Showing posts with label fundraising. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fundraising. Show all posts

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Teens for Jeans

Teens, Jeans Team up to Help the Homeless
knoxnews.com 1/17/2008

Aeropostale wants to "Do Something" for homeless teens.

The youth-oriented clothing chain will sponsor the "Teens for Jeans" campaign with the not-for-profit organization Do Something, which encourages youth to become more involved in volunteer community work, Jan. 22-Feb. 10. The goal is to raise awareness of the rising number of homeless teens in the United States. According to statistics, a third of the nation's homeless are children under age 18.

I just wanted to male a note of Aeropostale's new campaign. It sounds like individuals who donate a pair of old jeans get 20% off a pair of new ones and that the jeans will be given to local homeless youth.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Kids Can Help

Winslow Students Working to Help Homeless
Morning Sentential, 10/23/2007
Last year Kendra Littlefield's community-based learning students at Winslow High School were one of 10 national winners of a USA Weekend magazine Make a Difference Day award.

This week they are up to another good deed.

"Raising the Roof Over the Homeless" is the theme for the chem-free dance students have been organizing for the last two months, Winslow High senior Melanie Gagnon said.

St Brenden School Students Prepare Packages for the Homeless
The Providence Journal 10/23/2007

Middle school students from the St. Brendan School, a pre-kindergarten to grade eight private school in Riverside, could say that after preparing 150 sandwiches and other snacks for the state’s homeless Friday afternoon. The bag lunch was paired with personal hygiene items and socks — which were collected by the school’s lower grade students — to make it an all-school project.

Principal Joseph Renzulli said the school got the idea from a St. Brendan parishioner, Anne Pari, of East Providence. She delivers food to the homeless every Friday and Renzulli agreed the school would take over her duties one Friday.

They titled the project “Bread Lines.”

Highschool Helps Homeless
Lakeshore Advance, 10/24/2007

South Huron District High School student, Taryn Anstett handed Trevor Johnson of the Youth Action Centre (YAC) in London $365 for the centre during a presentation on homeless youth at the high school last week.
The students were told to act as lobby groups for a law project and made their primary focus of the campaign, awareness of homelessness. They went above and beyond and started by collecting pocket change from students and teachers over two days, raising the money for homeless youth. “The response was incredible,” says Anstett.
Nine Year Old to Walk to Tally For Homeless
Tampa Bay's 10, 10/22/2007
In the past three years, Zach Bonner has collected supplies for Hurricane Charley victims, raised money for the “Teaching Tools Hillsborough Schools” program, organized a holiday party for kids displaced by Katrina and given away more than 750 backpacks for needy kids.

For his efforts, President Bush last year presented Zach with a volunteer service award. But the 9-year old is not slowing down, he’s just moving on to his next big project.

There is another article that I have saved and want to write about but the sudden flurry of youth and schools working to help people experiencing homelessness deserves some attention. Service learning is a valuable tool for all kinds of social issues and is a fantastic way to bring classroom subjects to real life. I wish that I had an opportunity to participate in projects like these when I was in school but alas, in the 90s it was all about HIV and DARE, subjects that would be a little more risque to develop service learning projects around.

Edit: A couple more...
Virginia Run Students walk for Homelessness
Students Collect Pennies for the Homeless

Monday, October 8, 2007

Empathy vs Sympathy-- Do "Box Cities" Really Work?

Overnight 'box city' will help homeless
Post Bulletin 10/06/07

Cardboard Box City -- the annual overnight event that raises money to help organizations serving Rochester's homeless families and individuals -- will be Oct. 19.

Participants will spend the night in cardboard boxes and tents in a temporary city that will be created at Soldier's Field.

Event helps kids empathize with homeless
Strauss News 10/04/07

Box City ’07 is an event for high schoolers that gives them a chance to experience an aspect of homelessness. The children who participate will sleep in a box on the Sussex County fairgrounds for a night to get a sense of what it’s like for people who sleep that way every night.

Interfaith Hospitality Network (IHN), a nonprofit program providing emergency shelter to homeless families, hosts the “experiential event” for high school youth to promote homelessness awareness. Participants are given a light supper, engage in learning activities and replicate the actual experience of being homeless by sleeping outside in a cardboard box.

Is there anyone else out there that thinks that this fundraising strategy makes a mockery of what individuals experiencing homelessness face every day? For starters, a lot of the homeless people I know or see don't have cardboard boxes, they have tents or nothing. They don't get cozy sleeping bags and footie pajamas.

I understand what these groups are tying to do, they are trying to be able to take the kids from "Wow, that sounds like it really stinks" to "I tried that for one night and it totally sucked. I feel your pain brother." But neither of the events above mention that there will be any "real live" homeless people there to answer questions and interact with the kids. To the participants, it is a giant sleepover. If you want to raise awareness take them to a soup kitchen just a couple at a time, not in a big pack, so they blend in with the regulars and feel what that first trip to the soup kitchen must feel like. Or, better yet, have them help work the soup kitchen for a few weeks. If you want people to even begin to comprehend what homeless individuals experience you need them to interact with homeless individuals. You can camp out in boxes all you want but you aren't going to change someone's view of homelessness until they meet that homeless individual who looks just like their grandfather or who has a heart wrenching story to tell.


Saturday, September 15, 2007

Innovation is Key

Haven Bottle Drive will Feed Many Homeless in Need
Scabee.com 9/6/07

The Haven of Rest is continuing to collect cans and bottles with deposit to provide food for the homeless throughout the summer. Every 15 cans brought in will provide a meal to a homeless person. Whether you're having a family reunion or a small barbeque with your friends, The Haven is asking that you collect your cans and bottles to help us feed the homeless.

"We have been able to provide over 300 meals already with bottle money," said Executive Director Elaine Hunsicker. "This has been a great fundraiser for the Haven, so please continue to bring your bottles and cans in. Every little bit makes a difference, so whether you have a ton, or just a couple of bottles it all ads up to meals for the homeless."

I just want to point out that shelters oven have many innovative fundraising plans to help sustain themselves. One way to help homeless people, if you are willing to go beyond offering your smile, is to get involved with local shelters and help with the organizing and implementation of such events, which can be quite interesting!:

Volunteer Profile: Farytale Town Night Helps Homeless
Sacbee.com, 9/6/07