The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

NONPROFIT CHANGES FOCUS TO HELP THOSE AT HOME

Group founded in Atlanta helps hundreds with $1,000 a month.

- By Nancy Badertsche­r

New Story, a nonprofit dedicated to eliminatin­g global homelessne­ss, has shifted gears during the pandemic to help those at home. While its projects building homes in other countries are on hold, it has spent the past three months paying rent for struggling families in Georgia,

A nonprofit dedicated to eliminatin­g global homelessne­ss has shifted gears during the pandemic to help here at home.

While projects building hundreds of homes in Mexico, Haiti and El Salvador are on hold, the nonprofit New Story has spent the past three months paying rent for struggling families in metro Atlanta and other parts of Georgia.

“When the pandemic started, an unpreceden­ted number of people needed help,” New Story co-founder Brett Hagler said. “Our neighbors lost their jobs and income and, in turn, lost their ability to pay their rent.”

Working with four local, nonprofit partners, New Story has made rent payments averaging about $1,000 a month for three months for more than 300 jobless Georgians — at a total cost of more than $900,000. The organizati­on also is raising funds to support an additional 50 families in California.

“We wish we could help every person struggling,” Hagler said. “But we always say here: ‘Let’s care for some the way we wish we could care for all.’”

Many of the Georgians helped by New Story are living in extended stay hotels, unable to come up with the deposit and first month’s rent for an apartment. These people do not receive the same moratorium protection­s as a standard renter and may not qualify or receive the government support they need.

One single mother of four who received the rent help said she had been concerned for her children’s well-being. She was already behind on her utility bills when she lost her job due to the pandemic and stressed about providing her children with necessitie­s, such as food, clothes and toilet paper.

In another household of six, both parents lost their jobs due to the coronaviru­s and would have faced eviction without the rent help. They also had another big worry: One of their children was going through chemothera­py.

“We take great pride in supporting our community and are pleased to partner with New Story at a time when so many individual­s are in need of assistance,” said Gina Porter, vice president of human resources for Domain Capital Group, a private investment management services company in Atlanta and New Story’s partner in paying rent directly to landlords of the qualifying families.

Domain has pitched in on other local charitable efforts during the pandemic, including providing meals for health care workers at Atlanta’s Grady Memorial and donating iPads so the hospital’s patients can stay connected with family members who are not allowed to physically visit.

New Story is based in San Francisco but has strong ties to Atlanta. Its three co-founders met in Atlanta and started the company here in 2014, before applying to and becoming one of the first nonprofits with tech incubator Y-Combinator in California.

Half of New Story’s team members still work from an office on Atlanta’s Northside. The organizati­on’s mission is to pioneer solutions to end global homelessne­ss, which is forecast to increase by 200% and affect 3 billion people by 2050.

New Story started out building homes in Haiti after the 2010 earthquake that left many homeless for years. The organizati­on is now heavily involved in researchin­g breakthrou­ghs in homebuildi­ng technology and sharing them with other nonprofits and government­s.

In 2019, New Story started building the world’s first 3D-printed community in Tabasco, Mexico. The project consists of 50 3D-printed homes.

Since its founding, the nonprofit has built more than 2,500 homes around the globe. This year, New Story’s goal is to build about 700 homes across Mexico, Haiti and El Salvador. Those plans are still in the works but on hold due to safety concerns related to the COVID-19 crisis, said Sam Ballmer, a New Story employee.

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 ?? PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY NEW STORY ?? A boy runs in a New Story housing developmen­t in El Salvador. The nonprofit founded in Atlanta delayed plans to build hundreds of homes in Mexico, Haiti and El Salvador and has been giving rent relief to hundreds in Georgia.
PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY NEW STORY A boy runs in a New Story housing developmen­t in El Salvador. The nonprofit founded in Atlanta delayed plans to build hundreds of homes in Mexico, Haiti and El Salvador and has been giving rent relief to hundreds in Georgia.

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