| Thank you to our Sweid/Student home build
sponsors |
| |
Material and Service Donors ABC
Sanitary Armstrong Cash & Carry Lumber Cabinetland
Ltd. Cement Masons & Plasters Local #143 Champaign Heating
and Air Champaign Telephone Company City of
Champaign Custom Flooring & Acoustics Ezell
Excavating F & R Roofing Fry Access, LLC HDC
Engineering IBEW Local #601 IDSCO Illini FS Illiana
Insulation Kurt B. Crail Inc. LSSI Prison
Partnership Maxwell Counters MX Electric Inc. Nash Crane
Service Inc. Patton Lumber Prairie Central RC's Plumbing
& HVAC RP Lumber Sam's Drywall Springfield
Electric Stevens Excavating Storage Options
Solutions
Cash Donors Orange Krush
Foundation Habitat for Humanity ReStore
Food
Donors Chipotle Papa John's Silvermine
Subs University Dining Services.
University
Supporters Vice Chancellor Romano Board of Trustees
Jack Collins Diane Jeffers Christopher Kantas Jason
Schmitz |
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| Volunteer Social Hour this
Tuesday |
| |
| Volunteer Social Hour on Tuesday, May 8, from 5pm-7pm
at Boltini Lounge in downtown Champaign. Bring a warm smile, a firm
handshake, and get ready to mix it up with those you know... and
those you'd like to know! Never been to Boltini? Here's a helpful
map: http://snipurl.com/wod7. |
|
| Mother's Day Sale coming up next
week! |
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| 15% off everything in the store - Friday &
Saturday, May 11 & 12!! Please note: the ReStore will be closed
Sunday, May 13 for Mother's Day. |
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| Moving? Remodeling? Spring Cleaning? Donate to the
ReStore! |
| |
Drop off donations are accepted any time during store
hours. Please pull up to the southeast garage door and ring bell for
assistance.
Too large for your vehicle? Schedule a donation
pick up! Donation pick ups are a $5 fee in C-U, and $10 outside C-U
within a 15 mile radius. Contact us at (217)355-6460 x120 or
ReStore@cuhabitat.org to schedule. |
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| Wanted: Lovers of Volunteers |
| |
| We are in need of fun-loving, detail oriented
individuals to join our Volunteer Committee. This Committee works to
recognize and thank all of our volunteers through events and other
activities. Please contact either Courtney (volunteer@cuhabitat.org
or 355-6460 x 116) or Ellen (house@cuhabitat.org or 359-0507 x 110)
for more information. |
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| Wanted: Speakers |
| |
If you like speaking to groups and are passionate
about Habitat, we need you! Requests come in regularly for
presentations to schools, businesses and churches, groups of 5 to
100.
The Faith Relations/Speakers Bureau has developed an
application for Habiteers who want to make their skills available.
Applicants will indicate availability, skill and audience
preferences. After training and "ride-alongs," members of the
speaker pool will be contacted according to their
preferences.
For more information, contact Eileen
(director@cuhabitat.org, 217-359-0507 x111). Thank you!
|
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| ReStore Hours |
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Tuesdays - Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. Sundays from 1 - 5 p.m.
Coming soon: summer hours
starting in June! |
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| Habitat for Humanity Champaign County and
ReStore |
| |
119 E. University Ave. Champaign, IL 61820 (217)
355-6460 ReStore (217) 359-0507
Administration www.cuhabitat.org |
| | |
| Brought to you by Champaign Telephone
Co. |
| |
 |
|
| Congratulations to the Students and
Sweids |
| |
The Sweids on WCIA 3 on the building of their home: video
News-Gazette article by Julie Wurth: Habitat
opens door to dream for Syrian family
Special thanks to
Senator Frerichs and Representative Jakobsson for joining us last
Saturday, April 28 to celebrate the completion of our 46th
home.
Please help us thank all of the students who
volunteered their time to raise funds and build the home alongside
the Sweids:
Timothy Alegarbes, Eric Anderson, Jenele Anderson, Jessa
Barcus, Diana Baren, Stephanie Becker, Sarah Blatti, Jonathon
Bluemke, Adam Borhart, Rick Borucke, Deborah Bynard, Sharon Cabana,
Manuel Colon, Katie Connelly, Jessica Corrie, Emma Danley, Mallory
Darnell, Lewis DeJaegher, Stephen Delia, Thomas Engstrom, Kurt
Erbach, Kara Fishburn, Emily Fotzler, Anamae Freehauf, Kathryn
Galli, Michael Gilmer, Amanda Goddard, Jen Gonzalez, Michele Grant,
Caitlin Griffin, Tripta Gupta, Jenna Hall, Zaynab Hameeduddin,
Daniel Heun, Phillip Hogan, Laura Horan, David Hruska, Sung-Chan
Huang, Aston Hunt, John Jast, Rob Johnson, Joyce Ke, Lindsey Kerber,
Stephanie Kilburn, Jamie Kim, John Kim, Matthew Knight, Gretchen
Kopec, Christen Kunkler, Amy Kuo, Stephanie Larson, Matthew Law,
Holly Lechniak, Samantha Lee, Christine Liang, Eric Lindberg,
Jessica Martin, Jenna Link, Matthew Livas, Jimin Loh, Alecia Lotysz,
Ryan Luchtefeld, Hien Luu, Lisa Mackowski, Marella McMurray, Ryan
Mercer, Ryan Meschewski, Joyce Rebeca Meza, Fitih Mohammed, Daniel
Morgan, Alyssa Morris, Benjamin Neidich, Ben Nugent, Shana O'Brien, Erica Van Ollefen, Bennett Parkhurst,
Neal Patel, Robert Petersen, James Pierson, Elaine Pimentel, Alyssa
Pleune, Miranda Pollak, Katie Prendergast, Collin Reeser, Liz Regan,
Sonya Robinson, Jeffrey Ross, Paul Say, Kim Scarabello, Rebecca
Schield, Brett Siegel, Scott Snyder, Meng Song, Ashley Soriano,
Jonathon Stevens, Daniel Stich, Eric Surber, Sarah Syman, Erik
Tamas, Allison Tegge, Lik Yin Teh, Angel Thomas, Ryan Ting, Matt
Tobin, Caitlin Tribout, Jessica Wayer, Michael Welburn, Breanna
Weston, Christopher Wirtz, Margaret Yoo, John Zeman and David
Zimmerman.
Lastly, thank you to the Student Chapter Board of
Directors:
President Eric Sheu, Vice President Shari
Grieger, Treasurer Jeff Green, Education and Advocacy Coordinator
Chad Russell, Family Connections Coordinator Sandra Lu, Fundraising
Coordinators Stephanie Gioiosa and An Nguyen, Publicity Coordinator
Kathryn Galli, Special Events Coordinators Marli Bardell and Elaine
Estes, ReStore Coordinator Paul Hopkins, Volunteer Outreach
Coordinator Charles Blatti. |
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| Treasures at the ReStore |
| |
See new items here!
Mother's
Day Sale: 15% off everything in the store - Friday & Saturday,
May 11 & 12!!
Please note: the ReStore will be closed
Sunday, May 13 for Mother's Day itself. |
|
| Hammer time |
| |
Our Thrivent Builds Homes/Illini Radio Group
double-build for the Allen
and Dominguez families (507 and 509 E Bradley) begins with the
groundbreaking is on Saturday, 19 May at 10 a.m.
The full
build schedule, including tasks and needs, is listed here.
If you'd like to volunteer as a crew leader, crew member or
lunch provider, please contact Ellen Willcox (house@cuhabitat.org or
359-0507 x110). At least half of each crew will come from area
Lutheran congregations, the remainder from the community at large.
Community united! |
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| Women Build Homes |
| |
 On Mother's Day, May 13, we will launch our latest
Women Build Homes partnership with the Corona
family.
Women Build is a Habitat for Humanity
International program that encourages women and girls to have fun
and make a difference by building homes and communities.
If
you would like to take part in the build as a member of the steering
committee, build volunteer, food volunteer or fundraiser, please
contact Eileen Gebbie (director@cuhabitat.org, 217-359-0507
x111). |
|
| More than picking up a
hammer |
| |
| Looking to get involved but Saturdays on the build
site don't fit your schedule? We have any number of ways you can get
involved with Habitat for Humanity. Volunteering with the ReStore is
an ongoing opportunity that supports building homes, building
relationships and building community. It can be as hands on as
helping with our delivery service to as simple as collecting plastic
shopping bags for the store's use. For more information about
volunteering with the ReStore, please contact Courtney at
volunteer@cuhabitat.org or 355-6460 x 116. |
|
| New Threats to "The American Dream"
|
| |
Part Three of a Three Part series by Mark Middleton,
Finance Manager
In our first two articles, we noted between
1.2 and 2.2 million homeowners could lose their homes in the near
future. We showed that this is not just a problem for low income
people. Is there anything the average homeowner can do to avoid this
dire condition?
The first step comes from our good friends,
the Mennonites: "it is a gift to be simple." The decision to
simplify means making purchases based on practical necessity rather
than pure desire. When my wife and I moved to Champaign from the
Chicago suburbs, a beautiful house in an elegant sub-division
strongly tempted us. Then we considered our age and our future
ability to pay increasingly higher payments over 30 years. We bought
a two-bedroom, one bath "fixer upper" and applied the Habitat for
Humanity philosophy: "simple, decent, affordable" using a low
interest 15 year mortgage. This single decision resulted in lower
housing payments. It also means we pay a thousand dollars less in
taxes and hundreds of dollars less for insurance.
This
principle leads to our second step: "make a budget and live within
it." Of course, crisis beyond our control can threaten our financial
well-being. The death of a family member, the loss of a job,
unexpected medical costs, a major vehicle breakdown, or a natural
storm disaster can wreck havoc on the best household budget. In
these cases, it is important to communicate with creditors to work
on mutually acceptable terms.
The third step is to just say
"no" to easy, but high-priced, credit. If you are a homeowner, you
probably are deluged with offers to "lower your monthly payment" or
"pay no interest until 2008!" When you look past the hype and read
the fine print, you learn that these offers are often on
interest-only adjustable-rate conditions, or deferred interest
arrangements which will ultimately apply rates as high as 25%! If
you must borrow, conventional local sources such as your
neighborhood bank or credit union can offer more affordable
solutions.
Finally, I've learned along with many other local
consumers, to reuse and recycle, as well as bargain shop, at
ReStore! Over the past two years, we've purchased many new and
"gently used" donations from the ReStore at a fraction of retail
cost. And since ReStore sells home improvement items from appliances
to ceramic tile to paint, we've found it possible to maintain and
improve our home at much lower cost. Shoppers recently were able to
buy whole boxes of imported tile for the retail purchase price of
just one or two tiles each. Shopping ReStore is a great service to
the family budget as well as the community.
In making
decisions slowly and with community support, the American Dream may
survive. |
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