Helping
out south of border
By Greg Gelpi News Daily December 10, 2004
Taking
a vacation from his hectic work schedule as the information
technology manager of The
Doctor's Office, LLC
, Keith Schuler recently spent a week in Vera Cruz, Mexico.
But he wasn't on vacation.
The
Doctor's Office, LLC,
a group of twenty-two health-care providers, helped fund Schuler's
trip, part of the President Jimmy Carter Work Project, to help
build 75 houses through Habitat for Humanity.
From around 7 in
the morning to sometimes as late as 7 at night, he and a team
of 35 volunteers built the 600-square-foot house.
"You almost
need a vacation from your vacation," Schuler, 41, said.
Although most of
the volunteers have returned home, electrical and plumbing project
volunteers remain, but the families should be able to move into
their new houses before Christmas, Schuler said.
About 2,000 volunteers
worked to build 75 houses. Schuler served as a house leader,
coordinating the efforts of an international contingent, although
he didn't let language get in the way.
Other challenges
were the heat and constructing the single-family homes using
materials and designs unfamiliar to Schuler. The two-bedroom
homes were built with concrete blocks, which were more like
bricks, he said. Multiple homes were built on the same slab
to form small communities.
Schuler said he
received a greater appreciation of all that he has.
"You kind of
take an inventory of what you have and don't have," he
said, explaining that the experience is "rewarding."
Trading in his tools
as the "one-man IT staff," Schuler said he used his
experiences through the Boy Scouts of America as an Eagle Scout
and Scout volunteer, as well as his fair share of watching "This
Old House," to learn the tools and trade of construction.
Schuler said his
experience with Boy Scouts introduced him to volunteering and
performing projects to give back to the community and he became
involved with the Atlanta chapter of Habitat more than two years
ago.
His passion for
volunteering is shared by his family. The husband and father
of three said his children have expressed an eagerness to work
with Habitat for Humanity as well when they are old enough.
Meeting many of
the volunteers for the first time at the airport before departing
for Vera Cruz, Schuler said he made friendships that he hopes
to keep. The volunteers stayed in hotels and recovered from
the day's labor by plotting ways to tackle the next day's work.