Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

‘NEW BEGINNING’

Single mother attains homeowners­hip through Habitat for Humanity

- By Christophe­r Cann

In 2015, Keetonia Wilson fell at her son’s football game in Miami and broke her arm. She had reconstruc­tive surgery, but it didn’t go well and she ended up with major nerve damage and was diagnosed with chronic pain syndrome.

At the same time, Wilson, 39, and her family couldn’t keep up with Miami’s rising rents, so they relocated to Orlando. Wilson and her children stayed with family for awhile before moving into their own apartment in the Goldenrod area.

Wilson has been unable to work since her fall and has remained on a fixed income, living off disability. In February 2022, her landlord told her something that she still has trouble contemplat­ing: Rent would be going up from $1,300 a month to over $2,0400 — something millions of Floridians and Americans elsewhere have faced amid a rental crisis. In Orlando, the problem’s fueled homelessne­ss in the city as people are evicted and face the upward struggle of looking for a place to live in one of the nation’s most competitiv­e rental markets.

“It knocked me off my feet… forced me out of my home,”

Wilson said. With no other options, she moved in with her brother in the Lake Alfred area in Polk County.

“I thought it was a joke at first… but it wasn’t,” Wilson said about the sudden rent hike. On top of this, her health struggles persisted. She was suffering from blood clots and had to have major surgery on her thyroid. “I was defeated,” she said.

Wilson heard about Habitat for Humanity and in a fit of desperatio­n she looked up the organizati­on online. She wasn’t surprised that she qualified but she was when a month later she was accepted.

“We were living in an apartment and Momma said ‘We might get a house’ and I was like ‘Oh, does that mean I can paint my room finally?’” said Wilson’s 14-year-old daughter Karizma Petion.

On Saturday morning, Wilson and her three children, as well as her siblings, parents and extended family, all huddled together, posing for group pictures in front of Wilson’s new home: a four-bedroom, two bathroom house on a quiet street in South Apopka.

Standing in the front door, looking out over the fresh lawn and the spotless driveway, Wilson got choked up. “I am so thankful for this,” she said.

The plot of land that the home sits on was donated to Habitat for Humanity Seminole-Apopka along with four others by Orange County.

Habitat selects homeowners based on the applicant’s level of need and their ability to repay a mortgage through an affordable payment plan. The nonprofit has been able to get Central Floridians in the program a $1,000 mortgage payment for a four-bedroom, two-bathroom home, which is typically around $2,500 in Apopka, according to spokespers­on Muffet Robinson.

Robinson said houses are sold to home buyers for the appraised price. This is possible because the nonprofit uses grant money among other sources to keep the prices of homes down to levels affordable for approved applicants.

In the fiscal year ending on June 30, 2022, Habitat Seminole-Apopka closed 16 homes for families who would not otherwise be able to buy a home.

“It takes a village for this to happen,” said Idalia Nunez, the program director of the nonprofit, thanking volunteers and local officials at the ceremony on Saturday.

Nunez said Wilson broke the record for the fastest completion of the 200-hour program required to purchase a Habitat home. During program, which took Wilson 30 days to finish, she studied in courses on finances, home maintenanc­e and civic engagement.

Helping Wilson were her two teenage children, whom she had asked to “hit the books” and get straight A’s. They did exactly that and subsequent­ly points went toward Wilson’s hours, cutting down the time it took to close the home.

Wilson’s son, Mamay Petion Jr., 15, said he’s most excited to decorate his room with his favorite colors: red, black and white. He pointed

“To have our own space that we can personaliz­e… is so special. My kids have never had a yard where they can go and just play in and enjoy the sun. This… is going to be a great new beginning.”

— Keetonia Wilson

to areas around the empty room, describing where he’s going to set up his video games and what wall he will paint black so he can draw on it with chalk (Wilson laughed and shook her head when she was told of her son’s plans for his bedroom).

“It’s amazing having my own room,” he said, smiling wide. “But if my sister comes in my room and she wants to chill out with me, she can write on the walls and stuff…”

Both teens will be attending Apopka High School; they are working toward bright future scholarshi­ps.

A short time after the ribbon cutting ceremony, Wilson looked up from the front lawn at the house. It was full of friends and family and Habitat volunteers who were walking through rooms, opening closets, checking faucets and talking in small groups. There was catered food and some people were passing out plates and silverware in the dining room.

“I’m most proud to give my kids more,” Wilson said.

“To have our own space that we can personaliz­e… is so special,” she continued. “My kids have never had a yard where they can go and just play in and enjoy the sun. This… is going to be a great new beginning.”

 ?? WILLIE J. ALLEN JR./ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Keetonia Wilson, center, cuts the red ribbon as Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings, left, Wilson’s children, Apopka city officials and Habitat for Humanity members watch during the opening of her home in Apopka on Saturday.
WILLIE J. ALLEN JR./ORLANDO SENTINEL Keetonia Wilson, center, cuts the red ribbon as Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings, left, Wilson’s children, Apopka city officials and Habitat for Humanity members watch during the opening of her home in Apopka on Saturday.
 ?? ??
 ?? WILLIE J. ALLEN JR./ORLANDO SENTINEL PHOTOS ?? TOP: Keetonia Wilson, center, shows Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings through her new Habitat for Humanity home in Apopka on Saturday. Wilson is college-educated and had been moving up the corporate ladder until an accident changed her life, and she became fully disabled in 2015. The rents in Miami were unaffordab­le; she then moved to Orlando in 2016 to be near family. Her debts and the high rent were stumbling blocks, but she had a dream and promised her children they would eventually have a home to call their own. Thanks to Habitat for Humanity, her hard work and her family’s support, the promise was delivered.
ABOVE: Wilson, center, wears a big smile as she walks through her brand new Habitat for Humanity home.
WILLIE J. ALLEN JR./ORLANDO SENTINEL PHOTOS TOP: Keetonia Wilson, center, shows Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings through her new Habitat for Humanity home in Apopka on Saturday. Wilson is college-educated and had been moving up the corporate ladder until an accident changed her life, and she became fully disabled in 2015. The rents in Miami were unaffordab­le; she then moved to Orlando in 2016 to be near family. Her debts and the high rent were stumbling blocks, but she had a dream and promised her children they would eventually have a home to call their own. Thanks to Habitat for Humanity, her hard work and her family’s support, the promise was delivered. ABOVE: Wilson, center, wears a big smile as she walks through her brand new Habitat for Humanity home.

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