NBN Online for the week of June 30, 2008

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In This Issue:

Front Page
California’s Housing Market Finds Itself in Dire Straits
Nation's Building News Will Not Be Published July 7
Sen. Ensign Stalls Consideration of Housing Bill
Coast to Coast
Resets Peaking on Subprime Loans
Politics & Government
Carried Interest Provision in AMT Bill Would Harm Housing
States, Cities Offering Mortgage Counseling and Refinancing
Economics & Finance
New-Home Sales Decline In May
FHA Implements Risk-Based Mortgage Insurance Premiums
FHA Proposes to Halt Seller-Funded Downpayments
Eye on the Economy: Housing Policy Support Should Arrive Soon
Labor Department Collecting Building Industry Employment Data
Useful Links to Monitor Economic and Housing Trends
Tips
Builders’ Tip: Fabricating an Inexpensive Dust Collector
Business Management
Solidify Warranty Expectations With a Knowledgeable Staff
Women
Draw on Business Basics When the Sky is Falling
Remodelers
More Home Owners Seeking Energy-Efficiency Upgrades
Earn Designation Credits at the Remodeling Show
New Graduate-Level Designation Expands CGR Knowlege Base
Design
Smaller Homes Could Be Making a Comeback
Enter the BALA Design Competition by July 31
Sales
Training and Evaluating Sales Teams Bring Sales Success
Enter The Nationals Sales and Marketing Awards by Sept. 26
Education
Education Calendar
Green Building
Consumers Want Green Benefits, Confused by Details
‘WaterSmart’ Conference Set for Las Vegas
Environment
NAHB Takes Issue With New Construction General Permit
Safety
OSHA Has Free, Teen Summer Job Safety Materials
Legal
Ask the Lawyer: Passing on Fuel Surcharges
Labor
Lowe’s Introduces Hispanic Interns to Housing Careers
Building Products
Weyerhaeuser Announces Structural Framing Giveaway
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on DIY, Fine Living and HGTV
Endowment
Connecticut Team Builds Home for Injured Iraqi War Veteran
Stuard Scholarship Fund Announces 17 Winners
Association News
Macon Builder Robert Cleveland Dead at 71
Save $25 on Hertz ‘Green,’ ‘Fun’ or ‘Prestige’ Weekly Rentals
Save 10% With Office Depot Large-Format Printing Services
Willams Scotsman Offers $1.99 First-Month Storage Container
Sign Up for ‘Spokesperson Training’ Sessions at Fall Board
GM $500 Private Offer: Easy as 1-2-3
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Related Articles

Stuard Scholarship Fund Announces 17 Winners

Connecticut Team Builds Home for Injured Iraqi War Veteran

 

 

More than 1,500 volunteer hours were put in by employees of Lawrence F. Fiano Builders and Developers and Northeast Foundation Coating LLC to create an accessible home for injured Iraqi war veteran, Marine Sgt. Jared Luce.

Marine Sgt. Jared Luce lost both legs and received injuries to his left eye and hand during the Iraq War. With the help of a longtime member of NAHB, family friends in the home building business and their associates, Luce and his family now have an accessible home to call their own in Coventry, Conn.

For building a home for the Luce family, Lawrence F. Fiano Builders and Developers in Bolton, Conn. and Northeast Foundation Coating LLC received honorable mention in the 2007 Builder Achievement Awards for Outstanding Community Service from the National Housing Endowment. The award was presented during the International Builder’s Show in Orlando in February.

“We just pulled off one hell of a coup,” said Lawrence Fiano of the project.

 

 

Jared and Melanie Luce

Sharon and Peter Robbins, owners of Northeast Foundation Coating, first read of Sgt. Luce’s injuries in a local paper. As it turned out, Luce was the son of a friend of Peter’s, so the husband-and-wife team volunteered their firm’s waterproofing services to Homes for Our Troops, which was coordinating the construction of the Luce home.

Homes for Our Troops is a non-profit organization founded in 2004 to help build homes for severely injured servicemen.

When the Robbins first volunteered to help out the Luce family, they discovered that there was no builder to supervise the project and contacted Fiano, who agreed to help.

“Being a Marine himself, Peter approached me to see if I would build the house for the wounded Marine,” Fiano recalled. “I agreed to do this project right away.”

The project, both the Robbins and Fiano agreed, had some challenges ― starting with the lot itself which sloped heavily toward the street and was difficult to build on.

Luce, however, owned the lot, and even though a local builder agreed to swap it for one that could be built on more easily, Luce did not want to swap it.

So the volunteer team worked with the lot, created an 8-foot by 8-foot retaining wall and added more than 1,000 yards of fill to make the lot buildable.

The foundation was no picnic, either. “It wasn’t just your run-of-the-mill, easy box foundation,” said Robbins.

Hundreds of people helped build the home, Sharon Robbins said. She estimated that the volunteers, many of them from the Home Builders Association of Hartford County, put in about 1,000 hours on the project, while Fiano and the two employees he donated contributed another 300 hours.

“We were encouraged right from the beginning. I knew I could count on my fellow builders, but the response was unbelievable,” said Fiano. “Everything was a challenge, but we overcame it all.”

Luce was overwhelmed when the home was finished. “He had tears in his eyes when he accepted the key,” said Fiano. “He’s rather quiet, a very decent individual with three little boys and a wife. But he never complained once about the fact that he had one good arm and one good eye.”

The Robbins have continued their efforts for injured veterans, completing one house a week before Christmas for a 26-year-old wounded soldier “who had only the shirt on his back” when they met him, said Sharon Robbins, who added that the HBA is creating a non-profit organization to help veterans.

“It really doesn’t matter very much what your politics are,” she said. “These are people coming home with injuries, and we need to help them.”

As part of its award, Lawrence F. Fiano Builders and Developers received a $1,000 donation from the endowment, which it gave to the endowment of the Bolton Scholarship Fund.

Seven other builders were honored with 2007 Builder Achievement Awards for Outstanding Community Service during the presentation at the Builders' Show.

The awards were established through a grant to the endowment by Isaac Heimbinder, chairman of Rockville, Md.-based BuildTopia, a provider of Web-based construction management software for home builders, and his wife, Sheila.

For more information about the awards, e-mail Gwyn Donohue at NAHB, or call her at 800-368-5242 x8447.


 

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