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Magazine Article
Building Communities, and Hope
Builders use their business success to launch charitable efforts that benefit their communities.



Charitable efforts include supporting fund-raising events, such as this one for Housing Options, a group in Chicago which provides housing and services to people suffering mental illnesses. Geno Benvenuti, president, Benvenuti and Stein in Evanston, Ill., (center), takes advantage of his businesses’s success by helping those in need.
Donating money is not the only way to make a donation to the community. Dan Packman, president, Design Blue in Newbury Park, Calif. (left), mentors “those in transition” through a nonprofit organization he founded.
Raising money through building or remodeling a home and donating part of the profit is a way to use one’s trade skills to help the community, says Bob Peterson, president, Associates in Building & Design in Fort Collins, Colo. Here, staff from ABD hands over a check to the local Wingshadow organization.
Once a week, Dan Packman (right) meets at a school with local community members looking for help getting back on their feet. Packman’s charitable work takes up about one hour a day, which he says is not much to make a difference where
it counts.

Home builders and remodelers are giving back to their communities in creative ways that go beyond simply writing a check. Donating man-hours, mentoring, building playhouses for sick children or ramps for people in wheelchairs are some of the non-traditional ways those in need are receiving help. And for business owners who take that first philanthropic step, their charitable work typically has a life of its own and grows year after year.

Not that writing checks is bad. On the contrary, giving money to charities and community groups is a wonderful — and the most common — method of philanthropy that benefits those who need help. But some business owners generate money in ways other might not think of on their own.

What’s just as important as how a business contributes is why they contribute. For some business owners, they believe it’s simply the right thing to do. For others, the reasons are far more complicated. Ultimately, however, they all feel great about helping their communities.

“As a designer and builder, it’s exciting to view someone’s life like a raw piece of land, with all its issues and problems, and take that life and go through the building process, as you would with a home, and rebuild their life,” says Dan Packman, president, Design Blue, Newbury Park, Calif. “When you really care for someone, whether a stranger or not, you get a glimpse into their world and realize that we are so blessed with what we have.”

Bob Peterson, president, Associates in Building & Design, Fort Collins, Colo., says contributing to the community is the right thing to do. “In the mid-’80s I was in the corporate world. A vice president instilled in me — and my parents before him — that you’ll never give more than you get in this world. I’d say at my current age of almost 55, he’s dead on. It seems like the more you give away, the more keeps coming back,” he says.

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