The Mercury News

Program matches students with retired faculty members

- By Felicia Mello Correspond­ent

Finding housing was one of the first challenges Alyssa Mathiowetz faced as a new graduate student at UC Berkeley. She landed a room in a shared house near campus, but it came with a steep price tag: $1,500 a month.

“It’s definitely on the expensive side,” the Ph.D. student in metabolic biology said.

Mathiowetz’s rent could soon decrease, however, thanks to a new homesharin­g program that matches graduate students looking for housing with retirees who have extra space in their homes. Its organizers hope the program will prove successful enough to export to other UC campuses.

College students have been hit hard by California’s housing crisis, struggling to find affordable digs near campuses that in many cases are located in the state’s priciest markets.

The median apartment rent in Berkeley tops $3,500 per month, according to real estate website Zillow. Oncampus housing is scarce, and 10 percent of students in a recent survey reported being homeless at some point in their college careers.

Meanwhile, along the city’s idyllic, tree-lined streets, aging homeowners who bought in decades ago have stayed put as property values rose around them.

Staff members at Berkeley’s Retirement Center started strategizi­ng last year about how to bring the two groups together. They won a grant from the chancellor’s office for a pilot program that will match six students with senior hosts for the spring semester.

“People want to continue living in their homes, and people are living longer and retiring later,” said Andy Gaines, the executive director of Ashby Village, a nonprofit serving senior citizens that’s partnering with UC Berkeley on the project. “And oftentimes as people retire from the workforce and their friends and family die or move away, they are left more isolated.”

Sharing their homes with students can provide seniors with a sense of community, Gaines said.

Students will pay belowmarke­t rent — less than $1,000 per month — for bedrooms inside the homes of retired university faculty and staff.

That sounds like a bargain to Mathiowetz, who attended a recent informatio­n session. She saw other potential benefits, too. “It’d be great to get to learn more about the university and what it was like back then when they were working,” she said.

At the meeting, graduate student Rachel Bell coached interested students on writing enticing but honest bios outlining their interests and lifestyle. If you have a pet, Bell urged the students, mention it up front. Don’t wait for it to come up later.

Those profiles are passed on to homeowners, who — after both parties pass background checks — go on “dates” with prospectiv­e housemates until a match is found. Both parties then sign a “Living Together Agreement” detailing everything from acceptable TV-watching hours to who cleans the bathroom. The goal is to have participan­ts living together by early February, Retirement Center director Cary Sweeney said.

While students can help their hosts with other household tasks, it’s not required.

“The intention is it’s about building a relationsh­ip, and the support grows out naturally from that relationsh­ip,” Sweeney said.

Interest in intergener­ational living is percolatin­g on a number of campuses nationwide. At Humboldt State, thriving cannabis and vacation rental industries have put pressure on already limited housing stock. Campus staff have collaborat­ed with a local senior agency to host community events where seniors and students sign up for the online platform Silvernest, which connects potential housemates.

Students at New York University can dodge the Big Apple’s famous broker fees by applying to share apartments with seniors through the New York Foundation for Senior Citizens. Only four pairs of housemates have been matched so far, but Emily Gadd, who helps coordinate the program for NYU, said she expects interest to grow.

“Our guess is that in five years this is going to be something happening all over the country,” Gadd said.

Some of Anirban Karak’s friends were surprised to learn that his housemate was nearly 80, the Ph.D. student at NYU said. But adjusting to each other was “smoother than I expected,” Karak said.

The two shared a threebedro­om apartment in Queens for a semester and would have lunch or go shopping together several times per month. Karak, who is studying South Asian history, had a long research trip planned and was relieved not to have to set up a household by himself.

His housemate, who had also studied history before going into publishing “was quite well traveled, and had been to parts of Africa and China,” Karak said. “There was a lot that we could talk about.”

Playing matchmaker between students and seniors can be labor-intensive, which might be why existing programs tend to be small.

“There’s been lots of excitement but sometimes that doesn’t turn into reality,” said Dan Birmingham, a former program manager at the Area 1 Agency on Aging who organized the Humboldt workshops.

To make the Berkeley program more attractive to homeowners, organizers chose to focus on graduate students, with their reputation for being more responsibl­e and studious than undergrads.

They figured the 16,000 former university employees the Retirement Center serves would have strong ties to campus and might be willing to serve as hosts. Several thousand of those live within a few miles of campus, Sweeney said.

This being a university, organizers will also closely study the pilot’s impact. A 2015 survey of Berkeley graduate students found that satisfacti­on with their living situation was one of the biggest predictors of overall well-being. Will homesharin­g reduce students’ financial stress? Will they bond with their hosts?

Organizers will check in with both homeowners and renters at the one-, threeand six-month marks, and volunteer mediators will be on call to help settle any disputes. If the program succeeds, retirement centers at other UC campuses could provide the support to scale up.

“A big part of this is educating people about the overwhelmi­ng cost of housing,” said Sweeney. “It is astronomic­al. If we can educate the community about this issue, while at the same time actually giving them some action to do, it would be a real coup.”

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