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Rent Striking to Save the South Bronx Transcript

Manny Pardilla: If we're dealing with the Coronavirus outside, then for many of us, we're dealing with mold, with leaks, with rats with pests, indoors. And all these things, they trigger asthma, they trigger respiratory illnesses, they trigger all these health issues that impact our community and landlords have purposely kept conditions this way.

JG: That was Manny Pardilla.

He’s the main tenant organizer for the South Bronx Tenants Movement. I interviewed Manny back on April 4th a few days after the first call for a rent strike began. A month later, the rent strikes are growing:

Media Clip: “All across the country, from Los Angeles to Philadelphia to New York tens of thousands of tenants banded together for the biggest rent strikes in decades”

But let’s go back to early April, and to Manny’s South Bronx neighborhood of Mott Haven, where he organizes tenants.

Manny spent four years at the Northwest Bronx Community and Clergy Coalition, where he learned the ropes of tenant organizing at this housing focused non-profit.

After he left the position, Manny focused on organizing tenants on his own. He realized that many South Bronx tenants live in smaller 8-12 unit buildings owned by private landlords who have generally left them in consistent disrepair. Even though recent housing reforms have provided tenants with more legal assistance and resulted in lower eviction rates across the city, the Bronx is the only borough where eviction rates have risen every year since 2010.

Each year, evictions have ravaged the Bronx where overcrowding, terrible conditions, and aggressive landlords purge thousands of tenants and their families out of their homes.

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Taxi wars transcript

Host: Welcome, everyone, to the Working Class Heroes Podcast. I’m your host Lupita Romero and this is Episode One:

GS: “In 1984 I joined the airforce and went through basic training. My basic training photo I had given to Douglas, as soon I had left basic I sent a 5x7 copy of my photo. He had kept it with him and had it displayed on a fireplace mantle piece all the time. All this time...During that last week of spending time with him packing his home. Amongst our conversations after telling him it’s not too late. I said listen Doug, you’re going to go through this experience but I don’t want you to do it alone I want you to have me with you. During the process of packing the fireplace where he kept a few other photos of family members, I had packed those photos in a box and left him just that one and I said this one, I want you to keep. I want you to keep it with you so that you know you’re not alone. That I’m there with you and I’ll always be with you. He did.”

Host: That was George Schifter talking about his brother, Douglas. Douglas Schifter was a long time taxi driver who for years wrote about the dire situation the industry found itself in. He had a regular column in one of the taxi industry newspapers, the Black Car News. He committed suicide early Monday morning, February 5th, right in front of City Hall. Douglas Schifter was the first recorded casualty in a war backed by Wall Street investors and led by app companies like Uber and Lyft. It’s a war over the streets, taxi fares and over who will own the New York Taxi Industry. Caught in the crossfire are more than a hundred thousand taxi drivers. A few of these drivers have made the ultimate sacrifice.  

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