Guest Blogger: Jonathan Wallace, Volunteer Center of North Texas

April 21st, 2010 - Posted by OneStar Foundation - No Comments

Today’s guest blogger is Jonathan Wallace, Manager of Youth Volunteer Corps at the Volunteer Center of North Texas. All Collin, Dallas and Tarrant County residents who are interested in volunteering are welcome to contact the Volunteer Center of North Texas for more information on the opportunities that are available to them.

Every week is National Volunteer Week at the Volunteer Center of North Texas (VCNT). With more than 1,400 member agencies across North Texas, we play matchmaker every week to citizens looking for ways to serve in their community.

No matter what your age may be, or why you are choosing to serve, volunteering is one of the most important things a human being can do. By taking the time to serve someone else, a volunteer helps to provide basic needs to others and to their community. These acts of service pave the way for positive change in relationships, homes, neighborhoods and communities.

Volunteering can be performed in different ways and does not always have to involve a long-term commitment. Due to the busy schedules of people today, the VCNT finds that more and more groups want to volunteer through a short- term project, typically on a weekend. When an individual inquires about volunteering, we guide them towards the best opportunity that fits their desire and focus. Utilizing HandsOnNorthTexas.org as the online outlet for finding volunteer opportunities throughout the North Texas region, more than 79,500 referrals are provided annually. The VCNT also reaches out to the next generation through Youth Volunteer Corps of North Texas, sponsored by State Farm Companies Foundation. Youth Volunteer Corps of North Texas is a civic engagement and leadership development program that promotes service learning for students in middle school and high school.

While volunteering is critical and important, so is recognizing them. Volunteers give their time, energy and skills to tasks that usually would not be completed without them. They are critical to moving the missions of our organizations forward. The very least we must do to sustain the efforts of volunteers is to take the time and recognize their achievements. At the VCNT, we recognize our volunteers in several ways. From a random hug and “Thank you” in the hallway, to putting on our cowboy hats, belt buckles and spurs so that we can celebrate them with a Lone Star Salute!, our tri-county event honoring volunteers who served in their community the previous year. Our first Lone Star Salute! of 2010 will take place during National Volunteer Week on Thursday, April 22, 2010, at the Plano Centre in Collin County. We will hold Lone Star Salute! events for Tarrant and Dallas County residents later this year.

In addition to holding Lone Star Salute!, we will also be celebrating National Volunteer Week through our Student Engagement Department’s promotion of Global Youth Service Day on Saturday, April 24, 2010. Global Youth Service Day is the largest service event in the world, engaging millions of youth in more than 100 countries. With more than a dozen Global Youth Service Day projects occurring throughout the North Texas region, there are plenty of opportunities for volunteers to engage in service!

Because of volunteers, children are mentored and nurtured, the hungry are fed, those in pain have a shoulder to cry on and communities that once were broken begin to be healed. Volunteers recognize that it is not a choice to give back to their communities, but rather a civic responsibility. With this attitude, join others during National Volunteer Week to create positive change in your community.

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Because of a Volunteer

April 20th, 2010 - Posted by OneStar Foundation - No Comments

Imagine a world without volunteers.

So much depends upon volunteers—each of them. Every day, volunteers help to provide social services to Texans. They are a crucial part of nonprofits’ efforts to solve community challenges. If there were no volunteers, the world—our world, yours and mine—would be a very different place.

Because of volunteers, many crucial social services are provided, including food delivery, student tutoring, self-sufficiency programs for the homeless, college application assistance, health and wellness information and so much more. Because of volunteers, people receive assistance in rebuilding their lives. Volunteers engage in many different activities, depending on the organization they work with; but they all have that in common—they help to rebuild lives.

Because of volunteers, 556.6 million hours of service were given by 4.1 million Texans from September 2007 to September 2008. Roughly 23% of Texans—nearly one in four people—chose to help fellow Texans by volunteering1.

Here is our challenge to you: Imagine a world in which you are volunteering. What will you do? Who do you want to help? Which lives will you help rebuild?

National Volunteer Week is April 18-24, 2010. Will you join your fellow 4.1 million Texans and be a part of changing your community for the better? Your local volunteer center can help you find the right opportunity, as can the following online volunteering resources:

Imagine what can be done because you are a volunteer. Then, make it happen.

1 These statistics can be found in the Corporation for National and Community Service’s “Volunteering in America” report.

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Guest Blogger: Teisha-Vonique Hood, AmeriCorps*Texas Member, Central Dallas Ministries

April 15th, 2010 - Posted by OneStar Foundation - No Comments

Teisha-Vonique Hood and Jon Bon Jovi

We just got this amazing story from Teisha-Vonique Hood, an AmeriCorps*Texas member with Central Dallas Ministries and a member of the AmeriCorps*Texas Leadership Council. She told us about her experience promoting national service at a Jon Bon Jovi concert, and about snapping an “I AM AmeriCorps” photo with him!

Volunteers from AmeriCorps, Senior Corps and Corporation for National and Community Service distributed hundreds of Soul Foundation/JBJ Fan Site photocards and Serve.gov information cards throughout the American Airlines Center. One “hot spot” for distribution was the area where women departed restrooms and met their waiting guests outside. There, one woman to stop by the United We Serve table and learn how her organization can better assist underserved youth. As a result, our organizations are planning future collaborations. Concertgoers could also contribute to Soul Foundation (Jon Bon Jovi’s nonprofit) by purchasing “One Soul At A Time” t-shirts with all proceeds benefitting the organization, or by texting a donation. The service message was continuous throughout the arena, including in videos shown on monitors throughout the arena—even in the bathrooms! It was definitely evident how Bon Jovi is dedicated to service.

Yesterday, I was asked by my colleagues at Central Dallas Ministries (CDM) AmeriCorps to join them at their latest housing development project downtown during Jon Bon Jovi’s visit. I made sure to wear my “United We Serve” t-shirt from Saturday evening in hopes he would recognize it. Boy, did he ever. However, our AmeriCorps director had an additional mission: capture an image of Jon with the “I AM AmeriCorps” sign to show his dedication to service.

Part One

Jon finished his meetings in the morning with the CDM CEO and other partners, then proceeded to walk down a hallway for a television interview. As he walked back, he started smiling and waving slyly to rejoin members of his crew. I thought for a moment, “He surely is not waving at me?!?” As I checked around no one else was returning his wave, so I half-heartedly waved back. After his brief meeting, he walked towards the elevator, where my colleagues and I were positioned, and began to get on the elevator. But before he stepped on the elevator, he outstretched his hand to me, between two CDM employees engaged in conversation. I paused for a moment and had to look at his hand, look back up at him, then look at his hand, again thinking, “He surely is not outstretching his hand for me?!?!” Indeed, that gesture was directed to me. When I returned the handshake, he made sure to note, “I love your shirt.”

Part Two

My colleagues and I went to the first floor near the exit to try to capture the photo we desired before Jon’s departure. Prior to his return from the tour, we asked his crew if it would be possible to take a quick photo with him, and were kindly declined due to his tight schedule that day. As he walked towards the exit doors, we all positioned ourselves to capture a quick image, but our views were obstructed from his crew. We looked on patiently as they each offered their goodbyes, but I wasn’t defeated. I looked for an opportunity and found it in a five-second window when Jon already said his goodbyes and was waiting for his crew to complete theirs. I then walked around his crew, approached Jon directly with the “I AM AmeriCorps” sign and asked to capture a photo with him. The attached is the resulting image. To note, he was so kind to take the photo but even more gracious by repeatedly asking “Did you get the shot? Is it all right?” Mission accomplished.

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Can You Push Texas to #1 for Global Youth Service Day?

April 14th, 2010 - Posted by OneStar Foundation - No Comments

Global Youth Service Day 2010 is April 23-25

Global Youth Service Day is only two weeks away; and according to Youth Service America, Texas is one of the top states to register Global Youth Service Day projects! As of today, 75 Texas projects are listed on GYSD.org. Only Ohio (with 110), Minnesota (with 104) and Pennsylvania (with 85) are currently ahead of us, so registering your organization’s project might push Texas up to the top!

Registering will ensure that your organization’s project is counted in the official grand total. And with 63 countries currently represented and a total of 1,164 projects registered, every project counts!

You can find instructions for registering here.

Do you know what you will be doing for Global Youth Service Day? To get you thinking, here is an example of a project: one of our AmeriCorps grantees, Easter Seals Central Texas’ program ASSET AmeriCorps, will be building a community garden. (More information about their project can be found here.)  If your organization is planning a project, spread the word about it in the comments section!

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Stand Up and Be Counted: Why the U.S. Census Matters to Nonprofits

March 26th, 2010 - Posted by OneStar Foundation - No Comments

By now, you have probably seen several public service announcements about the importance of filling out your U.S. Census forms. You have probably received your Census forms in the mail as well.

But did you know that the Census is one of the most valuable tools available for federal, state and local government and planning officials? Data from the Census is utilized to create plans and distribute funds for schools, roads, government redistricting and more. According to the Chronicle of Philanthropy article “Foundations Pour Millions Into Efforts to Improve the Census,” the Census count currently results in $1,415 in funds per person annually, adding up to $14,150 per person for the whole decade.

In addition, according to NonprofitsCount.org:

  • $4 trillion in federal funds will be distributed to states over the next decade based on Census data.
  • Texas received $23.1 billion in Census-based federal funds during 2007 alone.
  • Each Texan counted in the 2000 Census earned $968.36 in federal dollars for our state.

Part of those funds will come in the form of taxpayer dollars that go toward contracting with nonprofits to deliver services. Unfortunately, many of the people who rely on nonprofits for services—particularly people with young children, homeless people and people whose primary language is not English—are often underrepresented in the Census. Without everyone’s participation in the Census, communities cannot effectively plan to meet the true needs of all of their residents, and nonprofits may not receive enough funding to continue serving their clients effectively.

But your nonprofit organization can help ensure that everyone—especially those who might need help the most—can stand up and be counted in the Census! Your organization can:

How is your organization promoting Census participation? Tell us in the Comments section!

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