Oroville Mercury-Register

More Blacks, Latinos face out-of-reach home prices

- By Alejandro Lazo CalMatters

Home ownership has long been considered a path to the middle class. But just 17% of Black and Latino households could afford a median-priced home in California last year, down from the prior two years, according to a new report.

All California­ns faced a high-barrier market in 2021. Only 26% of California households earned the minimum annual income of $144,400 needed to afford the monthly payments of a home priced at $786,750, the report by the California Associatio­n of Realtors said. That was down from 28% in 2020 and 30% in 2019.

The median home price is the point at which half the homes in the state are sold for more and half for less. In an ideal market, half of California­ns would be able to afford a medianpric­ed home, said Oscar Wei, deputy chief economist at the Realtors group.

Thirty-four percent of white households in the state could afford a median priced home, down from 38% in 2020. And 40% of Asian homebuyers could afford the median-priced home last year down from 43% in 2020.

Inequities may grow

Such racial inequities are likely to grow in 2022 if interest rates continue their expected upward climb, even as the labor market has driven wages higher for many workers, said Wei, the economist.

“When you see interest rates rising — and mortgage payments rising faster than income — that means affordabil­ity overall should decline in 2022,” Wei said. “The housing affordabil­ity gap between ethnic groups … could widen.”

California’s Black and Latino families earned median incomes less than those of the state’s white and Asian families. And higher housing prices would likely make it harder for Black and Latino families to save for down payments, Wei said.

The pandemic pushed California home prices into overdrive last year, spurring demand for single-family homes as families sought more space and were able to move further away from their places of employment given the rise of remote work. In Southern California, for instance, the million-dollar home became ubiquitous in a growing number of neighborho­ods, an analysis by The Los Angeles Times found.

Wei, of the Realtors group, said he believed Black and Latino families may have moved to more affordable parts of the state during the pandemic in comparison to other ethnic groups. This movement could result in further segregatio­n in the state, particular­ly in the state’s more expensive counties, he added.

Nikki A. Beasley, the executive director of Richmond Neighborho­od Housing Services, an affordable housing organizati­on that helps first-time buyers, said her organizati­on has helped many people in the organizati­on’s hometown of Richmond, as well as throughout the greater Bay Area. Qualifying for a mortgage in recent years has not been as big of a barrier as has the low availabili­ty of homes for sale, she said.

The nonprofit is itself a property manager, advocate and urban developer currently working on a West Oakland project of nine, single-family homes with accessory dwelling units, she said. They also are working to acquire and rehabilita­te dormant or blighted properties around the Bay Area to be converted into homes for people, Beasley said, and they are partnering with the Realtors on a program that provides up to $10,000 toward closing costs for low and moderate income firsttime homebuyers.

Programs set up

Sacramento lawmakers and advocates have sought to boost the homeowners­hip rate for Black California­ns. Across the state, several programs seek to increase homeowners­hip through downpaymen­t assistance. The largest program is overseen by the California Housing Finance Agency, which provides as much as $11,000 of down payment assistance to qualifying first-time homebuyers.

Last year, Senate Democrats proposed a “California Dream for All” plan in which the state might pay up to 45% of the purchasing price of a home. The state treasurer is studying the proposal and is expected to report back to the legislatur­e with more details.

Beasley, the director of the Richmond-based organizati­on, works with many Black families. She tells them homeowners­hip is possible, even in a frenzied Bay Area market.

“There is affordabil­ity in the Bay Area, you just have to make a decision of where you want to live,” Beasley said. “You may have to get innovative and creative: Maybe you look for a fixerupper.”

Assistance programs can only do so much to counterbal­ance a broader economic system that has left Black families and other communitie­s of color on an unequal footing, she said. That’s why her organizati­on promotes models outside of the traditiona­l mortgage market, she said, including community and cooperativ­e ownership models, as well as community land trust options.

When it comes to California home prices, Black families often face challenges including large student debt loads and pay discrimina­tion, Beasley said. Possible solutions include student loan forgivenes­s and pay equity.

“The reality with a mortgage, or with financing, is you have to have income, you have to be able to manage your debt, and the only way you can combat that is either make more money or reduce debt,” she said. “So either get more people of color higher-paying jobs, or figure out how to mitigate some of this debt.”

The first and only time a woman was honored on U.S. paper money was Martha Washington. In 1886, the $1 Silver Certificat­e featured her portrait, representi­ng the first time a real, historical woman was pictured alone on U.S. currency. The note, commonly referred to as the “Martha,” is still highly sought after by collectors and is featured in the 100 Greatest American Currency Notes.

Before the “Martha” was released, the only other historical woman to appear on currency was Pocahontas, however, she appeared within a group. In the 1860s, the “Baptism of Pocahontas” was featured on the back of $20 First Charter Period National Banknotes.

Women on Circulatin­g Coins

In 1893, Queen Isabella of Spain became the first woman featured on a United States coin, the Queen Isabella Commemorat­ive Quarter. It was almost 100 years later, in 1979, that the first U.S. circulatin­g coin depicted a woman. Since then, there have been very few other coins celebratin­g women.

If U.S. circulatin­g coins from the 18th to early

20th centuries portrayed female likenesses, they all depicted the mythical figure of Liberty.

Almost 200 years after the mint produced its first circulatin­g coin, Susan B. Anthony appeared on the dollar. The Susan B. Anthony Dollar was the first circulatin­g coin to depict a non-mythical woman. The mint produced the Susan B. Anthony Dollar from 1979 to 1981 and again in 1999.

The Sacajawea Golden Dollar replaced the Susan B. Anthony Dollar. The obverse showed Sacajawea carrying her baby, Jean Baptiste, on her back.

The mint made the Sacajawea Golden Dollar from 2000 to 2008, before it transition­ed into the Native American $1 Coin Program in 2009.

Both the Susan B. Anthony and Sacajawea dollars are unique because their portraits appear on the obverse.

 ?? JANE TYSKA — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP FILE ?? A housing developmen­t is seen near former salt ponds from this drone view in Newark on Jan. 27.
JANE TYSKA — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP FILE A housing developmen­t is seen near former salt ponds from this drone view in Newark on Jan. 27.
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 ?? ?? A $20 Liberty gold piece from 1904 can be worth thousands of dollars in 2022.
A $20 Liberty gold piece from 1904 can be worth thousands of dollars in 2022.

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