Calvin alum addresses health hazards in Kent County housing
More than 5,000聽children between the ages of zero and five tested positive for lead poisoning in 2014 in the state of Michigan. In Kent County, 465 out of the 610 children who had聽elevated lead blood levels in 2015 were from .
鈥淭here鈥檚 basically a bullseye over the southeast side of Grand Rapids with a ton of kids with lead poisoning. That鈥檚 not right,鈥澛爏aid Paul Haan.
Haan '88, who graduated from Calvin with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in communications and philosophy, worked with Creston Neighborhood Association from June 1988 to聽March 2000. He then served on the community institute leadership staff at Aquinas College as the Get the Lead Out! project coordinator, which led him to become the executive director of Healthy Homes Coalition which was created as a nonprofit organization in August 2006.
Committed to healthy housing
Although originally focused on eliminating sources of lead, Healthy Homes addresses multiple issues within substandard housing. 鈥淲e made a commitment to always put lead [issues] first, but to very carefully move forward and work on other issues in the community as well,鈥 Haan said.
Through Healthy Homes, Haan has been fighting lead and substandard housing issues for 10 years through grant writing, talking to funders, working with the state board and even going door to door to inform families about health hazards in the home.
Thus, the Healthy Homes team works toward eliminating sources of lead from homes and addressing various issues that can cause asthma, like carbon monoxide.
Haan sees major issues with subsidized houses, which make up many neighborhoods in impoverished communities. 鈥淚n the future, we need to plan housing for people of all incomes, and that means housing that works for families,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the big picture as we see it: sufficient, affordable, healthy and safe housing for families and kids. Right now, that鈥檚 not the case.鈥
Hometown reconciliation
Haan is grateful for the mindset and skills he began acquiring at Calvin that have been useful for his work since graduating. 鈥淗aving an extremely quality education and awareness of things from the various perspectives has positioned me to be much more critical, analytical and engaged in [my work],鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen I started at Calvin, I thought in very binary terms, but it鈥檚 not about either or鈥攊t鈥檚 about getting everyone together, for the benefit of everyone, for the reconciliation of the world.鈥
Through Healthy Homes, Haan hopes to engage in that reconciling work of the Lord by making right relationships in Grand Rapids. 鈥淥ne of the core values at the heart of this for me is, whether it鈥檚 community organizing or it鈥檚 this work [at Healthy Homes], it鈥檚 about reconciliation and making right relationships. I hope that Healthy Homes will be a prime mover in starting the momentum to actually clean up the lead in the environment in a meaningful, effective way鈥攖hat, within a generation, we get rid of those sources. Relying on medication for treating kids with asthma is not the only way. Again, if kids have safe and healthy housing, we can combat that problem.鈥