It seemed like a modest step toward solving a big problem: a bill to provide affordable rental housing for public school teachers on a vacant parcel next to a school in Ewa. In the end, the bill collapsed at the finish line, dying in conference committee.

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The measure鈥檚 sponsor, Rep. Scot Matayoshi, said the rental housing development is still alive even without the state鈥檚 help. But the Legislature鈥檚 failure to pass even a modest measure to support workforce housing shows just how hard it can be to address housing needs for key occupations like teachers, nurses and hotel workers.

to require the state Department of Education to develop housing for teachers went nowhere.

Meanwhile, in contrast to employers in places like the San Francisco Bay Area and Seattle, the private sector in Hawaii appears to be doing little to address challenges facing workers, which are especially acute in sectors like hospitality and health care.

It鈥檚 not like there鈥檚 no interest in housing policy. The Legislature in the past session pledged to create more housing in the islands by appropriating roughly $1 billion for a range of projects designed to help a spectrum of residents, from homeless people to welfare recipients to middle-income households earning nearly $100,000 annually. Also included was .

Construction fencing on a large parcel of land located next to Holomua Elementary in Ewa.
The promise of affordable housing for public school teachers remains largely empty, like this lot next to Holomua Elementary in Ewa. A bill to support development of teacher housing here died during the last legislative session. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2022

In a recent series of opinion pieces published by the Honolulu Star-Advertiser, two gubernatorial candidates 鈥 and 鈥 laid out extensive housing proposals. But implementing such programs is likely to prove harder than merely writing them down.

In the meantime, there鈥檚 the pressing question of whether employers can create homes for workers.

Teacher Housing Concept Is ‘Still Alive’

The Ewa school housing bill is a case in point. Policymakers repeatedly have said Hawaii鈥檚 high housing costs make it hard to recruit and retain teachers. But efforts to address the issue have been limited.

Private institutions like Punahou School provide some inexpensive housing for faculty, as does the . The education department, which oversees the public school system, reportedly has some teacher housing as well, but spokeswoman Nanea Kalani couldn’t say how much housing there is or where it is located.

The measure sponsored by Matayoshi, a former public school teacher himself, would have used one method to develop more. The bill authorized the state to buy a 12-acre parcel behind Holomua Elementary to develop affordable housing. Priority would have been given to Department of Education classroom teachers just entering the profession.

The property was unused, open space owned by the developer Gentry Homes, the builder of the nearby Ewa Gentry subdivision. The idea was for the builder to work with a nonprofit housing organization, Matayoshi said. The cost to the state would have been minimal, he said. And the bill’s final version from major players like the Department of Education and Hawaii State Teachers Association.

Still, the measure died.

鈥淚t didn鈥檛 die through a lack of merit,鈥 Matayoshi said. 鈥淚t just wasn鈥檛 quite ripe yet.鈥

The goal, Matayoshi said, was to get the project started by prompting a discussion in a public forum.

鈥淚t鈥檚 still alive as a concept,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he landowner and the nonprofit developer are still talking.鈥

A next step will be to work with Hawaii Sen. Kurt Fevella to get community input.

鈥淚f we can find more situations where this would work 鈥 and they exist 鈥 then we see this as a pilot project moving forward,鈥 Matayoshi said.

Other States Are Doing It

Still, Hawaii鈥檚 efforts to develop housing for public school teachers looks sluggish compared to efforts in places like Silicon Valley. For example, the Santa Clara school district鈥檚聽 teacher apartment complex, which is next to an elementary school and owned by the school district, has become in California, the education nonprofit EdSource reports.

And researchers at 聽have stepped in with a study identifying opportunities across the state to develop teacher housing on school-owned property, an idea championed in Hawaii by聽.

The UCLA-Berkeley study included language reminiscent of Hawaii鈥檚 problems.

鈥淢any of the 300,000 public school teachers cannot afford to live in the communities where they work, forcing them to commute long distances or pushing them out of the education system altogether,鈥 the California study says. 鈥淎ttracting new teachers has also grown more challenging.鈥

So why can鈥檛 Hawaii get anything done?

The issue is more complex than it might seem, said Chang, chairman of the Senate Housing Committee. Chang said one issue involving public education housing, for example, is that it requires more than teachers to make schools operate. So the question arises if housing should be made available to employees besides teachers 鈥 all in the context of collective bargaining agreements with different unions representing different occupations.

Still, Chang said he sees potential.

鈥淚 think the momentum is there,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think people recognize that the housing shortage is affecting teachers in a disproportionate way, so I think the momentum is there.鈥

Stanley Chang
Hawaii Sen. Stanley Chang, who spoke recently at a conference for land-use lawyers, said the idea of providing housing for Department of Education workers is gaining momentum. Stewart Yerton/Civil Beat/2022

Places like the Bay Area and Seattle are also far in front of Hawaii when it comes to the private sector鈥檚 involvement in housing issues. Google is investing $1 billion to build housing, and so is , according to media reports and company news releases.

Google Chief Executive : 鈥淲e know our responsibility to help starts at home. For us, that means being a good neighbor in the place where it all began over 20 years ago: the San Francisco Bay Area.鈥

A comprehensive article in a showed how companies like Amazon and Microsoft are making similar investments in Seattle, while Universal is working to build housing for theme park workers in Florida. And even some are building employee housing, the trade magazine Lodging reports.

For Hawaii’s hospitality industry, the solution isn’t to build housing for workers, but rather to support policies to enable developers to build more affordable housing units, according to Kekoa McClellan, spokesperson for the American Hotel and Lodging Association.

“Solutions to Hawaii’s affordable housing crisis need to focus on both increasing the supply of more affordable units and ensuring that those units end up in the hands of the kamaaina for whom they are intended,” McClellan said in a statement.

That has included supporting policies to eliminate illegal short-term rentals and to encourage development of affordable units in Honolulu’s urban core by allowing for more density.

“What Hawaii needs is common sense affordable housing policies that promote the development of new units,” he said. “Solving our supply problem will require our State and County governments to reduce permitting barriers to new affordable housing units.”

The Queen’s Medical Center once included residences for nurses. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2016

In some ways, Hawaii seems to be going backwards when it comes to employers providing affordable housing for workers. For example, Daniel Ross, president of the Hawaii Nurses Association, notes that The Queen’s Medical Center once provided affordable, dorm-style apartments for nurses.

Art Gladstone, executive vice president and chief strategy officer for Hawaii Pacific Health, said the hospital giant has no plans to offer affordable rental housing for employees of its four main facilities: Kapiolani, Pali Momi, Straub and Wilcox hospitals.

Still, Gladstone acknowledged the availability and affordability of housing is a challenge, especially when it comes to recruiting professionals like nurses.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a big factor and has long been a factor,鈥 he said.

Struggling To Get By” is part of our series on 鈥Hawaii鈥檚 Changing Economy鈥 which is supported by a grant from the as part of its CHANGE Framework project.

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