Building Homes, Building Economies: The Local Ripple Effect of Habitat’s Work in Lake & McHenry Counties

When people think of Habitat for Humanity, they often picture volunteers raising walls or a family receiving the keys to their first home. Those moments are powerful, but they’re only one piece of a much larger economic ripple.

According to Habitat for Humanity International’s 2024 National Economic Impact Analysis, every home built or repaired by Habitat produces measurable, long-lasting economic benefits in the surrounding community. That means the work we do right here at Lake-McHenry Habitat for Humanity not only transforms lives, it strengthens the entire economy of McHenry County and Lake County, Illinois.

In a region where housing costs continue to climb and working families struggle to keep up, this impact matters more than ever.

 

The Big Picture: What the 2024 Economic Impact Report Shows

Across the United States, Habitat affiliates and support organizations invested $1.68 billion in homebuilding, repairs, and operations.

The economic ripple effects include:

 

  • $2.91 billion in total economic output
  • A return of $1.74 for every $1 invested

  • 28,751 jobs supported

  • $1.61 billion in labor income

  • Approximately 2.2 jobs supported per home built or repaired

 

But numbers alone don’t capture the full story. Behind every economic statistic is a family gaining stability, a child with a safer place to learn, a volunteer building connection, and a local business supported through Habitat’s work.

When viewed through the lens of our own neighborhoods, from the busy streets of Waukegan to the growing communities around Woodstock — the impact becomes even clearer. Stable, affordable housing lays the foundation for stronger schools, healthier families, and more resilient local economies.

That’s why the national data matters for us here at Lake-McHenry Habitat: it reflects the economic transformation we see every time a family turns the key to a home they helped build. And it sets the stage for understanding how our specific initiatives strengthen Lake and McHenry Counties every day. So what does this national data mean for us locally?

 

The unfortunate truth is that a gap in housing assistance for the average American is real, it is growing, and it’s right here in McHenry and Lake county.

Many families earn too much to qualify for subsidized housing, but too little to afford safe, stable market-rate homes.

It leaves many between a rock and a hard place, but we see them, and we’re here to be a place to land.

We’re here to fill that housing gap.

 

Rising home values are outpacing wages.

 

High homeownership rates hide growing gaps.

 

When a Habitat home is built, something much larger begins to grow. A family finds stability. A neighborhood gains strength. A contractor receives steady work. A child sleeps safely. A community sees possibility.

This ripple effect is exactly what the national economic analysis captures — and it’s happening every day in Lake and McHenry Counties. The numbers show what we already know from experience: affordable housing doesn’t just change one household. It strengthens the economic and social fabric of the entire region.

As home prices rise and affordable options shrink, our work becomes a critical anchor for families who want to stay close to their support systems, jobs, and schools. And that’s where our local programs begin to shine

Our work not only lifts homeowners, it lifts the entire community. 

 

Our Trinity Trail development in Woodstock is the largest project in our history — and a major economic engine for McHenry County.

  • Ten homes = 22+ jobs supported

  • Local subcontractors and trades benefit directly

  • Future homeowners contribute ongoing property taxes

  • Families reinvest income locally in stores, schools, and services

Trinity Trail is more than a construction project, it’s a long-term investment in county-wide economic stability.

 

Women Build strengthens the local economy through:

  • Sponsorships from area companies

  • Volunteer spending at local businesses

  • Contracts with local trades

  • Funds reinvested into materials and supplies

Every participant, sponsor, and volunteer helps build both a home and the economic resilience of our region.

 

Veterans Build contributes to the economy by:

  • Employing local trades

  • Conducting repairs that prevent displacement

  • Improving veterans’ employment and financial stability

Stable housing gives local veterans the foundation to stay in the workforce, support their families, and participate in the local economy.

Critical Home Repair:

  • Keeps seniors safely aging in place

  • Prevents blight and preserves property values

  • Supports small contractors and trades

  • Protects community stability

CHR work often takes place in older homes — a major need in both counties.

These results reflect direct spending (materials, labor, operations), indirect spending (supply chains and subcontractors), and induced spending (household income circulating in the local economy).

Richard and Carol have built a beautiful life together in their community home since 1989. Over 35 years, they’ve filled it with cherished memories—raising their children, Sarah and Michael, and now welcoming three grandchildren through its doors.

Richard, a proud Vietnam veteran, spent years in the food industry, running his own business and building connections throughout the community. Carol, a talented baker, has always found joy in sharing her creations with neighbors and friends. Together, they’ve woven themselves into the fabric of their neighborhood, with Carol serving as an election judge and holiday parade judge, while Richard remains active in veteran service organizations.

This is the default image

“This is where we’re staying the rest of our lives … This is home.”

Their home isn’t just a building—it’s the heart of their family story. “This is where we’re staying the rest of our lives,” Richard says with conviction. “This is home.” Carol adds warmly, “I just want our house to be a comfortable place where we can enjoy every room, where the grandkids feel welcome, and where we can keep making memories.”

When drainage issues caused water to fill their crawl space, the needed repairs felt overwhelming. That’s when a friend told them about Habitat for Humanity’s repair program. The relief was immediate. “I was so worried we wouldn’t qualify for help,” Richard admits. “This program means we can stay in the home we love.”

The couple has watched their neighborhood evolve over the decades as younger families have moved in, and they’ve chosen to stay because this is where their heart is—and where their budget allows them to thrive. The completed repairs will do more than fix structural issues; they’ll give Richard and Carol the gift of aging in place with dignity and peace of mind.

For Richard and Carol, home means stability, community, and the promise of more years together in the place where they’ve built their legacy. Thanks to supporters like you, they’ll be able to stay exactly where they belong.

The support of our community is the only reason we’re able to make the critical home repairs that keep our neighbors in their homes. Join thousands of other people who have already chipped in to ensure that we can continue this important work!


Tom dreams of his children and grandchildren gathering in his lakefront home, making memories in the quiet neighborhood he’s grown to love. 

Tom Martinez, a navy veteran and retired medical technician, has called the same lakefront house home since 1990 when he bought it from his former landlord’s estate. What started as a rental became the foundation for everything that matters to him.

Tom’s roots in the Lake County community run deep. You’ll find him at American Legion events in Fox Lake, volunteering with the local animal rescue, and supporting fellow veterans however he can. For decades, he took pride in maintaining every inch of his property himself—the kind of guy who could fix anything and never asked for help.

But life has a way of changing the rules. A medical condition now limits Tom to lifting just 15 pounds, and suddenly those weekend repair projects became impossible mountains to climb. For someone who built his identity around self-reliance, admitting he needed help felt overwhelming.

His girlfriend, who works for the village, was the one who mentioned Habitat’s repair program. Tom had watched his windows fail and his siding deteriorate, knowing each winter brought higher heating bills and more worry. The house he’d lovingly maintained was beginning to deteriorate. And it broke his heart.

“I don’t want to worry about this stuff anymore. I want to come home and think, ‘Wow, that’s my house,’” Tom explains.

This isn’t just about windows and siding—it’s about preserving something precious. Tom dreams of his children and grandchildren gathering in this same lakefront home, making memories in the quiet neighborhood he’s grown to love. He wants them to inherit not just a house, but a sanctuary with a unique small-town feel.

Tom’s application to the Critical Home Repair Program was recently accepted and the repairs will do more than improve Tom’s daily comfort and slash his utility bills. They’ll give him back his peace of mind and let him focus on what really matters: nurturing the relationships and traditions that make a house a true home.

For Tom Martinez, this weathered house by the lake isn’t just where he lives, it’s where he’s put down roots and hopes to grow a legacy.

 

 

 

“… renting was like being stuck on a hamster wheel that she could never get off. Every rent increase was another sleepless night doing mental math about groceries versus utilities.

Some days, Sarah looks around her home and still can’t quite believe it’s really hers. It’s a sanctuary for her family; and she fought tooth and nail for it. 

Getting to this point wasn’t an easy or linear road. Sarah spent years in an abusive marriage that was slowly crushing her spirit. The kind of situation that had her questioning her own reality. Where “I love you” got tangled up with control and fear. But from somewhere deep within the most sacred part of her spirit, she found the courage to walk away with nothing but a fragile belief that life would get better and four kids who believed their mom could do anything. 

Except renting was like being stuck on a hamster wheel that she could never get off. Every rent increase was another sleepless night doing mental math about groceries versus utilities. Every inspection felt like someone reminding her that this apartment wasn’t really hers. The lack of privacy left her feeling like her family still wasn’t truly safe.  

And amidst all of this, when her three-year-old nephew was facing foster care, Sarah didn’t hesitate to step in for him. Maybe she should have—logically, financially, practically. But the heart doesn’t do math, does it? 

 

Then Habitat for Humanity and Women Build came into the picture, and Sarah’s life took a fortuitous turn. Dozens of women who believed in Sarah’s dream even when she was still figuring out how to believe in it herself picked up hammers and raised funds to build a safe home for Sarah’s family as they continued to heal. Sarah found the experience particularly meaningful as it “showed [her] kids that commitment and hard work matter”.

She also shared that the Habitat program “…taught me how to budget and save money—something I’d never been able to do before. But it’s more than just the financial stuff. I have confidence now. I have security. And I have a home that I absolutely adore and am so incredibly proud of!”

Now her nephew calls it home too. He’s got his own space and a bedtime routine that doesn’t involve packing up his things. Sarah’s kids invite friends over and decorate their rooms without worrying about landlord regulations. It’s the kind of security you can’t put a price on—the kind that lets a family breathe.

 

 

We don’t know yet which families will receive Women Build homes this year, but we know there are Sarahs out there waiting. Moms (and grandmothers and guardians) who are working two jobs and still coming up short. Families who feel like coming up with a down payment is as likely as winning the lottery or sleeping in cramped spaces that will never feel like home. People who just need someone to believe in them and give them a chance.

That’s where you come in. Families are waiting, and we need your hands and your heart  this year. Sign up for Women Build today—because when women stand together, we don’t just build houses. We build hope and new beginnings.