'Sweat equity' helps
provide new home
By CHRISTOPHER SPENCER
For the South Arkansas Sunday News
EL DORADO -- As Lillie
Green stood in her cramped, two-bedroom
mobile home, ankle-deep water covering the floor, she knew that she had
to get out. If not for herself, then for her children.
A water hose leading to
the washing machine had burst while
the Green family was at church that Sunday morning, and by the time
they returned home, the water was everywhere and stood several inches
deep.
While staying with
relatives, the family waited for the
insurance money to arrive; money which would let them resume their
lives with some degree of normalcy. Along with a check for $200, came a
cancellation notice, she said.
Green, a single mother of
three children, knew that the $200
would do little to bring her home back to its original condition.
With large water spots,
and weakened timbers in the floor,
Green, an employee of Employment Security Division for over 20 years,
tried to piece-meal wooden timbers and repairs as best she could on her
limited budget.
Unable to make proper
repairs to the trailer's floor, it
wasn't long before the weakened floor began to fall in, and rot away.
But, trapped by economic circumstances, the family of four was unable
to move elsewhere.
That was five years ago,
she said, now things are different.
Green and her family --
two daughters, Brittany and Adrienne
and son, Brian -- recently attended a ceremony dedicating a newly-built
house, their house.
Built with their own
hands and with the help and effort of El
Dorado's Habitat for Humanity, it will be a special moment for the
family. A moment that almost didn't come.
Although Green had heard
about Habitat five years ago from a
friend, she didn't think it would do her family any good. Instead, she
did what she could to dress up their deteriorating trailer, and make it
as presentable as possible.
The turning point came
when some of Brittany's classmates
started teasing the young girl about the condition of her house.
Ashamed and embarrassed, Brittany told her mother what was happening.
"I'm like the Rock of
Gibraltar," Green said, "but when it
comes to my kids I come unglued."
Unable to secure a loan
from a bank to build or buy a house,
she knew of only one alternative, Habitat for Humanity. So, she went
down and got an application for Habitat's program, filled it out and
sent it in.
But what Green didn't
know was that Brittany had also sent in
a letter of her own, telling the local chapter of Habitat what her
family's situation was like.
Five weeks later Green
heard from Pat Callaway, chairperson of
the family selection committee. It's a moment that Green remembers only
in snippets, so shocked was she when Callaway told her she had been
selected to receive a home.
But receiving a home,
according to Habitat, does not mean a
handout. It means being given the opportunity to buy your own home.
It's not a handout, it's a hand-up, goes the organization's unofficial
motto.
And it quickly became
apparent to Green that it wouldn't be
easy. The house was a charred shell, just a wooden skeleton which had
been ravaged by fire.
In a system called "sweat
equity," future homeowners are
required to work at least 500 hours on Habitat projects. So, Green and
her family rolled up their sleeves and did just that.
On weekends and
off-hours, the team of volunteers worked. Amid
the sounds of construction, and 10-year-old son, Brian, showing off his
new room to anyone within earshot, the house slowly began to take form,
looking less like an outline and more like the four-bedroom, two-bath
home they would live in, as the months passed.
"I never saw it as poles,
it was always a house to me," Green
said. "I just said, we've got work to do, and that's what we did." In
all, the family worked over 300 hours.
In the latter part of
May, the Green family received a key to
the developing house, so they could put finishing touches on the house
in their spare time.
"I remember one day, when
I went inside the house and turned
on the air-conditioning. For me, that was when it became a home," Green
stated.
Today, when the family
officially receives the home at the
dedication ceremony, it will be a culmination of many hours of
strenuous labor.
Once she accepts the
house, Green will be accepting the
house's mortgage. An interest-free debt, which will be paid out every
month for the next 20 years. It is the 14th house that Habitat has
built locally, and the note
that Green pays will go to future building projects.
Excited, happy and
relieved to be finished, still Green is a
bit sad to see it all end.
"Its been such a
fantastic experience. ... you just meet so
many people," she said. "It's been a lot of hard work, but its been
filled with joy."
The joy found in helping
someone, the joy of people working
together in the spirit of goodwill, it's these emotions which created
this home, says Green.
And, of course, the joy
in owning one's own home, adds Green,
is part of it. A goal, which for too long had seemed like only a dream
to her.
"Habitat looks at need
rather than finances ... Habitat
provided another way for us."
Anyone interested in more
information about Habitat for
Humanity can contact Sue Ellen Dillard at 862-7170.
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