HAMMERS Holiday Home Repair

2010

The 2010 Holiday Home Repair is underway! Follow the current repair process on the Holiday Home Repair blog.

2009

Adapted from a press release by Bill Giduz.

For three years Davidson Housing Coalition tried to find a way to improve one Davidson resident's living condition.  But repairs cost far more than the $5,000 HAMMERS maximum per home.  The town deferred condemning the home in hopes a solution could be found. Covington refused to consider selling the house and moving to a rental unit, since he grew up there and felt a strong sense of place.

Read the blog.

View local press coverage:  Charlotte Observer, Huntersville Herald

 

2008

Adapted from, "HAMMERS Repair Gives Huntersville Man a Christmas to Celebrate" by Bill Giduz.

Christmas came two weeks early for 62-year-old Thomas Boyd, in the form of construction elves scurrying all around his Church Street house in Huntersville. Up to 30 employees of Saussy Burbank and JCB Urban Construction spent several days recently conducting major structural repairs that had been preying heavily on Boyd’s mind.

Boyd and his late wife, Nancy, lived in the house for more than thirty years after having inherited it from relatives.  “It just seemed like it got harder and harder to keep up,” said Boyd, who retired two years ago from a 27-year career with Piedmont Natural Gas. “Lately I’ve been bad worried about finding someone to fix it, and where I’d get the money.”  Earlier this fall, a relative suggested he contact HAMMERS, an arm of Davidson Housing Coalition that makes emergency repairs on the homes of low-income homeowners to help them retain their dwellings. 

HAMMERS coordinator Zach Jakob inspected Boyd’s house, and quickly realized repairs would require more than the $5,000 cap the organization has established for projects. Jakob tried to refer Boyd to a Charlotte housing help agency for the elderly, but Boyd was too young to qualify. It looked like Boyd and his son would spend another Christmas in their crumbling home. “I wasn’t even going to celebrate Christmas this year,” he said. “I just didn’t feel like it. There were so many things to worry about.” “Under those circumstances, a lot of houses get condemned,” Jakob said. “There wasn’t any other place for them to turn.” 

Then rescue came in the form of a phone call from Jim Burbank, president of JCB Urban and a longtime supporter of DHC. “Part of our mission is giving back to the community,” said Burbank, “so I called Zach to ask if there was anything we could do to help out HAMMERS this holiday season.”  

Jakob told Burbank about Boyd’s needs, and Burbank agreed to take a look. Renovation of the 1,000-square-foot, three bedroom house turned out to be a big job. “We thought at first we would just do a couple of little fixes of bad spots in the floor and the electrical system, but realized quickly it needed significantly more help to be safe,” recalled Burbank. 

Burbank agreed to do whatever it took to renovate the house. He devoted his employees to the job, including some who regularly work behind a desk rather than on a construction site. Tommy Crowell, Grant Williams and Jeff Cornatzer developed the action plan and ran the project, recruiting more volunteer help from subcontractors and soliciting free or reduced price materials. Service manager Robert Hoffman worked non-stop all week long.

 The first step was not construction, but destruction, removing worn out floor covering and rotted wood throughout the house. About a dozen Davidson College football players from Phi Delta Theta fraternity volunteered to help with that heavy, nasty task, filling two dumpsters with debris. 

The skilled builders then replaced almost the whole floor system and installed new floor covering throughout. The plumbing, HVAC, electrical and duct systems were replaced, and hookups were installed for a new washer and drier and water heater. New cabinets and a new range were installed in the kitchen, along with a new back door, back patio, and sidewalk. The house was freshly painted, and the outside was made water tight. The value of the work and materials was estimated to be at least $20,000.  “It was the right project at the right time of year,” said Grant Williams of JCB Urban. “Things are slow in our industry right now and so this was a great team-building exercise for us, and it also gives our skilled workers a way to contribute to those in need without writing a check.”

 

Boyd filled with emotion in describing his feelings. “All my life I never fed off of other people,” he said, “but there’s not a person in the world right now more blessed than me. It’s a blessing from God that these people are helping me. I feel a lot better about Christmas now!”

 

 

Back

 

For more information call HAMMERS at 704.892.4486
or email
info@davidsonhousing.org

 

 

 

Davidson Housing Coalition, 220 Sloan Street, Suite A, PO Box 854, Davidson, NC 28036 | 704.892.4486
© Copyright 2006 Davidson Housing Coalition. All Rights Reserved. Designed by icontactwebdesign.com.