2013 - Habitat for Humanity of Washington, DC
Transcription
2013 - Habitat for Humanity of Washington, DC
Annual Report 2013 Table of Contents 03 / About Us 04 / Who We Are 05 / Letter from The Board Chair 06 / Homeowner Profile 08 / Homes for Vets Campaign 10 / Global Engagement 12 / Partner spotlight 13 / Fiscal Overview 14 / Our sponsors 97% of our homeowners say they are better off. ABOUT US There’s no place like home. Well, for some of us. But for others, home is not such a nice place. For some, it’s a building in major disrepair, a space that’s horribly overcrowded or even worse, a place that doesn’t exist at all. You’ll find them not just in third world countries, but here, in the shadow of D.C.’s mighty monuments, on the streets of our nation’s capital. They are our neighbors. And just as our museums and memorials belong to the D.C. community, so do the sub-standard homes of our city’s less fortunate. At Habitat for Humanity of Washington, D.C., we believe that all our neighbors deserve safe, decent homes they can afford – and there’s no better way to build our communities than to lend a hand. Because when we all donate what we can – whether it’s time, talent or money – we can build more homes for those in need. When volunteers, businesses, faith-based organizations and other groups come together and work as one, we can build faster, greener, more efficiently. And eventually all our neighbors can live in houses they truly want to call home. 02 03 Letter from The Board Chair WHO WE ARE STAFF Susanne Slater President & CEO Susan Moser Chair of the Board Rick Bowers Chief of Operations John Didiuk Vice Chair of the Board Jeff Brallier Project Manager Leila Finucane Secretary of the Board Paula Katrina Drago Volunteer Services & Coporate Partnerships Manager Yasamin Al-Askari Treasurer of the Board Agnes Hanna Mortgage & Accounting Associate Brian Monks Member of the Board Breanna Henderson Staff Accountant Debra Erb Member of the Board Daniel Hines Construction Supervisor Jean Gilbert Member of the Board Luke Hupp Assistant Construction Supervisor Corrine McIntosh-Douglas Member of the Board Mandy Jansen Office Administrator Margaret Meiers Member of the Board Peter Kiburi Director of Finance & Mortgage Servicing Charles Schilke Member of the Board Ashley Lemley Marketing & Development Associate Marti Tirinnanzi Member of the Board Andrew Modley Production Manager Mike Peterson Assistant Construction Supervisor Heather Phibbs Director of Marketing & Development Orlando Velez Manager of Housing Services 04 Board Members Dear Friends, 2013 has been a year of implementing long developed plans, pursuing exciting new opportunities and witnessing the dream of homeownership come true for a record number of partner families. For the first time in our 25-year history, we now have 18 homes in various stages of construction and rehabilitation, more than doubling our prior production levels. We are, once again, thankful for the many partnerships that make our work possible. One partnership in particular has borne fruit in a wide variety of ways. Working with the District’s Department of Housing and Community Development, under the leadership of Director Michael Kelly, we have been able to not only break ground on the final 11 homes in the third phase of our Ivy City development; but with his help we are now hard at work on a new development in the Ward 7 neighborhood of Randle Highlands, where we will be building homes for veterans in the coming years. Veteran initiatives were a high priority for us this year. In June, we joined Habitat International in a successful and highly visible “Veterans Build on the Mall.” As part of the four- day build, we hosted a well attended reception at the Capitol Visitors Center. Co-hosts James Schenck of the Pentagon Federal Credit Union and our own President and CEO Susanne Slater welcomed Senators and Members of Congress, senior military officials, , key District leaders and of course, our many donors. In addition, we held a moving dedication of a home to a formerly homeless veteran, Ken Harris, who stirred us with his vision and commitment to the ideals that motivate us all. We are grateful for the enthusiasm that our two new Board members and our newly formed Advisory Committee have brought to our organization. As the chair of the inaugural meeting, former HUD Secretary Henry Cisneros inspired the 17-member advisory committee to assist our Board and staff in ramping up our fundraising efforts in new and creative ways. And funds will indeed be needed to pursue our ambitious plans for the coming year. Building on our experience with small scale condominiums, we are purchasing land that enables us to venture into a promising urban model of multifamily condominiums, a form of homeownership that allows us to serve a greater variety and number of families in need. I want to thank our talented staff and Board, our donors, our volunteers and especially the dedicated AmeriCorps and Vista volunteers who provide invaluable energy and contribute so much to the vitality of DC Habitat. Thank you all for a productive year! In Partnership, Susan Moser Chair, Board of Directors 05 ‘‘Keep Moving Forward, step by step, unitl you reach that goal. That’s what I did. Now, I Have my own home.’’ A home dedication ceremony was held for Ken Harris on Veterans Day 2012, where he was joined by DC Habitat staff, Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton and executives from corporate sponsor MarriottFairfield Inns. In January of 2013, Mr. Harris moved into the rehabilitated home on Providence Street in the Ivy City community. Homeowner Profile Veteran Ken Harris Becomes a Homeowner in Ivy City “I was selfish when I was young,” he admits, but working on other people’s houses through Habitat’s sweat equity program has changed his perspective. “When you’re out there, sweating, tearing up concrete in the heat, for no pay, it gets you thinking,” he says. Mr. Harris hopes to continue volunteering even after becoming a homeowner. He says he hands fliers out to people because often they don’t know about the opportunities that are out there. When asked about his hopes for homeownership, he mentions cooking, moon walking to Billie Jean, and inviting his family over for a change. Most of all though, he says, “I’m just going to lock the door, sit, and relax.” Leaving his parents’ house at age 17, Ken Harris had no idea that it would take nearly thirty years before he would regain a stable roof over his head. Harris had made a commitment to his country by joining the army. He thought that when he returned, he might go to air traffic control school. However, like many vets, he became a member of the homeless community. To get by, he relied on family members, sleeping on their couches and accepting their hospitality. Other times, he had to sleep in his car. “I once spent a whole summer out by I-95 sleeping at a rest stop,” he recalls. It was Father’s Day 2008 that he decided it was time to change his life. Listening to a speech by Barack Obama, he decided he was “sick and tired of being sick and tired.” The speech must have resonated with his fatherly responsibilities and shortcomings, because within four years he turned his life around. With the same dedication and hard work that he demonstrated as a young man, Mr. Harris researched ways to pay off his debt, improve his credit score, and gain financial stability. He also secured a place in a local transitional housing program for homeless veterans, Q-Life. When he came across a Habitat for Humanity flier, he was prepared. He contacted Habitat’s Washington, DC office and began taking the steps to become a homeowner. 06 REHAB : BEFORE REHAB : AFTER 07 DC Habitat Launches Homes for Vets Campaign at build on the Mall event The event on the Mall served as the launch of DC Habitat’s own “Homes for Vets” campaign, supported locally by the DC Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD), the Chertoff Group, Freddie Mac, Pentagon Federal Credit Union and Wells Fargo. Following the event, three of the seven frames were moved to a permanent site in the Deanwood community of Northeast DC, where they are being fully constructed as homes for local veterans in need. The sun shone the morning of June 2nd, 2013, on a wooden foundation lying at the foot of the Washington Monument. This foundation would soon become the “hero house,” the first of seven house frames built on the National Mall during a week-long AmeriCorps build-athon called Veterans Build on the Mall. The seven frames built would symbolize each branch of the U.S. military, the Coast Guard, and National Service. During the week of Veterans Build on the Mall, DC Habitat hosted a Homes for Vets Campaign Kickoff Reception at the U.S. Capitol Visitor Center Atrium. More than 125 attendees took part in a cocktail reception followed by a speaking program. Congressional leaders, corporate sponsors, Washington, DC City officials, and military officers praised Habitat’s work and spoke in support of our campaign to provide affordable housing for veterans in our nation’s capital. Of the five AmeriCorps build-a-thons held across the nation, this one was special in that it was held to raise awareness of important opportunities offered through Habitat for Humanity International’s Veterans Build and Repair Corps programs. The programs aim to support and honor existing and retired military members and their families by offering affordable housing options, critical repair solutions and opportunities for volunteering, leadership and employment. Throughout that first week of June, AmeriCorps members, veterans and employees from sponsor companies Home Depot, Bank of America and MASCO worked to raise the walls of the seven symbolic homes. “The commitment to veterans and their families is two-fold: we serve them, and we ask them to serve with us,” said Wendy Spencer, CEO of the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS), during the opening ceremony. “Each year, CNCS programs reach more than 1.5 million veterans and military family members, and more than 27,000 veterans put their unique skills to work on a new mission on the homefront.” 08 As U.S. military forces continue to return home to DC from overseas deployments and make the transition back to civilian life, we are offering affordable housing and volunteer opportunities to veterans and their families. The Homes for Vets campaign will be a multi-year effort, and DC Habitat has acquired land from DHCD for a second veterans’ housing construction site. 6 homes were framed during the Build on the Mall event held in June. 09 in 2013, we donated funds to support habitat’s program in nicaragua, where: A new home can be built for as little as $6,000. Water & sanitation solutions are provided for as little as per household. $1,200 are being empowered Hundreds ofto women become income earners through business finance education & kitchen improvements. Global Engagement At DC Habitat, we believe that “humanity” extends further than one’s backyard. In our efforts to make an impact not just locally, but also globally, we tithe, or contribute, approximately 10 percent of the funds we raise to Habitat affiliates abroad. This means that every time you make a donation to DC Habitat, you're not only helping us to build affordable homes in the nation’s capital, but also in low-income communities around the world. In the past 25 years, DC Habitat has given over $330,000 to 17 countries in need, including El Salvador, India, Kenya, Mexico, Uganda, and Zimbabwe. This translates into homes for more than 100 families. Hen.’ The community’s name originates from chicken-like pre-Columbian etchings found on the walls of a nearby cave. La Gallina, along with the majority of the country of Nicaragua, is facing extreme poverty. More than 95 percent of the homes in La Gallina have dirt floors and are poorly constructed; drinking water and plumbing are largely inadequate to meet the residents’ needs. With a per capita income of about $1 per day, many families cannot overcome these challenges on their own. Habitat for Humanity is working to change these conditions and provide the families in Nicaragua with a better quality of life. Habitat for Humanity Nicaragua has made great strides in providing housing, water, and sanitation solutions in impoverished communities -- including many informal settlements. They have implemente new water systems, provided an ecological plumbing system, and built homes for those in need. Their goal is to provide 2,500 housing solutions and 3,000 support systems by 2015. This includes financial education, training in Nicaraguan housing law, home improvements, risk management, and community One of the Nicaraguan communities supported by DC development. With contributions from partners like DC Habitat, this goal will become a reality. Habitat contributions is that of La Gallina, or ‘The DC Habitat is currently working to focus its international support in the neighboring Central American region. In response to the devastating earthquake in Haiti, we contributed funds to Habitat’s program in that country from 2011 to 2012, and we are supporting Habitat Nicaragua in 2013 and 2014. In addition to our financial contributions, several of our employees and Board members have travelled to Nicaragua to help build during the past year. 10 Families earning less than $ $1 per day can make major home improvements through the help of micro-credits. 3,000 A total of nearly people were served in 2013 through housing improvements, water & sanitation solutions & technical assistance. Board member Debbie Erb on a 2013 Global Village trip in Nicaragua. 10 11 Photo by Simone D. McCourtie / World Bank Fiscal Overview Revenue $1,825,151 Sale of Homes Partner Spotlight: The World Bank Group The mission of the World Bank Group is two-fold: to end extreme poverty within a generation and to boost shared prosperity. One way that the World Bank Group is accomplishing their goals is through their partnership with DC Habitat. Over the past five years, the World Bank has contributed nearly $250,000 to our organization, making them one of our leading corporate partners. In addition, more than 100 World Bank employees have volunteered their time on our build sites. The World Bank’s progressive, results-oriented approach to poverty solutions is well aligned with DC Habitat’s housing philosophy. Lindsey Buss, Senior Officer of Community Outreach at the World Bank, believes in the importance of focusing on poverty alleviation around the world, while not forgetting about the problems in one’s own community. “World Bank Group staff come from all over the globe to work on the mission of ending poverty and boosting shared prosperity worldwide. At our Headquarters in Washington, DC, we focus intently on poverty that is thousands of miles away. But poverty exists everywhere. When we donate to Habitat through our workplace giving campaign, and especially when we participate in a Habitat build, we're able to express in our own community the values we work for on a daily basis,” Buss explains. The World Bank works closely with several Habitat affiliates, and backed several Habitat programs abroad, such as a land security deal in Cambodia and a Development Marketplace Grant in Kyrgyzstan. “The World Bank Group is proud to support the staff and Habitat with its own contributions as well,” says Buss. “Habitat has been a great partner for the World Bank Group and our staff as we live our value of fighting poverty every day, both here and abroad." $843,707 21% Contributions $41,173 Other Income 48% $870,004 1% Grant Support 23% $256,199 7% In Kind Goods and Services Expenses 8% 7% $347,912 Fundraising $344,401 Managment & General $3,882,950 85% 12 Construction & Programs 13 to our thousands of individual contributors and following corporate level sponors: Government & Community Partners $15,000 DC Department of Housing & Community Development Institute for Community Economics Local Initiatives Support Corporation (LISC) US Department of Housing and Urban Development Delman Mortenson Charitable Foundation Eaton Charitable Fund National Presbyterian Church Softwood Lumber Full House Partner $100,000 $10,000 National Geographic Society PriceWaterHouseCoopers Run Washington / Pacers Parsons The New School of Design Gerald Salzman Gold Hammer Partner $75,000 United Way of the National Capital Area Rotary Club of Washington, DC Silver Hammer Partner $50,000 Buildable Hours, Inc. Dorothy Downing Estate Fannie Mae The J. Willard & Alice S. Marriott Foundation Bronze Hammer Partners $25,000 Dennis M. Berry Bloomberg Habitat for Humanity International Wells Fargo World Bank Community Connections Fund $20,000 Citibank FSB Ken Valach 14 $5,000 Agua Fund, Inc. Cachendo LLC Cal State San Marcos Cherthoff Group Community Foundation for the National Capital Region Freddie Mac Corporation Gallup General Motors Foundation Grosvenor USA Limited Harris Foundation Michael & Heather Kuta Pentagon Federal Credit Union SAIC Symantec Corporation Teknion LLC Bradley Vogt $1,000 $1,000 (continued) Agriculture Federal Credit Union American Psychological Association The Arnold & Jeanne Berstein Fund Jennifer Baker Bike & Build Deborah Britt Stephen Bruce Scott Burroughs James Byrd The Carlyle Group Clark Construction Group, LLC Coakley & Williams D.C. Trial Lawyers Foundation Todd Dorrien Douglas Development Corporation Duncan, Weinberg, Genzer & Pembroke, P.C. Julian Eisenstein Peter Frias Judith French John G. & Jean R. Gosnell Foundation Nancy Gould Habitat for Humanity National Capital RSO The Mark & Annie Hansen Foundation Annos Hermanns Louis J. & Ruth G. Herr Foundation Thomas Horst Michael Kenefick Mari-Anne Pisarri Michele Ploeg PNC Bank Patrick Raher Reid Temple AME Church Julia Rosica RSO James Schoettler James Scott Bradford Seibert Steven Sher Ann Sigvaldsen Kris Smathers Snediker Family Charitable Fund Thomas Steinmetz Sterne Kessler Goldstein Fox Student Government Association School of Advanced International Studies Cheryl Sweigard United Way of Central Maryland United Way of Greater Atlanta University of Maryland MBA Assocation The Vinyl Institute Robert Weinberg Marjorie Wellman Michael Lestingi Ronald Linney Catherine MacNeil Hollinger Ellen Martin The Marvelwood School Walter McClenon Fund Janice McHenry Brian Monks Anita Morrison Susan Moser Dana Mulhauser National Association of Residential Property Managers Arnold & Porter LLP Bruegger’s Bagels Fin Pan Florida Tile Hunter Douglas Kohler Co. LaFarge Laticrete Schnieder D The Dow Chemical Co. US Airways Valspar Coporation Whirlpool Corporation In-Kind Goods & Services $100,000 was donated by invididuals during the 2012 holiday giving season, our most successful to date. 15 CFC #71579 United Way #8224 2115 Ward Court NW Suite 100 Washington, D.C. 20037 (202) 882-4600 www.dchabitat.org