"We don't want to be the last ones." Guillermo's voice is firm and strong, addressing a room full of reporters, legislators, and advocates at the California State Capitol. "We don’t want to be the last family who got the chance to own an affordable home. We want thousands more families to follow us — we want families who can look around their neighborhoods and say, 'We belong here.'"
Guillermo and his partner, Yulisa, own their home at Habitat for Humanity's Esperanza Place in Walnut Creek. They'd been homeowners for a year when Guillermo stood at the Capitol to advocate for CalHome funding — determined that his family be just one in a long line of other families that could build their futures on the strong foundation of affordable homeownership.
Before purchasing their home, Guillermo and Yulisa rented for years. "And not the kind of renters who could just move out when things got bad," he points out. "We stayed because we couldn't afford to leave. We stayed because we were raising our son, Cesar, and we needed a roof over his head — no matter what it took. We stayed because, like so many families, we were doing everything right — working hard, paying rent on time — and still had no control over the place we called 'home.'"
Their partnership with Habitat changed the story. "As renters, we lived month to month," Guillermo says. "As homeowners, we think in generations." Today, home means security and the consistency Cesar thrives on. It means "a future that's stable, safe, and full of possibility."
It's why Guillermo enthusiastically gives his time to meet with legislators, to rally fellow advocates at the state Capitol, to speak to supporters, and to write letters to urge others to stand with Habitat. He wants to be sure his family isn't the last.
"Because in California," Guillermo says, "home shouldn't be a dream you rent. It should be a future that you own."