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Tamara Keith, from Berkeley to White House correspondent
Tamara Keith Of NPR & PBS Used To Reside Near People's Park At 2646 Hillegass Ave: Food Not Bombs Feeding People at People's Park:
Tamara Keith, from Berkeley to White House correspondent
By Lynda Carson - September 21, 2024
Tamara Dawnell Keith, born in September of 1979, is a journalist who is a
White House correspondent for NPR, and appears weekly on the PBS NewsHour segment called “Politics Monday.” Lately she has been reporting on the reprehensible activities of the convicted felon Donald J. Trump, who has been falsely claiming that Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, have been eating their neighbors pets recently. A friend told me that the Nazis used to make the same outrageous claims about the Jews, in Nazi Germany years ago.
Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), has been designated as a 501(c)(3) since 1970. Fiscal year ending in June of 2023, PBS had a revenue of $544,038,860, and after subtracting their liabilities from their assets, they had net assets of $411,695,303. During that same period, Paula A. Kerger (President & CEO) raked in a whopping $1,055,135, plus $113,526 in other compensation.
Reportedly, PBS NewsHour: “PBS News Hour is produced by NewsHour Productions, LLC a wholly-owned non-profit subsidiary of WETA. When providing instructions to your broker, please be sure to have the stock transfer clearly designate the donation to the Greater Washington Educational Telecommunications Association, Inc. (WETA). Our Federal Tax Identification Number is 53-0242992.” https://www.pbs.org/newshour/support/stock-and-planned-giving .
WETA, Greater Washington Educational Telecommunications Association Inc., is a 501(c)(3) since August 1963, with a revenue of $141.076,862, ending in June of 2023 https://projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/organizations/530242992 . After subtracting their liabilities from their assets, they had $187,450,496 in net assets that year. Sharon P. Rockefeller the former First Lady of West Virginia is the President and CEO, raking in $699,520, plus $54,018 in other compensation. Life Magazine, April 14, 1967 - Sharon Percy weds John D. Rockefeller IV https://www.ebay.com/itm/113691597263 .
One can only wonder, how the hell did the robber baron Rockefeller’s https://www.studentsofhistory.com/gilded-age-robber-barons get their hands on the PBS NewsHour and WETA?
Click here to see some campaign contributions from Sharon P. Rockefeller https://www.fec.gov/data/receipts/individual-contributions/?contributor_name=Sharon+P.+Rockefeller .
More about Sharon P. Rockefeller.
https://weta.org/about/management/bio/sharon-percy-rockefeller#:~:text=She%20was%20a%20member%20of,board%20of%20directors%20of%20Sotheby's.
Reportedly, the estimated net worth of Sharon Percy Rockefeller is at least $12 Million dollars as of 2024-09-17. Sharon Percy Rockefeller is the Director of PepsiCo Inc and owns about 67,506 shares of PepsiCo Inc (PEP) stock worth over $12 Million. https://www.gurufocus.com/insider/19723/sharon-percy-rockefeller .
Tamara Keith used to reside in Berkeley at 2646 Hillegass Ave., near People’s Park.
During April of 2000, Tamara Keith used to reside in Berkeley at 2646 Hillegass Ave., near People’s Park, while she covered a story for CNS News about a corrupt Oakland landlord forcing some poor Section 8 housing tenants in his buildings to pay extra cash under the table every month. The corrupt greedy landlord named Doug Stuteville, was fingered by a number of tenants when they blew the whistle on him and his corrupt manager working for him at the time. The East Bay Express was the first to break the news story.
Along with Chauncey Bailey of the Oakland Tribune, Julie Haener of KTVU, Cynthia Gau of Channel 5, the East Bay Express, Beverly Blythe of Soul Beat, KPFA radio, and some other media news outlets in 2000, Tamara Keith interviewed me and ran a 2 minute story on TV about the Section 8 housing “rent scams,” occurring in Oakland at the time. Apparently, there was enough news coverage at the time that to my surprise, the FBI showed up and wanted to interview a number of tenants being ripped off, and the FBI wanted us to remain silent about their involvement in the case.
Chauncey Bailey covered the Section 8 rent scams for some time, and interviewed me for around 9 stories that he wrote. I really liked Chauncey, and it totally devastated me when Chauncey was gunned down in cold blood on the streets of Oakland one day. I recall seeing Chauncey at Lucky grocers near Lake Merritt shortly before he was assassinated, when he called out to me at the store to say hello to me.
Additionally, I still have a VHS video tape that Tamara Keith sent me of her “2—3 minute news story” that she ran on TV (CNS News) about the “Section 8 rent scams.” At times, when I watch her on the PBS News Hour, I wonder if Tamara still remembers the time she interviewed me back around April of 2000, when she kept asking me what am I going to do about facing eviction after I blew the whistle on the greedy landlord, and refused to pay him or his building manager Juanita, any extra cash more than what I was required to pay. There was not much more that I could do at the time, and eventually I was evicted. This was before Oakland had any Just Cause eviction protections, and I would be surprised if Tamara remembers interviewing me around 24 years ago.
Apparently, Tamara Keith was pretty busy around that time, and soon after, during March of 2000, she ran a press release called, “UC Berkeley will welcome crowds to Cal Day 2000, its April 15 open house.”
Around a year before that during May 1999, as a senior at Cal Berkeley, majoring in philosophy, Tamara wrote an article called, “Success as a student is a numbers game.” According to Tamara, she wrote, “When I was a freshman, someone told me the three basic components of a Berkeley student's existence: grades, a social life and sleep. To survive at Cal, it turns out, something had to be sacrificed. So I kept my sleep, found myself with half a social life, and became a straight B student. This was a formula I was willing to live with.”
As a straight B student, Tamara Keith claims that she has been misspelling her way through life.
At the time that Tamara was slumming it in East Oakland in 2000 covering the Section 8 rent scams ripping off the poor, while living near People’s Park in Berkeley before it was shut down by the pigs, she appeared to be wide awake when I met her, and she was a good reporter.
Lynda Carson may be reached at newzland2 [at] gmail.com
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By Lynda Carson - September 21, 2024
Tamara Dawnell Keith, born in September of 1979, is a journalist who is a
White House correspondent for NPR, and appears weekly on the PBS NewsHour segment called “Politics Monday.” Lately she has been reporting on the reprehensible activities of the convicted felon Donald J. Trump, who has been falsely claiming that Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, have been eating their neighbors pets recently. A friend told me that the Nazis used to make the same outrageous claims about the Jews, in Nazi Germany years ago.
Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), has been designated as a 501(c)(3) since 1970. Fiscal year ending in June of 2023, PBS had a revenue of $544,038,860, and after subtracting their liabilities from their assets, they had net assets of $411,695,303. During that same period, Paula A. Kerger (President & CEO) raked in a whopping $1,055,135, plus $113,526 in other compensation.
Reportedly, PBS NewsHour: “PBS News Hour is produced by NewsHour Productions, LLC a wholly-owned non-profit subsidiary of WETA. When providing instructions to your broker, please be sure to have the stock transfer clearly designate the donation to the Greater Washington Educational Telecommunications Association, Inc. (WETA). Our Federal Tax Identification Number is 53-0242992.” https://www.pbs.org/newshour/support/stock-and-planned-giving .
WETA, Greater Washington Educational Telecommunications Association Inc., is a 501(c)(3) since August 1963, with a revenue of $141.076,862, ending in June of 2023 https://projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/organizations/530242992 . After subtracting their liabilities from their assets, they had $187,450,496 in net assets that year. Sharon P. Rockefeller the former First Lady of West Virginia is the President and CEO, raking in $699,520, plus $54,018 in other compensation. Life Magazine, April 14, 1967 - Sharon Percy weds John D. Rockefeller IV https://www.ebay.com/itm/113691597263 .
One can only wonder, how the hell did the robber baron Rockefeller’s https://www.studentsofhistory.com/gilded-age-robber-barons get their hands on the PBS NewsHour and WETA?
Click here to see some campaign contributions from Sharon P. Rockefeller https://www.fec.gov/data/receipts/individual-contributions/?contributor_name=Sharon+P.+Rockefeller .
More about Sharon P. Rockefeller.
https://weta.org/about/management/bio/sharon-percy-rockefeller#:~:text=She%20was%20a%20member%20of,board%20of%20directors%20of%20Sotheby's.
Reportedly, the estimated net worth of Sharon Percy Rockefeller is at least $12 Million dollars as of 2024-09-17. Sharon Percy Rockefeller is the Director of PepsiCo Inc and owns about 67,506 shares of PepsiCo Inc (PEP) stock worth over $12 Million. https://www.gurufocus.com/insider/19723/sharon-percy-rockefeller .
Tamara Keith used to reside in Berkeley at 2646 Hillegass Ave., near People’s Park.
During April of 2000, Tamara Keith used to reside in Berkeley at 2646 Hillegass Ave., near People’s Park, while she covered a story for CNS News about a corrupt Oakland landlord forcing some poor Section 8 housing tenants in his buildings to pay extra cash under the table every month. The corrupt greedy landlord named Doug Stuteville, was fingered by a number of tenants when they blew the whistle on him and his corrupt manager working for him at the time. The East Bay Express was the first to break the news story.
Along with Chauncey Bailey of the Oakland Tribune, Julie Haener of KTVU, Cynthia Gau of Channel 5, the East Bay Express, Beverly Blythe of Soul Beat, KPFA radio, and some other media news outlets in 2000, Tamara Keith interviewed me and ran a 2 minute story on TV about the Section 8 housing “rent scams,” occurring in Oakland at the time. Apparently, there was enough news coverage at the time that to my surprise, the FBI showed up and wanted to interview a number of tenants being ripped off, and the FBI wanted us to remain silent about their involvement in the case.
Chauncey Bailey covered the Section 8 rent scams for some time, and interviewed me for around 9 stories that he wrote. I really liked Chauncey, and it totally devastated me when Chauncey was gunned down in cold blood on the streets of Oakland one day. I recall seeing Chauncey at Lucky grocers near Lake Merritt shortly before he was assassinated, when he called out to me at the store to say hello to me.
Additionally, I still have a VHS video tape that Tamara Keith sent me of her “2—3 minute news story” that she ran on TV (CNS News) about the “Section 8 rent scams.” At times, when I watch her on the PBS News Hour, I wonder if Tamara still remembers the time she interviewed me back around April of 2000, when she kept asking me what am I going to do about facing eviction after I blew the whistle on the greedy landlord, and refused to pay him or his building manager Juanita, any extra cash more than what I was required to pay. There was not much more that I could do at the time, and eventually I was evicted. This was before Oakland had any Just Cause eviction protections, and I would be surprised if Tamara remembers interviewing me around 24 years ago.
Apparently, Tamara Keith was pretty busy around that time, and soon after, during March of 2000, she ran a press release called, “UC Berkeley will welcome crowds to Cal Day 2000, its April 15 open house.”
Around a year before that during May 1999, as a senior at Cal Berkeley, majoring in philosophy, Tamara wrote an article called, “Success as a student is a numbers game.” According to Tamara, she wrote, “When I was a freshman, someone told me the three basic components of a Berkeley student's existence: grades, a social life and sleep. To survive at Cal, it turns out, something had to be sacrificed. So I kept my sleep, found myself with half a social life, and became a straight B student. This was a formula I was willing to live with.”
As a straight B student, Tamara Keith claims that she has been misspelling her way through life.
At the time that Tamara was slumming it in East Oakland in 2000 covering the Section 8 rent scams ripping off the poor, while living near People’s Park in Berkeley before it was shut down by the pigs, she appeared to be wide awake when I met her, and she was a good reporter.
Lynda Carson may be reached at newzland2 [at] gmail.com
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Landlords Overcharging Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Tenants Is Happening All Across The Nation
September 22, 2024
Landlords are still overcharging Section 8 Housing Voucher Holders (Section 8 tenants) all across the nation despite our fight in Oakland years ago to fight back against the greedy landlords. See a link further below to some news stories...
As an interim press officer for Just Cause Oakland back around 2000, I was able to make sure that Section 8 tenants were covered in the eviction protection measure known as "Measure EE" that voters passed into law in Oakland. Lucky me! As a tenant activist, I was in a position to make sure that the poor people in the Section 8 voucher program were going to be protected by "just cause eviction protections" once it was passed into law, and we protected thousands of poor Section 8 tenants as a result.
At the time, the Oakland Housing Authority fought back against us because they believed that it would make it harder to sell the Section 8 voucher program to the landlords if the tenants had just cause eviction protections. What a world....
For historical reasons, this is also the first time that I am releasing the name of the FBI agent who showed up to interview Section 8 tenants being ripped off by the Section 8 rent scams happening in Oakland back around 1999-2000. I feel that enough time has passed that it should not be a problem to share some facts that people were not aware of back around 1999-2000, or 25 years ago, as the story about the Section 8 rent scams in Oakland were all over the news for a while.
Bob Hoelscher is the name of the FBI agent at the time who interviewed a number of tenants involved in being ripped off during the Section 8 rent scams occurring, and apparently he was having his own landlord problems at the time around 25 years ago.
See a few stories below...
-Lynda Carson
Oakland, CA
>>>>>>>>
Landlords Overcharging Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Tenants Is Happening All Across The Nation
Click below for news stories…
https://news.google.com/search?q=landlords%20overcharging%20section%208%20tenants&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US%3Aen
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
Financial Overcharging Schemes In The Section 8 Housing Voucher Program
Click below to see video about the landlord schemes to illegally overcharge and rip off the Section 8 voucher tenants….
Click below...
https://www.hudoig.gov/newsroom/video-library/financial-overcharging-schemes
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
The FBI’s Least Wanted
By Greg Krikorian
July 23, 2003 12 AM PT
https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2003-jul-23-me-fbi23-story.html
TIMES STAFF WRITER
Five years ago, Bob Hoelscher stepped up to a microphone at the FBI Academy in Quantico, Va., and, in a time-honored graduation ritual, opened an envelope with a slip of paper that identified his first assignment.
San Francisco, it read.
An attorney with a wife and infant son, Hoelscher had heard stories about the cost of living in the Bay Area. “But how bad can it be?” he thought.
After driving cross-country, he found out.
With a starting salary of $50,000, Hoelscher, then 33, was priced out of housing anywhere near his new job. After months of searching, he found a $250,000 house in Fairfield -- 58 miles from San Francisco. His commute takes 75 minutes each way, if the weather is good.
“I actually live in the Sacramento division,” Hoelscher said. “There are tons of us who do the same thing each day.”
While the FBI plays a lead role in the war on terrorism, many agents say they are waging a private battle against financial hardship. An outdated pay structure has left many agents struggling to make ends meet, especially in high-cost cities such as San Francisco, Los Angeles and New York.
Some agents endure lengthy commutes. Others have gone deep into debt. A few have gone on food stamps or moved into government housing.
FBI veterans say the impact on the bureau’s crime-fighting prowess is subtle, but unmistakable. Scores of younger agents are resigning for better-paying jobs in the private sector. Experienced agents want out of big cities. Top-level vacancies in specialties ranging from white-collar crime to counterterrorism go begging for applicants.
The financial squeeze, agents say, is greatest in the very urban centers where the need for top investigative talent is most urgent.
“It is the elephant in the living room that no one wants to talk about,” said Nancy Savage, a Portland, Ore., agent who is president of the FBI Agents Assn. “It is killing us in terms of getting people to want to work and stay in these high-cost cities. And these are critical places for us to work.”
A House subcommittee will hold a hearing today on legislation to boost salaries for thousands of federal law enforcement personnel working in the nation’s most expensive cities for the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Administration and other agencies.
“It’s a major issue, not only in terms of quality of life and morale for the agents, but in terms of recruiting and keeping the most competent agents in these big cities,” said former FBI Director Louis J. Freeh.
In San Francisco, which has the nation’s highest housing prices, FBI officials estimate that 9% of the agents resign each year, compared with 2% for the bureau as a whole. A recent study found that of 313 agents hired in San Francisco from 1995 through 2002, 41% transferred to other cities.
A decade ago, there were 17 applicants for a coveted assignment as an assistant special-agent-in-charge in the FBI’s San Francisco division, recalled Mark Mershon, who won that competition and now runs the office.
It was a different story this year when two jobs at the same rank became vacant in San Francisco. Because of FBI rules on promotions, most applicants for such positions are bureau veterans from other parts of the country. The cost of living in the Bay Area frightened them off.
“I had no takers. Zero,” said Mershon, a 28-year FBI veteran. “Nobody raised their hands.”
Mershon eventually filled the jobs with two top candidates from out of state, but only after FBI headquarters bent the rules and offered each of the appointees a relocation bonus equal to 15% of their base salaries.
“It’s shocking,” said Dave Miller, head of the FBI’s counterterrorism program in San Francisco. “If the American dream is to own a home with a small backyard, it’s ironic that many FBI agents who are sworn to defend and protect this country have trouble buying into that dream.”
That trouble is greatest in places such as Los Angeles, where a new FBI agent earns a base salary of $39,204. A “locality” adjustment for living costs, coupled with 10 hours per week of mandatory overtime, bring the salary up to $56,843.
With the median home price in Los Angeles County at $313,000, the average new agent is priced out of the local market and must spend three hours a day commuting to and from work, according to the FBI Agents Assn.
Over time, agents become more comfortable financially. In Los Angeles, they can earn $84,000 after five years. The struggle is in the early years, and it is especially acute in the FBI because most new agents are on their second careers, and they have or are starting families.
Reality Check
In Portland, one new agent was stunned to learn two years ago that he and his family qualified for food stamps.
“We moved from Ohio ... and were having to go to our credit card for food and gas and everyday expenses where you don’t normally use a credit card,” said the agent, who spoke on the condition that he not be identified.
“Out of curiosity,” he said, his wife contacted the state of Oregon and learned that his FBI salary of $50,000, coupled with his previous salary in Ohio, which was lower, made the family of five eligible for food stamps.
“It was a reality check,” the agent said.
After six months of government assistance, state officials reevaluated the family’s eligibility. A full year’s FBI salary put them above the limit, the agent said -- by about $2,000.
Another FBI agent took a 20% pay cut when he left the engineering profession to join the bureau in April 2000. He was assigned to San Jose.
The agent and his wife, who had an infant daughter, no debt and $5,000 in savings, found that apartments in safe neighborhoods went for a minimum of $1,500 a month. Taking home $2,900 a month, he said, he went through the family’s savings his first year on the job.
“I was determined that I wasn’t going to go into debt,” said the agent, who is 32. “We weren’t doing anything. We didn’t go out to eat. We didn’t go to movies. We were only surviving because of the savings.”
He was about to give up and resign. Then he and seven other agents won a lottery for apartments at Moffett Federal Airfield, a former Naval air base in Mountain View. The family moved in just before the birth of their second daughter -- on Sept. 11, 2001.
They viewed the two-bedroom, one-bathroom apartment as a stopgap, but they are still there.
“We can’t stay. It’s not big enough,” the agent said. “But we still can’t buy a house.”
In the late 1980s, the high cost of living in New York City caused a staffing crisis in that FBI division. Though it employed about 10% of the FBI’s agents, the office was widely seen as the worst FBI assignment in the country because of living costs.
“They were losing several agents a week,” recalled Savage, of the FBI Agents Assn. “It was just insane.”
To stem the resignations, the FBI raised salaries and provided $20,000 bonuses for New York agents, she said. The bureau also adopted a “locality pay” formula to provide adjustments to the pay scale, depending on where in the country agents were assigned.
The formula has not been revised since then. Agents complain that it does not reflect the cost of living in a dozen particularly expensive cities. Pay adjustments are based solely on the wage level in a particular city or region. Agents complain that they do not take into account housing prices, transportation costs and other financial factors.
The system has bizarre consequences, agents say.
FBI personnel in Houston, for example, are the envy of their colleagues because private sector salaries are high, the state has no income tax and housing is affordable.
“They are middle-class in those places,” said Hoelscher, the San Francisco agent, “while we’re struggling to get by.”
Some leave the bureau rather than struggle, and they include agents with valuable skills. In the last three years, the FBI has lost at least 14 agents and supervisors in five cities who investigated computer crimes, said Ken McGuire, a supervisory agent in Los Angeles who works in that specialty.
“That is not a hard number,” McGuire said. “That is just the ones I know about.”
Three years ago, a San Francisco agent poured out his frustrations in a letter to Freeh, then FBI director.
An ex-Marine, the agent said that in his tours of military duty and his assignments with the FBI, he had “willingly accepted sacrifice as a way of life.”
“These sacrifices were made in the pursuit of a higher calling,” he wrote. “However, we should not have to sacrifice the security and needs of ourselves and our families.”
The agent, who asked not to be identified because he works undercover, later left the FBI for another federal agency that allowed him to relocate and earn a higher salary.
Long Commutes
For many new agents, affordable housing comes with a commute that can add two, three, even four hours to the required minimum 10-hour workday.
In New York City, many agents travel from as far Allentown, Pa., 90 miles away. In Los Angeles, they drive to the FBI office in Westwood from as far away as Lancaster and Riverside.
Beyond keeping agents on the road for hours, financial pressures limit career options and make it harder for FBI management to fill important jobs.
“People are more hesitant today to raise their hands and go to the high-cost areas,” said Frank Scafidi, a veteran supervisor in Sacramento. “We have people here who could run major cases in other cities.... But they have elected to stay in an environment that is more beneficial for their families.”
The FBI cannot afford the flight of talent from its big-city offices, said retired Los Angeles agent Larry Langberg.
“That is where the best work ... and the biggest threats are,” said Langberg, who headed the FBI Agents Assn. for seven of his 30 years with the bureau.
“Los Angeles shags some very good people, but it probably doesn’t pick from as wide a group as it could because of the cost of living. And it is unfair to agents, and it is unfair to the American public in this era of terrorism, not to have the most talented and motivated people competing for those jobs.”
Hoelscher, a native of southern Illinois, still has not adjusted to the high cost of living in San Francisco.
“My wife says, ‘Why don’t we move back home? You can go back to being a lawyer.’ But I love my job, and pride makes you go on, I guess.
“But it’s tough,” he said. “We’re always one financial disaster away from me having to resign.”
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Bob Hoelscher, FBI agent
UPI ARCHIVES JULY 23, 2003
FBI has least wanted (assignments) list
https://www.upi.com/Archives/2003/07/23/FBI-has-least-wanted-assignments-list/1141058932800/
SAN FRANCISCO, July 23 (UPI) -- FBI Agent Bob Hoelscher took his first assignment five years ago in San Francisco, not realizing the cost of living was going to be so high.
With a starting salary of $$@$!50,000, Hoelscher, then a 33-year-old attorney with an infant son, was priced out of housing anywhere near his new job.
After months of searching, he finally found a house in Fairfield for $$@$!250,000, 58 miles from San Francisco. His commute is 75 minutes each way.
"I actually live in the Sacramento division," Hoelscher said.
"There are tons of us who do the same thing each day," he said of his commute, the Los Angeles Times reported Wednesday.
Many FBI agents say they are waging a private battle against financial hardship. An outdated pay structure has left many agents struggling to make ends meet, especially in high-cost cities such as San Francisco, Los Angeles and New York.
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September 22, 2024
Landlords are still overcharging Section 8 Housing Voucher Holders (Section 8 tenants) all across the nation despite our fight in Oakland years ago to fight back against the greedy landlords. See a link further below to some news stories...
As an interim press officer for Just Cause Oakland back around 2000, I was able to make sure that Section 8 tenants were covered in the eviction protection measure known as "Measure EE" that voters passed into law in Oakland. Lucky me! As a tenant activist, I was in a position to make sure that the poor people in the Section 8 voucher program were going to be protected by "just cause eviction protections" once it was passed into law, and we protected thousands of poor Section 8 tenants as a result.
At the time, the Oakland Housing Authority fought back against us because they believed that it would make it harder to sell the Section 8 voucher program to the landlords if the tenants had just cause eviction protections. What a world....
For historical reasons, this is also the first time that I am releasing the name of the FBI agent who showed up to interview Section 8 tenants being ripped off by the Section 8 rent scams happening in Oakland back around 1999-2000. I feel that enough time has passed that it should not be a problem to share some facts that people were not aware of back around 1999-2000, or 25 years ago, as the story about the Section 8 rent scams in Oakland were all over the news for a while.
Bob Hoelscher is the name of the FBI agent at the time who interviewed a number of tenants involved in being ripped off during the Section 8 rent scams occurring, and apparently he was having his own landlord problems at the time around 25 years ago.
See a few stories below...
-Lynda Carson
Oakland, CA
>>>>>>>>
Landlords Overcharging Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Tenants Is Happening All Across The Nation
Click below for news stories…
https://news.google.com/search?q=landlords%20overcharging%20section%208%20tenants&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US%3Aen
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
Financial Overcharging Schemes In The Section 8 Housing Voucher Program
Click below to see video about the landlord schemes to illegally overcharge and rip off the Section 8 voucher tenants….
Click below...
https://www.hudoig.gov/newsroom/video-library/financial-overcharging-schemes
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
The FBI’s Least Wanted
By Greg Krikorian
July 23, 2003 12 AM PT
https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2003-jul-23-me-fbi23-story.html
TIMES STAFF WRITER
Five years ago, Bob Hoelscher stepped up to a microphone at the FBI Academy in Quantico, Va., and, in a time-honored graduation ritual, opened an envelope with a slip of paper that identified his first assignment.
San Francisco, it read.
An attorney with a wife and infant son, Hoelscher had heard stories about the cost of living in the Bay Area. “But how bad can it be?” he thought.
After driving cross-country, he found out.
With a starting salary of $50,000, Hoelscher, then 33, was priced out of housing anywhere near his new job. After months of searching, he found a $250,000 house in Fairfield -- 58 miles from San Francisco. His commute takes 75 minutes each way, if the weather is good.
“I actually live in the Sacramento division,” Hoelscher said. “There are tons of us who do the same thing each day.”
While the FBI plays a lead role in the war on terrorism, many agents say they are waging a private battle against financial hardship. An outdated pay structure has left many agents struggling to make ends meet, especially in high-cost cities such as San Francisco, Los Angeles and New York.
Some agents endure lengthy commutes. Others have gone deep into debt. A few have gone on food stamps or moved into government housing.
FBI veterans say the impact on the bureau’s crime-fighting prowess is subtle, but unmistakable. Scores of younger agents are resigning for better-paying jobs in the private sector. Experienced agents want out of big cities. Top-level vacancies in specialties ranging from white-collar crime to counterterrorism go begging for applicants.
The financial squeeze, agents say, is greatest in the very urban centers where the need for top investigative talent is most urgent.
“It is the elephant in the living room that no one wants to talk about,” said Nancy Savage, a Portland, Ore., agent who is president of the FBI Agents Assn. “It is killing us in terms of getting people to want to work and stay in these high-cost cities. And these are critical places for us to work.”
A House subcommittee will hold a hearing today on legislation to boost salaries for thousands of federal law enforcement personnel working in the nation’s most expensive cities for the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Administration and other agencies.
“It’s a major issue, not only in terms of quality of life and morale for the agents, but in terms of recruiting and keeping the most competent agents in these big cities,” said former FBI Director Louis J. Freeh.
In San Francisco, which has the nation’s highest housing prices, FBI officials estimate that 9% of the agents resign each year, compared with 2% for the bureau as a whole. A recent study found that of 313 agents hired in San Francisco from 1995 through 2002, 41% transferred to other cities.
A decade ago, there were 17 applicants for a coveted assignment as an assistant special-agent-in-charge in the FBI’s San Francisco division, recalled Mark Mershon, who won that competition and now runs the office.
It was a different story this year when two jobs at the same rank became vacant in San Francisco. Because of FBI rules on promotions, most applicants for such positions are bureau veterans from other parts of the country. The cost of living in the Bay Area frightened them off.
“I had no takers. Zero,” said Mershon, a 28-year FBI veteran. “Nobody raised their hands.”
Mershon eventually filled the jobs with two top candidates from out of state, but only after FBI headquarters bent the rules and offered each of the appointees a relocation bonus equal to 15% of their base salaries.
“It’s shocking,” said Dave Miller, head of the FBI’s counterterrorism program in San Francisco. “If the American dream is to own a home with a small backyard, it’s ironic that many FBI agents who are sworn to defend and protect this country have trouble buying into that dream.”
That trouble is greatest in places such as Los Angeles, where a new FBI agent earns a base salary of $39,204. A “locality” adjustment for living costs, coupled with 10 hours per week of mandatory overtime, bring the salary up to $56,843.
With the median home price in Los Angeles County at $313,000, the average new agent is priced out of the local market and must spend three hours a day commuting to and from work, according to the FBI Agents Assn.
Over time, agents become more comfortable financially. In Los Angeles, they can earn $84,000 after five years. The struggle is in the early years, and it is especially acute in the FBI because most new agents are on their second careers, and they have or are starting families.
Reality Check
In Portland, one new agent was stunned to learn two years ago that he and his family qualified for food stamps.
“We moved from Ohio ... and were having to go to our credit card for food and gas and everyday expenses where you don’t normally use a credit card,” said the agent, who spoke on the condition that he not be identified.
“Out of curiosity,” he said, his wife contacted the state of Oregon and learned that his FBI salary of $50,000, coupled with his previous salary in Ohio, which was lower, made the family of five eligible for food stamps.
“It was a reality check,” the agent said.
After six months of government assistance, state officials reevaluated the family’s eligibility. A full year’s FBI salary put them above the limit, the agent said -- by about $2,000.
Another FBI agent took a 20% pay cut when he left the engineering profession to join the bureau in April 2000. He was assigned to San Jose.
The agent and his wife, who had an infant daughter, no debt and $5,000 in savings, found that apartments in safe neighborhoods went for a minimum of $1,500 a month. Taking home $2,900 a month, he said, he went through the family’s savings his first year on the job.
“I was determined that I wasn’t going to go into debt,” said the agent, who is 32. “We weren’t doing anything. We didn’t go out to eat. We didn’t go to movies. We were only surviving because of the savings.”
He was about to give up and resign. Then he and seven other agents won a lottery for apartments at Moffett Federal Airfield, a former Naval air base in Mountain View. The family moved in just before the birth of their second daughter -- on Sept. 11, 2001.
They viewed the two-bedroom, one-bathroom apartment as a stopgap, but they are still there.
“We can’t stay. It’s not big enough,” the agent said. “But we still can’t buy a house.”
In the late 1980s, the high cost of living in New York City caused a staffing crisis in that FBI division. Though it employed about 10% of the FBI’s agents, the office was widely seen as the worst FBI assignment in the country because of living costs.
“They were losing several agents a week,” recalled Savage, of the FBI Agents Assn. “It was just insane.”
To stem the resignations, the FBI raised salaries and provided $20,000 bonuses for New York agents, she said. The bureau also adopted a “locality pay” formula to provide adjustments to the pay scale, depending on where in the country agents were assigned.
The formula has not been revised since then. Agents complain that it does not reflect the cost of living in a dozen particularly expensive cities. Pay adjustments are based solely on the wage level in a particular city or region. Agents complain that they do not take into account housing prices, transportation costs and other financial factors.
The system has bizarre consequences, agents say.
FBI personnel in Houston, for example, are the envy of their colleagues because private sector salaries are high, the state has no income tax and housing is affordable.
“They are middle-class in those places,” said Hoelscher, the San Francisco agent, “while we’re struggling to get by.”
Some leave the bureau rather than struggle, and they include agents with valuable skills. In the last three years, the FBI has lost at least 14 agents and supervisors in five cities who investigated computer crimes, said Ken McGuire, a supervisory agent in Los Angeles who works in that specialty.
“That is not a hard number,” McGuire said. “That is just the ones I know about.”
Three years ago, a San Francisco agent poured out his frustrations in a letter to Freeh, then FBI director.
An ex-Marine, the agent said that in his tours of military duty and his assignments with the FBI, he had “willingly accepted sacrifice as a way of life.”
“These sacrifices were made in the pursuit of a higher calling,” he wrote. “However, we should not have to sacrifice the security and needs of ourselves and our families.”
The agent, who asked not to be identified because he works undercover, later left the FBI for another federal agency that allowed him to relocate and earn a higher salary.
Long Commutes
For many new agents, affordable housing comes with a commute that can add two, three, even four hours to the required minimum 10-hour workday.
In New York City, many agents travel from as far Allentown, Pa., 90 miles away. In Los Angeles, they drive to the FBI office in Westwood from as far away as Lancaster and Riverside.
Beyond keeping agents on the road for hours, financial pressures limit career options and make it harder for FBI management to fill important jobs.
“People are more hesitant today to raise their hands and go to the high-cost areas,” said Frank Scafidi, a veteran supervisor in Sacramento. “We have people here who could run major cases in other cities.... But they have elected to stay in an environment that is more beneficial for their families.”
The FBI cannot afford the flight of talent from its big-city offices, said retired Los Angeles agent Larry Langberg.
“That is where the best work ... and the biggest threats are,” said Langberg, who headed the FBI Agents Assn. for seven of his 30 years with the bureau.
“Los Angeles shags some very good people, but it probably doesn’t pick from as wide a group as it could because of the cost of living. And it is unfair to agents, and it is unfair to the American public in this era of terrorism, not to have the most talented and motivated people competing for those jobs.”
Hoelscher, a native of southern Illinois, still has not adjusted to the high cost of living in San Francisco.
“My wife says, ‘Why don’t we move back home? You can go back to being a lawyer.’ But I love my job, and pride makes you go on, I guess.
“But it’s tough,” he said. “We’re always one financial disaster away from me having to resign.”
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Bob Hoelscher, FBI agent
UPI ARCHIVES JULY 23, 2003
FBI has least wanted (assignments) list
https://www.upi.com/Archives/2003/07/23/FBI-has-least-wanted-assignments-list/1141058932800/
SAN FRANCISCO, July 23 (UPI) -- FBI Agent Bob Hoelscher took his first assignment five years ago in San Francisco, not realizing the cost of living was going to be so high.
With a starting salary of $$@$!50,000, Hoelscher, then a 33-year-old attorney with an infant son, was priced out of housing anywhere near his new job.
After months of searching, he finally found a house in Fairfield for $$@$!250,000, 58 miles from San Francisco. His commute is 75 minutes each way.
"I actually live in the Sacramento division," Hoelscher said.
"There are tons of us who do the same thing each day," he said of his commute, the Los Angeles Times reported Wednesday.
Many FBI agents say they are waging a private battle against financial hardship. An outdated pay structure has left many agents struggling to make ends meet, especially in high-cost cities such as San Francisco, Los Angeles and New York.
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