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The Cost in Care of High Cost Housing

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Tanisha West, 26, loves her job as an instructional assistant at an Oakland preschool but tries not to think too hard about the future. By day, she works alongside a preschool teacher, leading lessons and activities for a class of 24. By evening, she鈥檚 at home in a living situation she knows can only be temporary. With Bay Area rents so out of reach, West and her fianc茅 are living with his parents while searching for subsidized housing.

So far, she was fortunate enough to land on two affordable housing waitlists鈥攈er low wages leave her eligible for subsidies. One apartment is 20 miles away in Fremont and the other 80 miles away in Sacramento, which would leave her with a two-hour morning commute.

鈥淪acramento is a stretch, but if they call me, I have no choice but to go,鈥 she said. 鈥淩ight now, all I can do is apply [for housing] and pray.鈥

The inability of teachers to afford housing in the Bay Area and other high-cost regions of California this year, especially during a seven-day teachers鈥 strike in Oakland Unified School District. But little attention has been paid to how this dynamic affects preschool and child care workers, an even lower-paid group of educators who, like West, struggle with skyrocketing rents. Their plight raises troubling questions: How many early educators will be forced from the region or their profession if housing costs continue to rise? For those who remain, what toll will the necessary sacrifices exact on them and the children in their care?

鈥淲e know that the majority of the early education workforce in our state earns below $15 an hour,鈥 LaWanda Wesley, an administrator for Oakland Unified School District, told us recently. One found the average Oakland apartment rent to be $2,854, which is more than the monthly income from a job that pays $15 an hour for 40 hours a week. 鈥淚n a high-cost county like Alameda, specifically in Oakland, how are they to live?鈥 In the meantime, Wesley said, they 鈥渁re driving for Uber and Lyft and working second or third jobs. They are stressed.鈥

It鈥檚 more than just finding affordable housing; the stress can impact their care. Early childhood is a crucial time for learning and brain development, which depends on stable relationships with skilled teachers and caregivers, experts say. And that the economic stress can impact teachers鈥 effectiveness in the classroom. California鈥檚 new Governor Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, made good on his promise for greater investment in young children and families this year, with new investments in early learning, K-12 education, and family support. But experts say the state needs to and, specifically, to increasing compensation.

鈥淲hen early educators are experiencing high levels of economic stress and worry, it really interferes with their ability to be as present and focused as they want to be in their positions,鈥 said Lea Austin, co-director of the Center for the Study of Childcare Employment at the University of California, Berkeley.

That kind of stress, combined with the low pay, can lead to higher staff turnover. A revolving door of early educators can hurt young children who depend on stable relationships with caring adults for their well-being and optimal development, Austin said, 鈥淥ne of the most important features of an early childhood program is a stable workforce.鈥

Oakland Unified School District has a stable preschool teacher workforce with many long-time teachers, said Christie Herrera, the district鈥檚 executive director of early learning. But she wonders about the future. What happens when those teachers, who may have purchased affordable homes decades ago, retire?

According to a housing affordability calculator by EdSource, an Oakland teacher would need to be mid-career, earning about $63,000, to afford even a moderately priced studio apartment (about $1,600 a month including utilities) in the Oakland-Fremont Metro Area. A first-year preschool teacher with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in Oakland earns $40,000, about 17 percent less than the district鈥檚 for a K-12 teacher. A showed that in nearby Santa Clara County, rents for the typical home rose three times faster than median wages between 2010 and 2017.

鈥淲e are going to have an increasingly hard time finding teachers who want to live in the Bay Area,鈥 Herrera predicted. 鈥淚鈥檓 in a rent-controlled building and working in central office, so that鈥檚 the only reason I can afford it.鈥

One commonly proposed solution is for school districts to build affordable housing for their teachers鈥攁 solution . But these programs will not help early childhood educators working for private centers and programs outside of school districts.

The recommends that programs for children from birth to age 5 be publicly funded, like K-12 schools, which would help ensure livable teacher salaries. Experts say that the need for this kind of significant public investment is becoming even more acute as California鈥檚 housing crisis worsens.

鈥淣ow is the time to create opportunities for the young people who would gladly pursue a career in teaching our youngest children,鈥 write in the San Francisco Chronicle, 鈥渂ut only if it offers a pathway to the middle class rather than poverty.鈥

Roxana Ortiz, 29, is one of this new generation of teachers who will face increasing housing pressures if housing prices continue to climb. Ortiz is a full-time teacher at Saint Vincent鈥檚 Day Home in Oakland, a private center that receives state-subsidies for preschool and child care. She has three roommates, lives two cities over from where she works, yet 鈥渨hen it comes to meeting my basic needs, I鈥檓 living paycheck to paycheck.鈥

But she feels fortunate鈥攁 recently divorced homeowner needing roommates gave her a break on the rent, and for the first time in years, she has a safe and affordable place to live. Because she couldn鈥檛 be choosy in a tight housing market, Ortiz has in the past lived with roommates who made her uncomfortable, making it harder to focus on the 鈥減assion of teaching,鈥 she said.

As much as she loves teaching preschool, she doesn鈥檛 see it as a viable long-term career. 鈥淚 knew I wouldn鈥檛 be able to afford [to] take care of myself.鈥 She plans to move on once she finishes her college degree.

Saint Vincent鈥檚 is fortunate to have a largely stable staff, said Executive Director Kate Shaheed. Many have 15 or more years of experience and can afford to stay, she said, because they鈥檙e 鈥渉igher on the pay scale and maybe in more advantageous rental situations or they鈥檙e in a relationship and have a partner who makes more money.鈥

Losing teachers like Ortiz will likely become more common if housing and wages continue to diverge. Recruiting qualified new teachers will also be a challenge, Shaheed said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a huge issue鈥 due to the housing costs.

鈥淟earning to be a good preschool teacher is complex,鈥 she continued. 鈥淚t takes a lot of practice, a lot of feedback and coaching. It鈥檚 not something that you can walk off the street and do. [Yet] you could make more at Costco or bartending. It鈥檚 very hard for younger folks to enter the field.鈥

In the future, fewer young adults in the Bay Area may even consider early education as a viable career option. Experts say that without a livable wage, the field may lose its best and brightest to other pursuits in the Bay Area鈥攐r to regions with more affordable housing. A loss that they say will come at a high cost to the children living here.

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The Cost in Care of High Cost Housing