They wait on you at your favorite restaurants. They help raise your children as early childhood education aides. They patrol your streets. They change your parents’ bedpans at the personal care facility. They cut your grass. They are young families trying to get a start and save some money to buy a house. But they aren’t good enough to live next door to you. Actually, not even next door but across a state road and more than 200 yards away. They see your signs expressing contempt for them, hundreds of households in desperate need, like you were once and your kids are now, for a decent place to live. They need homes they can afford.