Teachers: Housing still hard despite help By CAMERON MICULKA – West Hawaii Today | Sunday, May 19, 2019, 12:05 a.m.
KEALAKEKUA — It’s not news that finding affordable housing in Hawaii isn’t easy. That’s especially true for the state’s teachers, 10 percent of whom change schools, move or leave the profession entirely every year. So when a California-based company announced plans to help Hawaii’s educators make the critical down payment on a home, it caught a lot of attention — if not also some skepticism. “I was looking at it and saying, ‘What’s the catch? There has to be some kind of catch,’” said Jamie Gibson, a teacher at Konawaena Middle School. “This probably can’t be real.” Gibson was one of about two dozen people to come to Konawaena High School on Friday for a presentation by Landed, which has been helping educators in communities around the country by matching up to half of a down payment on a home and is now bringing its efforts to Hawaii. Ian Magruder, director of partnerships at Landed, told the crowd they’re here to help whether a family’s ready to buy their home or just getting started. “We plan to be here long-term,” he said. “This is not just a short-term program. There’s not a limited pool of capital; it’s not a lottery or anything.” Landed started a little over three years ago in the San Francisco Bay Area and has since expanded to Seattle, Denver and Southern California. Now in Hawaii, Landed plans to help educators at all of the state’s public schools, including charter schools chartered with the Hawaii Department of Education, as well as Kamehameha Schools. Educators must have been employed full-time for at least two years to be eligible and must continue working in education for another two years. More information about Landed is available at its website, www.landed.com. Landed works by providing up to half of a 20% down payment on a home in exchange for part of the rise or fall in the home’s longterm value. If the homeowner sells or refinances the home within 30 years of purchase, they pay Landed back its initial investment plus or minus 25 percent of the home’s appreciation or depreciation.