UNDERSTANDING THE IMPACT, STRUCTURE AND SUSTAINABILITY OF OUR HOMEOWNERSHIP PROGRAM

DONOR FAQS


The SILL Foundation values transparency, accountability, and meaningful impact. The following questions address how our Homeownership Program works, who it serves, how it is funded, and how donor support creates long-term change for families and communities.


Program Overview

What is the Homeownership Program?

The Homeownership Program is a comprehensive, client-centered initiative designed to help low-income families—particularly single mothers and households with dependent children—achieve sustainable homeownership. The program uses a structured case management model that emphasizes preparation, education, and access to affordable homeownership opportunities.

What problem does the program address?

Many families are excluded from traditional homeownership pathways due to systemic barriers such as limited credit history, insufficient savings, and lack of access to affordable homeownership. The program addresses these barriers through financial coaching, readiness planning, and strategic partnerships that create achievable paths to homeownership.

Why does the Foundation focus on homeownership?

Stable homeownership is a cornerstone of economic mobility, family stability, and generational wealth-building. By helping families move toward homeownership responsibly, the Foundation promotes long-term self-sufficiency and stronger communities.

Target Population & Equity

Who does the program serve?

The program serves low-income families who meet eligibility requirements, with priority given to single mothers with one or more dependent children, households with multiple dependents, and residents within the Foundation’s designated service area: Brewton, Alabama.

How does the program promote equity?

The program intentionally targets families who have been historically excluded from homeownership opportunities. By providing education, individualized planning, and access to affordable homeownership options, the Foundation helps level the playing field while maintaining accountability and readiness standards.

Program Design & Phases

How is the program structured?

The program follows a six-phase model:

  1. Application and eligibility screening
  2. Intake and development of an Individual Homeownership Action Plan (IHAP)
  3. Financial education and coaching
  4. Homeownership readiness assessment
  5. Placement and purchase
  6. Post-purchase support

This phased approach ensures families are prepared for long-term success, not just initial home purchase.

What is an Individual Homeownership Action Plan (IHAP)?

The IHAP is a personalized roadmap developed for each participant. It outlines homeownership goals, financial benchmarks, required education, and an estimated timeline toward homeownership, ensuring accountability and measurable progress.

Property Acquisition & Placement

Where do the homes come from?

Homes are acquired through donated properties, purchase of distressed or undervalued homes, and lease-to-own homeownership models. Properties may be rehabilitated as needed to ensure safety and habitability.

Does the Foundation own the homes?

In some cases, yes. The Foundation may temporarily own homes that are later sold or transitioned to participants through affordable purchase or lease-to-own arrangements.

Funding & Sustainability

How is the Homeownership Program funded?

The program is supported through a diversified funding strategy that includes federal, state, and local grants; private and faith-based foundation grants; corporate and financial institution partnerships; individual donations; and program income from lease-to-own arrangements or reinvested property sales.

Why is a diversified funding model important?

Diversified funding ensures long-term sustainability, reduces reliance on any single funding source, and allows the program to scale responsibly while maintaining program quality and outcomes.

Outcomes & Accountability

How does the Foundation measure success?

Success is measured through key indicators such as the number of families achieving homeownership, improvements in participant credit scores and savings, completion of financial education requirements, and homeownership retention rates.

How is data collected and evaluated?

The Foundation collects data through case management records, participant assessments, and post-purchase follow-up evaluations to ensure accountability, continuous improvement, and transparent reporting to funders.

Impact & Donor Value

How does donor support make a difference?

Donor support helps fund financial education, coaching, property acquisition, and long-term support services. Contributions directly enable families to overcome barriers to homeownership and achieve lasting stability.

Why is this program a strong investment?

The Homeownership Program addresses the full continuum of homeownership—from preparation to post-purchase support—making it a sustainable, high-impact investment. By supporting this program, donors help strengthen families, reduce housing instability, and build resilient communities.

PARTNER WITH US TO 
BUILD LASTING CHANGE

By investing in the Homeownership Program, donors and partners support a proven model that expands access to homeownership, promotes economic mobility, and creates opportunities for generations to come.