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$6,300

Raised of $5,200

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What have you signed up to do this time?

I am a Sports Medicine doctor who had always dreamed of riding my bike across country but never had 2-3 months of free time as long as I was working crazy hours. I retired a few years ago and in 2024 I rode from Seattle to Washington, DC with the Fuller Center. After spending 10 weeks on my bike with this group, I was convinced that this is the best group I could ever ride with. This year I am doing multiple rides with the Fuller Center for Housing to raise money for this mission. They do exactly what they claim to do, return as much money as possible to provide decent housing for as many people as possible. I don't mind sleeping on the floors of churches instead a hotel room, if it means more people can get a roof over their head.  Besides the cycling, we’ll also will be stopping to volunteer with Fuller Center projects along the way. More about the event itself is at fullercenterbikeadventure.org.

What’s the Fuller Center?

A 501(c)(3) non-profit Christian organization that believes everyone in the world deserves the opportunity to have a decent home in which to live. Millard and Linda Fuller were self-made millionaires who gave away their fortune in 1969 to follow God's leading. They lived the rest of their lives on humble means and dedicated themselves to providing decent housing to over a million people in 100 countries around the world, culminating in their founding of the Fuller Center in 2005.

Ok, but what does the Fuller Center do?

It builds and repairs homes using volunteers in partnership with families, who help with the work and pay it forward using a no-profit, no-interest loan that gets repaid to help more families.

It works through a grassroots network of volunteer-driven Fuller Centers in 90 U.S. towns and cities and in 20 countries around the world. Work includes community transformation in El Salvador, Armenia and Madagascar to disaster recovery in places like Mayfield, Kentucky and in Haiti to name a few.

It’s built or repaired over 9,000 homes – enough to house 30,000 people! Learn more about the impact here.

What happens to my donation?

The Fuller Center is known for maximizing donations by putting as much of the funds towards the work as possible. Their independent audit estimated that 92% of the funds go directly to program expenses, with only 8% to administrative and fundraising costs. This is a MUCH higher percentage to program than most groups given that the industry standard is 65% to program. The organization is also rated GuideStar Platinum, the charity evaluator's highest certification.

During the ride we live very simply, sleeping on the floors of gracious and generous church hosts, resulting in only about 2-3% of the funds raised helping to cover Bike Adventure expenses on the road.

Are there other ways I can help?

The rides do need crucial support volunteers and media interns (and often more riders!) if you’re interested in coming along, but besides that, your encouragement and your prayers for health, safety, and a great team would be highly appreciated. THANK YOU so much! This is a team event, and it’s not just the riders: by helping YOU are part of the team!

To give by check (and avoid all processing fees), make checks payable to "The Fuller Center for Housing" with "bike -- [rider's name]" on the memo line and mail to:
Attn: Bike Adventure
The Fuller Center for Housing
PO Box 523
Americus, GA 31709

Recognitions

Top Donors

$6,300 Raised By 5 Donors

$5,300 On Behalf Of Gail hill
$500 from DONALD J RIDGLEY
$250 from bob krulish
$125 from John Hill
$125 from John Loveless
$0 transferred to/from other fundraisers.

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