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SAN ANTONIO — High up on the Guadalupe Street bridge, the contours of downtown disappear behind you.
The humpback overpass spans railroad tracks and the skinny ribbon of Alazán Creek earlier than dropping again down into town’s historic West Side, a largely Latino, largely low-income neighborhood born of segregation and redlining.
To Athny Perez, the bridge is a tough border cleaving affluence and energy from her neighborhood, the place she lives on the Alazán-Apache Courts, town’s oldest and largest public housing undertaking. The 17-year-old has by no means been outdoors of San Antonio. She’s hardly even left the West Side.
It’s “a whole different setting over there,” she stated. “It kind of reminds me of us seeing into there, and them being able to see into us from there.”
Her group, generally referred to as the close to West Side, has continued by an enduring report of indignities and negligence.
On some blocks, the identical households have lived for greater than half a century, relationship again to the times when the West Side was one in all few locations in San Antonio the place Mexican Americans had been allowed to dwell. Vacant tons dot the neighborhood, some cleared beneath city-ordered demolitions, leaving solely units of concrete steps main to nowhere.
But for each empty, boarded-up dwelling, there are 4 to 5 lovingly adorned houses with tended gardens and swings hanging from the limbs of previous, tall timber. Sometimes the oldsters residing subsequent door performed collectively on the street as youngsters, the most recent generations of households ready to move on the little wealth they managed to accumulate in opposition to the percentages.
For some, the close to West Side is the one place they’ve needed to dwell; for others, it’s the place they will afford to keep.
But residents know they’re within the pathway of forces of change creeping over the humpback bridge that would overtake the group they need to maintain on to. Homes are being flipped at costs lifelong residents might by no means afford as outsiders purchase up property. Neighbors scramble to afford maintenance on ageing houses to keep away from code enforcement that would root them out.
In a spot constructed on division, the residents of the West Side have come collectively in hopes of not simply withstanding the challenges their neighborhood is going through, however perhaps even turning again the tide.
If neighborhoods have a soul — if they are often greater than transient locations for households passing by on their life journeys — then that’s what many residents discover themselves defending as they struggle to persuade outsiders that what they’ve is price retaining.
“We prevail through things that would keep someone down and feeling stuck in the dark,” Athny stated of residing on the West Side. “The residents and surrounding community are prepared to turn nothing into something.”
Reclaiming the West Side
Behind the wheel of her previous Prius, Graciela Sánchez runs a hand by her mop of white and grey curls, letting out one thing between a mutter and a grunt when she spots a vacant lot — one other tear within the cloth of the place she’s at all times referred to as dwelling.
The close-to-lifelong West Side resident, and one in all its most distinguished protectors, describes the neighborhood that was. The bustling companies, molinos and tienditas. The rows of tiny shotgun houses and casitas. In doorways, partitions and facades, Sánchez sees historical past, the ties that weave collectively her and so many different households right here.
She slows down whereas rolling by a brief avenue that reminds her of the one she grew up on a number of blocks away. The block is paying homage to others that escaped previous city renewal efforts. Neighbors nonetheless dwell in shut proximity on slim streets as soon as meant to be alleyways. A cluster of empty, tiny, rundown houses — some sitting on piled-up cinder blocks, some lacking home windows — stare out from behind a tall chain-link fence. Sánchez heard they’ve been purchased up and wonders what the out-of-town purchaser is planning for the historic houses.
“Maybe they’ll preserve them,” she stated. “But for whom?”
Lying inside San Antonio’s authentic 36 sq. miles, the West Side got here to life within the early twentieth century, when immigrants arrived fleeing political unrest in Mexico. Its residents lived throughout the confines of segregation. In 1935, a government-sponsored housing organization described San Antonio’s Mexican American residents because the “largest burden of the city” due to their dependence on aid packages. It additionally famous the “economic drawbacks” of town’s massive Mexican American inhabitants who “as a class,” it claimed, had been “non-productive” and “socially inferior.”
The streets had been largely shaded in red on maps that served as the premise for housing discrimination for many years to come, warning insurers that the neighborhood was too dangerous to write insurance policies. At the identical time, Black and Latino individuals had been saved out of different neighborhoods by racist housing covenants that restricted them from residing in lots of components of town.
Amid governmental disregard, the individuals of the West Side suffered. In rundown college school rooms, college students languished beneath poor studying circumstances and confronted abuse for talking Spanish. A surprising 1968 CBS documentary typically cited by locals captured the intense poverty and starvation that threatened West Side households.
But the individuals of the West Side additionally discovered methods to thrive. Without monetary help for mortgages, some households constructed their houses — many nonetheless standing — by hand. The space produced a few of San Antonio’s future political leaders, together with former mayor and U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Henry Cisneros in addition to Julián and Joaquin Castro. The former adopted in Cisneros’ footsteps; the latter is serving his fifth time period in Congress. The West Side has consistently nourished town’s Mexican American identification, fostering artists, poets, musicians and civil rights advocates.
Among the West Side’s early fighters was Sánchez’s grandmother who, she was informed, blockwalked the neighborhood accumulating petition signatures demanding primary companies like electrical energy and paved streets.
Sánchez left the West Side for Yale University after highschool however returned to San Antonio within the early ’80s after ending her research, drawn again by the worth her mother and father instilled of investing within the place from which you got here. She labored for a number of civil rights organizations centered on Mexican Americans earlier than discovering her calling utilizing cultural activism to construct group and consciousness. For many years, she’s led the Esperanza Peace and Justice Center, a nonprofit with a broad portfolio.
From a brilliant yellow home simply off of Guadalupe Street, the Rinconcito de Esperanza, the group’s cultural hub, is dwelling to an almost 30-year-old clay cooperative for low-income ladies and serves as a gathering area for the biweekly social justice courses it facilitates. Soon, it would even be the location of a museum of the West Side.
Two many years in the past, the Esperanza felt compelled to transfer into preservation work when its members unsuccessfully fought to save La Gloria, an iconic dancehall and the primary multipump gasoline station on the West Side, from demolition. Today, neighborhood streets are lined with massive black-and-white picture banners remembering its previous. The pictures are monuments to odd moments — a household sitting in entrance of their new dwelling within the public housing complicated, a procession on the Catholic church — of a West Side historical past longtime residents fear is disappearing.
The Esperanza’s seek for extra forceful instruments to resist the pressures of improvement and displacement turned it on to a extra revolutionary strategy: reclaiming land on the West Side.
It began a number of years in the past with a casita the Esperanza saved from demolition. The nonprofit wasn’t initially positive how to protect it, pondering maybe it could possibly be used to host group occasions. But as time handed, its objective turned clear, and the Esperanza moved it onto the roster of rundown properties it has since bought to be renovated. Backed by a $300,000 grant from the San Antonio Housing Trust and one other $300,000 from Bexar County, the houses will ultimately be established as everlasting reasonably priced housing.
It’s an idea referred to as a group land belief that permits nonprofits, normally ruled by members of the group, to personal land and lease or promote the house sitting on it to lower-income households. Because the property is saved in belief, and past the attain of the housing market’s influences, the mannequin makes it attainable for the houses to stay reasonably priced into the longer term at the same time as neighborhoods change or turn into costlier.
“We saw what happened in San Francisco and we saw how quick it went in Austin,” Sánchez stated. “And that’s what we are trying to prevent.”
Modern group land trusts are rooted within the civil rights motion however could possibly be essential to community-based efforts to stave off displacement in locations like San Antonio the place home prices have climbed significantly in recent times and the place potential homebuyers face fierce competition from investors.
But they’re additionally a part of a broader affordability effort that in some methods is just now catching up to how historical past has handled residents of the West Side.
The San Antonio Housing Trust backing the Esperanza’s effort, initially established with a $10 million infusion from town, just lately reorganized to enhance its effectiveness and solely simply finalized a five-year strategic plan. Community land trusts — particularly figuring out funding to set up one or two community-based companions — are “up in center” of Pedro Alanis’ rapid priorities because the belief’s govt director, however he acknowledges that structural change takes time.
“Obviously the need is urgent,” Alanis stated. “The need has also been there for decades.”
The metropolis has been working to implement a $1.2 billion bond program that features $150 million to create and protect reasonably priced housing, together with by partnering with nonprofit and private-sector builders to assemble or rehabilitate reasonably priced housing.
The metropolis’s housing targets are contained inside its 10-year reasonably priced housing plan, which goals to meet the housing wants of 95,000 “cost burdened” households that lack reasonably priced choices inside Bexar County. The broad plan, referred to as the Strategic Housing Implementation Plan, contains demolition diversion packages, linking residents to help packages, establishing a group land belief and constructing or preserving 28,000 reasonably priced houses — a rise of practically 10,000 houses from earlier housing targets.
But solely in the previous couple of months has town begun utilizing a “displacement impact assessment” earlier than awarding funds to builders. That course of contains figuring out potential issues for a surrounding group and doubtlessly going again to the developer for his or her assist in boosting dwelling rehabilitation or house owner help in potential constructing areas. The metropolis additionally considers design plans to guarantee a brand new improvement matches the character of the encompassing space.
The work of rising town, and including a wide range of housing, should remember the households already residing in established neighborhoods, stated Veronica Garcia, the director of town’s Neighborhood and Housing Services Department.
“When we have all of these other efforts throughout our community to improve roads, add new public spaces, redevelop areas, it’s all very exciting. And all of that development brings a lot of change: more infrastructure, more green space, more community space,” Garcia stated. “But that’s only helpful when the families that have been living in these areas are able to benefit from these positive impacts, when they have the opportunity to stay in that neighborhood.”
The blocks round Esperanza’s Rinconcito function a mannequin for the housing strategy that could be wanted to buttress town’s affordability efforts. The sandy-brick two-story buildings that make up a part of the Alazán-Apache Courts public housing complicated are backdropped by a just lately opened 88-unit house complicated that limits nearly all of its items to residents who make at most 60% of median space revenue. That complicated backs into two small houses going through Guadalupe Street that the Esperanza is fixing up as a part of its group land belief work.
Bookended by empty tons the place two different casitas as soon as stood, the tiny purple home and the small white home with their lined porches and lacking roof shingles maintain a lot of the Esperanza’s ambitions. It’s how they maintain what’s right here for the individuals who most want it. The properties have additionally opened up conversations with town about different casitas and properties that could possibly be introduced into the land belief’s fold.
Tucked behind the iron bars of 1 window is a white signal with black block letters saying what’s turn into a rallying name for some locals — “Mi Barrio No Se Vende,” My Neighborhood Is Not For Sale.
But as she angled her automobile again to the Rinconcito, Sánchez lamented the rising value of preservation and the alternatives squandered within the time it’s taken to garner help for the group. Properties within the space that had been as soon as $50,000 to $60,000 — when the Esperanza lacked the funds to attempt to beat builders to them — now go in the marketplace for $100,000 to $150,000.
“You stop believing in hope, and that’s the name of our organization,” Sánchez stated. “We’re just fighting against time.”
Code enforcement reform
There’s a saying on the West Side: The most reasonably priced home is the one individuals are in now.
It’s not tough to see why that is very true within the close to West Side, the place the median family revenue hovers between $26,000 and $35,000 and roughly a 3rd of residents dwell in poverty. Roughly half of adults 25 years or older lack a highschool diploma. At the highschool throughout the road from the general public housing complicated, 95% of scholars are thought-about economically deprived.
So when it started to seem to be homes within the close to West Side’s small boundaries had been coming down each week, residents started to fear.
It was 2015 and already the Esperanza and what would turn into the Historic Westside Residents Association had been listening to from neighbors, many older residents residing in poverty, not sure of what to do in regards to the notices of code violations exhibiting up at their houses and the specter of city-ordered demolitions if they didn’t repair up their properties.
Neighborhood leaders tried to collect as a lot metropolis knowledge as they might, and it appeared to present a excessive variety of demolition orders within the space. But once they tried to carry the problem to metropolis leaders, they felt largely ignored.
“Unfortunately, we’ve lost buildings because starting off we were not even a nonprofit,” stated Leticia Sánchez, now the co-chair of the residents affiliation and Graciela’s sister. “We were just a group of volunteers that represented the residents and the buildings of our community.”
Years later, in November 2021, a report by researchers at the University of Texas’ law school would function affirmation to them of what they had been seeing on the bottom. City knowledge analyzed by the researchers confirmed that orders to vacate and demolish occupied single-family houses for code violations from 2015 to 2020 considerably outpaced different massive Texas cities. In a whole bunch of circumstances, orders to vacate had been issued outdoors of a listening to course of — an authority the researchers discovered was not used or not accessible within the different cities. The orders had been concentrated in lower-income communities of colour within the city core, and the very best variety of vacate and demolition orders had been issued in census tracts within the close to West Side, in accordance to the report.
The metropolis pushed again vehemently on the findings.
At a City Council committee assembly final December, Michael Shannon, the director of town’s Development Services Department, ran by a presentation describing the report as “fundamentally flawed” as he confirmed pictures of houses with important structural points. He challenged the numbers utilized by the researchers and questioned why they might examine San Antonio to cities with totally different legal guidelines and processes concerning vacate or demolish orders.
(Standing by the findings, Heather Way, a regulation professor and lead writer of the report, stated the truth that San Antonio was an outlier due to its broader discretion was “the point.”)
Shannon objected to any suggestion that town was focusing on any space for code enforcement.
“What’s missing in the report is the safety and well-being of our residents,” stated Shannon, whose workplace didn’t reply to a request for an interview. “When we find these dangerous situations, dangerous structures, this is our top priority — the safety of our residents.”
But residents proceed to protest a tradition of code enforcement they see working punitively as an alternative of supporting residents’ well-being.
Residents of the close to West Side recounted cases through which neighbors reported receiving code violations for porch furnishings that wasn’t designed for the outside. Various volunteers shared the identical story of a blockwalking session early within the pandemic through which they witnessed a code enforcement officer go away a violation for trash for a sweet wrapper that was on the bottom.
They additionally describe a long-standing disconnect between the West Side and San Antonians in different components of town who could understand their neighborhood as “the worst place to live.”
“Which is not true,” stated Leticia Sánchez. “It’s just poor, working poor people who live here.”
“You’ll see a lot of the houses here have been owned by the same family for generations and those families take a lot of pride,” Sánchez stated. “They may not be able to fix the house, the house may look to somebody else that doesn’t live in the neighborhood as a shack, but people decorate their homes for Halloween and Christmas. The abuelitas continue to keep their jardines going and there’s just a sense of pride of ‘this is ours and we’re leaving this to our children.’”
Some group friction with code enforcement seems to have been extra systemic.
Until final 12 months, town used federal group improvement block grant cash to fund a code enforcement officer whose jurisdiction was restricted to the zip code through which the West Side sits. Some residents going through code violations are ultimately moved right into a listening to course of by which they’ve to present a timeline on which they vow to make repairs or perhaps a scope of labor — a pricey endeavor that’s typically past the technique of most of the West Side’s residents.
“Thinking about it from a human aspect, I don’t have $20,000 in my account to level my house if I’m told to do so within the next month,” stated Teri Castillo, the City Council member who represents the West Side. “Who has the capital to come into compliance within the expected deadlines? It’s not my constituents who do.”
Elected in 2021, Castillo ran on a platform to handle the displacement issues of the West Side, the place she rents a household dwelling a number of blocks from the Esperanza’s Rinconcito. Castillo was among the many residents trying to compile early code enforcement knowledge years in the past. Since taking workplace, Castillo has supplied lists of residences on the code enforcement unit’s radar to volunteer teams to allow them to supply assist and has organized group cleanups.
But Castillo believes that help to maintain individuals of their houses should be higher wrapped into town’s interactions with residents in order that code violations are accompanied by case managers who can present residents with true connections to help companies, a lot of which exist already however have been “severely underfunded.” The metropolis’s finances for fiscal 12 months 2023, accepted in September, contains funding for 2 housing navigators who will assist residents obtain code compliance in addition to a place inside code enforcement to function a liaison. The finances additionally contains $26.3 million for dwelling restore funding, essentially the most town has ever dedicated, in accordance to Castillo’s workplace, which is planning to push for hundreds of thousands extra to guarantee town meets its housing targets.
Over the final 12 months, group organizers and advocates have additionally been pushing to make adjustments on the root of code enforcement by amending town’s property upkeep code that governs the minimal requirements meant to guarantee public well being and security.
They largely centered on defending residents’ rights to due course of and offering them with clearer information about attraction procedures. In a metropolis the place greater than a 3rd of residents converse Spanish at dwelling, one other proposed change required violation notices to embody an announcement in Spanish providing translation companies and help choices.
The suggestions provided a legally binding method to handle the long-standing points residents had confronted regardless of town’s dismissal of the UT-Austin report, stated Uel Trejo-Rivera, a San Antonio-based housing advocate who works for the Texas Housers nonprofit.
She was among the many residents appointed to a metropolis code evaluate committee who at prolonged conferences all year long labored to carry to the desk the experiences of householders who had just lately had their houses demolished.
“This is a potential path forward. That way, we can make sure that code enforcement isn’t as predatory as so many people perceive it to be,” Trejo-Rivera stated.
But the committee really helpful that a lot of their proposed adjustments must be rejected.
Advocates discovered one other avenue although. This time, they submitted their amendments by the Planning and Community Development Committee — the identical City Council panel earlier than which Shannon addressed the UT-Austin report final December — whose members signed off on varied of the beforehand rejected amendments.
On Nov. 10, they had been unanimously accepted by the total City Council.
A dam in opposition to displacement
With the pressures of improvement and affordability closing in on cities like San Antonio, public housing typically captures the challenges areas constructed on segregation face in offering shelter for his or her poorest residents.
The Alazán-Apache Courts public housing complicated sprawls over practically 50 acres, its two-story buildings break up into two clusters on both aspect of Guadalupe Street in order that they border colleges the place a majority of scholars are thought-about susceptible to dropping out. At the sound of the afternoon launch bells, mother and father shuffle their children again dwelling throughout the streets surrounding the courts the place many youngsters dwell.
In a metropolis the place 1 in 4 youngsters lives in poverty, Athny Perez continues to be determining how to use her experiences residing on the courts to advocate for her group. But what is definite to her is the impression the Alazán-Apache Courts have on tenants like her, shaping them to be “ready for anything bad or good.”
It was at a Wednesday assembly of the Esperanza Center’s social justice program — meant to empower group members by biweekly courses and lectures — that she mirrored on the West Side as a borderland.
Fellow tenant Kayla Miranda, who helps lead this system, has seen firsthand the significance of serving to residents like Athny discover their voices. To her, it’s what helped save the courts from demolition.
The first public housing complicated in-built San Antonio, the items had been constructed starting in 1939. The multi-apartment cinder block buildings had been a marked enchancment for the roughly 5,000 preliminary tenants who regardless of their shut proximity to downtown had typically lived in small shacks with out working water or electrical energy. But the chance the courts provided was additionally a operate of segregation, housing solely Mexican Americans who had been relegated to the West Side.
Today, the complicated is an important element of town’s affordability panorama. Home to a few of its poorest residents, some households residing in its 685 shoebox items have annual incomes less than $10,000. Many reportedly pay about $130 in month-to-month lease. But the complicated has deteriorated. The items lack central air-con, and a few residents complain of pest issues. The courts additionally face crime points.
Down a distinct street, one on which the residents of the close to West Side stayed quiet, a few of the complicated would have been bulldozed by now.
Deeming the complicated too far gone to restore — and in want of eradicating the “negative stigma that set it apart from the surrounding community” — the native housing authority in 2019 opened its search for a non-public associate to implement “a comprehensive redevelopment project” on the Alazán-Apache Courts web site.
In actuality, the housing authority deliberate to tear down a lot of the courts and exchange them with a mixed-income improvement over the course of a number of years. In the primary section, simply 10% of the 324 initially deliberate items would have been put aside for households making 30% or much less of the realm median revenue, which on the time got here out to about $21,300 for a household of 4.
Concerns started to develop in regards to the displacement of households throughout building and afterward. Members of the general public, together with tenants, started attending public conferences to converse in opposition to the undertaking. After a board vote to transfer ahead with the demolition in 2020, protesters marched from the housing authority’s headquarters to outdoors the house constructing of its outgoing CEO.
The redevelopment plan was a part of each a broader development of trying towards privatization amid diminishing federal funds for public housing and a push to recast poverty by shifting residents out of conventional public housing complexes. But for some residents of the Alazán-Apache Courts, the consideration lacking within the dialogue was one in all dignity and respect for what they’ve constructed.
“We don’t want people coming from other areas telling us how to live, what’s right, what’s beautiful, what it’s supposed to be,” Miranda stated.
A tenant chief immediately, Miranda got here to the courts along with her youngsters five-and-a-half years in the past with nothing greater than the few backpacks holding their garments.
It occurred shortly. After forsaking her enterprise to take care of her ailing mom, her now ex-husband was picked up on an immigration violation and held in a detention heart. She struggled to maintain on to a job on the time due to the common calls she’d get to choose her son up from college earlier than he was recognized with autism and epilepsy.
Before shifting to the courts, Miranda and her youngsters had been homeless, generally residing out of resorts however typically out of their automobile. At the courts, in a 789-square-foot, three-bedroom unit, they discovered a security web, however in addition they discovered a group.
From her small, cramped front room, Miranda tapped on her laptop computer whereas attempting to assist a neighbor take care of an excellent invoice. There are extra of Miranda’s dishes in that neighbor’s kitchen than her personal, she stated.
When she first turned concerned within the effort to save the courts, Miranda felt the tenants themselves had been lacking from the dialog. There was the prospect of housing vouchers to use in different components of town however not sufficient readability in regards to the challenges — and the restricted voucher-friendly properties — that might include that, she stated. The tenants additionally started to look east, the place town had similarly replaced public housing with mixed-income development to which a few of the earlier tenants didn’t return.
“The community has been saying this for years and were ignored,” Miranda stated of the pushback on the plan to demolish the courts. “But you can’t ignore the people living in the property telling you this is happening.”
Not everybody desires to keep on the courts although.
On a latest cool afternoon, whereas her 10-year-old rode his bike up and down the block, Gabriela Saucedo turned to look again on the just lately opened house complicated that sits between her nook unit on the courts and the Rinconcito and puzzled why one in all her neighbors had been moved over earlier than she obtained the prospect. “I feel like the ones living here longer should have first choices,” Sauceda stated.
The 44-year-old was homeless earlier than touchdown a spot on the courts the place she’s lived along with her son for the final 5 years, coping with common upkeep points and issues about security. But she hadn’t been conscious of plans to demolish the complicated and stated she would’ve wanted monetary help to relocate even briefly.
Amid sustained pushback from the group, the housing authority in a shocking flip of occasions in January 2021 canceled its personal partnership to raze and exchange the courts.
Since then, it has employed an structure agency and a set of consultants to reimagine and renovate the courts with enter from residents who will get to keep within the neighborhood whereas building is undertaken in phases. The metropolis’s housing authority has described the trouble as a “commitment to be responsive to the needs of the residents, neighborhood and surrounding community” whereas creating higher-quality housing. Its president and CEO Ed Hinojosa Jr. has stated they’re assured the agency will deal with the undertaking “with the delicacy it needs to honor the past and plan for the future.” Early design proposals would preserve many of the existing buildings and even add greater than 100 new items.
For now, the close to West Side has in some methods already handed its largest check.
Some residents and neighborhood advocates contemplate saving the Alazán-Apache Courts because the close to West Side’s final dam in opposition to the currents of displacement and gentrification. Neighbors share tales of being flooded with relentless, unsolicited affords from builders and land speculators. Because incomes are so low within the space, there’s a shared worry that even a number of wealthier newcomers might threaten the power of the neighborhood’s poorest residents to keep.
To Graciela Sánchez, the courts are one of many ties binding collectively the West Side she’s attempting to protect. She remembers summer time film nights within the courts that helped construct group. The Esperanza’s picture banners hanging from the fences of the courts seize the resolve of tenants taking English courses far earlier than they’d be seen as full residents.
During a latest Día de los Muertos celebration placed on by the Esperanza, members of the Kalpulli Ayolopaktzin, a standard indigenous danza group, led a procession greater than 100 deep by the streets of the Alazán-Apache Courts. The regular beat of a drum and the chiming of the dried shells hanging from their ankles coaxed tenants out from behind the wrought iron doorways of their houses to catch a glimpse of what till the pandemic had been an annual custom.
“Together, let’s come up with a policy that helps to preserve those homes and that helps to preserve the culture and the history and improve the quality of the neighborhood for the people,” Sánchez stated. “And keep the people.”
Disclosure: Esperanza Peace and Justice Center has been a monetary supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news group that’s funded partly by donations from members, foundations and company sponsors. Financial supporters play no function within the Tribune’s journalism. Find an entire list of them here.
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