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March 2013 – On March 21, OPAL moved a house from Buck Mountain to Mountain View. Partnering with Nickels Bros., OPAL moved a 960 square foot home from Parker Reef Road, near the base of Buck Mountain, to a lot acquired by OPAL through donation.
The house is the fourth building that OPAL has moved since February 2011.
Noviembre de 2012: utilizando fondos de subvención del Fondo Fiduciario de Vivienda del Estado de Washington, OPAL compró una casa de tres habitaciones de 1,400 pies cuadrados en Hemlock Street en Eastsound. OPAL implementará reparaciones modestas en la casa y la ofrecerá a la venta a un precio de $180,000 a principios de 2013.

Septiembre de 2012: OPAL ocupó el tercer lugar en la competencia nacional de los Premios al liderazgo prudencial de Board Source para juntas excepcionales sin fines de lucro. La aplicación incluía una narración y un video de 2 a 5 minutos.

November 2011 – The latest updates on three houses recently moved to Oberon Meadow in Eastsound:

August 11, 2011 – Bob and Phyllis Henigson donated a 1,000 sq. ft. residence to OPAL and OPAL hired Nickel Bros. House Movers to move the building to Eastsound in the early morning hours of August 11th. The house is pictured squeezing through a very tight spot on Deer Harbor Road.
The building, which served as the Gropper home for many years, will be located on Oberon Lane, next to the house OPAL moved to the site in February 2011. It appears likely that a third house will join the other two later in the fall.

February 25-26, 2011 – A house donated to OPAL has moved to its new site at Oberon Meadow.
Between 10 p.m. on Friday and 6 a.m. on Saturday, a 1,064-sq.-ft., two-bedroom beach house, given to OPAL Community Land Trust by Bruce and Toy Baker’s two sons and their families, was moved by barge and truck from its decades-old site on North Beach to its new location off Oberon Lane.
To accommodate the donated house in its new location, OPAL must seek permission from the county to revise the sub-division. Once permission is obtained, OPAL will install a road and parking area, a new foundation, utilities and renovate the house. It is expected to be ready for sale to qualifying buyers by year-end.
February 1, 2011 – OPAL Community Land Trust accepted an unprecedented gift: a two-story, two-bedroom, one-bath house on a one-acre parcel of land in Eastsound, owned and generously donated by Philip Rife, who has lived on the property for 11 years. Rife, 65, is moving to a retirement community on the mainland.
“I have been very blessed in life and I’d like to give something back,” he said. “I don’t need the assets from the sale of the property. I decided to donate the house and land so someone who has not been as fortunate as I have can have a home.”
The Rife house will become OPAL’s seventh scattered-site dwelling, joining other individual properties in Olga and Eastsound. Plans are to renovate the house and have it ready for new qualified low- or moderate-income buyers by the summer.
Diciembre de 2010: se completa la construcción del edificio en Wild Rose Meadow en Eastsound. Las 32 casas nuevas en el vecindario de Wild Rose Meadow están terminadas. El trabajo en el paisajismo y los detalles finales del sitio continuarán hasta principios de 2011.
June 2009 – Washington State awarded $1.5 million for OPAL to purchase and renovate the 22-unit Lavender Hollow apartments. OPAL plans to purchase the apartment buildings in 2009 and commence renovation in 2010. The current Federal subsidized loan from the USDA Rural Housing Service will transfer to OPAL, so that the apartments will continue to provide an affordable home for low-income and very low-income seniors, persons with disabilities, young people starting into adulthood and parents with children.