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Sweat equity builds skills through Habitat in Okanogan communities
The
support of extended families in the Tonasket and Oroville area limits
the number of applications for Habitat for Humanity houses.
“Most hesitate to apply—even if they earn too little to pay rent or own
a house. They think someone else is more needy,” said Ivetta
Howell, building coordinator for the Okanogan affiliate of
Habitat.
“There may be 10 living in a grandparent’s home, but they may not think
they meet the criterion of need,” she said in a recent interview during
a workday in Oroville at the site of the affiliate’s fourth house in
eight years.
Ivetta said it’s as hard to raise funds as it is to
find families.
People in churches,
community organizations and businesses in Tonasket and Oroville never
know how they will raise the $40,000 needed to build a Habitat house,
but they have built two houses in Tonasket and are completing their
second in Oroville.
Area orchards have declined and have diversified from apples to pears,
cherries, apricots, nectarines and peaches. There were once four
apple warehouses in each community. Now there is one in
each. The area is economically depressed, but the affiliate has
raised the funds, she said.
Ivetta, a member of the Tonasket Community United Church of Christ,
said area churches contribute to fund raising. In addition to her
church, other area churches on the Church Relations Committee or
assisting are the Seventh Day Adventist, Assembly of God, Free
Methodist, and Holy Rosary Catholic in Tonasket; Immaculate Conception
Catholic, the Free Methodist, the United Methodist, Country Full Gospel
and the Episcopal Church in Oroville; the Church of the Brethren in
Ellisforde; Emmanuel Lutheran in Havillah and the Community Church in
Loomis.
Each year they hold a fund-raising house tour. Last year the
Havillah church arranged for Thrivent Financial to match up to $800 in
donations for the salad lunch and house tour. They raised $1,000
from the 70 participants, so had a total of $1,800.
Women in the churches make and raffled quilts. Men made and
raffled a storage shed.
On Sept. 19, the churches held an interdenominational service,
featuring a guest speaker and music from area churches.
“We build on faith, never knowing when we will receive funds from memorials, donations and fund raisers,”
Ivetta said.
Income also comes from homeowners
paying their mortgages.
They draw from the churches to recruit volunteers.
Vern Ritter heard an announcement at church that Habitat needed
volunteers, so he called and has come each work day. About eight
people are regular volunteers, working Thursdays and Saturdays.
Youth groups and others in churches join in to help when it’s time to
paint.
Interested people have found many ways to share their skills.
For example, Ruth and Bill La France are among those who bring
refreshments.
Last year, a reading teacher motivated students to read, saying the
elementary principal would donate a certain number of minutes of work
on the Habitat house for every book they read. He worked 200
hours in the summer. Other teachers joined him.
Midway Tile Supply is the source of building materials, giving a price
break. A local contractor, Bob Thompson, drew the plans,
excavated and poured cement. A plumber, an electrician and a
window installer donate their time.
AmeriCorps volunteers have also helped with Habitat houses.
When the local AmeriCorps
director left, the homeowner of the third house became the new
AmeriCorps director. Another homeowner, who had been
a janitor, gained confidence and skills through building his
house. Now he is head of the maintenance department at the
hospital in Tonasket. A local contractor hired the other previous
homeowner.
“Most just need a hand to get going, and their lives improve,” Ivetta
said.
The owners of the current home in
Oroville, Danny, 46, and his wife, Georgia, grew up in the area. They
were living in their mothers’ homes. They have two older children
in the military and a fourth and a sixth grader at home. He is on
disability because of heart problems. She is working two
jobs.
He is putting in the 500 hours of “sweat equity,” under the careful eye
of volunteer builders, Vern, Pete Liesmaki, Gene Howell and
others. They make sure he doesn’t overdo as he pounds nails.
“I lost my dad two years ago, but I’ve gained five dads working on the
house,” Danny said.
He said he is learning skills he can apply to a future trade, perhaps
cabinet building. He had helped his mother with remodeling her
place, but never had built a house from the ground up.
“I hope to find ways to give back to Habitat,” he said.
Ivetta, who moved to Tonasket in 1965, has been involved with Habitat
since it started.
“By building Habitat houses I have met people I would never have had
contact with,” she said. “It feels so good just to help someone
and to know we are making a difference in someone’s life.”
For information, call 486-2458. or email ivetta@televar.com.
By Mary Stamp, Fig Tree editor
- © October 2004
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