Building friendships, not just houses!

John Slovick, Jim Boehme, Lillian Pierce, and Lyle McMillan return year after year to coach volunteers.

Meet the crew; any weekend you show up to volunteer at the CCHFH build site, you’ll likely be greeted by Lyle McMillan, Lillian Pierce, John Slovick, and Jim Boehme. Each volunteer has his or her own unique callings–the job they do and the reason they return year after year.

Lyle McMillan, CCHFH volunteer construction supervisor for five years, was recruited to help build his step-daughter’s CCHFH house after he retired from a career in construction. He enjoys teaching others, but what draws him back every year is to help the kids, “All kids need a good home to grow up in and a yard.”

Lillian Pierce, retired elementary school teacher, says working every weekend is a bonding experience, “The home-owners become like family.” “Kids run up to greet you and wrap their arms around your legs.” Willing to do any job assigned from hammering to hanging siding, she is best known as “the organizer”– recruiting volunteers and scanning the scene to make sure everyone is on task.

John Slovic has no formal training in construction; he relies on technical ability with tools and problem solving skills he learned in the industrial piping trade. He switched to the CCHFH crew this year from Boise, because he wants to share his gifts to help people his home community. By maintaining an attitude that “no task is too small,” he has been able to enjoy diverse tasks.

When it comes to large group projects like hanging siding, Jim Boehme (pronounced “Bome”) is usually in charge. A master of many trades from a career building homes, Jim likes to use his talents beyond making a living. “It gives you a good feeling to know you are helping a family and improving the community,” he said. Jim is also the “go-to guy” for hanging cabinets.

What keeps volunteers coming back? Despite their individual reasons, each mentioned they enjoy a special commeraderie that comes over time. “I really enjoy working with these guys, even though they give me a lot of guff,” said Lillian.

-Ann Van Buren

Volunteer profile: Rochelle Killett

Meet Rochelle Killett, CCHFH volunteer extraordinaire!!

Rochelle Killett is a Nampa resident, who came to the area to attend NNU and has stayed ever since. Rochelle is a schoolteacher in Kuna, serves on the Habitat Family Selection Committee, is a budget counselor at Love INC, and volunteers with many other church related programs. In her spare time, she is first and foremost a reader.

 

How did you hear about CCHFH?

“Rev. Caroly Bowers, a previous Family Selection Committee chair is a friend of mine.  She invited me to serve on the committee but I read about Habitat when I read Millard Fuller’s first book from the Nampa Public Library many years  before. ”

 

Why did you start volunteering with CCHFH?

Carolyn was looking for a diverse group and she invited me to participate.  We meet once a month as applications are available, and more often when we are planning to recruit families and when it is time to make home visits and the actual selection of families for the homes to be built.

 

What have you learned from volunteering with CCHFH?

Before volunteering for Habitat, I’ve volunteered for many other projects so working as part of a team was not new to me.  However, I am constantly amazed at how little some families live on.

 

What do you like best about working with the other Habitat volunteers?

It is humbling to be able to recommend a family who otherwise wouldn’t have the opportunity to own their own home for a Habitat home.  Working with others who share similar interests in helping families get into their own homes is very rewarding.

 

What would you say to someone who is thinking about volunteering?

Volunteering for Habitat is a good way to improve your community and to help families find a way to own their own home at an affordable rate.  It’s well worth the time it takes to volunteer and you meet some amazing people.

 

What has been the best part of working with CCHH?

Making home visits is well worth the time it takes to go visit.  Meeting these hard working people who live on such limited incomes is almost always humbling and is such an encouragement to see how resilient the human family is.  Working with other people who give of themselves to help others is very rewarding.

Though I lack construction skills, the time I did spend working on a home was really wonderful.  I joined the woman’s build day in May at the current house and learned how to drive a nail with a hammer, a skill that has evaded me for more years than I want to remember.  Just having worked on the house connects me to that family in a more concrete way than just working on the Family Selection Committee even though I’ve had the privilege of visiting in most of the family homes before they were chosen.  Getting to know the families who receive the homes makes very strong connections to the whole process. Each time the process begins again, I wonder who the familiy’s to be chosen will be.  Each time it has been amazing to watch them be selected and then work on their home as the construction progresses to the point of moving in.  What a change it makes for families watching them learn as they work on the house and then make it their own.

Thanks, Rochelle! For other profiles of CCHFH volunteers, look under the interview category of the blog!

From volunteer to executive director! Meet Marcia Davis, Executive Director

I thought this kind of thing never really happened anymore, but Marcia is a perfect example of how volunteering can lead to a full-time job. There is no limit to how far you can go when you have passion for what you do. Her daughter went from volunteer to a paid employee, too, with the national office. What’s with this place?

Marcia has been with Canyon County Habitat for Humanity for seven years: 4 as a volunteer and the last 3 as Executive Director. Marcia gained insight into motivating people as a middle school teacher for 9 years. She gained her savvy in the home building business as a real estate agent for 14. Like a lot of parents, her first volunteer work was as an elementary classroom “room mother” and as a Boy Scouts den mother.

She was simply looking for a way to spend time with her daughter, who had just returned from college, when Marcia showed up to a CCHFH board meeting in Caldwell and was elected treasurer. For 4 years, she was very active in many areas of the affiliate. In 2007, she became Interim Director and because the board already knew of her talents—and flaws—they voted her to become the permanent executive director 6 weeks later in 2007.

CCHFH volunteers are fortunate; because of her own experience as a volunteer, Marcia believes in being flexible to customize a job description to match a volunteer’s interest and skills. It is a really close-knit family, too. Most everyone on the board rolls up their sleeves and works on the building sites.

Call the office first, at 459-3344, if you plan to volunteer at the building site. Or, complete our volunteer application form. “We like to take very good care of our volunteers, who are the heart and soul of our organization,” she said.

-Ann Van Buren

Meet Joe Clark! Restore Volunteer and CCHFH Board Member

Joe has been volunteering for CCHFH since about 2000. He started as a volunteer board member, and later became board president. Joe joined the board when Jack Hoffmeirer, his neighbor and CCHFH Past President, invited him to participate.

Q:  You currently volunteer for the ReStore. What is one of your most memorable moments from working there?

A: I enjoy seeing how clean the Restore is, and how well the items are displayed. Also, it is nice to see all types of people (race, color, age, different backgrounds) working together for a common cause.

Q: What would you say the biggest needs are for the ReStore?

A: Right now one of our greatest needs is having a solid volunteer staff that we can count on to man the store. We currently don’t generate enough revenue to justify a fully paid staff, so we really need to rely on good solid volunteers. Another crucial need is to continue to get donations of materials and cash from a broad spectrum of the community to be able to operate the Restore and make a profit. Learn more about donating

Q: If you were talking with some friends and they asked you why they should consider volunteering for the ReStore, what would you tell them?

A: I would tell them that it is a very worthwhile cause. Working at the Restore is very fulfilling to me. And, as a senior citizen, it lets me give back to the communities that I, and my family, live in. It just makes our community better.

Q: Do volunteers need any particular skills or time availability to be able to work in the ReStore?

A: No, you don’t need any particular skills, nor are you locked into a long-term contract. We can use people that want to help for as little as an hour a day or as much as a full 8 hour shift. We try to accommodate people, and work around their timetables as much as possible. As far as particular skill sets are concerned, we need help in sales, customer service, and merchandising: basically anything that you would do in a retail store environment.

Q: What is something about CCHFH or the ReStore that might surprise people unfamiliar with your organization?

A: People would probably be surprised by the fact that all the money that is made at the CCHFH ReStore stays in Canyon County. The Boise ReStore exists solely for HFH in Ada County, and all of their money stays in Ada County. Although we are part of the same organization, we are totally separate entities.