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THE HABITAT - Habitat for Humanity Canada

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<strong>THE</strong> <strong>HABITAT</strong><br />

2011<br />

SPRING/SUMMER<br />

News and Views <strong>for</strong> the Friends of <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong><br />

Possibility and<br />

Progress Starts<br />

with Home<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Humanity</strong><br />

Abroad<br />

Building Homes<br />

with Hope


contents<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

dwell<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong> News & Views<br />

Possibility and Progress<br />

Starts With Home<br />

New <strong>Habitat</strong> Program Targeting the<br />

Key Activities Proven to Build<br />

Sustainable Communities<br />

There’s No Place Like Home<br />

The Impact of a Safe, Secure Place to Live<br />

Trans<strong>for</strong>ming Communities<br />

Through Leadership<br />

and Collaboration<br />

National Leadership Council to<br />

be a Voice <strong>for</strong> Change<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> Abroad<br />

Government Support Received<br />

<strong>for</strong> Haiti Projects; Volunteers<br />

Building a Global Village<br />

Building Homes with Hope<br />

Writing Contest Winner to Provide<br />

a Wellington County Family with<br />

the Hand Up of Homeownership<br />

COVER: CHRISTINA RYAN AND HER DAUGHTER,<br />

EMILY, AT <strong>THE</strong>IR FULLY ACCESSIBLE <strong>HABITAT</strong><br />

HOME IN CALGARY, AB (PHOTO BY CHRIS BOLIN)<br />

The <strong>Habitat</strong> Spirit, a<br />

publication of <strong>Habitat</strong><br />

<strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>,<br />

seeks to promote<br />

communication, discussion<br />

and networking among<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

affiliates, volunteers<br />

and supporters.<br />

QUESTIONS OR COMMENTS<br />

SHOULD BE SENT TO:<br />

<strong>HABITAT</strong> FOR<br />

HUMANITY CANADA<br />

477 Mount Pleasant Rd.,<br />

Suite 105, Toronto, ON<br />

M4S 2L9 1.800.667.5137<br />

Fax: 416.646.0574<br />

habitat@habitat.ca<br />

www.habitat.ca<br />

PHOTO CREDITS:<br />

The photos contained in<br />

this newsletter were<br />

provided courtesy of<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

<strong>Canada</strong>, its affiliates and<br />

HFHI unless attributed<br />

otherwise.<br />

Visit the newly<br />

redesigned<br />

habitat.ca!<br />

Earlier this year, HFHC<br />

launched a redesigned<br />

website, which we hope<br />

will offer our volunteers<br />

and donors more up to<br />

date and dynamic content<br />

that is easier to access<br />

and browse. Check it out<br />

at habitat.ca, and visit<br />

us on facebook to tell<br />

us what you think!<br />

SPECIAL THANKS TO:<br />

Christina Ryan<br />

John McMahon<br />

Jean Geary<br />

Soapbox Design<br />

Communications Inc.<br />

RR Donnelley<br />

HFHI<br />

HFHC Resource<br />

Development Team<br />

A Message from our<br />

President & CEO<br />

Building Our Organization’s<br />

Ability to Impact More<br />

Families and Communities<br />

Now into our second quarter-century in <strong>Canada</strong>,<br />

we are looking to 2011 to be our most successful yet.<br />

A major accomplishment of this year will be the<br />

completion of our 2,000th house, which will be built<br />

over a two-week blitz build in Winnipeg, Manitoba<br />

this July. Interestingly, this home will be built adjacent<br />

to <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> Winnipeg’s 200th house,<br />

and both will be built as part of the third phase of<br />

the Sir Sam Steele housing development — the<br />

greenest af<strong>for</strong>dable housing project in <strong>Canada</strong>,<br />

which will provide shelter to 32 low-income<br />

families once completed.<br />

With 72 affiliates across <strong>Canada</strong>, <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Humanity</strong> has the presence needed to serve the majority<br />

of the Canadian population in housing need. So, in<br />

order to increase our organization’s impact, we must<br />

focus on ensuring that our affiliates have the tools<br />

they need to build more homes than ever be<strong>for</strong>e.<br />

For us at <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>, this means<br />

constantly innovating our programs and looking <strong>for</strong><br />

new ways to serve families and communities.<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong>’s key activities focus on<br />

providing homeownership while reducing<br />

environmental impact; ensuring that our partner<br />

families have the tools they need to succeed<br />

with their new home; engaging our volunteers;<br />

collaborating and partnering with surrounding<br />

communities, and private and public partners;<br />

and, ensuring the safety of our build sites and other<br />

work areas. Ultimately, the ability of our affiliates<br />

to serve more families each year does not come<br />

down to just the wood and nails required to build<br />

the home, but rather to developing their capacity<br />

in each and every one of these key areas. This is<br />

why <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong> is launching the<br />

360 Built Smart Partnership, a program that has<br />

identified each of these activities as a pillar, and<br />

will drive support to our affiliates <strong>for</strong> capacitybuilding<br />

relating to each (read more about the 360<br />

Built Smart Partnership on page 6).<br />

Another way we are looking to extend our<br />

organization’s ability to serve more low-income<br />

families is through ReNew It, a program that<br />

will enable our affiliates to assist families with<br />

owner-occupied properties by working with<br />

volunteers to undertake critical repairs or needed<br />

modifications. Staying consistent with the same<br />

principals we apply to our homeownership program,<br />

ReNew It will require qualified applicants to repay<br />

the cost of materials and contracted services at no<br />

interest and through af<strong>for</strong>dable monthly payments.<br />

These programs will enable us to impact more<br />

families and communities, but as always, this will<br />

only be made possible through the dedication<br />

and passion of our supporters. Whether you have<br />

volunteered with an affiliate, have donated to our<br />

cause or advocated on our behalf, you’ve been a<br />

critical part of our past and the success we were able<br />

to achieve in our first 25 years. As we look to the<br />

future of our organization — focused on building<br />

even more homes <strong>for</strong> more families — your<br />

continued support and dedication is needed now<br />

more than ever. Be a part of our past and our future;<br />

join us this year in breaking the cycle of poverty<br />

<strong>for</strong> low-income Canadians.<br />

Sincerely,<br />

Stewart Hardacre<br />

President & CEO<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong><br />

2 <strong>THE</strong> <strong>HABITAT</strong> SPIRIT Spring/Summer 2011 To donate, participate or advocate visit www.habitat.ca 3


dwell<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong><br />

News & Views<br />

dwell<br />

2011: A Year of <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> Anniversaries<br />

RESTORE 20TH ANNIVERSARY<br />

This year marks several anniversaries of <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> in <strong>Canada</strong>, including that of ReStores, a concept<br />

first developed by five volunteers in Winnipeg 20 years ago. Quickly proving its worth, the idea caught on and<br />

today there are 65 ReStores selling new and gently used building materials and home décor items in <strong>Canada</strong>,<br />

with hundreds more spread across the United States.<br />

Equally important to the deals that can be had at ReStores is their environmental and social impact. In 2010,<br />

ReStores diverted over 20,000 lbs of material from landfill and recycled 2.1 million lbs of metal. As well, through<br />

the sale of ReStore items, a lot of which is marked down by up to 75%, ReStores raise substantial funds <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong>’s homebuilding ef<strong>for</strong>ts in <strong>Canada</strong>.<br />

ReStores rely heavily upon their surrounding communities: on volunteers in their operation and on community<br />

members to donate salable items. Visit habitat.ca to find and support your local ReStore.<br />

PEI<br />

15TH ANNIVERSARY<br />

“As with any teenager celebrating<br />

their 15th birthday, <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Humanity</strong> PEI is going to spend<br />

it with its friends doing what it<br />

loves – building homes <strong>for</strong> families!...<br />

You’re invited to one of the biggest<br />

parties in PEI this year. Come<br />

help us celebrate!”<br />

– Susan Zambonin, Executive Director,<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> PEI<br />

For their 15th year, <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

PEI plans to build five homes, providing<br />

homeownership to 34 PEI residents<br />

currently living in substandard housing.<br />

<br />

<br />

HAMILTON<br />

20TH ANNIVERSARY<br />

“<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> Hamilton<br />

is looking <strong>for</strong>ward to our next<br />

twenty years with a vision that<br />

will not only provide opportunity<br />

to more families, but will contribute<br />

to the redevelopment of one of<br />

Hamilton’s oldest neighbourhoods.<br />

While our early years were marked<br />

with challenges, we look <strong>for</strong>ward<br />

to having learned from these<br />

and building at a rate that will<br />

place our affiliate as a leader in<br />

providing homeownership to<br />

hardworking families.”<br />

– Bob McConkey, Executive Director,<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> Hamilton<br />

This year has already seen <strong>Habitat</strong><br />

<strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> Hamilton dedicate<br />

four homes, setting in motion a<br />

trans<strong>for</strong>mation that will impact the lives<br />

of four partner families <strong>for</strong> generations<br />

to come. The homes are part of an<br />

eight-unit townhouse development,<br />

with the remainder of the units to be<br />

completed and dedicated later this<br />

year. With these homes, <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Humanity</strong> Hamilton is working towards<br />

the city’s goal of making Hamilton the<br />

best place to raise a child.<br />

EDMONTON<br />

20TH ANNIVERSARY<br />

“We’re able to celebrate because<br />

of the incredible vision and<br />

determination of those who started<br />

the <strong>Habitat</strong> program in Edmonton<br />

twenty years ago. These folks set<br />

the foundation <strong>for</strong> us to be able<br />

to reach our current goal of<br />

serving 100 partner families each<br />

and every year by 2012.”<br />

– Alfred Nikolai, President & CEO,<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> Edmonton<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> Edmonton<br />

built approximately one home per<br />

year during its first decade in<br />

Edmonton. In 2011, they plan to serve<br />

over 80 families with the hand up of<br />

homeownership. <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

Edmonton celebrated its 20th<br />

anniversary with their second annual<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> Day in the Capital Region,<br />

a campaign that saw five builders<br />

each donate a home to the affiliate.<br />

Governor General of <strong>Canada</strong><br />

Puts Hammer to Nails<br />

On January 14th, His Excellency the<br />

Right Honourable David Johnston, Governor<br />

General of <strong>Canada</strong>, visited <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

Toronto’s William’s Way build site to lend a helping<br />

hand and mark his acceptance of vice-regal<br />

patronage of <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong> (HFHC).<br />

His Excellency arrived at the site eager to build,<br />

despite the day’s frigid temperatures. After meeting<br />

several <strong>Habitat</strong> partner families and volunteers,<br />

His Excellency got to work, cutting floorboards<br />

and nailing and sealing them into place.<br />

Following this, His Excellency, along with<br />

Stewart Hardacre, President and CEO of HFHC,<br />

and Neil Hetherington, CEO of <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Humanity</strong> Toronto, addressed the crowd in<br />

attendance, thanking them <strong>for</strong> their contributions<br />

in making the William’s Way project possible.<br />

The twenty townhouses that will be built at the<br />

William’s Way site will provide safe, decent and<br />

af<strong>for</strong>dable shelter to 96 women, men and children<br />

currently living in substandard housing in Toronto.<br />

The build is also the site of <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong>’s<br />

first solar-panel technology homes in <strong>Canada</strong>,<br />

which will meet GreenHouse® certified construction<br />

standards and will be 25-30% more energy efficient<br />

than those constructed to standard building code.<br />

His Excellency, Carrying-on a<br />

Tradition of Patronage<br />

By accepting patronage of HFHC, His Excellency<br />

is carrying-on the tradition created by the two<br />

previous Governor Generals of <strong>Canada</strong>, the Right<br />

Honourable Michaëlle Jean and the Right<br />

Honourable Edward Schreyer. This public expression<br />

of support will continue to bring significant<br />

awareness to the critical issue of af<strong>for</strong>dable housing<br />

in <strong>Canada</strong>, and will further <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

<strong>Canada</strong>’s work in breaking the cycle of poverty <strong>for</strong><br />

Canadian families.<br />

“The enthusiasm and support already expressed<br />

<strong>for</strong> our cause by His Excellency truly has been<br />

remarkable,” said Hardacre. “I want to thank the<br />

Governor General <strong>for</strong> his endorsement of our work<br />

and encouragement of our ef<strong>for</strong>ts, and welcome<br />

him to the <strong>Habitat</strong> Family.”<br />

2011 Outstanding Contribution Award Recipients<br />

In Honour of All of Our Fantastic Volunteers<br />

As a way to honour all of our terrific volunteers, who every year give their time<br />

and voice to advance our mission and raise awareness of <strong>Canada</strong>’s af<strong>for</strong>dable housing<br />

crisis, we recognized seven volunteers by posting their inspirational stories on our<br />

website over the 2011 National Volunteer Week. These Outstanding Contribution<br />

Award Recipients were: Joe Dauk, Wayne Helfrich, Martin Blake, Don and<br />

Lynda Sellar, Noelle Nurse, Sarah Saso and Mario Zambonin. Thanks to<br />

everyone who shared their volunteer stories with us – they were truly inspirational.<br />

And thanks again to all of our fantastic volunteers!<br />

Buy a Hammer,<br />

Build Your<br />

Community<br />

Buy a $2 ‘paper<br />

hammer’ from<br />

June 2 to July 3,<br />

2011, at your nearest<br />

The Home Depot<br />

location and support<br />

local charities including<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong>.<br />

The Home Depot<br />

<strong>Canada</strong> Foundation<br />

will match the amount<br />

raised by the top<br />

per<strong>for</strong>ming district.<br />

Visit habitat.ca <strong>for</strong><br />

participating stores.<br />

20 11<br />

4 <strong>THE</strong> <strong>HABITAT</strong> SPIRIT Spring/Summer 2011 To donate, participate or advocate visit www.habitat.ca 5


Announcing the<br />

New Program to Create Lasting Change <strong>for</strong> Canadian Communities<br />

Home is a place where big<br />

plans grow. More than a<br />

refuge from the world<br />

outside, a home provides<br />

safety, stability, and self-esteem to the<br />

families that our communities<br />

are built upon.<br />

For those who lack a home – especially<br />

children – the impact can be devastating.<br />

Worldwide, more than 10 million people<br />

die each year from conditions related to<br />

substandard housing, and in <strong>Canada</strong>,<br />

those who lack af<strong>for</strong>dable housing are:<br />

<br />

meningitis, respiratory problems<br />

or asthma;<br />

<br />

school; and<br />

<br />

unemployed as adults.<br />

Nationwide, one in seven children still<br />

lives in poverty and four million people<br />

live in core housing need. More recently,<br />

the United Nations stated that <strong>Canada</strong> is<br />

facing a national emergency on poverty,<br />

welfare, homelessness, and housing.<br />

Since 1985, <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

<strong>Canada</strong> has worked tirelessly towards<br />

our vision of a world where everyone has<br />

a safe and decent place to live. Our<br />

mission is to build af<strong>for</strong>dable housing<br />

and to promote homeownership as a<br />

means of empowering families to break<br />

the cycle of poverty. Through our work,<br />

we have seen the trans<strong>for</strong>mative impact<br />

that housing can have on families and<br />

on the communities in which they live.<br />

You might be surprised to know how<br />

many doors the key to a single home can<br />

open: kids do better in school; parents’<br />

employment prospects improve; and<br />

families report that they are happier and<br />

better equipped to face life’s challenges.<br />

Ultimately, good housing attracts<br />

economic investment and development<br />

in our communities, and contributes to<br />

thriving school systems and community<br />

organizations. <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong>’s<br />

model, which focuses on volunteerism<br />

and af<strong>for</strong>dable housing, leads to the<br />

development of stronger, healthier, and<br />

more sustainable communities.<br />

However, today many of our 72<br />

Canadian affiliates struggle to find the<br />

land, products, and financial donations<br />

they need to allow them to continue<br />

their work. They require support in areas<br />

critical to engaging volunteers, building<br />

homes, and training families in how to<br />

succeed with their new asset.<br />

As a result, on May 31st, <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong> will publically launch<br />

a new initiative called the 360 Built<br />

Smart Partnership, designed to drive<br />

support to local affiliates to help them<br />

proactively address the af<strong>for</strong>dable<br />

housing crisis in their communities. The<br />

program takes a 360-degree approach,<br />

funding the key activities that have been<br />

proven to build sustainable communities:<br />

1. Homeownership & Environmental<br />

Impact – Providing access to<br />

homeownership while reducing<br />

environmental impact though our<br />

green builds and ReStores<br />

2. Family Outreach & Financial<br />

Education – Helping affiliates seek out<br />

families in need in their communities<br />

and helping partner families succeed<br />

with homeownership over the long<br />

term though financial literacy and<br />

homeowner training<br />

3. Volunteer Engagement – Rallying<br />

communities and volunteers to<br />

tangibly take part in our work<br />

4. Local Collaboration & Partnership<br />

Engaging both public and private<br />

partners in long-term solutions<br />

5. Safety Commitment – Fostering safety<br />

on our build sites, and in all areas of<br />

our work<br />

Research has shown that investing in<br />

these activities leads to long-term social<br />

paybacks in the areas of improved health,<br />

educational and economic opportunities.<br />

“We’re very excited <strong>for</strong> the launch<br />

of the 360 Built Smart Partnership,”<br />

said Stewart Hardacre, President and<br />

CEO of <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>.<br />

“Conquering <strong>Canada</strong>’s af<strong>for</strong>dable housing<br />

crisis requires more than funding <strong>for</strong><br />

home builds; it requires a conscious and<br />

holistic approach that addresses all aspects<br />

of the need <strong>for</strong> af<strong>for</strong>dable housing.”<br />

LEADING BY EXAMPLE<br />

Since 1996, The Home Depot<br />

<strong>Canada</strong> and The Home Depot <strong>Canada</strong><br />

Foundation have provided tens of<br />

thousands of skilled, volunteer labour<br />

hours and millions of dollars in cash<br />

and in-kind donations to <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Humanity</strong>’s housing projects across the<br />

country. To extend their commitment<br />

to developing safe and healthy housing<br />

solutions <strong>for</strong> Canadian families in need,<br />

The Home Depot <strong>Canada</strong> Foundation<br />

recently made a three-year commitment<br />

to support sustainable community<br />

development through the 360 Built Smart<br />

Partnership. They are joined by Holcim<br />

(<strong>Canada</strong>) Inc., who has also made<br />

significant financial and in-kind<br />

contributions towards the program.<br />

Together, these organizations will<br />

encourage and empower their employees to<br />

take a leadership role in their communities<br />

by volunteering on build sites or on local<br />

boards and committees. As business<br />

leaders, they believe in going beyond the<br />

bottom line to help lead our country<br />

toward a better future.<br />

“Be<strong>for</strong>e a family can set their sights on<br />

where they’re going, they must first have<br />

a place to begin. We believe that a home is<br />

a starting point; a safe place where people<br />

and their ideas thrive. The trans<strong>for</strong>mation<br />

that we can ignite, whether through a<br />

single home, or through thousands of<br />

homes, truly is profound and enduring,”<br />

Peg Hunter, Vice President, Marketing and<br />

Communications, The Home Depot<br />

<strong>Canada</strong> and Secretary, The Home Depot<br />

<strong>Canada</strong> Foundation.<br />

Together, we are calling on Canadians<br />

and Canadian organizations to support the<br />

360 Built Smart Partnership program to<br />

ensure lasting change <strong>for</strong> families in need.<br />

<strong>THE</strong> RIPPLE EFFECT STARTS WITH YOU<br />

The 360 Built Smart Partnership will be<br />

a powerful movement to drive change, but<br />

we can’t do it alone. We are now calling<br />

on the support of all Canadians. Donate<br />

to the 360 Built Smart Partnership and<br />

bring about trans<strong>for</strong>mation to families and<br />

communities across the country that will<br />

impact generations to come. Donate now<br />

online at habitat.ca, by calling 1-800-667-<br />

5137 ext. 230, or by completing the reply<br />

card included with this newsletter.<br />

Bridging Personal<br />

Volunteerism<br />

and Corporate Social<br />

Responsibility<br />

Jean-Maurice Forget<br />

General Manager, Demix Agrégats (Holcim <strong>Canada</strong>)<br />

Administrator, <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> Montreal Board of Administrators<br />

HUNG ON <strong>THE</strong> refrigerator of a nearly-completed <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

Montreal house was a photo of the family that would soon move in. For me,<br />

just this simple image made everything that I had heard about <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Humanity</strong> seem so much more tangible – the fact that a real family would<br />

experience a real trans<strong>for</strong>mation within the walls around me. That they would<br />

become homeowners and create a legacy impacting generations to come.<br />

I passionately believe in the work of <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>, so when<br />

their Montreal affiliate asked <strong>for</strong> my volunteer support, I agreed whole-heartedly.<br />

I now serve on their board of administrators, working with a dedicated and<br />

skilled group that is focused on building the affiliate’s capacity.<br />

Benefitting from our work are people like Abdellatif Aabid, who moved<br />

his family from Morocco to Montreal eight years ago in hopes of a better life.<br />

An engineer in Morocco, he was able to find work relatively quickly, but was<br />

unable to secure either safe and af<strong>for</strong>dable rental accommodation or financing<br />

to purchase a home. It was then that Abdellatif turned to <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

Montreal. I later found out that it was a photo of the Aabid family that I had<br />

noticed on the refrigerator of the build site I had visited.<br />

My passion <strong>for</strong> <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> is one of the reasons I am proud to work<br />

<strong>for</strong> Holcim <strong>Canada</strong>, an organization that also supports the cause with great<br />

dedication. Since 2003, Holcim <strong>Canada</strong> has been a charitable partner of <strong>Habitat</strong><br />

<strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>, committing more recently to becoming a 360 Built Smart<br />

Partnership Title Sponsor. I find it extremely fulfilling to be able to manage this<br />

partnership <strong>for</strong> Holcim in Quebec, a region of great potential <strong>for</strong> <strong>Habitat</strong>’s work<br />

and permanent impact.<br />

Paul Ostrander, CEO of Holcim <strong>Canada</strong>, said last October, “no longer<br />

does corporate giving involve an arm’s-length financial donation that gets<br />

logged in the books as another transaction and nothing more.” Gone are the<br />

days of hollow corporate social responsibility. Today “partnership” means so<br />

much more, and I can say from experience that we’re all better <strong>for</strong> it. Our<br />

communities will not improve by themselves and many Canadian families,<br />

despite their best ef<strong>for</strong>ts, have not been able to break free of the cycle of<br />

poverty on their own.<br />

Through their homeownership program, <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> provides<br />

families with the tools they need to be confident and proud homeowners who<br />

are able to contribute to and better their communities. This is the same line of<br />

thinking that we apply at Holcim <strong>Canada</strong>, as we seek to build our employees’<br />

pride and sense of ownership in the company with every opportunity.<br />

For me, it is inspiring to be part of <strong>Habitat</strong> both personally and professionally.<br />

I know that with the continued combined support of Holcim and its employees,<br />

our impact on communities and what it means to be “socially responsible” will<br />

continue to be undeniable.<br />

6 <strong>THE</strong> <strong>HABITAT</strong> SPIRIT Spring/Summer 2011<br />

To donate, to advocate or participate visit www.habitat.ca 7


Please help us<br />

trans<strong>for</strong>m the lives<br />

of more families like<br />

the Ryan’s. Please<br />

give to <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>.<br />

Trans<strong>for</strong>ming Communities Through<br />

Leadership and Collaboration<br />

Stewart Hardacre, President & CEO, <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong><br />

There’s No Place<br />

Like Home<br />

The Impact of a Safe, Secure<br />

Place to Live<br />

For a single mother of two working three jobs while putting<br />

herself through school, finding out that the apartment<br />

she rented was being sold was not welcome news. Finding<br />

a place where her daughter, Emily, who suffers from<br />

Down syndrome, could live wasn’t easy.<br />

“There just weren’t a lot of options <strong>for</strong> a single mom with<br />

two kids, one who is in a wheelchair,” says Christina Ryan.<br />

Financially stressed in one of <strong>Canada</strong>’s most unaf<strong>for</strong>dable<br />

housing markets, Christina turned to <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

Calgary. She attended a family in<strong>for</strong>mation session, applying<br />

<strong>for</strong> a home with a zero interest mortgage that would be<br />

geared to her income.<br />

Several months later, Christina received the news that<br />

she’d been hoping <strong>for</strong> — <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> Calgary<br />

had matched her with a home they were planning to build.<br />

“After meeting Christina, we knew that the hand up of<br />

a <strong>Habitat</strong> home would empower her to do many of the<br />

things that she was not previously able, while substantially<br />

improving the standard of living of her and her daughters,”<br />

said John McMahon, <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> Calgary<br />

Faith Coordinator.<br />

In 2008, <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> Calgary had completed<br />

a fully accessible home <strong>for</strong> the Ryan family in the community<br />

of Evanston in Northwest Calgary.<br />

Now, Christina no longer has to carry her daughter<br />

and wheelchair up and down stairs as she had to at their<br />

apartment building, a task she says she wouldn’t be able<br />

to do now that Emily is almost 12 years old. And the<br />

af<strong>for</strong>dable mortgage payments allowed Christina to<br />

purchase a vehicle with a wheelchair lift.<br />

“We can now do more things and go more places as<br />

a family,” she says.<br />

Christina has also found professional success, opening<br />

her own photography business and regularly lends her<br />

skills to her local <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> affiliate that made<br />

it all possible.<br />

PHOTO BY CHRIS BOLIN<br />

2010 was a landmark year <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>, it marked<br />

25 years of breaking the cycle of poverty<br />

by offering families in need of af<strong>for</strong>dable<br />

housing a dignified and permanent solution.<br />

By the end of the year, an additional 238<br />

families across the country had recieved the<br />

hand up of homeownership — the greatest<br />

number in our 25-year history.<br />

Sadly however, housing insecurity<br />

remains a persistent issue affecting<br />

1.3 million Canadian families.<br />

According to a recent Wellesley<br />

Institute report, the effect of the lack<br />

of af<strong>for</strong>dable housing on Canadians’<br />

health is reducing our nation’s<br />

productivity, limiting our national<br />

competitiveness, and indirectly driving<br />

up the cost of health care and welfare<br />

(“Precarious Housing in <strong>Canada</strong>,” 2010).<br />

The nationwide af<strong>for</strong>dable housing crisis<br />

is costly to individuals, communities,<br />

the economy, and the government.<br />

Together, we can and must do more.<br />

That’s why <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong><br />

has created a National Leadership Council,<br />

a group of prominent Canadian leaders<br />

who are passionate about creating<br />

solutions to <strong>Canada</strong>’s housing crisis.<br />

They have pledged to devote their<br />

personal time, expertise and influence<br />

to raise awareness and understanding<br />

of the problem of inadequate housing<br />

and the effectiveness of solutions<br />

centered around homeownership.<br />

We are delighted that Cossette<br />

President and CEO Brett Marchand,<br />

who has led his agency to international<br />

acclaim, has agreed to chair the Council.<br />

To date, invitations to join the Council<br />

have also been accepted by:<br />

<br />

CEO, Delta Hotels and Resorts<br />

<br />

Holcim (<strong>Canada</strong>) Inc.<br />

<br />

Tachane Foundation<br />

We will also be announcing council<br />

members from The Home Depot <strong>Canada</strong>,<br />

MCAP, and RBC shortly.<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong>’s work is well<br />

known, but not always fully understood.<br />

Many people are familiar with our builds,<br />

but are unaware that our model empowers<br />

families to own their own home. Partner<br />

families take out af<strong>for</strong>dable, interest-free<br />

mortgages that are paid into a revolving<br />

fund, which is used to help other families<br />

in housing need by financing future<br />

builds. Many people are also often<br />

unaware of the links between housing<br />

insecurity and the determinants of health,<br />

educational outcomes and employment.<br />

Because many of our National<br />

Leadership Council members have been<br />

involved with our cause <strong>for</strong> a number<br />

of years, witnessing the impact of our<br />

work, they are best-placed to tell our<br />

story and inspire others to get involved<br />

as donors, volunteers and advocates.<br />

They know first-hand that housing is so<br />

much more than four walls and a roof: it<br />

is a point of trans<strong>for</strong>mation that opens<br />

the door to education, health, security<br />

and dignity. They have seen families lifted<br />

up as children’s grades improve and<br />

parents are able to start saving <strong>for</strong> their<br />

futures. They’ve seen families once<br />

dependent on social services become<br />

taxpayers and contributors to the<br />

economic base of the community.<br />

They understand that an investment<br />

in housing isn’t a band-aid solution; it<br />

is a gateway to change, and change<br />

that lasts <strong>for</strong> generations.<br />

The National Leadership Council<br />

will be a powerful voice <strong>for</strong> change.<br />

With respected leaders sharing our<br />

message with communities nationwide,<br />

we will inspire more Canadians than<br />

ever be<strong>for</strong>e to invest in <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Humanity</strong>: a permanent and perpetual<br />

investment that pays itself back time<br />

and time and time again. Look <strong>for</strong><br />

more in<strong>for</strong>mation on the Council in<br />

the coming months.<br />

“Since becoming involved with <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>, I’ve become more aware of the<br />

struggles that many families face when it comes to housing insecurity. As business leaders,<br />

I believe that we must take a leadership position on the issue and we must do so by investing in<br />

the development of Canadian communities. I am eager to play a meaningful role on <strong>Habitat</strong>’s<br />

National Leadership Council — driving awareness and support to <strong>Habitat</strong>’s work across the country.<br />

I’ve seen the trans<strong>for</strong>mation that results when a family moves into a home that they own and<br />

it is this trans<strong>for</strong>mative impact that gives me hope that our contribution to this issue is truly<br />

making a difference,” Hank Stackhouse, CEO, Delta Hotels and Resorts<br />

8 <strong>THE</strong> <strong>HABITAT</strong> SPIRIT Spring/Summer 2011 To donate, to advocate or participate visit www.habitat.ca 9


National Partners<br />

The key to <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>’s success is<br />

the generous contributions we receive from our corporate,<br />

foundation, individual and government partners.<br />

Thank you to all of them.<br />

MULTI-<br />

YEAR<br />

DONORS<br />

A special “Thank You” to our committed multi-year<br />

partners. Your long-term investment helps us plan into<br />

the future and better achieve our mission to build<br />

sustainable communities across the country.<br />

LEGACY PARTNERS<br />

SINGLE<br />

YEAR<br />

DONORS<br />

PLATINUM PARTNERS<br />

PLATINUM PARTNERS<br />

SILVER PARTNERS<br />

GOLD PARTNERS<br />

BRONZE PARTNERS<br />

Tachane Foundation<br />

SILVER PARTNERS<br />

We are <strong>for</strong>tunate to have many committed partners – not all could be listed here. To view<br />

our complete donor list, please visit habitat.ca. To learn more about partnership opportunities,<br />

contact Matthew Gustafson at (416) 644-0988 ext. 352 or mgustafson@habitat.ca.<br />

10 <strong>THE</strong> <strong>HABITAT</strong> SPIRIT Spring/Summer 2011<br />

To donate, participate or advocate visit www.habitat.ca 11


<strong>HABITAT</strong> FOR HUMANITY ABROAD<br />

<strong>HABITAT</strong><br />

FOR<br />

HUMANITY<br />

ABROAD<br />

Significant Funds<br />

Committed by<br />

CIDA to <strong>Habitat</strong><br />

<strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

<strong>Canada</strong>’s<br />

Rebuilding<br />

Ef<strong>for</strong>ts in Haiti<br />

On March 2nd,<br />

the Government of<br />

<strong>Canada</strong> announced its<br />

commitment of almost<br />

$1.3 million to support<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

<strong>Canada</strong>’s rebuilding<br />

projects in Simon Pele,<br />

a low-income, high density,<br />

earthquake affected area<br />

of Port-au-Prince.<br />

With this financial support, <strong>Habitat</strong><br />

<strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong> (HFHC) plans<br />

to repair 175 homes and install 100<br />

sanitation facilities. This will involve<br />

the training of local residents at a<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> Resource Centre in repair and<br />

reconstruction techniques, employing<br />

and empowering Haitians in an area<br />

with high unemployment.<br />

As well, with this funding HFHC plans<br />

to provide primary health care clinics<br />

to the community, educating 10,000<br />

community members on major health<br />

issues, immunizing 100 pregnant women<br />

and 900 children, and providing health<br />

supplies to 3,000 households and two<br />

schools. This component of the relief<br />

ef<strong>for</strong>t will be delivered under the<br />

direction of HFHC by Rayjon ShareCare,<br />

a Canadian NGO that has been working<br />

in Haiti <strong>for</strong> 25 years.<br />

The Government of <strong>Canada</strong> provides<br />

funding <strong>for</strong> this initiative through the<br />

Canadian International Development<br />

Agency (CIDA).<br />

The State of Haiti,<br />

a Year Later<br />

The magnitude 7.0 earthquake that struck<br />

the Caribbean nation on January 12th,<br />

2010, just 10 miles west of the capital,<br />

Port-au-Prince, damaged nearly 190,000<br />

houses. Just over a year later, one million<br />

survivors are still displaced. Afraid to<br />

return to their homes, they are suffering<br />

severe overcrowding, health and security<br />

risks. Yet the Ministry of Public Works,<br />

Transport and Communications’ initial<br />

Building Habitability Assessments<br />

indicates that nearly 80% of damaged<br />

homes can be safely repaired and/or<br />

retrofitted while being strengthened<br />

in order to be able to withstand<br />

future disasters.<br />

Simon Pele was suggested to HFHC<br />

as a community of focus by <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Humanity</strong> Haiti following a request from<br />

the United Nations Shelter Cluster to<br />

consider developing a neighbourhood<br />

program there, as it was not previously<br />

being served by any other shelter<br />

organization.<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

Responds to Devastation<br />

Triggered by Earthquake<br />

in Japan<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong> (HFHC)<br />

sends its thoughts and prayers to all those<br />

affected by the 8.9 magnitude earthquake<br />

and tsunami that devastated areas of Japan<br />

on March 11th, 2011. In response, HFHC<br />

is currently working with <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Humanity</strong> International, <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Humanity</strong> Japan and other NGO partners<br />

to assess the situation and determine how<br />

and where <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> can be<br />

of most help.<br />

Currently, <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

International is sending leadership<br />

representatives to Japan to determine<br />

potential operational plans. We expect the<br />

response to include domestic volunteer<br />

engagement with key NGO partners, and<br />

potentially direct activities focused on<br />

home clean-up and repair, although this<br />

latter element will be a function of<br />

resources, capacity, and specific needs<br />

of those affected by this disaster.<br />

Orest Myckan<br />

Building a<br />

Global Village<br />

Some see retirement<br />

as the end of an era,<br />

others see it as just<br />

the beginning.<br />

For Orest Myckan, retirement has given<br />

him the chance to travel the world while<br />

helping those less <strong>for</strong>tunate. Since retiring<br />

in 1997, he’s participated in 19 <strong>Habitat</strong><br />

<strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> Global Village builds<br />

around the world.<br />

“When retirement came along I said<br />

no more meetings, no more committees,”<br />

remembers Orest, who spent his career<br />

working as a human resources specialist.<br />

He was a long-time volunteer with <strong>Habitat</strong><br />

<strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> in his local community in<br />

Edmonton, but the year he retired, he<br />

joined his first <strong>Habitat</strong> build abroad –<br />

traveling to Honduras to erect a house<br />

<strong>for</strong> a family in need.<br />

Orest began leading trips in 2000.<br />

“Once I started, I just couldn’t stop,”<br />

he says, “the experiences were just<br />

so fulfilling.”<br />

Over the course of the last decade,<br />

Orest’s builds have taken him from<br />

Guatemala, the Philippines, Jamaica<br />

and Mexico to Cost Rica, Nicaragua,<br />

El Salvador, the Dominican Republic<br />

and even Iqualuit.<br />

<strong>HABITAT</strong> FOR HUMANITY CANADA’S GLOBAL VILLAGE PROGRAM:<br />

Volunteers Building Homes and<br />

Building Hope <strong>for</strong> Families Abroad<br />

IMAGINE TRAVELING into the interior of the Cambodian<br />

jungle, to the Northern Island of Hawaii, or to the mountainous<br />

region of Uganda to immerse yourself in the local culture,<br />

working to build safe and secure homes side-by-side with local<br />

residents who have welcomed you as their own. You’d be<br />

changing lives, and your own life would likely be changed in<br />

the process too.<br />

Since its beginnings in 2005 when <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

<strong>Canada</strong>’s Global Village program sent one trip of 20 volunteers<br />

to Uganda, the program has exploded in popularity, now<br />

having impacted the lives of over 400 partner families and<br />

6,000 Global Village volunteers.<br />

Now 67, Orest plans to continue<br />

doing two international builds a year in<br />

addition to his local volunteer work.<br />

His most recent build took him to Nepal<br />

<strong>for</strong> the Everest 2010 Build that brought<br />

together teams from all over the world<br />

to launch construction of the second<br />

5,000 <strong>Habitat</strong> houses in the region.<br />

Orest says the payoff from his<br />

involvement with <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

has been incredible. “You come together<br />

as a team and <strong>for</strong>m really meaningful<br />

relationships with each other and the<br />

local people – and you see first-hand the<br />

results of your ef<strong>for</strong>ts,” he says.<br />

Hammering nails and laying bricks<br />

across the globe has been Orest’s<br />

fountain of youth. “It really keeps me<br />

young,” he says.<br />

A testament of the life-changing<br />

impact that these trips have on their<br />

volunteers, and something that<br />

can explain the rapid growth of the<br />

program in general, is that just about every Global Village<br />

participant becomes a Global Village advocate. The stories<br />

and photos that come back from each and every trip have<br />

inspired countless others to act, which is goodwill that<br />

has led to a greater number of families abroad receiving<br />

the hand up of homeownership every year.<br />

Visit habitat.ca/globalvillage to learn more and to<br />

view upcoming trip schedules.<br />

12 <strong>THE</strong> <strong>HABITAT</strong> SPIRIT Spring/Summer 2011 To donate, participate or advocate visit www.habitat.ca 13


1<br />

Building Homes<br />

with Hope<br />

Genworth Financial <strong>Canada</strong>’s Meaning of Home<br />

Contest Winner to Provide a Wellington County<br />

Family with the Hand Up of Homeownership<br />

ON JANUARY 25TH,<br />

Genworth Financial<br />

<strong>Canada</strong> (Genworth)<br />

announced that<br />

Grade 6 student<br />

Karson Simpson<br />

from Guelph,<br />

Ontario was chosen as the winner of<br />

this year’s Meaning of Home contest <strong>for</strong><br />

her exceptional essay that used poetic<br />

language to compare a homeless teen<br />

with one who has a com<strong>for</strong>table home.<br />

Karson’s submission was selected from<br />

a record number of 2,400 entries received<br />

from Grades 4, 5 and 6 students across<br />

<strong>Canada</strong>, winning her the opportunity to<br />

devote a $60,000 donation from Genworth<br />

to the Canadian <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

affiliate of her choice. Deciding that she<br />

wanted to help a family from her own<br />

community, Karson chose <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Humanity</strong> Wellington County to receive<br />

the award.<br />

As this year’s winner, Karson also<br />

received a home computer <strong>for</strong> her own<br />

use as well as a pizza party <strong>for</strong> her<br />

entire school.<br />

Karson is the 4th winner of the<br />

Genworth Meaning of Home contest,<br />

which was established in 2007 to raise<br />

awareness among students of the<br />

importance of having a home. Since its<br />

inception, $357,000 has been donated<br />

by Genworth to 23 <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong><br />

affiliates in <strong>Canada</strong>. In addition to the<br />

grand prize $60,000 donation, five<br />

runners-up will get to devote $5,000<br />

donations and 18 semi-finalists will get to<br />

devote $500 donations to the <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Humanity</strong> affiliates of their choice.<br />

“Genworth Financial <strong>Canada</strong>’s Meaning<br />

of Home contest has once again effectively<br />

engaged youth as advocates in <strong>Canada</strong>’s<br />

af<strong>for</strong>dable housing crisis,” said Stewart<br />

Hardacre, President and CEO of <strong>Habitat</strong><br />

<strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong>. “In addition, the<br />

substantial financial support that has<br />

come to <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> as a result<br />

of the contest has helped provide several<br />

Canadian families with the hand up of<br />

homeownership, something that we<br />

know will have a trans<strong>for</strong>mative impact<br />

on these families and their communities<br />

<strong>for</strong> generations to come.”<br />

All winning essays from this year’s<br />

contest can be viewed at Genworth’s<br />

Meaning of Home website,<br />

meaningofhome.ca.<br />

“The quality of entries we received<br />

again this year demonstrates the high<br />

level of creativity and compassion found<br />

in the younger generation,” said Peter<br />

Vukanovich, Executive Vice President,<br />

Corporate Development. “The Meaning of<br />

Home contest empowers students from<br />

across <strong>Canada</strong> to use the importance of<br />

their words to give a family a home. We<br />

would like to thank all of the entrants as<br />

well as the many teachers who brought<br />

this project to their classrooms.”<br />

A Longstanding <strong>Habitat</strong> Partner<br />

The Meaning of Home Contest is part<br />

of a larger national partnership between<br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong> and<br />

Genworth, the largest private sector<br />

supplier of mortgage insurance in <strong>Canada</strong>.<br />

The company has committed to a<br />

three-year project called “The Path to<br />

Home”, which will total more than<br />

$1 million in support <strong>for</strong> <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Humanity</strong>’s af<strong>for</strong>dable homebuilding<br />

projects nationwide. In addition to<br />

donations, Genworth is contributing<br />

educational materials, volunteer hours<br />

and expertise to local <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

<strong>Humanity</strong> affiliates in <strong>Canada</strong>.<br />

About Genworth Financial <strong>Canada</strong>:<br />

Genworth Financial <strong>Canada</strong>, a subsidiary<br />

of Genworth MI <strong>Canada</strong> Inc. (TSX:MIC),<br />

has been the leading Canadian private<br />

residential mortgage insurer since 1995.<br />

Known as “The Homeownership Company”,<br />

it provides default mortgage insurance<br />

to Canadian residential mortgage lenders<br />

that enables low down-payment borrowers<br />

to own a home more af<strong>for</strong>dably and stay<br />

in their homes during difficult financial<br />

times. Genworth Financial <strong>Canada</strong><br />

combines technological and service<br />

excellence with risk management expertise<br />

to deliver innovation to the mortgage<br />

marketplace. As of September 30, 2010,<br />

Genworth MI <strong>Canada</strong> had $5.3 billion in<br />

total assets and $2.6 billion in shareholders’<br />

equity. Based in Oakville, Ontario, the<br />

Company employs approximately 265<br />

people across <strong>Canada</strong>.<br />

Hope by Karson Simpson<br />

She opens her eyes slowly hoping, yet again, that maybe when they are fully open<br />

she’ll be in a warm house, with a cozy bed and a fridge full of food. Instead she has<br />

only two brick walls covered in graffiti— she knows as art, a ratty old sleeping bag<br />

and a back pack <strong>for</strong> a pillow. She takes a deep breath and hopes <strong>for</strong> a good day.<br />

She wants five more minutes but doesn’t have time. Time is all it takes to be alone.<br />

A sliver of light creeps onto the walls of her brightly coloured room, as her<br />

sister slowly opens her door. She rolls over in her warm bed, blankets still<br />

wrapped around her, and opens her eyes. Her sister tells her she can get into the<br />

shower and disappears into the dark hallways of the house. She gets up to the<br />

shower five minutes later. As she steps into the steady stream of warm water,<br />

she loses herself in her thoughts. As she steps out, she clears the mirror and looks<br />

at her reflection — nothing ever changes in her life. She just stands there and<br />

thinks, <strong>for</strong> a while. She has the time. Time is all she has.<br />

She learns everything she needs to from her sister, at least that’s what her parents<br />

tell her. She hopes more <strong>for</strong> herself, because she feels like she deserves it. She’s never<br />

asked her parents <strong>for</strong> more than she already has. She knows her parents do the best<br />

they can <strong>for</strong> her and her sister, but she can’t help thinking about more.<br />

The wind whips through her hair as she walks to school with a friend. She<br />

slowly takes out her headphones as the song on her iPod finishes its last chord<br />

— All You Need Is Love; is love all you really need?<br />

As her parents argue about what to do next, the rain beats down harder and her<br />

stomach moans loudly; she’s starving. Her parents tell her and her sister to go to the<br />

women’s shelter and the family will meet again tomorrow. Will they really be back?<br />

She slowly walks upstairs leaving the family television alone till tomorrow. She<br />

brushes her teeth then crawls into her bed. She lays there in the peaceful silence,<br />

left alone; she’s swallowed up by the darkness of her non-existent room to venture<br />

into her thoughts. What if I didn’t have my warm bed, my good food? What if I<br />

had to work <strong>for</strong> everything I have and nothing was a privilege? What if I didn’t<br />

have my carefully planned out routine I follow daily?<br />

As she lies in the bed at the shelter she hears only the consistent breathing of her<br />

sister bedside her and the careful cry of an infant off in the distance. She runs<br />

through the thoughts in her head. What if I had a bed and food of my own? What<br />

if I could go to school and learn? What if I had money to buy what I wanted? What<br />

if I had my days planned? What if I had a warm home of my own? For right now<br />

she can only hope <strong>for</strong> these things, but with hope the world is yours.<br />

The next morning she wakes up and knows that if she didn’t have her home,<br />

she wouldn’t have much of anything at all. She knows now she needs to love and<br />

cherish what she has because not everyone has what she has — a home.<br />

Read the runner-up winning entries online at meaningofhome.ca<br />

2<br />

3<br />

1. KARSON DEDICATING HER<br />

WINNING CHEQUE TO <strong>HABITAT</strong><br />

FOR HUMANITY WELLINGTON<br />

COUNTY, GUELPH, ON<br />

2. MARGARET, VANCOUVER, BC<br />

— RUNNER-UP<br />

3. TYLER, EDMONTON, AB<br />

— RUNNER-UP<br />

4. SAMUEL, LONGUEUIL, QC<br />

— RUNNER-UP<br />

5. <strong>THE</strong> <strong>HABITAT</strong> HOME BUILT<br />

WITH LAST YEAR’S MEANING<br />

OF HOME DONATION,<br />

ST. JOHN’S, NL<br />

RUNNERS-UP NOT SHOWN:<br />

LUCY, OAKVILLE, ON<br />

KEVIN, ST. JOHN’S, NL<br />

5<br />

4<br />

14 <strong>THE</strong> <strong>HABITAT</strong> SPIRIT Spring/Summer 2011<br />

To donate, participate or advocate visit www.habitat.ca 15


WINNIPEG, MB<br />

<strong>THE</strong> <strong>HABITAT</strong><br />

<strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong><br />

upholds the highest standards of<br />

accountability and transparency.<br />

Our reputation is our most important<br />

asset, and maintaining strong and<br />

open relations with our supporters<br />

is a top priority.<br />

For this reason, <strong>Habitat</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Humanity</strong> <strong>Canada</strong><br />

is one of Imagine <strong>Canada</strong>’s Ethical Code<br />

Program participants, meaning that we commit<br />

to the guidelines set in Imagine <strong>Canada</strong>’s<br />

Ethical Fundraising and Financial Accountability<br />

Code. For more in<strong>for</strong>mation, please visit<br />

imaginecanada.ca.

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