The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Seniors finding housing by sharing, renting rooms

- By Jeff Collins Jeffcollin­s@scng.com

Bobbie Hill has been renting out rooms in her two-story Claremont house since her first child went off to college more than 25 years ago.

Since then, at least 120 college students have boarded in her 112-year-old Craftsman-style home, helping the 82-year-old make ends meet. She now has five tenants, including her ex-husband, an artist who rents a backyard cottage and displays his sculptures throughout the property.

“I don’t have a retirement,” Hill said. “I’m totally dependent on my Social Security and my business of renting rooms to students.”

Hill said she loves her interactio­ns with young people, saying it makes her feel optimistic for the future. Her tenants say Hill is more mentor than landlord.

“If I ever have a problem, Bobbie is really willing to help,” said Tatiana Woliung, 24, a student at Claremont Graduate University. “It’s good for me. I can get along with people who aren’t my age.”

Hill’s house in leafy Claremont is an example of the unconventi­onal housing solutions already surfacing throughout Southern California and across the country as society ages.

Demographe­rs project Southern California’s senior population will grow by 1.2 million by 2030 and by an additional 852,000 the decade after that. The population of people younger than 65, meanwhile, will shrink steadily over the next 40 years.

By 2060, projection­s show, there will be close to 5.5 million people over 65, or 29% of the region’s total population.

As the region ages, housing options will evolve, with some seniors needing more support in their homes and others on fixed incomes struggling with finances.

Intergener­ational living will become common, sometimes with kin moving in together to share duties and expenses, sometimes with seniors renting rooms to non-family members in exchange for help around the house. Home sharing and co-living will become more convention­al. And one agency is experiment­ing with a backyard cottage program that saves some seniors from homelessne­ss.

A website called Silvernest helped Jocelyn Mccormick, 78, find a roommate after her husband died in the spring.

The online site pairs home seekers with people with rooms for rent. Some services on the site are free, although it charges a monthly fee for extras like background checks and sample lease agreements.

Mccormick, who retired from publishing nine years ago, logged onto the site, created a profile and soon had a dozen responses to sift through. She ultimately chose a woman in her mid-50s who, like Mccormick, spent much of her life abroad.

“I plan to travel next year and I wanted somebody to be in the apartment,” Mccormick said. “We don’t have to be best friends, but (I wanted) somebody I liked and could have a glass of wine with.”

Establishe­d in 2016, Silvernest has yet to turn a profit. But a growing wave of retirees could prove to be big business for Silvernest, Nesterly and other home-sharing websites down the road.

“There are a lot of people that are either on fixed incomes or working toward retirement,” Silvernest President Riley Gibson said. “They have extra space in their homes, but more and more of their money is just going toward food and shelter. Home-sharing can be just one of many ways for older adults to unlock some passive income.” Home-sharing is not new. The nonprofit Affordable Living for the Aging Home Share program has been around since 1978, finding roommates for about 2,500 senior Angelenos over the past four decades.

The average age of home providers is 75, while home seekers average 65 years old. The average rent is $600 a month and arrangemen­ts can include a combinatio­n of rent and tasks like cooking, cleaning or transporta­tion.

“Home providers who could use extra income in order to make ends meet … or who need assistance with light household tasks, and companions­hip, can be matched with roommates to provide that gap in services and help the homeowner remain living in place,” ALA Home Share Director Miriam Hall said. “Housing seekers benefit because they are securing housing in their price range when there are really no other options.”

Hall screens, matches and monitors home providers and seekers to make sure they’re compatible.

While home-sharing websites don’t provide such services, Gibson

said, they do provide online advice and security tips to help users find a suitable match.

“It’s not something to rush into,” Gibson said. “It’s something people should take time with and interview a number of different people.”

Another program matched seniors facing homelessne­ss with accessory dwelling units, or granny flats. A grant to the city of Los Angeles funded a pilot project, providing rent subsidies to tenants and qualified renters and ongoing support to landlords. The program matched 32 seniors with 25 homeowners before the funding ran out. Operators now are looking for new backers.

“This program has the potential to really make an impact on the housing crisis that we have with older adults,” said Jenna Hauss, CEO for Onegenerat­ion, the Sanfernand­o Valley senior services center that ran the program. “These are buildings that are already all over the place in Losangeles, and we’re using those to house seniors.”

Such programs hold promise, but still tend to be small, said Laura Trejo, director of the Losangeles County Aging and Disabiliti­es Department.

“We have to start thinking: How will we grow this?” Trejo said. “And how will we scale it to meet the needs of the community?”

“This program has the potential to really make an impact on the housing crisis that we have with older adults.”

— Jenna Hauss, CEO for Onegenerat­ion, a San Fernando Valley senior services center

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