Hot housing market

People are facing higher costs to buy or rent a place to live.

After finishing his time in the Army, Tom Scaggs moved across the country last year to settle into a Nashua apartment with his wife and young son.

First, Scaggs found that the $1,300 a month he was paying for child care doomed his family’s chances of getting a VA mortgage to buy a house in the Nashua area.

What’s Working, a series exploring solutions for New Hampshire’s workforce needs, is sponsored by the New Hampshire Solutions Journalism Lab at the Nackey S. Loeb School of Communications and is funded by Eversource, Fidelity Investments, the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, the New Hampshire College & University Council, Northeast Delta Dental and the New Hampshire Coalition for Business and Education.

Contact reporter Michael Cousineau at mcousineau@unionleader.com. To read stories in the series, visit unionleader.com/whatsworking.