Fire in Sao Paulo squat shines light on housing shortage
SAO PAULO — Marta Maria Maia da Fonseca and her husband shared the conundrum of tens of thousands of working class families in Sao Paulo: They couldn’t afford to rent an apartment in the city’s centre and high transportation costs would render even low-rent places on the city’s outskirts unaffordable.
The couple and their 14-year-old daughter felt they had no option but to join a group of squatters living in an abandoned building downtown.
Now, the family faces a new housing dilemma. An electrical short circuit started a fire in the 24-story former police headquarters and it collapsed last Tuesday. They spent that night camped out on a plaza in front of a nearby church along with several of other newly homeless families. The next day they moved in with a sister, crammed into a tiny two-bedroom apartment in a neighbouring city with six other relatives.
“We have to start all over again,” said da Fonseca, who works as a home health aide and has lived in three different squats over 10 years.