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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Habitat
provides a safe haven Providing
six houses for needy families this summer, Sisters Habitat for Humanity
is working at record pace to guide neighbors with shaky circumstances onto
solid ground.
Terri Gallegly, 42, who owns
a quaint, Habitat-built, two-bedroom home on Pine Tree Lane, tells how
Habitat and the Sisters community gave a needed refuge to her family.
A dishonest boyfriend, a nomadic
lifestyle and the careful decisions wrought by a single mother brought
Terri Gallegly to Sisters for the first time at age 23 with her four-year-old
daughter, Jackie. Having previously lived out of her car in Texas, Gallegly
parted from her boyfriend and eventually moved to Sisters not knowing
anyone, and unsure where she would work or live.
Fourteen years later, after
living in several rentals (including an icy-cold motor-home in Sisters
where she said the curtains and clothes froze to the walls), Gallegly
purchased her own house through Habitat for Humanity for $72,000 in May
of 1998.
Sitting on her porch swing
with her four-year-old granddaughter on her 2.5 acres of scenic property,
Gallegly smiled at the safe haven she's found for herself, her husband
of two years, Larry Gallegly, her 23-year-old daughter, Jackie Bradley
and her granddaughter, Chelsea.
Jackie and her daughter moved
into the spare bedroom last year, while Jackie started school.
"This is a safe environment,"
Gallegly said. "It's a lot of security for her (Chelsea) because grandma
and grandpa have always been in one spot. When you rent, there is always
the possibility the owners could come back, raise rent or change something.
When you own, there's always a home for the kids to come back to."
Gallegly said a neighbor had
to convince her to apply to Habitat in 1996 because Gallegly thought it
was welfare and didn't want to do it. When she got selected, she was working
for Weitech, a pest-control manufacturer in Sisters.
She and Larry Gallegly were
renting from Larry's boss at R.L. Schaefer Construction.
"I had checked into Fannie
Mae and every bank I could find, but I had no credit so the banks and
mortgage companies wouldn't even talk to me because I didn't have enough
money," Terri said. "Habitat was pretty much the last resort. If we had
to pay interest on our loan, it would double the house payment and we
would be scraping to make ends meet."
Habitat for Humanity selects
homeowners who live or work in Sisters, meet income requirements, and
are willing to give 500 hours of volunteer work. Habitat, which sets no-interest
mortgage plans based on income, put Gallegly on a 20-year mortgage plan
for the $72,000 home.
Gallegly said she was relieved
to be able to purchase a house and humbled by the means, which involved
two groups of college students from Minnesota who flew to Sisters for
their Spring Break to build Gallegly's home.
"It is the most humbling experience
a person can have to let kids pay their way to fly out of their state
and spend their Spring Break to build your home," Gallegly said. "They
help not because they have to but just because they want to. "They didn't
have enough work to keep them busy on my house so they went to my neighbors
to do landscape. She gave them $100. A month later, she got the check
back in the mail.
"That touched me," Gallegly
said. "They do a lot more for families than just build houses. They did
for me and they still are." |
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