SB 1413, as amended, Leno. School districts: employee housing.
Existing law establishes various housing and home loan programs throughout the state to help low-income families and other specified groups. Existing law authorizes the governing board of any school district, when leasing a building for housing of school district employees, to lease the building for any period they deem necessary.
This bill would authorize a school district to establish and implement programs, as provided, that address the housing needs of teachers and school district employees who face challenges in securing affordable housing.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: no. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
begin insert(a)end insertbegin insert end insertbegin insertThe Legislature finds and declares that the
2changes made by this act are necessary in order to provide
3affordable housing opportunities to teachers and other school
4district employees.end insert
P2 1
(b) California places a high value on our public education
2system, and the stability of housing for school employees is critical
3to the overall success and stability of each school in California.
4
(c) The supply of new preschool through
grade 12 teachers in
5California has hit a 12-year low, and enrollment in educator
6preparation programs has dropped by more than 70 percent over
7the last decade, and this shortage most impacts schools serving
8more low-income and minority students.
9
(d) Demand for teachers and staff is projected to grow further
10as school districts continue to recover from the recession and seek
11to replace previously eliminated programs and positions. Districts
12are also coping with attrition, which averages about 8 percent of
13all teachers annually. This attrition includes inevitable retirements,
14as fully one-third of California teachers are over 50 years of age
15and 10 percent are over 60 years of age, but most attrition is due
16to younger teachers leaving.
17
(e) A growing trend driving teacher turnover is the steadily
18increasing cost of housing in certain markets. In addition to the
19negative emotional and developmental impacts teacher turnover
20has on students, the costs
borne by school districts to recruit, hire,
21and train new teachers each summer is immense. In San Francisco
22alone, during the summer of 2015, the school district had to recruit,
23hire, and train 700 new teachers. Many cited housing costs as the
24reason why the teacher was leaving the school district.
25
(f) Students and the community at large are benefited by teachers
26living in the community in which they practice their profession. It
27ensures stability, community involvement, and stronger ties
28between teachers, their students, and their families.
29
(g) By creating affordable housing options for teachers near or
30on schoolsites, it also reduces vehicle miles traveled and time away
31from teachers’ homes, thereby reducing or eliminating commute
32time.
Part 14 (commencing with Section 53570) is added to
35Division 31 of the Health and Safety Code, to read:
36
This part may be cited as the Teacher Housing Act of
402016.
(a) The purpose of this article is to facilitate the
2acquisition, construction, rehabilitation, and preservation of
3affordable rental housing, forbegin delete teachers, school district employees, begin insert teachers and school district employeesend insert to allow
4and their familiesend delete
5teachers or school district employees to access and maintain
6housing stability.
7(b) A program established under this part shall be restricted to
8“teacher or school districtbegin delete employees” and their families.end delete
9
begin insert
employees.end insertbegin insert”end insert
As used in this part:
11(a) “Affordable rental housing” means a rental housing
12development, as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 50675.2,
13withbegin delete affordable rent, as defined in subdivision (a) of Section begin insert rents restricted to levels that are affordable to persons
1450675.2,end delete
15and families of low or moderate income, as defined in Section
1650093,end insert but neither definition is restrictive to only projects with
17five or more units.
18(b) “Teacher or school district employee” means
any person
19employed bybegin delete an elementary school district or unified school district, begin insert a unified school district
20maintaining a kindergarten or grades 1 to 8, inclusive, or a high
21school district or unified school district,end delete
22maintaining prekindergarten, transitional kindergarten, and grades
231 to 12, inclusive, an elementary school district maintaining
24prekindergarten, transitional kindergarten, and grades 1 to 8,
25inclusive, or a high school districtend insert maintaining grades 9 to 12,
26
begin delete inclusive.end deletebegin insert inclusive, including, but not limited to, certificated and
27classified staff.end insert
A school district may establish and implement programs
29that address the housing needs of teachers and school district
30employees who face challenges in securing affordable housing.
31To the extent feasible, the school district may establish and
32implement programs that, among other things, do the following:
33(a) Leverage federal, state, and local public, private, and
34nonprofit programs and fiscal resources.
35(b) Promote public and private partnerships.
36(c) Foster innovative financing opportunities.
begin insert
37
(d) Dedicate school district-owned land to the development of
38affordable rental housing and restrict occupancy to teachers and
39school district employees.
This part specifically creates a state policy supporting
2housing for teachers and school district employees, as described
3in Section 42(g)(9)(B) of the Internal Revenue Code, and, further,
4permits school districts and developers in receipt of local or state
5funds designated for affordable rental housing to restrict
6occupancy to teachers and school district employees on land owned
7by school districts, so long as that housing does not violate any
8other applicable laws.
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