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NEW NATIONAL DATA REVEALS ANNUAL SALARIES FOR FIVE VITAL COMMUNITY OCCUPATIONS FALL SHORT OF $50,000 NECESSARY TO OWN A HOMEStatistics for 60 Metropolitan Areas Show that America’s Teachers, Police Officers and Licensed Practical Nurses are Struggling to Afford Housing
While at the national level the data reveals that on average homeownership is out of reach for many working families, the 60 metropolitan area findings offer insight into concerns within specific communities. For example, the data show that families dependent on a police officer’s salary are priced out of almost half, or 28, of the 60 areas studied, while households dependent on one teacher’s salary alone cannot afford to buy a home in 32 localities. In addition, licensed practical nurses cannot afford to buy a home in all but three of the areas. Janitors and retail salespersons require more than double their salaries in many of the metropolitan areas. “Although there is a growing understanding of the housing challenges we face as a nation, this new data prompts us to take an even closer look at the affordability concerns for working families, as well as the related social and financial implications for our communities,” said NHC Executive Director Conrad Egan. On the rental side, the data also indicates that in all but two of the 60 metropolitan areas studied, both janitor’s and retail salesperson’s are unable to rent a one-bedroom apartment based on the accepted standard of 30 percent of their income. Although it is out of both choice and necessity that many working families have more than one wage earner to keep them from serious housing stress, in some of the hottest West Coast markets, as well as metropolitan areas as diverse as Boston, MA, Dallas, TX, Washington, DC, West Palm Beach, FL, and Middlesex, NJ, typical rents require more than 30 percent of two such salaries.
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