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Santa Cruz, The Least Affordable Place For Teachers, Is Trying To Make It More Livable

Erika Mahoney
Elle Wiley has been teaching at Soquel High School since 2016. But she's not sure how much longer she'll be able to stay in the area due to the high cost of housing.

 

The Santa Cruz area is among a handful of California school districts considering creative solutions, including building affordable housing on school district property, to keep their teachers from leaving.

At least three of 10 school districts in Santa Cruz County are exploring the option of building below-market homes for teachers and staff. In neighboring Monterey County, at least two districts out of 34 are looking into the idea.

Just last month, Santa Cruz City Schools took their exploration one step forward. The district is now looking for an architect to start designing plans to build workforce housing. It already has designated 2.5 acres just behind the Natural Bridges High School campus in Santa Cruz for the project.

A recent study by USA Today ranks Santa Cruz as the least affordable city in the nation for teachers. The study analyzed teachers’ pay and the cost of living in nearly 300 metro areas. It found that experienced Santa Cruz teachers make around $62,620 (before taxes), but that 66% of their salary goes to rent. San Jose and San Francisco ranked as the second and third least affordable places.

California’s teacher shortage has been worsening since 2015, according to the Learning Policy Institute, a research and policy nonprofit.  

Elle Wiley, a math teacher for Santa Cruz City Schools, says about 40 percent of her monthly paycheck goes toward housing. 

Typically, financial experts recommend spending no more than 30 percent. The median rent in the city of Santa Cruz and San Jose is around $3,500 a month. It’s around $4,580 in San Francisco. 

 

“Every year I have the same question to myself, am I going to be here this year,” said Wiley, who teaches at Soquel High School east of Santa Cruz. “Am I going to teach here next year?”

 

“Every year I have the same question to myself, am I going to be here this year,” said Elle Wiley, a math teacher.

Wiley’s classroom is lined with twinkling lights. A garland of fall leaves hangs from the whiteboard and math visuals cover the walls. She teaches Integrated Math, a freshman-level course, and buys many of her classroom decorations and supplies herself. She says it’s just one more thing to pay for at the beginning of each school year. 

“I can tell you I lived off of leftovers that students gave me for food for a couple weeks this year. Thankfully, I have amazing parents, and they brought some meals for me,” Wiley said while sitting in her classroom. 

When Wiley was hired in 2016, she had to take out a loan to move from her hometown, Chico, Calif. Wiley struggled for months trying to find somewhere she could afford to live close to work and somewhere she could have her only companion, her husky Willow. She started and ended that first year sleeping on her aunt’s couch because the place she initially found didn’t work out. 

“It wasn't my personal space, so it was hard to have my paperwork laid out in their living room,” she said about living with her aunt. “So I didn't do much work outside of school, so I stayed at school until super late hours getting all my work completed,” said Wiley.  

Fast forward and she now rents a room in a co-worker’s house. But Wiley says she’s going to have to move soon. Her co-worker recently married and is planning to start a family. Wiley is running out of options. She’s thinking about moving back home to Chico.

“I’m just so tired, I’m giving up. I feel like giving up. 100 percent. I love the school. I love my colleagues, I love my administration, I love my district office. I just personally cannot keep fighting for a place to live,” Wiley said while sitting insider her classroom. 

She would jump into teacher housing in a heartbeat. But she isn’t sure her district’s project will be ready by the time she needs it. 

“Oh wow, my plan would be completely turned around because that's my number one issue, … not having the secure place for next year. And if it does happen next year, I don't even know. I just know in my head I can't even think about it because I know it's not going to happen. So I can't get my dreams up like that,” Wiley said.

Just north of Santa Cruz, the San Lorenzo Valley Unified School District is also working to get its project approved. There’s no set date for groundbreaking yet. First, Santa Cruz County supervisors must approve a zoning change to allow for housing. The district plans to turn a former elementary school into apartments.  

 

Credit Krista Almanzan
San Lorenzo Valley Unified is working to turn this former elementary school into teacher housing.

 

Credit Krista Almanzan
Dr. Laurie Bruton, superintendent of San Lorenzo Valley Unified, stands in front of the district’s former elementary school. The plan is to turn the school into 33 below-market apartments.

 Dr. Laurie Bruton, superintendent of San Lorenzo schools, walks up to the elementary school in Boulder Creek. “And you can see it’s really a beautiful campus,” said Bruton. 

Trees and plants dot the schoolyard, which spans 28 acres. 

“So a lot of the plants and all of those things were put in by teachers, maintained by teachers. Not only flowers, but there were vegetable gardens here.”

The school has been closed for 17 years. The district currently rents it to various tenants, some of which may stay. Bruton says the plan is to turn the classrooms into 33 below-market apartments. The school is designed into clusters of buildings that already look like condos. 

“The classrooms are bright and there's a lot of greenery around and there's a lot of flat space. So you can see, like this, is a great patio right here at the entrance of this classroom configuration that you can have a grill and some patio furniture out on,” Bruton said. 

Credit Krista Almanzan
Bruton says the entrances to the classrooms could make nice patio spaces.

The project is estimated to cost the district nearly $10 million. The district may use what’s similar to a tax-free bond to pay for it. Bruton hopes the investment will help hire and keep teachers around. And she says that, will ultimately help the students.  

“If you're a young teacher and you raise a family in this area and your kids go to school here, that's a whole different level of ownership to the community into the school,” she said. 

San Mateo Community College District and Santa Clara Unified School District built employee housing in the early 2000s. Now, school districts have a state law on their side.  Passed in 2016, it allows districts to put teacher housing on district owned property. A law passed the following year establishes tax exemptions for teacher housing on district owned land. 

Billy Riggs, a professor at the University of San Francisco School of Management, studies economics, housing and smart transportation. He would like to see California embrace workforce housing for all kinds of professions. But he says that 2016 Teacher Housing Act is a step in the right direction. 

“It allows housing in a location we never thought about before and that's phenomenal. We should do more of that,” said Riggs.

 

 

 

 

Krista Almanzan contributed to this report.

 

Erika joined KAZU in 2016. Her roots in radio began at an early age working for the independent community radio station in her hometown of Boulder, Colorado. After graduating from the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University in 2012, Erika spent four years working as a television reporter. She’s very happy to be back in public radio and loves living in the Monterey Bay Area.
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