7.29.2009

Volunteering in 2009


In Tough Times, Volunteering In America Remains Strong




New Federal Report Ranks 50 States and 200 Cities, Shows Young Adults & “Do-It-Yourself” Volunteers Leading Compassion Boom

Washington, DC – A new report released today by the Corporation for National and Community Service finds that even during a time of prolonged economic recession, volunteering has remained steady, fueled by a compassion boom led by young adults and a wave of do-it-yourself volunteers working with their neighbors to fix problems.

Volunteering in America 2009, the most comprehensive data ever assembled on volunteer trends and demographics, found that a total of 61.8 million Americans volunteered through an organization in 2008, up one million from the previous year. America's volunteers dedicated more than 8 billion hours of service in 2008, worth an estimated $162 billion.

While the formal volunteering rate in America remained relatively stable at 26.4 percent, other less-formal ways of serving in communities have dramatically increased. The number of people who worked with their neighbors to fix a community problem rose by 31 percent, from 15.2 million in 2007 to 19.9 million in 2008, suggesting an emerging trend of self-organized ‘do-it-yourself' service, a trend the Obama Administration is working to encourage through its United We Serve initiative and Serve.gov website.

“In this time of economic distress, we need service and volunteering more than ever to build a new foundation for growth,” said First Lady Michelle Obama. “This report suggests that Americans are responding to the hardship around them by reaching out in service to others, giving their time when they cannot give their money. It reminds us of the generosity of the American spirit, and challenges us to work harder to make service part of the daily life of every American.”

The fact the volunteering held steady during a time of high unemployment and foreclosure rates was welcome news to nonprofit and government leaders, who are facing increasing demands at a time of dwindling resources. Previous research would suggest that volunteering should drop during an economic downturn, because volunteer rates are higher among job-holders and homeowners. Volunteering trends for 2008 stand in stark contrast to charitable giving, which experienced the steepest decline in the past 53 years last year.

The report also found an increase in volunteering by young adults (age 16-24), rising from 7.8 million in 2007 to 8.2 million in 2008. The finding aligns with other indicators suggesting a strong service ethic among the millennial generation, including a 217 percent increase in applications to AmeriCorps over the past 8 months.

The research is based on annual surveys of approximately 100,000 individuals collected by the U.S. Census and the Bureau of Labor Statistics in partnership with the Corporation. The VolunteeringInAmerica.gov website contains nine years of data on volunteering, and rankings, volunteer trends and demographic information for every state and almost 200 large and mid-sized cities. It is produced to help national, state and local leaders better understand volunteering trends and demographics and use the data to develop effective strategies for recruiting and retaining volunteers.

“Driven by young adults and neighbors with a do-it yourself spirit, Americans are responding to tough times by reaching out to help others in need,” said Nicola Goren, Acting CEO of the Corporation. “The need is great, the momentum is strong, and potential is unlimited for ushering in a new era of service in America.”

To make it easier for Americans to volunteer, the Corporation worked with the White House to launch a new Serve.gov website in June. At Serve.gov, organizations can post their needs, and potential volunteers can find local opportunities simply by entering their zip codes. The site includes do-it-yourself toolkits with instructions for finding and filling local needs, and a blog featuring stories of service from people all across the country.

Nonprofits Turning to Volunteers to Fill the Gap
As part of this year's report, the Corporation supported Johns Hopkins University to conduct a nationwide survey about the impact of the economy on a sample of over 1,400 nonprofit organizations. The results show that 80 percent of nonprofits have experienced significant economic stress, with more than a third indicating the stress is “severe” or “very severe.”

In the wake of declining financial and staff resources, more nonprofits are relying on and increasing their demand for volunteers. The Hopkins study found that between September 2008 and March 2009, more than a third (37 percent) of nonprofit organizations reported increasing the number of volunteers they use, and almost half (48 percent) foresee increasing their use of volunteers in the coming year. That effort could also help with fundraising challenges since this report also discovered that individuals who volunteer are more than twice as likely to donate to a charity or nonprofit organization as individuals who do not volunteer: 78.2 percent of volunteers made a charitable contribution worth $25 or more as compared to 38.5 percent of non-volunteers.


Key State and City Findings
For the fourth year in a row, Utah was the top volunteer state with a volunteer rate 43.5%, followed by Nebraska (38.9%), Minnesota (38.4%), Alaska (38%), and Iowa (37.1%).

Minneapolis-St. Paul once again ranked number one among large cities at 38.4%, followed by Portland, OR (36.7%), Salt Lake City, UT (36.5%), Seattle, WA (34.3%), and Kansas City, MO (33.4%).

Mid-size cities, particularly those in the Midwest, have on average higher volunteer rates than large cities, and residents of mid-size cities contribute more hours to volunteering.

In the second annual look at volunteering in 75 mid-sized cities, Provo, Utah, again led the nation with a whopping 62.9 percent volunteer rate, followed by Iowa City (42.9%), Ogden, UT (43.6%), Madison, WI (41.5%), and Topeka, KS (40.7%).

Although women are more likely than men to be volunteers – in fact, working mothers have the highest volunteer rates of all – men are more likely to participate in their community in less formal ways.


Background
“Volunteering in America 2009” is based on data obtained from the U.S. Census Bureau and Bureau of Labor Statistics through a “volunteering supplement” to the Current Population Survey from 2002 to 2008. Volunteers are defined as persons who did unpaid work through or for an organization. The report includes information for all 50 states, Washington DC, and 198 cities, including 51 large cities, 75 mid-size cities, and 72 additional cities, based on Metropolitan Statistical Areas. This information includes the volunteer rate; the types of organizations through which residents serve; their main volunteering activities, the average hours per year and volunteer rates for age and gender demographic groups, and key trends and highlights.

The Corporation for National and Community Service is a federal agency that each year engages four million Americans of all ages and backgrounds through its Senior Corps, AmeriCorps and Learn and Serve America programs. For more information, visit NationalService.gov.

Calling All Americans!







UNITED WE SERVE is a national service movement, from June 22 to September 11, founded upon the ideal that ordinary people can achieve extraordinary things when given the proper tools. President Obama is asking you to participate in the United We Serve movement and make an initial service commitment to your community by addressing the needs in education, health, energy, the environment, safety and security.

Although the program lasts only 81 days, it is intended to set the country in motion toward a renewal of our commitment to service. United We Serve will lay the foundation for a sustained, collaborative, and focused movement to promote service as a way of life for all Americans and help meet growing social needs resulting from the economic downturn.


United We Serve has designated the following themes that target priority issue areas.

July 20: Community Renewal
July 27: Education
Aug 03: Energy & Environment
Aug 10: Health
Aug 24: Safety & Security
Aug 31: Interfaith Service



Visit Serve.gov to find volunteer opportunities in your community or register your own service opportunity.


http://www.serve.gov/


http://www.nationalservice.gov/

7.22.2009

Stuff the Bus





Come Let’s Stuff the Bus!!


A School Drive for Kids in Need


Join First Coast News, WTLV/WJXX, Publix Super Markets, Community First Credit Union and the Salvation Army to give needy children a “smart start” this new school year. Thousands of children in Northeast Florida and Southeast Georgia begin school each year without event the most basic classroom necessities. To be ready to learn, they need the proper supplies. Operation Stuff the Bus is a perfect way to show you care. From July 14 through August 9. While you’re out shopping, pick up an extra school supply or two (see the checklist below)

When: Monday, July 14 – Friday, August 8, 2009

Where: Bins will be placed at the Jacksonville Office Park Friday July 10 at the following buildings; 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, and 700

Donation Checklist

Pencils, Pens, Crayons, Markers
Paper, Spiral Notebooks
Folders, 3-rign Binders
Calculators, Rulers, Compasses
Backpacks (preferably clear), Lunch Boxes
Dividers, Pencil Boxes, Kleenex
Red pens, Glue Sticks, 3x5 index cards
Zipper pockets for notebooks
Safety Scissors (rounded tip)
Notebook paper, Composition notebooks


Delivery: Friday, August 8 from 10:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. If you would like to help deliver the school items to Salvation Army, please register at Team Bank of America web site. First Coast News will be on site highlighting companies that took part with the drive.

6.25.2009

General Mills' Hamburger Helper











General Mills’ Hamburger Helper® is partnering with Grammy Award-winning singer, songwriter and actress Beyoncé to help Feeding America deliver more than 3.5 million meals to local food banks through the Show Your Helping Hand™ campaign. The effort is being launched in conjunction with Beyoncé’s U.S. “I AM…” Tour.

Through the work I do with my Survivor Foundation, I’ve been committed to helping families get back on their feet in difficult times,” said Beyoncé. “That’s why I’m excited to get involved in this effort to help Feeding America deliver more than 3.5 million meals to local food banks. If we all show a helping hand, together we can make a difference in the fight against hunger.”

Fans can support the campaign in three ways: by submitting codes from specially marked boxes of Hamburger Helper® online at www.showyourhelpinghand.com; by donating non-perishable food items at Beyoncé’s “I AM…” Tour concerts in select cities across the U.S.; or by logging on to www.showyourhelpinghand.com to donate money.

According to Feeding America, hunger affects one in eight Americans, and the demand on local food banks has grown by more than 30 percent in the past year.

“In the coming months, we expect the need for food to be even greater as children on summer break lose access to school meal programs. And for the rest of this year and beyond, the economy will continue to present serious challenges,” explained Vicki B. Escarra, president and CEO, Feeding America, the nation’s leading domestic hunger-relief charity. “By getting involved in the Show Your Helping Hand™ campaign, Americans can really make a difference in the fight against hunger.”

As experts in the food industry, Hamburger Helper®, one of the largest brands in the General Mills portfolio, is proud to initiate such a meaningful hunger relief initiative.

“We all have the opportunity to show our helping hands and help fight hunger in America,” said Beth Brady, Vice President at General Mills, the maker of Hamburger Helper®. “By partnering with Beyoncé and Feeding America, we can collectively draw attention and resources to the critical issue of hunger in America.”

6.05.2009

Today's Show - Call to Action

Read more about this on the Today's Show website as well... Please see below what you can do to help to support our troops... They love to receive messages and letters as well as gift boxes. Thanks for doing your part to continue to show the love and support during those rough times this is when they and all Americans need it the most!


http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/30988193/#storyContinued

TODAY’s Call to Action series aims to get Americans to step up their support for service members and military families. Here is a list of resources that can get you started.

Send letters, gifts, and packages to troops overseas


Anyone can send a letter, an e-mail, or package to those deployed. Let them know they are not forgotten. Thousands of soldiers have signed up to hear from you, and you can find their names and addresses on this Web site. It's free.
http://www.anysoldier.com/



USO’s mission is to provide morale, welfare and recreation-type services to uniformed military personnel. The original intent of Congress, and enduring style of USO delivery, is to represent the American people by extending a touch of home to the military.
http://www.uso.org/


This organization seeks to lift morale and put smiles on the faces of those men and women deployed in hostile and remote regions by sending care packages, food, hygiene products, entertainment items and personal letters of appreciation. They have sent more than 400,000 packages all over the world.
http://www.opgratitude.com/


Books For Soldiers is a soldier support site that ships books, DVDs and supplies to deployed soldiers and soldiers in VA hospitals via a large volunteer network.http://www.booksforsoldiers.com/


The AdoptaPlatoon Soldier Support Effort founded in 1998 is a nonprofit 501C-3 organization managed nationwide by volunteer mothers to ensure that deployed United States service members in all branches of the military are not forgotten by providing needed mail support and promoting patriotism in our schools and communities.
http://www.adoptaplatoon.org/



Service members register with this organization for morale support and are matched with civilians who want to e-mail our troops and show them they care. In addition to receiving a military service member — or several — to correspond with on a one-on-one basis, eMOM also runs seasonal and year-round support projects to keep you motivated and having fun, all while supporting our troops. The organization also sends mail and care packages.
http://www.emailourmilitary.com/


La Knitterie Parisienne is a knitting shop that invites everyone to join them in crafting a hand-knit blanket for USA Cares Operation Lap Wrap and help make a difference in the lives of the brave servicemen and women who have put their lives on the line.
http://www.laknitterieparisienne.com/LKP_USACares.html




Support military families in need


Operation Homefront
Operation Homefront was created to channel volunteer support to help the families of our deployed military personnel. With hundreds of thousands of service members deployed for war in Iraq, and countless others around the world fighting the war on terrorism, thousands of spouses and children are left behind, and many are in need. Operation Homefront is there for them.

Military Child Education Coalition
This organization helps families, children, schools and communities be better prepared to support military children whose education is impacted by frequent moves and difficult, sometimes traumatic, times in the lives of military families.

West Point Family Morale, Welfare and Recreation Soldier and Family Assistance Center This Army community service organization offers assistance and support to wounded soldiers and their families in the West Point community. It works to help resolve health, personal and social issues for officers, soldiers, transitioning service members, civilian veterans and their families.


USA Cares
USA Cares maintains a "call center" dedicated to the millions of Americans who have service members in their family. They also have a family support account created with money generously donated to them, exclusively for use in supporting military families in the same tradition as Kentuckiana Cares. Trained and experienced "advocates" will mentor, coach and be the friendly voice to help those families that may not even know the right question to ask.

The Yellow Ribbon Fund
The Yellow Ribbon Fund has one mission: Welcoming our injured service members into our community. More than 500 individuals and companies in the Washington metropolitan area joined together to support these injured service members. We offer them an opportunity to use their free time to learn new skills with a local company. We provide hotel rooms, rental cars, and other transportation for their families. Our volunteers are mentors and friends who care.

Building Homes for Heroes
Building Homes for Heroes provides individuals, corporations and others with an opportunity to help severely wounded and disabled veterans and their families rebuild their lives. Many of these young men and women are coming home badly burned, with permanent and unsightly body disfigurements, missing limbs, the loss of sight or ability to walk, psychiatric conditions or paralysis. Building Homes for Heroes is committed to supporting these extraordinary men and women, with a goal to build homes for families in dire need.

Evan A. Ashcraft Memorial Foundation
The intent of this foundation established by Jim and Jane Bright is to memorialize Sergeant Evan A. Ashcraft, who was killed in action in Iraq on July 24, 2003. Donations to the foundation will be distributed in memory of Evan Ashcraft and his desire to help people. It will provide educational funds to the veterans and dependents of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Fisher House Foundation
Because members of the military and their families are stationed worldwide and must often travel great distances for specialized medical care, Fisher House™ Foundation donates "comfort homes," built on the grounds of major military and VA medical centers. These homes enable family members to be close to a loved one at the most stressful times — during the hospitalization for an unexpected illness, disease or injury.

Homes for Our Troops, Inc.
Founded on February 4, 2004, this Massachusetts nonprofit builds specially adapted homes for our disabled veterans of war. The organization is dedicated to helping those who have selflessly given to their country and have returned home with serious disabilities and injuries.

Operation Comfort
Operation Comfort's mission is to create a nationwide network of mental health providers and agencies to donate their services, free of charge, to family members who have a loved one serving in the Middle East.

Hope for the Warriors
The mission of Hope for the Warriors is to enhance quality of life for U.S. Service Members and their families nationwide who have been adversely affected by injuries or death in the line of duty.

National Veterans Foundation
Since 1985, The National Veterans Foundation has been a leading resource for veterans. NVF is a nonprofit organization that offers emotional support, a listening ear, and information about veteran services. NVF is run by veterans, for veterans. The mission of The National Veterans Foundation is to help veterans get the help they need as quickly as possible.

Semper Fi Fund
The Injured Marine Semper Fi Fund helps Marines, sailors and their families meet their financial needs during difficult times. The Fund works closely with the Marine Corps, the Navy and hospitals nationwide to identify and assess the needs of specific families.

Operation Purple
The National Military Family Association’s Operation Purple camp offers time for having fun, making friends, and reminding military kids that they are the nation’s youngest heroes. It also offers Operation Purple Healing Adventure Camp, which has a specially designed program for wounded service members and their families.

Operation Special Delivery
This organization provides trained volunteer doulas for pregnant women whose husbands or partners have been severely injured or who have lost their lives in current conflicts, or who will be deployed at the time that they are due to give birth. If you are a trained doula and want to help military moms get through labor physically and emotionally, please volunteer.

The Real Warriors Campaign
The Real Warriors Campaign is an initiative launched by the Defense Centers of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury (DCoE) to promote the processes of building resilience, facilitating recovery and supporting reintegration of returning service members, veterans and their families. They are looking for health professionals to join their TRICARE network of physicians.

Operation Open Arms
This is an organization of South Florida businesses who welcome military families by donating free guided fishing trips, restaurant meals and other R&R activities to members of the armed forces on leave before they return to Iraq, Afghanistan, Cuba, or other foreign duty stations.

Blue Star Families
Blue Star Families is a bridge between military families, the shapers of policy affecting military life, and the nation. Through outreach with national and local organizations, civilian communities and government entities, the organization seeks to educate the nation in order to promote healthier families, aid in our military readiness and contribute to our country’s strength.

N.J. National Guard Family Programs
The New Jersey National Guard Family Programs Office has established regional Family Assistance Centers (FACs) to support all military families specifically during times of deployment and separation. Each Family Assistance Center is trained to help families get the support and information they need, as quickly as possible, while lending a sympathetic ear to those in need of one. Call toll free: 1-888-859-0352.

Support for veterans:

Canines for combat veterans
NEADS' mission is to rescue and train dogs to assist veterans with everyday tasks through their Canines for Combat Veterans Program. The program's goal is to provide the highest quality of trained service dogs to all qualified applicants. Volunteers are needed to help raise puppies.

America's vet dogs
The VetDogs project is a program from the Guide Dog Foundation for the Blind, Inc. Since its beginning in 1946, the foundation has always served the needs of veterans and in recent years, the foundation has come to recognize that as veterans age, and as wounded soldiers return home from the global war on terrorism, there would be a greater need for guide dogs and specialized service dogs to help our service members maintain mobility and independence. With the assistance of volunteers, they train and supply guide dogs for the visually impaired veteran and service dogs for those who have disabilities other than blindness.

Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America is the nation's first and largest group dedicated to the troops and veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the civilian supporters of those troops and veterans. It provides the following online resources:

SupportyourVet.org gives friends/family members tools on how to ease the transition back into civilian life and fight problems that these vets are facing such as Post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

CommunityofVeterans.org is a social media Web site that is exclusive for vets where they can freely discuss issues they face, such as PTSD.

Special thanks: TODAY's Call To Action asked for viewers to bring baby need items and children's books to the Plaza on Thursday morning. Every item is much appreciated. We'd like to thank everyone who participated and give a special thank-you to these wonderful companies who answered our call and donated nearly $76,000 in products that will help military families.

Southwest Publishing
Cheerios "Spoonfuls of Stories"
Pampers
Graco Children's Products
Little Brown Books for Young Readers
Sesame Workshop: The non-profit educational organization behind Sesame Street

6.02.2009

Child Hunger in America
















www.strength.org/

Understanding Childhood Hunger

Strengthen Your Resolve to End Childhood Hunger in America
Why childhood hunger? Hunger impairs our children's health in significant and long-lasting ways, including physical and mental development.

All of us have at one time or another experienced hunger. We’ve all craved a midnight snack, wanted something salty or needed some chocolate. But there’s a big difference between trying to satisfy a brief craving or stomach growl and wondering where your next meal will come from.

The reality is that more than 12.4 million children in America—that’s one in six—are at risk of hunger. And it’s likely that these children will endure lifelong consequences as a result of having limited access to nutritious foods. In fact, they’re more likely to suffer:

Weaker immune systems
More stomachaches
Headaches
Colds
Ear infections
Fatigue
More hospitalizations
Behavioral difficulties

Impaired performance in school-academically, athletically and socially
A whole host of other lifelong consequences
And hunger doesn’t discriminate. It can affect any child—even those you’d least expect.

The good news: You have the strength to make a difference!
Share Our Strength is working hard to end this invisible hunger. But we can only do it with the help of dedicated, committed volunteers, community organizations—and strong supporters like you.


We are Share Our Strength.

Share Our Strength® is a national organization that works hard to make sure no kid in America grows up hungry.

We weave together a net of community groups, activists and food programs to catch children at risk of hunger and surround them with nutritious food where they live, learn and play.

We work with the culinary industry to create engaging, pioneering programs like Share Our Strength’s Taste of the Nation®, Share Our Strength’s Great American Bake Sale®, Share Our Strength’s A Tasteful Pursuit®, Share Our Strength’s Great American Dine Out™, and Share Our Strength’s Operation Frontline®. Discover how you can get involved »

Why We Do It

We have all experienced hunger at one time or another: We’ve all craved a midnight snack, wanted something salty or needed some chocolate. But there’s a big difference between trying to satisfy a brief craving or stomach growl and wondering when or from where your next meal will come.

More than 12.4 million—one in six—children in America are at risk of hunger. These children will endure lifelong consequences as a result of having limited access to nutritious foods. In fact, they’re more likely to suffer poorer health, fatigue, hospitalizations, behavioral difficulties and impaired performance at school.

And hunger doesn’t discriminate. It can affect any child—even those you’d least expect.

Despite the good efforts of governments, private-sector institutions and everyday Americans, millions of our children still don’t have daily access to the nutritious meals they need to live active, healthy lives.

Strength Makes the Difference

Through the strength of dedicated, committed volunteers to support our fundraising efforts and community organizations that put our resources to good use, Share Our Strength finds childhood hunger where it hides and works hard to end it.

We raise funds through our pioneering culinary events (Share Our Strength’s Taste of the Nation, Great American Dine Out, A Tasteful Pursuit and Great American Bake Sale) and award grants to support successful organizations across the country that work to provide children and their families with the healthy food they need. Since our inception in 1984, we have raised over $245 million and provided support to more than 1,000 of the most effective hunger-relief organizations around the globe. Get involved with a Share Our Strength event.
We partner with leading corporations through strategic marketing programs that engage their customers, employees and partners around the issue of ending childhood hunger in America. Learn more about our innovative corporate partnerships.
We award grants to organizations throughout the country whose efforts and successes align with the 10 points of our national plan to end childhood hunger. Learn more about our Grants at Work.
We convene partnerships with effective, influential nonprofits that develop their own plans modeled after Share Our Strength’s national plan to end childhood hunger. Learn more about our state partnerships.
We provide education programming through Share Our Strength’s Operation Frontline, our awarding winning nutrition education program that teaches families how to prepare healthy, low-cost meals. Learn more about Operation Frontline.
All of this work supports our strategy to end childhood hunger in America.

Driving Social Change — Community Wealth Ventures®, Inc.
Community Wealth Ventures®, Inc. (CWV), a wholly owned for-profit subsidiary of Share Our Strength, is a consulting firm that leverages the power of market-based approaches to drive social change. CWV helps nonprofit organizations become more self-sustaining by generating revenue through business ventures and corporate partnerships. In addition, the firm helps corporations improve their bottom lines through the design and implementation of community investment

5.22.2009

May is American Stroke Month









Overwhelmed with questions after your loved one had a stroke? We can help. Check out the American Stroke Association's 15 tips for coping with your new role as a stroke caregiver. Learn about recovery expectations, therapy, resources and preventing secondary stroke.

http://www.strokeassociation.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=1200037

The Difference $1 Can Make

Stroke is the third leading cause of death and the leading cause of disability for all Americans. Give at least $1 to the Power To End Stroke campaign to help raise awareness and reduce stroke risks.

http://amha.convio.net/site/TR/Events/General?pg=fund&fr_id=1120&pxfid=17650