A home of their own
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Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- About 70 Orange County women will soon be laying
concrete, building walls and tiling a roof for a single-parent family in
Costa Mesa.
Habitat for Humanity and the city’s Redevelopment Agency are
collaborating to develop three Del Mar Avenue homes for low-income
families.
One of the homes -- with construction slated to begin late this month
or early next month, depending on the rain -- will be built entirely by
women.
“It’s not that women do not normally participate,” said Barbara
Thomas, CEO of Habitat for Humanity of Orange County. “We have many women
volunteers, but they normally do the behind-the-scenes stuff. Although
there are a few women who do actual building, the majority of those
volunteers are always men.”
The house will be Habitat for Humanity of Orange County’s first
“women’s build” house, although women volunteering at other chapters of
the national organization have built several in the United States.
Thomas said the organization decided to make one of the houses a
women’s project to “really draw attention to the fact that women can do
anything” and to get the “other half” of the workforce involved in
eliminating substandard housing.
“We feel if we can mobilize the female half to build as well, there
will just be more people building,” she said.
The Orange County chapter, which opened in 1988, has built 84 homes
throughout the county.
Two of those homes are in Costa Mesa, including one on Wallace Street
and another on Del Mar Avenue, across the street from the site for the
three new homes.
Mayor Libby Cowan, City Councilwoman Linda Dixon and Planning
Commissioner Katrina Foley have already committed to the estimated 16
Saturdays it will take to raise the house.
Foley said she decided to participate to help families gain stability
and security in their lives.
“A home is important because it allows you to focus on caring for your
family, working or getting an education and not having to feel the
pressure of not knowing where you’re going to live,” she said. “What
better project to be involved in? Men dominate the construction industry
and this provides an opportunity for women to see women in those
professions and for the community to see how women can perform in those
roles, as well. Also, it will teach women trades that might be helpful in
their own personal lives and gives them the satisfaction of being
involved in a project literally from the ground to the roof.”
Also helping to build will be the single mother who will be moving
into the house with her four children, said Joan Ziegler, media relations
volunteer.
The mother, whose name has not yet been released, will be paying for
the house, in part, with 500 hours of “sweat equity.” She will also be
paying a 1% down payment and a long-term mortgage.
An all-women team is raising the money to build the house, estimated
to cost $70,000. The organization has so far raised $51,000 and is
gathering donations to try to raise the rest, Ziegler said.
Elizabeth Mahoney, volunteer committee chairwoman for the project,
said she hopes the home will be the first of an annual women’s building
event.
“The women’s build offers a unique opportunity for women to learn
about building in a fun and very empowering environment,” she said. “It’s
an opportunity to create a learning experience for women and also
[Habitat for Humanity] is recognizing this as a great opportunity to
expand their base of volunteers who will be building. It has a very
aggressive build schedule and would like to build many, many houses this
year.”
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