to high quality early learning is the key to school success. MNC is acquiring an additional site in the Bayview neighborhood to ensure early educational opportunities are made available for San Francisco’s working parents and their children.

Florida Governor signs Executive Order banning ‘vaccine passports’

OPA LOCKA, FLORIDA - NOVEMBER 01: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks before the arrival of U.S. President Donald Trump for his campaign event at Miami-Opa Locka Executive Airport on November 1, 2020 in Opa Locka, Florida. President Trump continues to campaign against Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden leading up to the November 3rd Election Day. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

by Jack Phillips

 

April 2, 2021 – Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Friday signed an executive order that bars the usage of CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus “vaccine passports,” becoming the first governor in the United States to take action against what civil liberties groups say is a potential privacy nightmare.

The Republican governor’s order comes after unconfirmed reports that the Biden administration could be working on implementing a vaccine passport-type system in the United States, although White House press secretary Jen Psaki later said there is no federal mandate for it but said the administration will “provide guidance” to private companies regarding similar systems.

“Today I issued an executive order prohibiting the use of so-called COVID-19 vaccine passports,” DeSantis wrote in a tweet on Friday. “The Legislature is working on making permanent these protections for Floridians and I look forward to signing them into law soon.”

DeSantis has repeatedly criticized the proposals for vaccine passports. On Monday, the governor said he would forbid local governments and businesses in Florida from requiring vaccine passports, or documents showing one has been vaccinated for the CCP virus, which causes COVID-19.

“No COVID-19 vaccine is required by law,” the governor’s order stated, adding that “vaccination records are private health information” that shouldn’t be shared by a mandate. The passports, he said, would harm individual freedom and harm patient privacy.

“A requirement to show a passport to take part in everyday life such as a sporting event, going to a restaurant or going to a movie theater would ‘create two classes of citizens,’” DeSantis stated.

Airlines and cruise companies appear to especially favor vaccine passports in a bid to entice customers to use their services.

New York state, meanwhile, has proposed its own “Excelsior Pass” that would be used in large-scale events such as Madison Square Garden or sporting events. Israel set up a vaccine passport system in February to grant people access to gyms and hotels, while Iceland now uses a vaccine passport to allow foreign travel, and Saudi Arabia has an app-based passport for people who got vaccinated.

But civil liberties groups such as the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) have cried foul over such proposals, saying they would place low-income people at a disadvantage as many do not own smartphones to display an app that would show they are vaccinated. What’s more, a centralized passport system could imperil Americans’ right to privacy, the group said.

“There is a difference between a standardized system for presenting proof of vaccination, and a digital system for doing so,” the group wrote in a statement this week. “With more and more of our credentials being displayed through apps on our phones—from airline boarding passes to concert tickets to gym memberships—it strikes many people as an obvious and overdue step to create a similar digital credential for those occasions when a person has to prove that they’ve been vaccinated.”

Pianist, 12, wins international competition; will play at Carnegie Hall

Alexander Vivero of Guadalajara became a composer at 6

by the El Reportero’s news services

March 26, 2021 – Like many 12-year-olds, Alexander Vivero likes to play with his friends online, watch movies, and read. He’s currently almost finished with the Star Wars TV series The Mandalorian. However, in one way, he’s pretty different: the middle-school student is busy rehearsing a Beethoven piano sonata to perform at Carnegie Hall. The Guadalajara native will play at the fabled musical venue after winning an award in the American Protégé International Music Talent Competition. Alexander won first place in the competition’s school students’ category for entrants 12 and under.

“I’m really happy because I never expected it,” he told the newspaper Excélsior.

“I’m excited because it means my teacher … and I are doing well.” Alexander’s music teacher, Joel N. Juan Qui of the University of Guadalajara, posted an enthusiastic message on his Facebook page on Friday with an image of the award letter the teen prodigy received from American Protégé, saying, “Study mijito [my son]! Next stop, NY, Carnegie Hall!” Not yet a teenager and still with a bedroom full of stuffed animals, the young pianist already has an impressive list of accomplishments under his belt.

He became a recognized composer at just 6 years old when he was selected by Yamaha México to perform a piece he had written for piano, La ardilla saltarina (The Jumping Squirrel) at the Roberto Cantoral Cultural Center in Mexico City.

He has already composed several pieces in his short life, one of which, El Circo (The Circus), was performed on March 3 by the Chamber Orchestra of Zapopan, for which he is currently composing yet another work. In October, he won an award in the Grand Prize Virtuoso International Music Competition in Bonn, Germany.

He also plays several instruments besides the piano, including the violin, cello, drums, and saxophone. And music isn’t even his only area of excellence: he’s also a polyglot, speaking English, French and German, and he’s currently studying Italian. Milenio (sp), Excélsior (sp)

You could boost your brain health with olive oil

How olive oil benefits your brain

by Brocky Wilson

04/07/2021 – The brain benefits of high-quality olive oil make it a best brain food. Learn how to choose genuine extra virgin olive oil (and avoid widespread fake oil). The health benefits of olive oil are legendary. It’s a major component of the Mediterranean diet which is widely considered the healthiest way to eat for health and longevity. People from this region are some of the healthiest and longest-living people on the planet. Some of the wellknown health advantages of olive oil include its ability to help boost the immune system, increase bone density, prevent heart disease, and reduce risk of diabetes. Another equally important, but often overlooked, benefit of olive oil is its contribution to good brain health. Benefits of olive oil for brain health and mental wellness As a key part of the Mediterranean diet, olive oil may be in part why people who live in longevity zones like Ikaria, Greece rarely suffer from depression, dementia, and Alzheimer’s. Here’s a look at some of the ways olive oil helps keep your brain healthy now and helps protect it from future degeneration. Olive oil is high in brainprotective antioxidants Your brain uses a lot of oxygen — 20 percent of your total intake. This makes it especially vulnerable to oxidation caused by free radicals. If you’ve ever seen a cut apple turn brown or an old car get rusty, you’ve seen oxidation at work. A similar process happens in the cells of your brain. The health benefits of olive oil are believed to be largely due to its high level of polyphenols. Olive oil contains over 30 phenolic compounds that are potent antioxidants and free radical scavengers. Polyphenols also play an important role in keeping bottled oil fresh. Olive oil is high in essential brain vitamins Olive oil is a significant source of vitamins E and K, two vitamins with proven brain benefits: Vitamin E Vitamin E helps prevent mental decline as we age. It’s an effective antioxidant which helps protect the brain from free radical damage. Vitamin E, especially in the presence of vitamin C, helps to maintain a good memory, slow memory loss, and significantly reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s and dementia. Vitamin E can minimize the damage caused by a stroke by redirecting blood supply after the event Vitamin K Vitamin K is found mainly in green leafy vegetables. If you don’t eat as many of these as you should, you can get the vitamin K you need from olive oil. Vitamin K helps keep your brain sharp as you age and boosts your brain processing speed. It can improve your ability to remember words, a big problem for many of us as we get older. Vitamin K is believed to play a role in preventing Alzheimer´s since patients are often found to be deficient. Olive oil increases brain-boosting chemicals Another surprising benefit of olive oil is that it boosts levels of two cbrain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and nerve growth factor (NGF).) These compounds encourage the formation and repair of brain cells. BDNF is a protein that stimulates new brain cell formation. BDNF can offset the negative effects of stress on the brain. Low levels of BDNF are associated with depression.) Olive oil helps protect the brain from degenerative diseases The last brain benefit of olive oil is that it can ward off cognitive decline. Higher intake of monounsaturated fats improves memory and other cognitive functions in seniors.  Eating a Mediterranean diet high in olive oil can reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s disease by up to 40 percent. Olive oil is an essential part of the MIND diet.

Small rental homeowners assistance program launched

by Isabella Bloom Ethnic Media Services

Jie Wang owns three rental properties in Oakland. Her whole family relies on income from tenants paying their rent. Many have lost their jobs during the pandemic. Eviction moratoriums protect tenants who can’t pay part or all of their rent. But small housing providers like Wang still have mortgages, utilities and other expenses. A lack of government support puts pressure on them to sell their properties. “Nobody can escape from this coronavirus,” Wang said. “I have a very good relationship with all my tenants.

I try to help them.” Wang spoke on a recent panel hosted by Ethnic Media Services along with other housing rights advocates and researchers. The panel discussed the risk of treating all landlords the same. The word “landlord” stirs up connotations of large real estate corporations, wealthy enough to maintain their properties through the pandemic. However, small landlords, often referred to as mom-and-pop landlords, have been hit hard by losses in income due to tenants who have been at least partially unable to pay their rent during the pandemic. According to the Urban Institute, individual investors like Wang rather than large conglomerates own more than 75 percent of oneto-four-unit rental properties.

In addition, mom-andpop landlords of color are more likely to own duplexes, triplexes and fourplexes. Their rent rates tend to be cheaper, so they’re also more likely to draw minority tenants. Maeve Brown is the executive director and founder of Housing and Economic Rights Advocates, a statewide nonprofit law office that provides free legal services to low- and moderateincome Californians.

She works with many people of color who have never had any training on how to manage their properties and consistently charge below-market rent rates. “Another key part of the story here is our failure to appreciate what small landlords are actually providing — our failure systemically to recognize that they really are affordable housing providers,” Brown said. “If localities and our state government actually recognized the truth of that, that should have an impact on the policy choices that they make.” Mom-and-pop landlords often are also more connected to their communities and tenants. John Wong, the founding chairman of the Asian Real Estate Association of America, has lived in San Francisco for nearly 67 years and been a realtor for over 40.

In the briefing, he described the relationships he’s experienced and witnessed between mom-and-pop landlords and their tenants. “I talk about this spectrum of housing providers because I think it speaks to our response to COVID,” Wong said. He added that mom-andpop landlords tend to know their tenants personally. “The relationships have typically been very, very amicable,” he said. Rent relief programs like the $2 trillion CARES Act have primarily benefited larger, wealthier real estate corporations, leaving behind mom-and-pop landlords. “The policy choices that the state has made have just made no distinction between large landlords and small landlords,” Brown said. “State policy choices have squarely placed the burden of nonpayment of rent on the shoulders of small landlords — of small, affordable housing providers.”

The danger with placing that burden on momand-pop housing providers is that it pressures them into selling their properties to investors and real estate conglomerates. The result is that California will lose more and more of its affordable housing.  “If they lose their property, they’re probably going to lose it to an investor who will charge as much money as the market can possibly bear,” Brown said. Landlords of color are also more likely to have a mortgage and lower income, so the pressure to sell during the pandemic is higher, according to Urban Institute.

There may be new hope for mom-and-pop landlords and their tenants in the form of a new rental assistance program, but it comes with a caveat. The new California rental relief program intended to help the state’s most vulnerable renters and landlords opened March 15.

The program, which comes from Senate Bill 91, extends the eviction moratorium to June 30 and draws from $2.6 billion in federal funds for rent relief.  “The SB 91 moratorium and the state rental assistance program, in my opinion, is the most important thing to have for smaller mom-and-pop housing providers,” Wong said. Tenants and landlords both have to fill out certain parts of the on line application, available on the California state website Housing is Key. The first group of eligible renters are those with greatest need — households making 50 percent or less of the area’s median income, or anyone who has been unemployed for at least 90 days.

The next group includes households making 80 percent or below the area’s median income. Undocumented tenants are also eligible. Data from Urban Institute shows that, throughout the U.S., less than a third of tenants and less than half of landlords are aware of federal rental assistance programs. This is why John Wong aims to spread information about rental assistance programs to mom-and-pop landlords, especially those who may be linguistically isolated. “I personally have a heavy focus on making sure that individuals who have English as not their primary language have access to information that these funds are available,” Wong said.

The way the rent relief works is 80 percent of a tenant’s rent owed between April 1, 2020, and March 31, 2021, will be paid directly to the landlord, so long as the landlord agrees to forgive the remaining 20 percent of the back rent. But this new rental assistance program doesn’t distinguish between small and corporate landlords. For mom-and-pop landlords like Jie Wang, absorbing the remaining 20 percent of unpaid rent can be a crippling blow after a year of unpaid rent. “I’m open to the low-income renter,” Jie Wang said. “As long as I can survive, I will receive all the tools to help me and to survive this very difficult situation.”