How substandard housing affects families and the difference Habitat is making
When housing isn’t affordable and secure, families suffer.
When housing isn’t affordable and secure, families suffer.
Volunteers and homeowners are showing their appreciation for the hard work that was accomplished during this year’s Carter Work Project.
See the story of how paying it forward with a donated dining set defines the meaning of giving back.
Habitat is working to create what Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. called “the Beloved Community” — we will do the work in our practices, our programs and our networks to put equity and justice at the forefront of our efforts and bring that mission to the communities in which we work.
Year after year, now numbering 36, the Jimmy & Rosalynn Carter Work Project has forged connections between families seeking decent homes and volunteers seeking a way to share their hearts.
Some Habitat volunteers wield a different set of tools.
In March, onlookers near Sundance Square in downtown Fort Worth were treated to an unusual sight: a house rolling slowly along Seventh Street.
When families partner with Habitat for Humanity, home becomes a place of safety, security and strength.
Habitat supports its provisions to streamline existing programs, increase the supply of affordable homes and preserve our aging housing stock.
Habitat for Humanity International board member Ronald Terwilliger reflects on the second anniversary of Habitat’s Cost of Home U.S. advocacy campaign and why he is a longtime supporter of Habitat’s work.