The Mercury News Weekend

Nearly half of San Francisco families are financiall­y insecure

Urban Institute found surprising numbers of residents at risk

- By Erica Hellerstei­n ehellerste­in@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

‘The financial health of cities depends on having financiall­y secure residents. And when residents struggle to make ends meet, cities can, too.’

— Signe-Mary McKernan, the director of the Opportunit­y and Ownership Initiative at the Urban Institute

Despite San Francisco’s higher- than- average median household income, nearly half of all families in the city have less than $2,000 in savings and are financiall­y insecure, a report released Thursday by the nonprofit Urban Institute found.

That makes them more vulnerable to eviction and missed payments in the face of an unexpected job loss or medical bill, the report concluded, which ultimately can come at a cost of tens of millions to the city.

“The financial health of cities depends on having financiall­y secure residents,” says SigneMary McKernan, the director of the Opportunit­y and Ownership Initiative at the Urban Institute. “And when residents struggle to make ends meet, cities can, too.”

In 2018, according to census data, the median household income in San Francisco County was $112,336, far higher than the statewide average of $75,277 and among one of the higher rates in the nine-county Bay Area. And yet an estimated 168,000 of the 360,000 families in San Francisco — or 47% — are considered financiall­y insecure, according to the report. The organizati­on’s estimates were based on 2014 data from the U.S. Census Bureau, which it analyzed and put into a predictive model for different U.S. cities, including San Francisco. No other Bay Area cities were included in the study of 10 major U.S. urban areas.

In San Francisco, families have to contend with skyrocketi­ng housing prices, which could explain why, despite earning so

much more than families in other counties and states, many in the city are still unable to save.

“We often think about income as a solution, but what we found in this research is that low-income families with savings are more financiall­y resilient than middle-income families without savings,” McKernan says. “If you’re lowincome with $2,000 or more, you’re less likely to be evicted and miss payments than a middle-income family that has no savings.”

Nationally, the report found, 52% of families are financiall­y insecure. Financiall­y insecure households that experience unexpected job losses or medical bills are 14 times more likely to be evicted than financiall­y secure households and three time more likely to miss a housing and utility payment. In San Francisco, researcher­s found, that can cost the city anywhere from $30 million to $70 million of its total annual budget.

Stil l, San Francisco fared better overall than many of the regions the Urban Institute analyzed:

Just 22% of San Francisco residents have delinquent debt, compared with 42% in Houston, 44% in Dallas and 36% in Columbus, Ohio. The median credit score of residents is also higher than peers in Houston, Dallas and Columbus. And 4% of San Franciscan­s have medical debt, compared with 11% in California and 16% nationally.

This article is part of The California Divide, a collaborat­ion among newsrooms examining income inequity and economic survival in California.

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