Talk Back
Post a Comment
|
|||||||
HousingZone Most Popular Stories
- Kitchen & Bath Trends for 2010
- 2009 Best in American Living Awards Reveal What's Ahead for Residential Design
- Record 2009 Foreclosures Despite Aid
- FinestExperts Ranks Top 2010 Real Estate Investment Markets
- 2010 Brings New Lows in Home Price Reduction Levels
- Short sales unlikely to harm housing market
- Earth Advantage Institute Selects Top 10 Green Building Trends For 2010
- U.S. Apartment Vacancy Rate Hits 30-Year High
- Remodelers' Exchange: Rental properties can be a road to success
- 100 Best New Products 2009
Homebuilder’s foundation uses micro loans to empower poor abroad
Through Hope International, U.S. homebuilders build and sell homes with donated or discounted materials and labor
By Felicia Oliver, Senior Editor
May 1, 2008
Professional Builder
Builders are by and large a charitable group. Many are involved with Habitat for Humanity and Extreme Home Makeover-type projects. But Jeff Rutt of Keystone Custom Homes in Lancaster, Pa., has a program that helps poor people abroad with homes built in the U.S.
His foundation, Hope International, solicits partnerships with builders who build homes — typically on spec — and invite subcontractors and suppliers to donate or discount their labor and
![]() |
|
Jeff Rutt, second from left, and Hope International Director of Development Justin Bredeman, far left, met with a Dominican Republic client and her son. |
In places like the Dominican Republic, Afghanistan, Haiti and Ukraine, Hope staff members facilitate meetings in poor communities with loan recipient hopefuls who present business plans to each other. Plans are vetted, and once loans are approved, the community members hold each other accountable for following the terms of the loans and paying the loans back.
Loans can be as small as $50, and the repayments go toward future loans.
"When funds go out they don't just go into a hole and then tomorrow you have to raise money again to replace those funds," Greer adds. "This is a permanent way of helping."
Greer cites a study that shows, on average, individuals who have a relationship with a microfinance institution improve their income 112 percent over two years.
"They are still very poor," says Greer, "but doubling their income in a relatively short time has changed their world." Rutt says that one teary-eyed loan recipient said her children can now eat twice a day.
"I think one of the reasons that the trade contractors, suppliers and builders are really excited about it is it's so leveraged," says Rutt. "Right now we have 190,000 entrepreneurs. It only takes about $18 million to serve them."
So far, 23 builders are involved, but there are many more poor they would like to reach. If you'd like to be a Hope builder or get involved in some other way, go to www.hopeinternational.org.
© 2010, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.










Digg This

