|
Business Spotlight Underprivileged youth of
many backgrounds come together, learn confidence, discipline from martial
arts By Janis Mara |
|
CASTRO VALLEY--Although the bulk of his income is derived from
the multi-unit
apartments he owns, it's apparent that Mark Gerry's greatest riches come from
his work with under-privileged children. Gerry, who owns
a total of 50 rental units in buildings scattered through Hayward, San
Lorenzo and Castro Valley, also owns' three East Bay martial arts studios,
two in Hayward with partner Alan Sim and one in Pleasanton. Youngsters from
low-income backgrounds, many of them the children of his tenants, work out
for free under Gerry's tutelage at his dojo on Center Street In Hayward. Gerry's father,
R.T. Gerry, began building the family's rental business, Gerry Properties,
shortly after coming to Oakland in the 1940s. R.T. Gerry worked as a
landscape contractor during the day and repaired and maintained his rental
properties at night. Mark Gerry, born in Castro Valley where his father
eventually settled, has worked in the business "since Infancy."
"Ever since I can remember, I traveled around with my dad in the truck
at night and helped out," said Mark Gerry, who still lives in Castro
Valley. "We would change faucets, install switches, do all kinds of
stuff." Though he
started a limousine business, Stars Limousine, in Hayward in May 1982, Mark
Gerry's first priority remained the rental business. When his Mark’s father
died in 1995, he sold Stars Limousine to concentrate on Gerry Properties,
taking over as president of the company, which he runs with his sister Rhonda
Gerry. He handles purchasing, tenant issues and property purchases, among
other things, for the business. “My tenants are like my family,” he said. “I
know everyone of my tenants, I know their names and their kids' names.”
Business for Gerry Properties is flat from last year, Mark Gerry said. "I have
dropped rents for some of my tenants who came in during the dot-com boom when
rents were spiking", Mark Gerry said. "They were good tenants, and
I wanted to give them an incentive to stay.” A hyperactive
child, Mark Gerry took up Tae Kwon Do at age 15. "I got tired of being
beaten up and hooked up with Alan Sim, who taught me martial arts in his back
yard. Now, he's my partner in the studios,” Mark Gerry said. The studios,
Koryo Martial Arts, were established in 1983. Mark Gerry holds a fifth degree
black belt in Kajukenbo, a form that developed in Hawaii in 1947, as well as
a fifth degree black belt in Tae Kwon Do. Mark Gerry's
children, Nicholas, 15, and Nicole, 12, started studying martial arts at age
5 in their father's school. They now train in Brentwood, where they live with
their mother. Single mother says son benefited from martial arts training “All my
students at the school on Center Street are low-income kids or adults.
They're It African American, Hispanic, Asian, Palestinian. They speak Arabic,
Korean, Spanish, and they all get along great. I get a blast out of
that," Mark Gerry said. Jenny
Henriquez, a Castro Valley resident who works in banking, said her son has
benefited from Gerry's martial arts tutelage. "I'm a single mother, and
my son was only around women; he didn't know how to defend himself,"
Henriquez said. ”I just happened to mention it in conversation with Mark, who
is a customer of mine. |
