Showing posts with label Volunteers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Volunteers. Show all posts

Monday, April 8, 2013

Sanctuary for Independent Media focused on building up community. (Troy, NY)


By Andrew Beam
TROY — It’s going to be a busy few months for the Sanctuary for Independent Media as they aim to create a community in an area seen as one of the most neglected blocks in the city by bringing in art, food and music.

With the help of several grants, totaling around $250,000, the non-profit is looking to make several changes to their area, including constructing a staging area in Freedom Square while also unveiling the product of a yearlong Found Art in North Troy project.

“It’s about bringing art into a community, into a street of not an elite and separated thing from life but actually art that, at its essence, is about community development,” said Branda Miller, the arts and education coordinator at the Sanctuary. “It’s a participatory art design that gives voice. That’s the essence and vision of the Sanctuary.”

The grants come from the National Endowment of the Arts, which gave $50,000 to the project, along with a matching grant from the city, which was the result of a settlement between the city and the Sanctuary from a lawsuit regarding selective enforcement.
There is also a $100,000 Art and Economic grant from New York State Council on the Arts, which is part of the Capital District Regional Economic Development Council, and a $13,000 grant from the Alfred Z. Solomon Charitable Trust.

The bulk of the money will go toward artist fees and other initiatives, Sanctuary Executive Director Steve Pierce said, while the grant from Alfred Z. Solomon will help fund the construction of the stage.

Behind the stage, a mosaic will be created by contributions from students from various schools around the city, which Miller said fit into the idea of participatory art. Isaiah Zagar, a Philadelphia-based mosaic artist, will work with student volunteers in creating the mosaic on a concrete wall; Pierce said the work to create the wall has been put out to bid.

A bin full of plates can be seen outside of the front door of the Sanctuary for people to break and use in creating the mosaic when Zagar visits on June 1 and 2. There are also plains for artist Marcus Kwame Anderson to paint murals on the sides of various buildings on the block and even in the middle of the street in an attempt to slow down traffic, Miller said. He may even paint a mural on the side of the new Jamaican restaurant moving into the block, something both Miller and Pierce never imagined would happen.

The owner of the restaurant, Vincent Douglas, had been looking at Schenectady for some time before visiting Troy. Once he saw how much simpler it was to do business in the Collar City he decided to move it. Anderson will be meeting with Douglas later next week to discuss the possibility of a mural.

All of this activity and interest has been generated by the work done by both members of the Sanctuary and volunteers within the community, including members of Troy Bike Rescue, Collard City Growers, AME Zion Missing Link Street Ministry and Transition Troy.
“It’s a lot of people pooling their resources to try and make something happen here,” Pierce said. “We’re talking about something that, on the cosmic scheme of things, is very inexpensive. The expenditure of public money is relatively small but the impact is relatively big. And people feel like they’re a part of it as opposed to something that is happening to them.”

Volunteers also helped clear brush in a vacant lot the Sanctuary purchased to put in a perennial garden where members of the community can help grown their own food. The Sanctuary will even hold classes on teaching members how to cook, including a workshop on April 9 called ‘The Story of Beans” which will teach people how to cook dry beans from scratch.

For Pastor Willie Bacote of the AME Zion Missing Link Street Ministry Church, it’s been great to see all of the work happening in the area.

“It’s a joy just to know what’s going to exist here,” Bacote said. “I’ve enjoyed every day I’ve been here. We’re finally going to see all this work come to fruition.”

Miller said the year-long project is all about empowerment and making the community feel like it is a part of the transformation. Both Pierce and Miller said Mayor Lou Rosamilia’s administration has been very responsive and encouraging about the work being done on their block.

“We hope it can be an area for experimentation for alternatives,” Miller said. “The traditional responses for economic problems haven’t done much. We just hope the powers that be are more responsive to more unorthodox alternatives.”

Thursday, April 4, 2013

National Volunteer Week Funds Available

The Institute for Human Services Brings You:National Volunteer Week Mini Grants

National Volunteer Week: April 21-27, 2013

Are you planning a volunteer event as part of National Volunteer Week during April 21-27th?  Could you use some additional funds to enhance your project's impact?

If you have answered "YES" to either of these questions then consider applying for a mini-grant from 2-1-1 HELPLINE Give Help and the Regional Volunteer Center of the Southern Tier!

Because of this partnership, we are to be able to offer mini-grants to support local volunteer efforts in Chemung, Steuben and Schuyler Counties during National Volunteer Week. If your organization is currently planning an event for that week and could use some additional funding to enhance your efforts we encourage you to request a mini-grant of up to $350. If you are interested in applying for a mini-grant, simply fill out our online application by going to the link below. Please complete the survey by Friday March 29th. Decisions regarding project funding will be made by Friday April 5th, 2013.

  
If you have any questions, please contact Tess McKinley at mckinleyt@ihsnet.org or at (607) 776-9467, ext. 217

2-1-1 HELPLINE Give Help coordinates volunteer support services, by serving as a volunteer clearinghouse and resource center that is supported by United Way of the Southern Tier to increase civic engagement in our area.  Interested in volunteering?  Want to add your volunteer opportunities to our database?  Learn more here.

The Regional Volunteer Center of the Southern Tier is a collaboration designed to promote and enhance local volunteer efforts in our community. Under the leadership of the Institute for Human Services, United Way of Broome County, and United Way of Tompkins County, local non-profits are coming together to create a dynamic regional partnership to enhance and strengthen local volunteer efforts.  The Regional Volunteer Center of the Southern Tier is one of ten regional volunteer centers in New York State.

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

The Inexpensive Solution to Volunteer Protection

The Inexpensive Solution to Volunteer Protection

Sometimes, volunteers have accidents - injure someone, get hurt themselves, or have an auto accident. Usually, their own insurance is not enough to take care of the damage. And the nonprofit organization's insurance does not protect the volunteer in some critical areas of risk.

Your nonprofit organization has the option of adding volunteers as additional insureds on the commercial general liability (CGL) policy. However, such an endorsement usually excludes volunteers' travel between home and the place of volunteer duty. Also, a CGL endorsement excludes coverage for claims made by one volunteer against another. Finally, the organization risks sharing its own limits of insurance - under the CGL policy - with the volunteer.

Covering volunteers under workers' compensation usually is not the wisest approach. First, a volunteer's injury would affect the claims experience of the nonprofit, which could increase workers' compensation insurance costs. Second, workers' compensation does not protect the volunteer during travel to and from their volunteer duty. 

However, there is an inexpensive solution to the problem...

VIS  

To protect volunteers, the Volunteers Insurance Service (VIS®) program offers the following three coverages separately or combined:
  • Up to $50,000 in accident medical reimbursement as a result of covered accident - at a cost of $3.94 per volunteer per year;
  • Up to $1,000,000 in personal liability insurance - $1.72 per volunteer per year with a minimum premium of $100;
  • For those volunteers who drive, up to $500,000 in excess automobile liability insurance above the volunteer's own insurance -$6.34 per volunteer per year with a minimum premium of $100.  
Total cost per volunteer, if all coverages are selected: $12.00 per year. The organization simply insures the greatest number of volunteers it expects to have at any given time.

VIS® Membership is required in order to sign up for any of the above programs; which an annual membership fee of $135 (July-June fiscal year).

For More Info Click Here

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

New! Consumers Guide to Volunteer Management Systems

We’re thrilled to announce the release of our latest in-depth report, A Consumers Guide to Volunteer Management Systems, created in partnership with TechSoup. It’s available for free download with registration at http://www.idealware.org/volunteer_management.

Like all our reports, this one is the product of extensive research, interviews and hands-on system demos. It condenses the knowledge of experts and impartial reviews into an all-in-one-place guide to help nonprofits understand and choose the best volunteer management system.

Volunteers provide the strong backs that help build organizations, but volunteer-based nonprofits have to keep track of a lot of data, from contact info and schedules to time sheets and job sites. The right software can streamline that process and free up time for managing volunteers. Though there are a number of products on the market, it’s surprisingly hard to find information about them—until now.

We designed this report as an introduction to volunteer management software: what’s out there, what to expect, and how the different solutions compare. It covers the basic features and functions that might be desirable, and discusses the pros and cons of standalone systems vs. those that track volunteers alongside donors or other constituents. Finally, it compares the strengths and weaknesses of three standalone volunteer management systems and three consolidated constituent management systems, with contextual information about 21 additional systems.

Whether you’re upgrading your existing system or just starting out, let Idealware help your nonprofit make smart software decisions—use this report to guide you through the process. Download it now (free with registration)!

Want to know more, or to hear the researchers talk through the systems and considerations? Check out our online seminar Choosing a Volunteer Management System, for $40 on June 9th.


Enjoy!
Laura
--
Laura Quinn Executive Director Idealware
laura@idealware.org http://www.idealware.org/

Thursday, June 17, 2010

NY dead-last in volunteerism

The Albany Business Review reported that New Yorkers are not very beneficent when it comes to giving their time. Not at all.

In fact, the Empire State ranks 51st out of 50 states and Washington D.C. when it comes to volunteering, according to the annual Volunteering in America report.

Nationally, however, about 1.6 million more volunteers served in 2009 than in 2008, making this the largest single-year increase in the number of volunteers since 2003, when data was first collected for the study. The report is produced by the Corporation for National and Community Service, a government-sponsored nonprofit. Higher unemployment rates also increase volunteerism.

Nationwide, a total of 63.4 million volunteers contributed 8.1 billion hours of service in 2009, an estimated dollar value $169 billion. Overall, the volunteering rate increased in 2009 to 26.8 percent, up from 26.4 percent in 2008.

Volunteering data used in the annual report is gathered through the Current Population Survey, conducted monthly by the U.S. Census Bureau for the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Volunteers are defined as individuals ages 16 and over who perform unpaid activities for or through an organization.

The study showed that 2.9 million, or 19 percent, of New York residents volunteered in 2007-2009, compared with the national average of 26.8 percent. The Capital Region fared better, but still placed in the lower half of the rankings. It ranked 44th out of the 75 mid-sized cities that were studied for the report, with 27.1 percent, or 200,000, of its residents volunteering.

Compared with other mid-sized cities in New York, the Capital Region placed behind Binghamton, ranked 30th, and Poughkeepsie, ranked 41st, and ahead of 71st-ranked Syracuse. Nationally, Provo, Utah, ranked first among mid-sized cities and El Paso, Texas, was last. Utah was the top state for volunteerism.

Volunteers in New York contributed 405.5 million hours, or $8.5 billion worth in service from 2007-2009.

Read more: New York dead-last in volunteerism - The Business Review (Albany)

Monday, March 15, 2010

Center for American Progress Promotes Accelerated Expansion of Service

New paper highlights capacity already in field and effective management by national service agency

In a new paper released this week, the Center for American Progress calls for an accelerated expansion of national service. The author, Shirley Sagawa, reports that "[i]ncreasing full-time service would create jobs, address pressing community problems, and reconnect youth who are neither employed nor in school with a pathway to opportunity. Existing federal programs and state and local networks have excess capacity and are well positioned to grow to serve this end if Congress makes the financial resources available."

Click here to read "How Quickly Can National Service Grow?" by Shirley Sagawa of the Center for American Progress.

In November 2009, the Center for American Progress released "National Service and Youth Unemployment" by Melissa Boteach, Joy Moses, and Shirley Sagawa, which details youth unemployment and explains the role for national service in creating jobs. "How Quickly Can National Service Grow?" follows this paper by describing the existing capacity for community-based organizations to absorb new positions efficiently and effectively.

Sagawa further notes the ability of the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS) to expand and administer additional grants and programs. In the past year, CNCS has "receiv[ed] an unqualified positive opinion on its financial statements" while managing significant growth that resulted from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, the Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act, and record appropriations in fiscal years 2009 and 2010.

New Yorkers Volunteer
State Commission on National & Community Service
52 Washington Street
North Building - Suite 338
Rensselaer, NY 12144
Phone: 518-473-8882
Fax: 518-402-3817
www.newyorkersvolunteer.ny.gov

Friday, November 6, 2009

NY Voters Approve Proposal to Allow Prisoners Work for Nonprofits

WNYC reported that New York voters approved Proposition 2 this week, by a large margin.

The measure allows the state legislature to draft a law letting prisoners do work for non-profits. Some prisoner advocates say the proposition will force inmates to work for meager wages. Others say it will help rehabilitate them.

Glen Martin is a prisoner advocate for The Fortune Society, a non-profit group in Long Island City. He spent six years in prison for robbery, and says he remembers inmates hoping for work assignments, because they could get fresh air and build skills. But Martin says they should get higher wages.

MARTIN: You know, people in prison would like to get paid some sort of prevailing wages so they can have resources accumulated for when they're released. Most people are returned to very poor communities that lack resources to help them.

REPORTER: Right now, state prisoners are paid less than a dollar an hour, for work done outside prisons.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Change Would Allow Inmates to Work for Nonprofits

The Times Union featured an article on a state proposition that goes to voters. As the article relates, it originated with the New York State Sheriffs' Association, some of whose members have long used volunteer jail inmates to perform tasks such as painting or cleaning town or county facilities.

In some cases, inmates had worked in cemeteries, which are non-government, raising the question of whether that was allowed. That led to the proposition, said Tom Mitchell, counsel for the association.

Sheriffs, Mitchell said, generally like having their willing inmates work.
The change would add nonprofit charitable organizations to the list of places where inmates could work. That would include charitable, religious or educational organizations.
Read more here.

Do you support this measure? Share your thoughts here.

Monday, October 26, 2009

CommonKindness Rewards Community Volunteers

CommonKindness is promoting an innovative contest to encourage community service and volunteerism. There are only 5 days left to enter!!!

CommonKindness.com is accepting nominations from the general public to enter their favorite “do-gooders” in a contest to win a 5-night Caribbean Cruise, sponsored in conjunction with Cabot Creamery Cooperative and Celebrity Cruises. Nominations are being accepted through October 31st, 2009.

Seven winners making a profound difference in their communities and the world through their good deeds will be announced on Nov. 15th to win a cruise to the Caribbean for themselves and one guest, including airfare, in January 2010.

CommonKindness.com, Cabot and Celebrity Cruises would like to encourage and reward everyday “unsung heroes” who work so hard and selflessly to make the world a better place.

Send Your Favorite “Do-Gooder” on a Caribbean Cruise for two!
(Who knows, maybe they’ll choose to bring you along!)

In every community, there are unsung heroes who quietly work behind the scenes to improve our communities and the world.

The reward for these special people usually resides in the good work they do, not in the recognition they receive. But today you can reward your favorite “do-gooder” by nominating them to win a 5-night Caribbean cruise for two!

Simply visit CommonKindness.com to enter them into a contest to win a 5-night Caribbean cruise for two, including airfare, sponsored by CommonKindness, Cabot Creamery Cooperative and Celebrity Cruises.

Entries must be received by 11:59 pm on Oct. 31st, 2009 so act now!
Seven lucky winners will be chosen on the merit of their community service and the impact it has on their community or the world.

Nominations are being accepted at CommonKindness.com through 11:59 pm October 31st, 2009. Winners will be announced on November 15th, 2009. Valued at approximately $3,244, the cruise is scheduled for January 23rd – 28th, 2010.

Remember to visit CommonKindness.com every week to save an average of $1,300 a year for your family on your groceries and other purchases. CommonKindness offers thousands of online coupons and discounts accepted at most supermarkets and retailers near you.

Best of all, every time you use a coupon or discount with CommonKindness, funds are generated to help support the charities and causes you are passionate about - at no cost to you!

Each time you use a coupon or online discount with CommonKindness, companies posting their offers pay advertising fees. CommonKindness shares 60% of its income with the causes and charities you choose from more than a million non-profit organizations already included on the site.

CommonKindness supports the charities and causes you are passionate about by putting money into your pockets instead of taking it out!

Dana Valdez
Director of Operations
CommonKindness
845-254-4535 ph
845-254-4549 fax