Affordable housing for teachers? California owns plenty of land for that


By 
Ivan Natividad, UC Berkeley News. 

Excerpt: New research from UC Berkeley has the potential to influence state policy aimed at providing affordable housing to public school teachers and staff. The report, “Education Workforce Housing in California: Developing the 21st Century Campus,” was published today by UC Berkeley’s Center for Cities + Schools, the Terner Center for Housing Innovation at Berkeley, and cityLAB at UCLA. The research, developed in collaboration with the California School Boards Association and funded by the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, looked at tens of thousands of potential California housing sites and found that counties across the state own public land that can be designed and developed to house public school teachers and staff. Researchers found that the scarcity of affordable housing in California impacts the quality of K-12 education because public school teachers and employees often cannot live in the communities where they work. …  

Why is this article related to climate change? Because if people live close to their work, they expend less energy (and emit less greenhouse gas) than commuting far distances.

Popular posts from this blog

Rude Awakening

Relax, Electric Vehicles Really Are the Best Choice for the Climate

Lost history of Antarctica revealed in octopus DNA