Daily Progress, Jacksonville, TX

Homepage

August 22, 2006

Birthday Blessing

Moving out of her home on Davis Street on April 3, her birthday, Leola Redd was one of six local residents chosen to receive a HOME Grant from the city. Construction on the new homes was recently completed.

Leola Redd is one of the six applicants for the HOME grant fortunate enough to be selected for a home renovation. Her previous home had become so dilapidated that the Redd family did not know what they were going to do.

“At my age it’s hard, because you can’t get grants and loans to fix up your house,” Redd said. “So I didn’t know how I could ever fix my house.”

Redd’s house was so full of holes that she couldn’t keep rain from coming inside through her roof or snakes from coming inside through her floor. The wooden floorboards were so weak that the toilet was expected to fall through the floor at any time.

“God is still in the blessing business,” Redd said. “I thank the Lord for everything, and I thank all the people that have been working and spending all their time to help us, I really appreciate them.”

Redd, a mother of six children and a member of Sweet Union Baptist Church, moved out of her old house on April 3, her birthday. HOME grant recipients were initially told that the work would take four months, and that initial estimate was fairly accurate. As part of the HOME grant, recipients will also receive a refrigerator and a stove as part of their

new homes.

“I had a lot of good memories of the old house, I loved the design of the house, and I loved the yard,” Redd said. “But time was just out for that house, it was real bad.”

Redd has lived in Jacksonville her entire adult life and lived in her old home for the past 48 years.

“The neighbors asked me if I was going to cry, and I said, ‘Why would I cry? If I cry I would be crying for this blessing that God has given me,’ because God knows what I was living in. Why would I cry when things were so bad in there?” Redd said.

So now Redd and the other grant recipients, wait until the end of the month, when they can move into their new homes and can get back to their normal life.

“People don’t have to do anything for you, I’m just so thankful to the people who came up with this grant idea,” said Redd. “Now when I pass the place where the new house is being built, it looks so good that I can’t believe it.”

Text Only
  • job.shadow.jpg

    Students, from left, Dillon Rodriguez, Casey henderson, Kathryn Henderson and Hugo Gonzalez were seated in an ambulance as firefighter Glen Wilburn told them about the in's and out's of what they do during their job shadowing day on Thursday. Progress photo by Marivel Resendiz

    “You have to ask yourself, 'Who am I going to be?’”: JHS students shadow people in careers

    After seniors and juniors from Jacksonville High School got ready for school Thursday morning, they did not immediately go to class. They went to local businesses to walk in the shoes of career men and women.

    1 day 1 Photo
LOCAL NEWS
LOCAL SPORTS
LIVING
E-Edition
LOCAL MAGAZINE
SELECT TV SECTION
LOCAL OBITUARIES
AP VIDEO
Killer of Fla. Girl Found in Landfill Gets Life Army Orders Bradley Manning Court-martial Cancer Charity Revives Breast-screening Grants Heavy Snowstorm Hits Colorado On Its Way East 2nd Teacher From LA School Arrested on Sex Claim Prosecutors Close Armstrong Inquiry, No Charges Sights and Sounds: Football Fans Pour Into Indy Unemployment Rate Down to 8.3% Obama: Still Far Too Many Americans Need Jobs GOP: Jobs Numbers Welcome, Can Do Better Fla. Man Adopts Girlfriend in Legal Battle More Deaths As Egypt Clashes Continue Raw Video: Prince William in Falklands Egpyt Protesters Blame Police for Soccer Deaths 'Lucky' 9-Year-Old Receives 6-Organ Transplant Raw Video: Michelle Vs. Ellen in Pushup Contest First Person: Will Peyton Manning Stay in Indy? Egypt Shaken After Deadly Soccer Riot New Suits, New Starts for New York's Unemployed Hall of Famer Dorsett Speaks Out on NFL Injuries
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com