In Liberty, Missouri, there is a house that appears somewhat more upright than it did a few years ago. The front door ramp is brand-new. The handrails are firmly in place. It doesn’t appear to be a headline. It appears that someone was concerned enough to arrive on a Saturday morning with tools, and that is essentially what took place.
For twenty-five years, Rebuilding Together Kansas City has carried out this kind of low-key, unglamorous work. No product launches, red carpet events, or viral moments. Just lumber in pickup beds, volunteers wearing work gloves, and families who would have otherwise remained in homes that were gradually collapsing around them. By June of this year, the organization had completed 1,750 home repairs throughout the Kansas City metro area, recruited over 8,900 volunteers, and provided over $5.4 million in free safety modifications and repairs for low-income families, the elderly, veterans, and individuals with disabilities.
The figures have significance. However, they fall short of accurately depicting the real situation on the ground.

This was initiated by Clay McQuerry in 2001, which is an amazing detail in and of itself. He didn’t work as a contractor. He served as a pastor for sixteen years, leading churches in Texas and Missouri and traveling on mission trips to communities across the United States, Canada, and Mexico. He claims that while his own neighbors quietly struggled at home, he helped people in distant places. He saw the difference between the real location of the need and the direction his energy was going. He was shown a model by a Texas Rebuilding Together affiliate. He returned it to Clay County. Exactly 25 years before the organization celebrated its anniversary this summer, on June 21, 2001, the first board of directors meeting took place.
What it takes to manage a company like this for twenty-five years is noteworthy. Nonprofits fail. Missions stray. Founders either move on or burn out. It speaks to the depth of the original instinct that this one not only endured but grew, evolving from “Rebuilding Together Liberty” to “Rebuilding Together Kansas City” by 2017 and extending into Platte and Jackson Counties. It wasn’t based on a fad. It was founded on the particular, unwavering conviction that having a secure home is not a luxury.
The point is probably that the work itself is not as dramatic as the numbers imply. ramps for wheelchairs. staircase handrails. a roof that has been fixed before winter. A mobile home’s walls were repaired after a child with severe autism broke through them, making the dangerous area habitable once more. These are not glitzy endeavors. If they had the funds and the freedom to do so, the majority of homeowners would take care of these repairs without hesitation. The difference between a home that is safe and one that is structurally sound can be years for families without either.
The organization claims that 2025 was its best year to date, with project completion rates up 30% from the previous year. Although it’s possible that it represents growing need, it’s tempting to interpret that as an indication of increasing momentum. It is possible for both to be true simultaneously.
It is more difficult to quantify what the Kansas City volunteer network has quietly and unobtrusively created than home repairs. People who volunteer for strangers year after year because someone once persuaded them that the need was genuine and the work was worthwhile make up this recurring community structure. It takes time to build that kind of infrastructure. It takes 25 years, 8,900 volunteers, and one man who decided his own neighborhood should receive the same level of attention he had been providing everywhere else after returning from a mission trip.
The Liberty house still has a slightly more upright appearance. The ramp remains in place. Another volunteer is taking measurements for the next one somewhere.

