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With donated and discounted building materials, and cash contributions from sponsors, Habitat helps families who need housing, chinamadefloordrillpresses and who commit to working shoulder-to-shoulder with community volunteers throughout the construction of their homes. In Tucson, Arizona, for example, single-parent families must agree to donate 200 hours of labor on the building or in the Habitat office; two-parent families must donate 400 hours of sweat equity, says Yvonne Coelet, Director of Public Relations.Houses are priced affordably and the families who move in are given zero-interest loans. The interest-free loans and community underwriting chinamadefloordrillpresses and chinamadefloordrillpresses of the project through volunteer labor and donated materials means home payments for the new residents are typically much lower than the rent payments they were making previously. In Tucson, families living in rental units pay at chinamadefloordrillpresses least $.500 per month. In contrast, house payments for Habitat homes are typically about $350 per month. "With a house payment that''s significantly lower than rent," says Coelet, "families can get ahead in life." DB90 planterFor growers who have high-productivity requirements, harvest in a 12-row, 30-inch configuration, and need to seed more acres in less time, John Deere introduces the new DB90, 36-row, 30-inch spaced planter.The DB90 planter is a front-fold, five-section, flex-frame planter with John Deere MaxEmerge Plus chinamadefloordrillpresses row units. It features a new Bauer Built Manufacturing frame design, new hydraulic system, and new row markers. These enhancements allow for a narrow transport width, narrow folder marker profile to allow planting close chinamadefloordrillpresses to fences, and overall planter productivity and reliability. Low fuel bills and affordable mortgages save families hundreds of dollars a year, preserving hard-earned cash for other necessities such as food, clothing and education. In 1997, the Valadez family chinamadefloordrillpresses moved into an energy-efficient home built by HFH of Metro Denver."The typical winter utility bill in their new home ranges from $47 to $52 per month, compared to $150 to $200 per month in their old apartment," says Pritchard. "Their summer utility bills now range from $20 to $27 per month, down from $65 to $75 per month in their apartment."
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