RELATED: New 'catastrophic' details reveal what went wrong inside flooded luxury SF apartment building
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They can terminate their lease or choose to return when the building is habitable, 33 Tehama says. But it will stop providing financial assistance.
Supervisor Matt Dorsey is calling on city agencies to protect tenants.
RELATED: More than 600 residents at SF luxury apartment displaced by flood; some left without hotel
He issued a statement Monday and says he wants to accelerate placements for tenants of some 60 below-market-rate units.
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It reads in part: "This is a bad situation that has caused very serious upheaval in the lives of hundreds of residents at 33 Tehama, none more so than the low and moderate-income renters who are least able to afford near-term housing arrangements on their own."
RELATED: Residents at SF luxury apartment displaced after pipe bursts, flooding all 35 floors