Ashton Place Residents' Association

What is Ashton Place

Late in 2002, the property was renamed from “ASHTON PLACE” to “ARCHSTONE SAN JOSE”. There was no change of ownership or management associated with this rebranding, so everything you read on the net about “ASHTON PLACE” probably still applies to the property under its new name of “ARCHSTONE SAN JOSE”.

 

Ashton Place in San José California is a large (approximately 948 unit) apartment complex owned and operated by Archstone-Smith Trust (NYSE:ASN). Archstone Communities was formed by the merger of two other entities (Security Capital Pacific Trust and Security Capital Atlantic Inc.) in July 1998. In October 2001, Archstone Communities merged with Charles E. Smith Residential Realty to form Archstone-Smith Trust. Late in 2002, the property was renamed Archstone San Jose, but no ownership or management change was associated with this rebranding.

Archstone purchased the property about seven years ago. Previously the complex was an Oakwood property (although many of the residents are long term -- some having been residents for over 25 years!).

The population, as might be expected in the Silicon Valley, is diverse. A wide variety of ethnic backgrounds, occupations, ages, income levels, and family stati are represented.

Who Are We? 

We are the Ashton Place Residents' Association. As you might expect, we are an association of residents who live at Ashton Place. Of course, the Association is made up of volunteers!

The Association formed in 1997 when many residents became concerned about a decline in the quality of the complex and a reduction in amenities after the new management took over the property.

There were a number of "trigger" events that galvanized residents into action:

  • New management was disregarding City of San José ordinances with respect to "Rent Control".
  • Residents were concerned about a decline in security (both a reduction in the number of security personnel and poor maintenance of security related facilities such as gates) and the attendant increase in crime.
  • Construction and renovations being undertaken to increase the value of the property were not taking residents' "Right to Quiet Enjoyment" into account.
  • Common amenities such as the Clubhouse, Fitness Center, and movies were eliminated.
  • The maintenance and office staffs became increasingly ineffective and unresponsive.
  • When talking to one another, residents realized that problems with their individual apartments (such as Housing Code Violations) were not unique. 

What's Happened/Happening? 

The "main event" is that residents of Ashton Place filed over 100 "Rental Dispute and Mediation Petitions" with the City of San José. While each of these petitions is filed by an individual resident, the Association assisted in the organizing and legwork related to these petitions. In particular, members of the Association Board have been designated by most petitioners as their formal representatives before the San José Rental Rights and Referrals Program (although the Association itself is not involved in the representation of individual petitioners).

The process is time consuming for the Association but is relatively simple for individual residents. This is partially because of the City, understandably, being somewhat overwhelmed by the number of petitions. However, a greater problem was that the apartment management (Archstone-Smith) was resistant to negotiation.

The last (of nearly 100) Mediation hearings was held in December 1999. A final Mediation Fact Finding Report was issued in July 2000. This Fact Finding Report specified awards for most petitioners with the total amount totaling approximately $250,000. However, as expected, the landlord appealed the decision, as did a few Petitioners – as a result, the case was referred to the Arbitration phase.

The last of the Arbitration hearings was held in October 2003 and an Arbitration Fact Finding Report was issued in May 2004. The awards specified in the Arbitration Fact Finding Report were of a similar level to those granted in Mediation (although distributed among Petitioners somewhat differently). The ninety day appeal window (during which Petitioners and the Landlord could refer the decision to the judicial system for review) expired without the landlord appealing and, to our knowledge, without any Petitioner appealing. The landlord has indicated they will be sending the award payments to individual Petitioners as specified in the Arbitration Fact Finding Report.

One upside is that a number of residents have found that long standing problems get fixed (or at least patched!) when management becomes aware that a petition has been filed -- occasionally even before the petition is examined by the San José Rental Rights and Referrals Program. This presumably is out of management's concern for how successful their defense will be if they continue to ignore the problem.

Resident Tips

Some tenants have experienced problems getting maintenance problems addressed.  Unfortunately, if the tenant doesn't keep a written record of requests, it is difficult for them to prove in Small Claims Court or during a Rental Dispute hearing that they did notify the landlord of the problem and how many times they did so.

To protect your rights, it is best to either make your service requests in writing and retain a copy of the request or demand a copy of the Work Order each time you make a request. Make sure these copies are dated and retain them. For each request, note the resolution (Was problem fixed?  How long did it take for maintenance to respond? etc.).

If the problem is not fixed in a reasonable time, keep making written requests (keeping copies of course).  If, after filing multiple service requests, the problem is not fixed, send a letter to management indicating that the problem has not been fixed in spite of your best efforts and that you expect them to resolve the problem without additional prompting and to notify you in writing when they believe the problem is fixed.

Unfortunately, in some cases, management's defense to unresolved maintenance problems is that "The tenant didn't tell us it was not fixed" just because the tenant gave up after filing many requests without action on management's part.  The purpose of this final letter is to show that you have put the responsibility for fixing the problem on management and that until they notify you in writing that it is fixed, they can't claim that they think it was fixed.

Contacting the Ashton Place Residents' Association

Since you have access to this web page, the easiest way to contact the Ashton Place Residents' Association is via direct email ([email protected]).

The Ashton Place Residents' Association does not currently maintain a US Postal Service mailing address.

The Ashton Place Residents' Association voicemail number is 1-206-666-8080 (note this area code is in Seattle so it is probably a long distance call for you – this is the result of using the free web based voicemail service k7.net). When leaving a message, please be sure to include your name, callback number, the best days/times (PDT) to call, and a brief description of the issue (including your unit number if you live at Archstone San Jose). Calls are normally returned within a couple of days.

Links of Interest to Residents & Prospective Residents 

Note that there have been some recent changes to the San José Rental Dispute Mediation and Arbitration Ordinance. In addition, the administration of the Ordinance is now the responsibility of the San José Rental Rights and Referrals Program within the San José Department of Housing (previously, it was part of the Parks, Recreation & Neighborhood Services).

San José Rental Dispute Mediation and Arbitration Ordinance

(See Title 17, Chapter 17.23. Note also that “official” hard copies are available by contacting the San José Rental Rights and Referrals Program via the following link.)

San José Rental Dispute Mediation and Arbitration Information

(You can fill out a petition on line at this location.)

"Tenant/Landlord" handbook published by the State of California – HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

(At bottom of page you can download a PDF version that may be easier to review/save. Also, note disclaimers near front of handbook and the companion document reflecting more recent updates to California law.)

AptRatings.com: Current Reviews by Tenants

Map to Complex

SCG Annual Financial Filing (10-K) for 1998 (856KB Text - Search for "Ashton Place"!)

Rent.Net Online (In case you want to move!)

Apartments to Rent Online (In case you want to move!)

Aerial photo of Archstone San Jose Apartment complex

The northwest corner of complex is left of dead center of this view. The buildings with the bright white roofs left of the center of the view are just west of the edge of the complex. The west edge of the Archstone San Jose property is the long driveway (and carports) extending from the freeway all the way up to the east/west street in the center of the view. On the other sides, the streets bound the property. Click on the picture to zoom in. Also, click on the Schools, Crime and Demographics for 95129 link below aerial view for stats on the zip code the complex is in.

For more information, please contact [email protected]

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