Fuller Center General

By:
Kirk Lyman-Barner
Director of US Field Operations

By: Kirk Lyman-Barner
Director of US Field Operations

It was 57 degrees this morning in Prairie View, Texas to meet with Deborah Dennis, the founder of our new start up Fuller Center of Houston Metro Area, Inc.   I immediately forgot about the chill in the air because of the warmth of the welcome Deb and her staff gave me when I arrived at her office.   It was a beautiful rental housing complex for Prairie View A&M University students located in a neighborhood struggling with blight.

As we were touring the area, Deb was constantly working, answering calls from a mother who was concerned for her daughter living in a hotel this semester wondering if Deb could find a better place to rent.  She would see a lot with a newly placed “For Sale By Owner” sign and she called them up negotiating the price… “Now, I’m not going to pay $11,000 for that lot. I know you paid $7,000 for it….send me a plat and a better asking price.”
 

By Kirk Lyman-Barner
Director of US Field Operations


Today’s visit was with Eleanor and Jimmy Shaw, founders of The Fuller Center of New Iberia, Louisiana which is famous for its sugar cane fields and the home of the Tabasco brand hot sauce.

While we were visiting over lunch I learned that Jimmy is an independent contractor who has many years of experience as a supervisor for the local weatherization program for Community Action.  We had plenty of stories to swap and I learned about the compassion he had for the families whose homes he worked on.  He moved here from Kentucky and started his business from scratch.   He proudly told me his son went to a junior college in Mississippi and then went on to play football for Tulsa.  I asked Jimmy what his son was doing now and he looked down at his watch.   He smiled and said, “Our son is Tyrunn Walker and he is defensive end wearing number 75 for the New Orleans Saints.”  I told Eleanor and Jimmy how honored I was that they were spending time with me on game day.

Then they gave me a tour of “the hood” which is the east side of New Iberia.  They live nearby and both are leaders in a Church of Christ which is in the middle of the neighborhood of rundown shotgun shacks and deteriorating HUD projects.  Being there reminded me of the first time David Snell, Millard and I visited the Allendale neighborhood of Shreveport.  But in this case all of the shacks were occupied.  About 100 of them are owned by a single slumlord.

Eleanor decided she wanted to make a difference in the eastside.  Though there was high crime and addiction driven activities in the area, she knew  there were good people living there, too.  So she started a facelift painting ministry and spruced up dozens of the shacks over the past few years.  She discovered The Fuller Center for Housing on a journey to find a way to do more than just to make cosmetic improvements for the people she cared so much about.