

In West Virginia, the American Federation of Teachers recently helped open a building with apartments for teachers and retail shops that officials hope will revitalize the rural town of Welch. “It’s like a great gift coming from the district,” said math teacher Eleonor Obedoza of her family’s new three-bedroom apartment. 6 summer hearings wrap up: What did we learn? “For us to be at the front end of this new wave of teacher and staff housing is actually pretty exciting.” As we’ve gone through the process, we’ve learned of so many other districts interested in doing what we’ve done,” said Andrew Lie, a school board trustee. “This is absolutely a solution for other districts. But with a national teacher shortage and rapidly rising rents, the working-class district could serve as a harbinger as schools across the U.S. The Jefferson Union High School District in San Mateo County’s Daly City is among just a handful of places in the country with educator housing.

I think it shows educators that they value them.”

“More districts really need to consider this model. “I have a sense of community, which I think is more valuable than anything else,” the San Francisco native said. But her employer, a 4,000-student school district south of San Francisco, was the rare success story in the struggle to provide affordable housing and in May, it opened 122 apartments for teachers and staff. It was once an impossible dream in an exorbitantly priced region hostile to new housing. San Francisco Bay Area high school teacher Lisa Raskin moved out of a cramped apartment she was sharing with a roommate and into her own place this month, paying a deeply discounted $1,500 a month for a one-bedroom with expansive views within walking distance to work.
