News roundup: stories of community

in community stories, Housing

Students ‘Make a Difference’ volunteering at nine homes in Saginaw

Saginaw News – The three 16-year-old juniors joined about 170 students from 10 high schools who volunteered at nine Saginaw homes Thursday for Make a Difference Day. “It’s more rewarding than sitting in a classroom on a typical day,” said Webber. “Probably the best part was the bonding of kids between different schools and just coming together for the common good.”

Get outdoors, meet the neighbors

Lake Country Calendar – “Trails are an asset to the community just like parks, roads, and sewers,” says Dev Fraser. “They help promote healthy living, stimulate the economy and offer alternative opportunities for transportation. Most importantly though, I believe they make us better stewards of our environment. Being out in nature is the best way to build respect for it.” The trails were built using 100 per cent volunteer labour. Fraser says people in the community just heard about WALC’s activities and started joining in. Earlier this month a group of outdoor education students from George Elliot Secondary had a great time when they came out for a couple of sessions working on the trails. The District of Lake Country gives the group a small budget to work on with which to purchase tools, signs, gravel and surveying services.

Pilot paint program off to good start

Examiner-Enterprise – The City of Bartlesville recently began work on houses accepted for the pilot session of the Joseph’s Coat, an exterior paint program for low-income seniors/disabled property owners in Bartlesville. The program, recently passed by the Bartlesville City Council, is a collaboration between the city and St. Luke’s Episcopal Church. Applicants had to meet certain eligibility requirements, as did the proposed structure.

Protesters’ secret: they’re out there because it makes them happier

The Boston Globe. At least if recent research is to be believed, political activism, no matter the cause, seems to make people happy – even if they don’t win an election or triumph in a ballot initiative. Psychologists curious about what fuels human happiness have looked at political engagement and political activism, and they’ve found that it provides people with a sense of empowerment, of community, of freedom, and of transcendence. Political activists, in other words, are all happy warriors.

“People have psychological needs. If those needs are well satisfied, then people thrive, and if any of those needs are poorly satisfied, people don’t thrive,” says Tim Kasser, a psychology professor at Knox College and coauthor of a forthcoming paper on the topic. “Activism is a kind of activity that people can engage in that satisfies all of those needs.”

Volunteers help disabled senior stay in home

Going well beyond its mission to deliver daily meals, Meals On Wheels has teamed with other volunteers to renovate a Vista resident’s home that had fallen into serious disrepair. Oliver Mayfield, a retired aerospace engineering technician, has lived in the Sierra Estates neighborhood of Vista for more than 40 years. But after a stroke left him partially paralyzed three years ago, his home became dilapidated and even dangerous. Unable to navigate his chair through most of the home’s interior doorways or reach household appliances, Mayfield was confined to one room in his 800-square-foot home when a Meals On Wheels volunteer brought his plight to the attention of others.

Area Habitat Volunteers Gather To Dedicate 9 Homes

Tyler Morning Telegraph – Creating a safe community by uniting people from all walks of life so others can capture the American dream was “nothing short of a miracle,” a local pastor said. “I see a little bit of the kingdom of heaven,” said Rev. Stuart Baskin, senior pastor at First Presbyterian Church. One by one, homeowners told why they are humbled. Rosie Mastrolia-Parker was once homeless but now says she loves and appreciates the quiet, peaceful neighborhood. “I am so grateful to have a home, coming where I come from,” she told the crowd.

Churches join forces to build couple a new home

The Longmont Times-Call – The house is being built by volunteers from 10 local church congregations through Apostles Build, a program sponsored by Habitat for Humanity of the St. Vrain Valley. This is the first Apostles Build home the local Habitat affiliate has sponsored, executive director David Emerson said. The 10 participating churches provide volunteer crews and have pledged to collect the $80,000 needed to build the home. So far, they’ve raised $20,300.

Habitat for Humanity Home Receives A Lot of Help

in community stories, Housing

Transcript: Ground was broken on a new home back in May that is bringing one community together in the spirit of service.

Habitat for humanity is known across the country for helping people to live the dream of owning their home. Tuesday night that dream became a little closer to reality for one Pocatello family and its thanks to a group of young men.

It was a buzz of excitement as a couple dozen boy scouts offered a hand to the newest neighbors.

It may not look like much now, but in the coming months this foundation will take shape for the Sheppard family.

They received the good news last week that this habitat for humanity home would soon be theirs.

Tiffany is a single mom who lives in a cramped apartment with her two daughters. The three are more than ready for a space of their own.

Tiffany Sheppard, home recipient: “We’re just looking forward to going forward and getting into our new home.”

The excitement hasn’t settled down since the May groundbreaking. The boy scouts helped to shovel dirt, haul lumber, and move rocks. The work was done in preparation for Saturday’s framing crew.

Tiffany: “I’m ready to go forward. I’m so excited. It’s like a pay it forward process.”

Tiffany says this home brings a new outlook on life, something she is very grateful for.

Tiffany: “Put me in a better spot so I can take better care of my two girls. That’s the most important thing. I’m just really happy.”

The goal is to have the house completed by April 1st of next year. Organizers say is a very ambitious goal, but they are determined to reach it.

For more information about becoming a volunteer for Gate City Habitat for Humanity, please call (208) 233-9081.

via Habitat for Humanity Home Receives A Lot of Help – KPVI NEWS 6: Pocatello, Idaho Falls-Weather, Sports, News-. By Stuart Summers

Residents take over mobile-home park

in community stories, Housing

After four months of living in campers, motels and rentals, residents of Mountain Springs Villas Mobile Home Park in Red Lodge may be days away from moving home.

But it won’t be the same old neighborhood. Gone are the dirt streets and ugly power lines. Homes no longer sit haphazardly on cluttered lots, their foundations resting on bare ground. And when residents pay their monthly $235 for a space, the money goes not to a landlord, but to the residents’ association to which they all belong.

“Oh, it’s beautiful compared to what it was,” said Tami Hoth, one of the residents who helped organize rebirth of the 30-unit mobile-home park. “It was kind of the forgotten part of town.”

During a flurry of construction this summer, streets were paved, curbs and gutters installed, concrete foundations poured and sewer, water and utility lines were buried. Eleven of the 26 resident families will be moving into new mobile homes, 10 of them thanks to the efforts of District 7 Human Resources and Development Council, Hoth said. Only four spaces in Mountain Springs are vacant.

And it didn’t cost the city of Red Lodge a dime, said Mayor Betsy Scanlin, who is almost as excited about the project as the residents. Grants and loans covered the approximately $3.4 million in costs with a little in-kind help from the city.

Getting the grants

NeighborWorks, a nonprofit housing program headquartered in Great Falls, and HRDC “really started us on the right track,” Hoth said.

NeighborWorks hired Flynn Consulting of Helena as grant writers. Three grants resulted, Hoth said. The first was $450,000 to help buy the property. A $15,000 grant paid for planning and a preliminary plat. A $500,000 grant covered infrastructure improvement including paving, water and sewer and underground electric and gas lines.

A private loan and a Montana Board of Housing loan helped pay for the rest, said project administrator Julie Jones, owner of Single Tree Consulting in Bridger. Residents were also able to find help through the Montana Homeownership Network and the U.S. Housing and Urban Development’s HOME Investment Partnership Program, she said.

The best part of the project is that residents will not have to worry again about a landlord selling the ground out from under them, Scanlin said. They will have ownership through the association.

“They are going to have equity in their property now,” the mayor said. “I’m just delighted.”

A Community Development Block Grant helped find families places to live and pay for their temporary housing, Jones said. The grant also paid for some of the construction work.

Read the full story: Residents take over mobile-home park with government help. By Lorna Thackeray

From house to home

in community stories, Housing

Richard Parsons, president of the board of directors, Habitat for Humanity, York County, new homeowner Janalee Moquin, and her son Orion, 13, take a break from working on the Habitat for Humanity Home to talk about the project. Moquin and her son will be moving in upon completion. Deb Cram photo

Richard Parsons, president of the board of directors, Habitat for Humanity, York County, new homeowner Janalee Moquin, and her son Orion, 13, take a break from working on the Habitat for Humanity Home to talk about the project. Moquin and her son will be moving in upon completion. Deb Cram

The Habitat for Humanity house under construction on Hemlock Avenue is looking more like a home.

New owner Janalee Moquin and her son Orion, 13, of York, toured the interior of the simple ranch house on Friday, as an estimated dozen volunteers took a lunch break. Stud walls showed the outline of what will be an open-concept kitchen and living room, three bedrooms, a bath, and stairway to an unfinished basement with cement floor.

“It still seems like a dream,” said Moquin, who currently rents her home atop Mount Agamenticus.

The Habitat house has given her the opportunity to become a property owner in York, a town admittedly in need of affordable housing.

She and Orion plan to move in by the end of the year.

Professional contractors, working at a discounted rate, and volunteers, including Moquin and her son, work on the house every Friday and Saturday.

The house is a $100,000 project, according to Richard Parsons, president of the board of directors, York County Habitat for Humanity.

Moquin will assume taxes on the property and the estimated $100,000 mortgage, the latter payable to Habitat at no interest. The mortgage helps pay for the next project, Parsons said. Her mortgage price, including taxes, will be slightly more than what she is currently paying for rent, she said.

“We’ll feel like we’re in more of a community,” said Moquin, who has already brought cookies to her new neighbors.

Habitat looked at 16 applicants and made its evaluation based on the applicant’s financial need, whether he or she lived in York, worked in town, and had a record of volunteering. Moquin, who cleans the Town Hall and beach rest rooms, fit on all counts, said Parsons. She was notified on June 24.

Since July 27, when the foundation was poured, Moquin has been at work on the house. She is required to put in 400 hours of sweat equity.

“I have no technical knowledge hammering nails,” she said.

There’s still plenty to be done on the project that wouldn’t get completed without volunteer help or donations.

Parsons gives much credit to fundraiser and volunteer, resident Walter Woods. Woods, of Graystone Builders of Maine, is doing the site work at a reduced rate. Over the Labor Day weekend, he held a bonfire benefit for the project that raised $4,345.

Other volunteers include York police, who built a retaining wall and steps out back, and selectmen Chairman Mike Estes, who is installing the heating system.

“I think it’s a great thing to do,” said volunteer Jean Quinn.

Read the full story: From house to home | SeacoastOnline.com. By Susan Morse