| Support those who support Habitat! |
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92.5 The Chief
ABC Sanitary
Adams Outdoor Advertising
Armstrong Lumber
Babyland
Bacon & Van Buskirk
Boltini's
Cement Masons & Plasters Local #143
Champaign Do-It-Best Hardware
Champaign Estate Sales
Champaign Heating & Air
Champaign Telephone Company
City of Champaign
City of Urbana
County Market on Kirby
Custom Flooring & Acoustics
Denver Mattress
Dodds Company
Dow Chemical
eXtra 99.1
Ezell Excavating
F & R Roofing
Flat Top Grill
Flooring Surfaces
Fry Access
Furniture Lounge
Geocon
The Great Frame Up
HDC Engineering
Herriott’s Party Rental
Home Depot
IBEW Local #601
IDSCO
Illiana Insulation
International Galleries
Judah Christian School
Kan-Doo Concrete
Kurt Crail Inc.
Larson
Laticrete International
Lowe's
Lutheran Social Services
MX Electric Inc.
Maxwell Counters
Meijer
Menard's
Mix 94.5
Nash Crane Service Inc.
New Prairie Construction
Pages for All Ages Bookstore
Patton Lumber
Peckham & Associates
Pekara Bakery
Prairie Productions
Prime Time Pizza
Prairie Central Materials
Prudential Landmark Real Estate
Ramada Ltd.
RC's Plumbing & HVAC
RP Lumber
Remco Electric
Reynold's Towing
St. Patrick’s Catholic Church
Sherwin Williams
Smith/Burgett Architects
Springfield Electric
Square D
Stevens Excavating
Storage Options Solutions
TSI Specialty Cleaning & Restoration
Thrivent Financial for Lutherans
UpClose
Vaspar
Wal-Mart in Urbana
Whirlpool
Williams Business Interiors
Workout 24
WIXY 100.3 |
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| Moving? Remodeling? Spring Cleaning? Donate to the ReStore! |
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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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| Skilled construction leaders needed for Gulf Coast rebuilding |
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Habitat
International is seeking skilled construction leaders to help rebuild
homes and lives in the Gulf Coast. Individuals should be able to lead
all phases of construction and manage unskilled volunteers. Funds are
available to defray expenses for individuals committing to at least one
month in the hurricane-impacted area.
If you meet the above criteria - even if you can't make a
month-long commitment, please contact Mark Van Lue, director,
Construction and Environmental Resources, HFHI, at mvanlue@habitat.org
or 800-HABITAT, ext. 2139. |
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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 |
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119 E. University Ave.
Champaign, IL 61820
(217) 355-6460 ReStore
(217) 359-0507 Administration
www.cuhabitat.org |
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| HfH is a member of Community Shares |
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| Brought to you by Champaign Telephone Co. |
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| Vacation Home Raffle through the 30th |
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At
the Working Women's Expo we began our week-long raffle for a 7-day
vacation at a private 4 bedroom, 3 bath vacation home in Orlando,
Florida. Relax by the pool, head to the hot tub or spend the week at
Disney World. Photos here.
This beautiful home is moments away from Mickey and Minnie! Our second
and third prizes are $100 and $50 gift certificates to the ReStore.
Tickets are $5 each or $20 for six. You may purchase them at the
ReStore cash register during regular business hours. We'll announce the
winners on Tuesday 1 May. Thank you to Homeway Homes for this generous donation. |
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| Treasures at the ReStore |
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| See new items here! |
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| Jakobsson & Frerichs to celebrate with the Sweids tomorrow! |
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The University of Illinois Habitat for Humanity Student Chapter
is concluding the school year by dedicating the home built in
partnership with the Sweid family at 925 N. 4th Street, Champaign, IL
61820. The ceremony is planned for Saturday, April 28th, 2007 at
10:00am at the new home.
The Sweids have been working with the student volunteers in
building their house each weekend. Jenna Hall, a first time volunteer,
said, “I really like being able to work side by side with the future
homeowner; to see just how much our help is appreciated.” Her friend
Ashley Soriano, who had previously worked with Habitat in high school
as well as with the Student Chapter, agrees that being able to see the
immediate effects of service is one of the most rewarding parts of
volunteering with Habitat for Humanity.
Work on the home began Saturday, September 16, 2006 (photos here).
Kurt Erbach, a sophomore at the University, recently helped install the
front porch on the home and noted, “it’s exciting to see the house all
the way through from start to finish. It’s almost hard to think that
just a few months ago this was nothing but a vacant lot with a hole in
the middle of it.” The students have logged over 600 volunteer hours
from construction occurring primarily on Saturdays. Fundraising began
in the fall of 2005, including “canning,” tournaments, races and a
“shanty town” on the University of Illinois Quad.
Freshman Aston Hunt likes getting to put in “a hard day of work with no
experience necessary.” In fact, the training that the students receive
on the build site is one of the most attractive parts of Habitat for
Humanity says Margaret Yoo. “It’s a great learning experience, useful
for my major [Architecture] and future homeownership, too.”
Saturday’s dedication will include recognition of volunteers,
certification of the house’s electrical system by IBEW Local 601,
comments from Rep. Naomi Jakobsson, Sen. Mike Frerichs and other
community leaders as well as words from the Sweid family themselves.
Please join us! |
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| Let's build! Thrivent & Women Builds |
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Our Thrivent Builds Homes/Illini Radio Group double-build for the Allen and Dominguez families
(507 and 509 E Bradley) begins soon. The groundbreaking is on Saturday,
19 May at 10 a.m. We'll be building each Saturday, 2 June to 8
September. The dedication is on Saturday, 15 September 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!
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). |
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| ReStore restores hope |
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Volunteers
consistently let us know that the reason they give of their time and
energy to Habitat is because they see the results of the generosity, be
it in a finished home or a family finding an affordable necessity in
the ReStore.
Our home improvement ReStore has daily opportunities for helping,
fellowship and fun. There are a few principal types of volunteers
needed at the ReStore:
+ Store Clerk
+ Cashier
+ Displays Assistant
+ Pick up & Delivery Drivers
+ Photographer
+ Flyer distribution
We do ask for a commitment of at least 1 shift per week for 4
months at the ReStore. Because the ReStore is a business and there is a
fair amount of training required, it is best for us to have reliable
volunteers who come in on a regular basis. Weekly ReStore orientations
are held on Saturday mornings at 9a and Wednesdays at 5:30p.
If you'd like to spend a few hours a week helping out in a relaxed and
welcoming environment, then contact Courtney Egg (e-mail, 217-355-6460
x116). |
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| New Threats to “The American Dream” |
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Part Two of a Three-Part Series by Mark Middleton, Finance Manager
In our first installment, we discussed the concern that between 1.2 and
2.2 million homeowners could lose their homes in the near future. If
you read about this issue in the popular press, the blame is placed
solidly on a part of the mortgage market called “sub-prime” mortgages.
But they are only a small part of the issue.
Economists classify over million homeowners whose homes are now in
jeopardy as “middle class.” These families are caught in the same
triple squeeze as the poor: rising interest rates, rising tax
assessments, and rising insurance rates combining to greatly exceed
increases in income.
Many mortgages in the past few years have moved beyond the
conventional fixed rate loan into “adjustable rate mortgages.” As
interest rates rise, mortgage payments are also “adjusted” upward.
Other loans were issued as “principal only” and deferred interest to
the future. In this case the homeowner is also “borrowing” the deferred
interest and the loan amount compounds on the deferred interest in
addition to unpaid principal.
These variable rate loans were issued with an intent to make the
initial monthly payments “affordable.” Within a few years, they are
not. Some middle class homeowners have seen their payments suddenly
increase by over $1500 per month! Their problems don’t end with
interest rate woes.
Most taxing authorities base real estate taxes on “market
valuation.” In many communities around the nation, market valuations
rose as part of a pricing “bubble” and homeowners were taxed
accordingly. However “valuation” is locked into a property until such
time as it is sold. In some Cook County communities real estate taxes
have moved from $5,000 to $12,000 a year for a relatively modest
residence over the space of just half a decade. Middle class incomes
have not kept up with that pace and people are being “taxed out” of
their own neighborhoods.
“The American Dream” of homeownership nets out for many as the
“American Nightmare.” With rising interest payments, taxes, and
insurance, it is not uncommon to see the cost of housing to reach 50%
of many families’ incomes.
Our goal at Habitat for Humanity is to provide simple, decent, and
affordable homes where payments, including taxes and insurance, are no
more than 30% partner family’s gross income. And Habitat’s ReStore
keeps home maintenance and home improvement affordable for every
homeowner or apartment dweller. Community support and generosity make
the dream possible.
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