|
Mark thomas
Story and Photo by Ellen C. Warren
Seven years ago Mark Thomas
saw an ad for a national all-volunteer
organization called Rebuilding Together.
They offer free home repairs for lowincome
elderly and disabled homeowners
and families with children, especially
if the children have special needs. He
called the number and found that they
were very interested in starting a chapter
in Milwaukee. The group that had been
here had dissolved, and the need was
great.
He held a meeting at the Milwaukee
Chamber of Commerce. The meeting was
very well-attended, and the Milwaukee
Chapter of Rebuilding Together was
launched. Several people who volunteered
to serve on the board worked for
Milwaukee County. They helped identify
four houses that Rebuilding Together
worked on that first year.
Then things got complicated.
Some members lost their jobs with the
County and were no longer interested in
continuing with the group. Mark missed
a meeting and the remaining members
considered disbanding the chapter.
That is, unless Mark agreed to be
president.
They let him know what they’d
decided in his absence. “I really wasn’t
looking to be in charge,” he explained,
“but I didn’t want to see it go down.” So
he agreed.
They had lost all the leadership.
“So, we pretty much had to start from
scratch,” Mark says. That was six years
ago. He’s still president.
“We have over 500 volunteers,”
Mark proudly announces. This year,
they’re expecting to do 18 houses. Lately,
their average has been about 15 per year.
“We did one in Riverwest a couple
years ago, and another one last year,”
he said. “This year, I didn’t push it,” he
continued, “but I was hoping that the
neighborhood would get together and
find me more houses…. I’d really like to
see something in my own neighborhood.”
The organization is not lacking for
applications. One hundred and fifty or
more is normal in a year.
“A big part of what we do is try to
help [disabled clients] be comfortable
in their homes,” Mark explained. “We
partner with the occupational therapy
department at UWM. Students come in
for a learning exercise. They work with
clients to determine what their needs are,
and then they write the specifications for
us.” (If you’d like to learn more about
Rebuilding Together, please see the info
following this article.)
Mark is a home inspector with 25
years of construction experience. He
began working as a carpenter while
attending college, where he received
Associate Degrees in both Civil
Engineering Technology and Business
Administration. After he’d “learned how
buildings are put together,” he designed
and constructed commercial buildings.
Presently, he inspects commercial
buildings as well as homes and offers
his services as a building consultant.
He is also the founder of the Wisconsin
Association of Home Inspectors and an
instructor at MATC.
Recently he partnered with a fellow
Riverwester, Greg Golimowski of Right
Remodeling, on a rehab of a 4-plex on
Bremen Street. Mark describes Greg as a
“fabulous, detail-oriented, perfectionist
kind of carpenter.”
“The building is well-constructed
and stunning,” Mark explained, “but it
hadn’t been maintained for a really long
time.” They stripped seven layers of paint
off the woodwork, redid the electrical
and the plumbing, and did all the rest of
the work involved in returning the brick
structure to its original beauty.
Mark originally landed in
Riverwest in 1979 after a four-year stint
in the Navy. He traded in his childhood
northwest-side neighborhood (“That’s
so boring over there!”) for an apartment
above what is presently Nessun Dorma.
A year later he bought a house on Weil
where he married and had his first child,
a daughter. Around 1985, they sold that
house and bought the one farther north
on Weil where Mark presently lives. They
had a second daughter in that house,
and in 1990 he and his wife moved to
Washington Heights where his third
child, a son, was born. Seven years later
they moved to Bay View.
The multi-family on Weil became
home again a couple years ago after he
and his wife divorced. He presently has
his 21-year-old daughter, Noelle, and
15-year-old son, Andre, living with him.
Andre attends the High School of the
Arts, majoring in visual art. Noelle is a
student at MATC in liberal arts and will
continue on at UWM where she’ll decide
her major. At this time, her dad says with
a smile, “It changes pretty regularly.”
The family is rounded out by a shih
tzu-mix dog named Peppy. Mark happily
accompanies his pup to the riverside
fields and trails a couple times a day. (He
even knows Marianne and Wendy – last
month’s Neighbor Spotlight!)
What does Mark particularly
enjoy about living in Riverwest, besides
the people and the neighbors, some of
whom he’s known for twenty years?
The music!
“I like to go out to see live music,”
Mark exclaimed, “and I don’t think
there’s anywhere in the city with a greater
concentration of live venues.”
“Really, anywhere,” he continued.
“Even if you go to some of the cities that
are famous for music…go down to Beale
Street in Memphis…there’s a lot of bars
with music, but I don’t think there’s any
more than in Riverwest. And we’ve got a
good variety, too. You go to Beale St., it’s
all blues. Whereas here, there’s all kinds
of stuff. Most of the venues that have live
music, I’ve been there.”
Note from the writer: And if you
can’t find him there or at the park, try
Nessun Dorma!
Rebuilding Together’s mission is
to preserve and revitalize houses and
communities, assuring that low-income
homeowners, from the elderly and
disabled to families with children, live
in warmth, safety, and independence. In
partnership with communities, their goal
is to make a sustainable impact.
Applicants must be single family
homeowners in Milwaukee or Waukesha
County (sorry no duplexes). They must
be current on their taxes or on a payment
plan. They must also be over 60 years of
age and low-income OR a person living
with a disability and low-income.
To learn more, to volunteer, to apply
for help or to recommend a homeowner
for consideration, go to rtmilwaukee.org,
or call 414-319-9828.
Riverwest Currents online edition - March, 2007 |