Jose Lopez has been caught in the cross hairs of the affordable housing crisis in Minneapolis.
Tuesday afternoon he faced off against a property manager, insisting that his family should not be evicted from an apartment in the Whittier neighborhood where he's lived for the past 23 years.
"It's been a hot spot for development," says Scott Smedberg, who lives near Lopez. "This is ground zero for gentrification."
Lopez, who has a green card, works at the Crooked Pint downtown, and his wife works at a McDonald's. They have three children: a daughter, 12, and two sons, ages 16 and 4.
"It's really so mean and unjust," Lopez said in Spanish, speaking through an interpreter. "How can someone come in and buy the building and we have to leave in 30 days?"
Most of the other renters of his 38-unit building on the 2600 block of Pleasant Avenue have already left.
Lopez's two-bedroom apartment cost his family $1,095 per month. It's already being advertised on an internet rental site for $1,400 a month.
Crime has dropped, says Lopez, thanks to a community effort and people like himself. The neighborhood has become more livable and attractive, he said.