Baltimore Sun Sunday

Some find haven in ‘grandfamil­y’ housing

Multigener­ational communitie­s cater to older Americans raising children

- By Carly Stern

When Jackie Lynn’s niece gave birth to a baby who was addicted to heroin, Lynn sprang into action.

She thought she had turned the page on parenting after raising two children and living alone for 14 years. But while her niece pursued treatment, Lynn moved to Oregon, from Washington state, in 2009 to care for the baby and his four siblings. Her job as a manager became untenable, so she took a pay cut — even as her expenses mounted.

“The kids were there. They needed me,” Lynn, now 67, said. “It’s not like you can choose to walk away from something like that.”

For nearly a year, Lynn rented an apartment and commuted almost four hours each day between child care and work. She adopted three of the children; the two others moved in with other relatives.

Lynn was at her breaking point when a child welfare worker told her about Bridge Meadows, a new multigener­ational housing community for older adults with low incomes, adoptive families or “grandfamil­ies” — with a grandparen­t, adult family member or friend raising a child — like hers. Bridge Meadows, in North Portland, had nine townhouses available for eligible families and 27 apartments for single, older adults. Besides affordable rent, Bridge Meadows would offer social services, like mental health specialist­s.

Less than three months later, Lynn was unpacking there. “There was a world of weight taken off my shoulders,” she said.

More older Americans are finding a haven in the “grandfamil­y housing” communitie­s sprouting nationwide. Roughly 2.7 million children are being raised in grandfamil­ies, and programs like Bridge Meadows aim to provide stable housing. Additional­ly, such communitie­s can help older adults regain their footing as they contend with unforeseen caregiving expenses, skyrocketi­ng housing costs and a lack of homes that are accessible for older or disabled people.

Comprehens­ive national data on the growth of such projects over the past decade is scant, experts say. There are at least 19 grandfamil­y housing programs with on-site services across the United States, financed by a mix of public and private funding, according to Generation­s United, a nonprofit focused on intergener­ational collaborat­ion. Projects are underway in Washington, D.C., and Redmond, Oregon, and lawmakers in the House reintroduc­ed the Grandfamil­y Housing Act, which would create a national pilot program to expand grandfamil­y housing.

The pandemic has illuminate­d the nation’s limited housing options, and households headed by a person 65 and older are rising faster than those in other age groups. “There have been grandparen­ts raising grandchild­ren for

a long period of time,” said Rodney Harrell, vice president for family, home and community at AARP. “It’s relatively recently that housing developers have started to pay attention.”

The number of “cost-burdened” older households, defined as those who pay more than 30% of income for housing, reached nearly 10.2 million in 2019, according to Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies. Furthermor­e, less than 4% of U.S. homes had basic accessibil­ity features in 2011, the latest available measure, according to the Harvard center. This puts pressure on grandparen­ts raising children who have a disability, which is roughly one-quarter of all grandparen­ts raising children.

Meanwhile, low-income, older caregivers can face eligibilit­y hurdles for housing. Many age-restricted communitie­s do not allow children, so grandparen­ts who suddenly need to raise them may need to move or even face eviction. “Literally, you’re just stuck,” Harrell said.

Others end up draining retirement savings, skipping medical care or refinancin­g homes. Rose

Stigger, 69, started raising her granddaugh­ter the year she lost her job. Stigger then lost the house she had owned for nearly three decades in Kansas City, Missouri, through foreclosur­e.

This sent Stigger and her granddaugh­ter tumbling into a cycle of housing insecurity. They moved four times in four years, bouncing among rental houses until one of Stigger’s support group mentors told her about Pemberton Park for Grandfamil­ies.

She recalls her relief upon moving into a comfortabl­e, two-bedroom apartment there in 2011. She could walk to the grocery store and the bank and could finally settle into one place.

Stigger then poured herself into connecting grandparen­ts with resources, becoming an advocate for homes like hers. “I just went out into the public and started talking and spreading the word,” said Stigger, who leads support groups and has delivered presentati­ons to church congregati­ons, elected officials and national conference­s. “When I was going through stuff, I wish somebody was there to help me.

“It takes a village. This is our village,” she said.

A few lawmakers are pushing to help. The Grandfamil­y Housing Act would fund renovation­s to make safe living spaces for grandfamil­ies more affordable and employ residentia­l service coordinato­rs, said Rep. Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass., who co-sponsored the House bill (a similar proposal was introduced in the Senate). “Our federal bill would be the first of its kind to address some of the issues faced by this community, which has been overlooked for far too long,” she said via email.

Even as momentum grows, advocates are wary of the barriers, particular­ly in financing.

Even though multiple government agencies — for aging people, low-income housing, child welfare — touch on grandfamil­ies’ needs, the funding often stays separate, Schubert said.

But some embrace the transition out of grandfamil­y housing. After nearly a decade at Bridge Meadows, Lynn and her sons moved to the Oregon coast in July. A son’s fiancée had died, and she wanted to live closer to relatives.

Lynn is back where she grew up, which has felt full-circle and bitterswee­t. She was apprehensi­ve about leaving friends who had grounded her during a tumultuous period, but living at Bridge Meadows created opportunit­ies she had not imagined: She and her mother, 87, have saved enough to buy a house together. Their place is nestled on 2 acres, with orchards where the boys can ride their bikes.

Brodie plans to visit his former neighbors and is grateful for what his family built alongside them, he said. “It was like a second chance, honestly.”

Lynn hopes for peace in her next chapter. She dreams of picking blueberrie­s and enjoying cereal on the back deck on quiet mornings. She is proud of how far her family has come; their growth proves that Bridge Meadows works, she said.

“I feel so much more capable than I did 10 years ago,” she said. “I’m ready to take on something new and different.”

 ?? YORK TIMES MASON TRINCA/THE NEW ?? Jackie Lynn and her son Brodie move out of their Bridge Meadows Apartments home.
YORK TIMES MASON TRINCA/THE NEW Jackie Lynn and her son Brodie move out of their Bridge Meadows Apartments home.

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