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When a Hyundai is also the family home

When a Hyundai is also the family home

Veronica Vargas helps her children get ready for bed. The boys sleep in the back of the car while Veronica and Alex work the overnight shift. Rachel Wisniewski for NPR hide caption

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Rachel Wisniewski for NPR

Veronica Vargas helps her children get ready for bed. The boys sleep in the back of the car while Veronica and Alex work the overnight shift.

Rachel Wisniewski for NPR

Some families sacrifice nearly everything so their kids can go to the “right” schools.

In eastern Pennsylvania, Veronica Vargas and her longtime partner Alex put their sons to bed most nights in their car in the Walmart parking lot where they work. They’re doing it to keep their 11-, 13-, and 14-year-old boys in a sought-after public school district that’s nearby. We aren’t using Alex’s last name or the children’s names because of his concerns about people learning about their not having a home.

But it’s in an area where affordable rentals can be hard to get. So, the family’s Hyundai Santa Fe has become a bedroom, living room, and kitchen for five people.

“I’ve lost like 20 pounds,” Vargas said. “I don’t eat because of the stress.”

Veronica Vargas waits as her three boys get ready for school in the Walmart parking lot. Rachel Wisniewski for NPR hide caption

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Rachel Wisniewski for NPR

Veronica Vargas and her partner Alex drop off their boys at school on the morning and stop at their storage unit to switch out items from their car. Rachel Wisniewski for NPR hide caption

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Rachel Wisniewski for NPR

Veronica Vargas and her partner Alex drive around Allentown and its surrounding towns looking for apartments which might be available for rent. Rachel Wisniewski for NPR hide caption

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Rachel Wisniewski for NPR

When the family’s not at school or work, they spend most of their time in a local park.

They were living in Florida when the pandemic began, but Vargas lost her job as a Spanish language interpreter and Alex lost his telemarketing job. They were out of work for a while and it took a toll on their finances. They ran through over $20,000 in savings and eventually lost the home they rented.

Vargas and Alex moved north and now work full-time at a Walmart in the Allentown region of Pennsylvania. They relocated their family in order to work the overnight shift at the store. They were attracted to the wages; they each earn over $18 an hour.

“A lot of the workers know about the kids’ situation,” Vargas said.

Alex runs basketball drills with his sons at the park to prepare them for team tryouts. Rachel Wisniewski for NPR hide caption

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Rachel Wisniewski for NPR

Veronica Vargas and Alex’s children enjoy chicken as an after school snack at the park where their family spends each afternoon. Rachel Wisniewski for NPR hide caption

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Rachel Wisniewski for NPR

Veronica Vargas walks back to the car with her children. Rachel Wisniewski for NPR hide caption

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Rachel Wisniewski for NPR

Combined, Vargas and Alex make more than the median household income in the U.S., which is around $67,000 a year. So, they don’t qualify for government aid programs.

But living unhoused is expensive for a family of five.

They fill their car up with gasoline every day since they keep it running all night so the boys stay warm.

On top of that, there’s a car payment, occasional hotel stays, storage unit fees, $13 truck stop showers, and even frequent trips to the laundry mat so Veronica can get wrinkles out of the boys’ school clothes

It makes it hard for them to save the thousands of dollars they need for a security deposit and first and last month’s rent. Especially in the area they’re in now: the Parkland School District in Allentown’s suburbs.

The district attracts families because it has one of the region’s top-ranked high schools.

Diane Irish, a social worker at Parkland, explained that one-bedroom apartments within the school district can cost $1,800 a month. And landlords usually won’t even rent such a small unit to a family.

So, parents often overextend themselves financially just to keep their kids in Parkland’s schools.

Veronica Vargas drives her children to the park restroom. Rachel Wisniewski for NPR hide caption

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Rachel Wisniewski for NPR

Veronica Vargas and her partner Alex buy more gallons of water before their nightly outdoor shower. Rachel Wisniewski for NPR hide caption

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Rachel Wisniewski for NPR

Veronica Vargas does her family’s laundry at a laundromat on the evening. Rachel Wisniewski for NPR hide caption

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Rachel Wisniewski for NPR

“We don’t have a high concentration of true federally defined poverty, but we certainly have families that are not getting by or needing to make some really harsh choices and decisions in order to get by sacrificing one thing for another,” said Irish.

Ahmed Rahman, an economics professor at Lehigh University, said a “surprising” number of Americans are strapped for cash, even for things that seem basic, like homeownership, a car for each parent, college funds for kids, and a family vacation every year.

“Turns out that that package of products actually costs double what the median income of households is currently,” Rahman explained.

Rahman said that’s a “glaring example” of how Americans’ actual incomes fall short when it comes to a living standard we think is reasonable.

That said, Veronica and Alex are working on scrapping enough money together for their version of the American dream: putting their boys to bed in a house, not the back of an SUV. And a home near schools they trust to teach their sons.

Veronica Vargas, her partner Alex, and their three sons make one last stop at the family’s storage unit to grab the boys’ bedding. Rachel Wisniewski for NPR hide caption

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Rachel Wisniewski for NPR

Veronica Vargas and Alex’s sons make shadow puppets on the wall of the family’s storage unit on their last stop there for the night to grab their bedding. Rachel Wisniewski for NPR hide caption

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Rachel Wisniewski for NPR

Veronica Vargas and her partner Alex head into Walmart for their nightly shift. Rachel Wisniewski for NPR hide caption

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Rachel Wisniewski for NPR

Source: https://www.npr.org/2021/11/14/1053923521/housing-school-district-pennsylvania-parking-lot