! HE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, August 27, 1969 flue I WC) I HE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, August 27, 1969 Jenants Union presses for recognition, lower rent t t uiu''d tl -r ( .fia d- The primary thrmAu Ofland- lord response carme in the courts. Arbor Management was hi' first realtor to bring r e n t trikmg tenants to court. But it has been in the courts that strikers have won t h e i r greatest victories thus far. In the first two eviction cases, for xampl"., the precedent was set of allowing jury trials - a ruling with rent strike steer- IIg commiitee members felt was "significant victory" because ranting of a jury trial indi- cates that there is a question of fact In other words. the ruling al- lowing jury trial gave tenants the opportunity to show 1n court that landlords were, in part at least, responsible for the withliolding of rent. And in the first two cases brought by Arbor Management, the tenants did precisely that. Arbor Management's E d w a n' d Kloian had asked for $880 from one group of tenants, but the court reduced their back pay- ments to only $400 after hear- ing testimony of city health and safety code violations, a stoppage of heat and alleged threats. In addition to securing re- duced rents during the trials'; many tenants were awarded possession of their apartments. ; ;.. , u< PICK UP YOUR EIEE GIFT-PAK (A $2.00 Value) at ULRICH'S-The Student's Bookstore In effect, this barred the land- lord from evicting them for the duration of their lease. Even if such tenants do not make back rent payments as or- dered by the court, the landlord must still bring ,legal proceed- ings for damages-not for evic- tion. Some landlords point to the court decisions that order the tenants to pay at least some of the back rent and they claim that the tenant has lost the case. This is a matter of inter- pretation. The Tenants Union claims the decisions have been in its favor. Although the jurys do not say which evidence they be- lieve is true, their decision to reducesthe back rent and award possession indicates a belief that tenants do have legitimate con- plaints. Although a tenant is ordered to pay back rent-even if it is not reduced-this does not take him out of the strike. The un- ion advises the tenant to pay the rent because the court has ordered him to do so, and then, the next month, begin to with- hold rent once more. Thus the landlord must again take the tenant to court and waste mon- ey, lawyer's fees, court costs #and time. The tenants who belong to the union are defended by un- ion lawyers. The lawyers, court and operating expenses are paid by a strike fund of nearly $10,- 000 representing individual strik- er's antes of 10 per cent of a- one-month rent payment and contributions from outside citi- zens and organizations. But the legal committee of the Tenants Union -including many volunteer law students and several paid lawyers-has not stopped with merely defend- ing eviction suits. Union law- yers, in action separate from the strike - have brought an anti-trust suit against the man- agers' association, charging the realty firms with conspiring to avoid competition in the hous- ing market. Although the suit is filed in the names of eight tenants, they will take "class action." This means they represent, as their suit states, all tenants who are living in Ann Arbor now, or have lived here within the last four years. Seven landlords have also filed a suit against "the so-called Tenants Union," charging that the rent strike involves a con- spiracy to violate existing and future leases and to obtain li- belous articles in The Daily. The suit charges that the ul- timate goal of the rent strike is an attack on the concept of pri- vate property. Ninety-one de- fendants are named: twelve are charged with conspiracy. The complaint also covers. besides the 91 strikers, "all or- ganizations they represent or belong to, including the so- called Tenants Union and any- one involved in it, and all co- conspirators whether named or not." But the Tenants Union has struck back with a one million dollar countersuit against the seven landlords. The union is charging that the landlords have violated leases and anti-trust statutes. The landlords are charged with "banding together. in an unreasonable restraint of trade," breaching leases through "inadequate facilities," and "fraudulent misrepresentation" of the condition of their prop- erties. The landlords involved in the two suits include: Apartments Limited, Arbor Forest Apart- ments, Charter Realty, Brady Anderson, Charlotte Van Cur- ler, William Van Fossen and Robert L. Shipman. Both suits will be tried in court at the same time. As this supplement goes to press, a pre-trial hearing deci- sion on the two conspiracy cases still is pending. But even if the Tenants Union is en- joined, the rent strikers are al- ready thinking about organizing a new union in the fall. "And if we win," says Dale Berry, head of the legal com- mittee, "it may prove decisive for the rent strike." This fall is considered as the crucial point of the strike by both landlords and the Tenants Union. It will be then when the union will really show just how effective it can be and whether the strike can force the land- lords to answer their demands. The Tenants Union says it will pick up over 2,000 students in the fall. Already over 1,000 of last year's freshmen have signed pledges that they would join the strike. The strikers are receiving more and more support each day. City councilmen and other officials have publicly supported the. strikers. Student Government Council has asked that it be named as a co-defendant in the conspiracy suit. The strike has also a wide base of support on the campus, win- ning endorsements by campus organizations of a wide range of political beliefs. These organizations include: SGC, Graduate Assembly, So- cial Work Students' Union, En- gin Council. Young Lawyers Guild. Black Law Student Alli- ance. Law Students Civil Rights Research Council. Northwood Terrace Association, New Uni- versity Conference, Citizens for New Politics, AliceaLloyd Couse Council, Bursley Mall Council, Fraternity Representatives As- sociation, and Interfraternity Council Although the University ad- ministration says it is remaining neutral, the union has been giv- en space in the Student Ac- tivities Building for its offices and is recognized by SGC as a student activity Not since the Brooklyn strike of 1914 when 4,000 angry apart- ment dwellers withheld rent has there been such a large collec- tive effort against a body of landlords. But the Brooklyn strike ended in failure when the landlords held out longer than the strik- ers. "This strike will not end," says Katz, "until the union is of ficially recognized. This is non-negotiable as far as were concerned." Lessor evitism of apartments Decorate your room with Quality REPRODUCTIONS We have hundredstf prints immediately available Sfom the following artists. For example Picasso "Blue Model" "Don Quichote" "Guernica" '"Mother and Child by the Sea'; "Sylvette XII1 "Toros y Toreros" "The Tragedy" Chagall "The Rabbi" Dali "Autumn Cannibalism," "Metamorphosis of Narcissus' Diaz "Clown 1" (with tophat), 'Clown with Little Boy" Feininger "Boats" Foss "St. Gervais" (Paris), "View of the Seine" Ganguin "Who are We?" Klee "Senecio," "Departing Ships," "The Rich Harbour" Le Ba Dang "Golden Horse," "Life Under Water," Marini "Representation in Blue" Mondrian "Tableau 1" Monet "The Cliffs of Monaco," "Pleasure Boats," "Women in Poppeyfield" ~ Van Gogh "Le pont-levis at Arles," "Orchard in Bloom," "Peach Tree in Bloom," "Sunflowers" Goya "Dona Isabel" Pithey "Cave Composition" Reuther "Cock," "Nu au piano" Rubens "Four Negro Heads" 1965 SUPER HAWK. $300, well taken care of miles. Will sell to highest offer by Nov. 1. Andy-761-5930. Z2 with maxi power!, Michael!!! (is here) AHomecomings are always better than one! I love yolt I lap FF Read and Use DAILY Classifieds By NADINE COHODAS "All I want is a room somewhere - far away from the cold night air," yearned one young lady in an old broadway hit. "Wouldn't it be loverly?" Eliza Doolittle thought - "an apartment all to myself." Many University students apparently share Miss Doolittle's view, although just how "loverly" apartment living is can be extensively debated. For the most part, living in apartments has advantages over other kinds of living in Ann Arbor - notably eight-month resi- dence in one of the University's dormitor- ies. There are several kinds of apartments available to would-be tenants - new, mod- ern-equipped buildings, furnished and un- furnished; whole houses; old subdivided houses that have been renovated: old sub- divided houses that haven't been renovat- ed; and small rooms with a bed, chair, desk, closet, maybe a window, a n d the bathroom down the hall. Each of these different breeds accomo- dates varying numbers of people. Some are efficiencies for one person, others one bed- room for two people, or two and three bed- room places for up to five people. Naturally each type of dwelling demands a rent which varies with the presumed quality, size and location of the apartment in question - though not always in the proportion one thinks most equitable. Generally; however, one can find a place within his own price range. A single room without bathroom or kitchen facilities, for example, costs $40 or $30 a month. Effi- ciencies rent for $80-$260 a month (osten- sibly the $160 spots are nicer than the cheaper places); and two, three, four or five man places rent for anywhere from $150-$360 a month, or roughly $60-$85 per person. Better food than dormitories and most local restaurants is one sure advantage to apartment living, even if rents are high. But the drawback, of course, is the dishes afterwards (unless you're a paper p1ate user) and the money it takes to stock the kitchen. Campus food prices are notoriously ex- pensive but if you can find a cheap way out to a suburban shopping center, the grocery bill can be substantially reduced. Besides offering opportunities for better food, apartments usually guarantee privacy not easily obtained in t h e ready-made, omni-present dormitory neighborhoods. But apartment living need not lead to isolation. In many of the larger apartment buildings, the walls are thin enough so your neighbor seems like he's in your living room with you. And ati places with thicker walls, you needn't be destined to spend eight months of lonely nights either. If you don't live alone, there are always roommates on hand and word gets around soon enough in classes where you live so people c a n drop by any time. (One advantage to the University campus is that the physical lay- out is small enough so that one is never too far from anyone else.) Despite the better food, privacy and neighbors when you want them, a disad- vantage to any apartment, wherever and however it is, is actually paying the rent and most of the time paying utilities and the telephone bill as well. Perhaps its only plus point, is that this responsibility guar- antees mail once a month and provides the vehicle for getting to know your landlord better. Although the University is on the tri- mester system, most apartments are on the yearly system and rent must be paid for a full twelve months even if students are here only eight. Consequently,- they either stay here and fill out the lease or sublet their respective places for the summer at a cheaper cost than-vthe actual rent and pay the difference themselves. In addition, to the rent and utilities, Ann Arbor tenants are required to pay the ill- famed damage deposit - usually $50 or $100 paid before arrival to cover any os- tensible wreckage to the apartment that might occur during their sojourn in the landlord's abode. Presumably if only "normal wear and tear" is inflicted on the place, the money will be returned. But many landlords ap- parently think students are capable of be- ing much more delicate than they are and the damage deposit often is not refunded. Recently some of Ann Arbor's most suc- cessful landlords have come under severe attack by their tenants for negligence in meeting building codes - refusing to make necessary repairs in older apartments es- pecially - a n d for unnecessarily with- holding damage deposits. Despite these drawbacks, however, apart- ment living has more advantages than oth- er types of living on campus. The choice of where to live, of course, is up to each individual student. But should you decide to join the ranks of Ann Arbor tenants, there most certainly is a landlord out there someplace, pen and lease in hand, ready to sign you up. And if you don't like what you've signed yourself up for, you can always join the rent strike. PLUS HUNDREDS OF POSTERS & WALL HANGINGS LOGO'S 611 Church (around the corner from Campus Theatre)" --- - - ............ . .. . . . 1I ORG IZE for TE A TS RIGHTS I Many of you will be moving into apartments either this fall or next year in the expectation of gaining more freedom and control over your own lives. You will soon find that the price you must pay for this freedom is enduring an oppressive living situation. There is, however, a large and powerful movement which is confronting this issue .directly: The Ann Arbor Tenants Union. The Tenants Union is currently conducting one of the largest rent strikes in the history of the United States. Instead of paying rent directly to his landlord, each sriking tenant pays rent into an escrow fund set up by the Tenants Union. This practice will continue until the major land- lords formally recognize the T.U. and agree to bargain collectively on all aspects of the rental situation in Ann Arbor. In addition to exorbitant rents and the inconvenient and costly 12- month leases, Ann Arbor tenants have also been plagued by poor maintenance and handling of complaints, widespread housing code violations, excessive and illegally withheld damage deposits, utilities costs, and payment of exorbitant deposits in advance of moving in. The strike itself expresses the culmination of years of helpless frus- tration over this rental situation. This situation is due to the failure of the University and the City to meet their proper responsibilities in pro- viding moderate and low-cost housing for their citizens, thus leaving the market open to the collusive action of a small group of wealthy property owners. Because of this failure on the part of both the University and. the t : i+% +, + -i ..im t :ir- k :. nk a mn--: n: ki+, mnc+ ..ti. %kl a The Rent Strike has already gained widespread support: over 1,200 tenants have gone on strike, and the strike is supported by most campus organizations, such as SGC, Graduate Assembly, IFC, and Engineering Council. The Democratic Party of Ann Arbor and the United Auto Work- ers support the strike as well. The Strike has won major victories in court and will continue until its demands are realized. The success of the rent strike has been built on personal organizing and decentralized decision-making. The continued success of the strike depends on organizing a significant portion of all tenants in Ann Arbor. These new strikers will join the tenants who are already striking from last year. The intricate process of presenting the rationale for the strike, its organizational structure, the legal ramifications of withholding rents, and the goals of the strike will be explained in organizers' work- shops. Those interested in organizing for the Tenants Union or other- wise assisting in this effort should call the office (763-3102) or fill out a form and send it in. NAME . PHONE. ADDRESS ....................... PLEASE CHECK IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO GET OUR NEWSLETTER WORK ON THE STRIKE, IN THE FALL ORGANIZING STRIKERS 1 ' ° . m _._, I _ _ _ _. __.e______ _______.__ __ --. -- I