Week 24: Community Connections Camp

June 11, 2018

This week was the week of my Community Connections Camp  at Lakehill for middle and high school students. It is without a doubt one of the highlights of my year! Each day of the camp, we partner with two different non-profit organizations (one in the morning, one in the afternoon). I love returning to volunteer with long-time favorites, as well as introducing campers to new places to channel their altruistic energy. I was honored to have my colleagues Kaye Hauschild and Jo Cayme-Mosley with me again for this camp. Many of our dedicated campers return every year to volunteer with us.

We began our week at Crossroads Community Services, where our campers did an amazing job sorting linens, stocking food, organizing donations, and shopping with clients. Crossroads provides much needed services to those living below the poverty line in Dallas. They are always needing donations of men’s and boys’ shoes and clothing – please think of them when clearing out closets!

In the afternoon, we visited Voice of Hope, where we worked with their first and second grade students. We led an arts and crafts activity in their classrooms and some competitive games of balloon tennis in their gym. Voice of Hope is dedicated to serving families in West Dallas, focusing their efforts on the children of the community.  Our campers did an amazing job engaging the young students, keeping them on task, and making sure everyone had fun.

On Tuesday, we began our day with CitySquare’s Food on the Move program. We helped set up, passed out food, organized activities for the children, and stayed and played at four different locations in the community. Our campers did a great job interacting with the children we served. CitySquare is a broad community development organization that offers a wide range of social services that address four key areas related to the persistence of poverty: hunger, health, housing, and hope. Their Food on the Move program helps provide free food and fun to impoverished children across Dallas in the summer when school is out.

From there, we went directly to our afternoon project at Jewish Family Service (JFS), a nonsectarian mental health and social services agency that impacts over 13,000 lives a year. We were able to participate in an amazing simulation they call the Food Pantry Experience. Our group was divided into teams and each given a family profile and scenario. They were charged with creating a budget for their family, dealing with unexpected setbacks along the way, and preparing a list of food they could purchase. They then went through the intake process at JFS, filling out the needed forms, before being allowed to shop in the food pantry. It really was an amazing experience, and gave us some insight into the food pantry clients we served the next day.

On Wednesday, we traveled to Brother Bill’s Helping Hand in West Dallas. Brother Bill’s brings not just a legacy of 75 years of service to West Dallas, but hope for a better life to the more than 25,000 people living in the 75212 zip code. This is always a favorite project for my students, as they love getting to help in the grocery store. We bagged produce, sorted plastic bags, and prepared for the approximately 100 guests who visited the grocery store. When the doors opened, our campers were ready to greet the guests, help them with their selections, provide food (and sometimes recipes), sack groceries, and help guests to their cars. This is the first post I have written on Brother Bill’s, and I highly recommend volunteering here. It’s fun, engaging, and always busy! The students were amazing – chatting with the guests, carrying bags of groceries, and making every person feel special.

In the afternoon, we cleaned Lakehill’s adopted shoreline at White Rock Lake (through For The Love of the Lake). The campers did a great job despite the heat, finding a lot of trash in a short amount of time.

We spent Thursday morning at Community Partners of Dallas, an organization that assists CPS caseworkers in helping abandoned, abused, or neglected children who have been removed from their homes. After a tour of the facility, we got to work on a seemingly monumental task – sorting, packing, and shelving row after row of backpacks. Our campers were absolutely amazing – they didn’t take a minute’s break, “power sorting” backpacks into a variety of categories and getting them into boxes and onto the shelves in beautiful order.

After lunch, we traveled to the North Texas Food Bank where we packed cereal boxes for distribution, broke down cardboard boxes, and stacked a lot of pallets.

On Friday, we headed to the VNA Meals on Wheels headquarters for a quick orientation and to pick up our food. We then traveled to Potter’s House/Primrose Oaks in South Dallas to deliver. The campers did a great job greeting clients and delivering meals with a big side of smiles. I loved seeing how they interacted with the residents.

After lunch, we prepared Bingo bags for Austin Street Center to be delivered later in the summer.

Together, our group gave 762 combined hours of service to ten wonderful organizations dedicated to the environment and to those affected by abuse, poverty, homelessness, and hunger. I am so proud of our campers and their engagement with our community this week.

I can hardly wait for my next Community Connections camp later in the summer!

 

Week 23: Community Partners of Dallas

June 8, 2018

This week, I volunteered with Community Partners of Dallas, a nonprofit organization dedicated to ensuring safety, restoring dignity, and inspiring hope for the abused and neglected children served by Dallas County Child Protective Services.

I have volunteered with Community Partners of Dallas numerous times over the past 10 years: collecting items at Lakehill Preparatory School for one of their four major drives (Easter basket, Toy, Coat, and Back-to-school) and bringing groups to work in the warehouse. Some of our Lakehill teachers have recorded stories for their Storyline program. Community Partners is the type of organization that makes volunteering easy. There is always plenty to do, and it is always well organized and well managed.

Friday was the first time I have ever volunteered at Community Partners on my own. As always, it was easy to sign up and I was welcomed with open arms when I arrived. My task during my two-hour shift was similar to those I have completed when I attended with a large group: to sort, count, box, and label supplies (pencil pouches this time), in preparation to fill the thousands of backpacks they will need for back-to-school.

I enjoyed volunteering on my own, but am looking forward to being back next week with my Lakehill Community Connections campers. I love the energy when we volunteer as a large group! I’ll be back with them next week and again in July.

Community Partners of Dallas serves more than 20,000 children a year through four unique programs. The Rainbow Room is an emergency resource center providing critically-needed items for children in the care of CPS. The cheerful room is filled with new toys, clothing, and supplies which are available for caseworkers to help children who come into protective care. Founded in 1993, it has served more than 168,000 children. I love that Community Partners only accepts new items for the Rainbow Room, operating on the credo that “abused and neglected children don’t need abused and neglected clothes.”

Other initiatives include Kids in Crisis (provides funds for children’s clothing, transportation, therapy, enrichment activities, housing, and medical expenses); Caseworker Appreciation (events that are held to show appreciation and gratitude to caseworkers); and Storyline (a dedicated phone line, 214-446-2222, that children can call 24 hours a day to hear a story).

With a staff of only 12, Community Partners of Dallas relies on the support of dedicated volunteers. There are several ways to get involved in helping the abused and neglected children they serve. There are opportunities for individuals, families, and groups to volunteer, from one-time events to regularly-scheduled volunteer hours. Be aware that Community Partners of Dallas does not work directly with the children in care of Child Protective Services due to confidentiality and safety requirements.

Teens can join THANKs (Teens Helping Abused and Neglected Kids), a volunteer program that gives them the opportunity to learn more about nonprofit operations and issues facing the community and participate in meaningful community service.

After 10 years in the Wilson Historic District, Community Partners of Dallas is moving to a new location in January 2019. With three times the space available, the organization will be able to continue to grow to meets the needs of abused and neglected children in Dallas Country.

Week 22: Voly in the Park

June 2, 2018

I have been wanting to attend Voly in the Park for several years to learn more about nonprofit organizations in my community. This year, I signed on to volunteer at the event, held June 2, in Klyde Warren Park in downtown Dallas. Voly in the Park is an amazing festival dedicated to volunteerism. This year’s event, the fifth annual, featured 75 nonprofit agencies, hands-on volunteer projects, and live entertainment.

The festival showcased VolunteerNow’s proprietary online volunteer matching program, VOLY.org, which connects volunteers with more than 1,000 North Texas nonprofits and 900+ volunteer opportunities.

Area nonprofits represented a variety of causes, including animals, health and human services, hunger relief, environmentalism, and education, among others. Local groups performed on the stage throughout the afternoon, while potential volunteers strolled the grounds—learning more about the organizations represented, collecting information, and signing up to volunteer.

As an Agency Advocacy Team volunteer, I helped nonprofits get settled into their booths and made sure they had everything they needed to be successful. I then checked on them throughout the event. It gave me a wonderful opportunity to connect with friends at those agencies where I had previously volunteered, and to get to know many new ones.

I visited with representatives from all of the organizations as I went from booth to booth. Once my shift was over, I collected literature on numerous opportunities and signed up for several mailing lists. I have already signed on to volunteer at several of these organizations and hope to get more scheduled soon.

I feel fortunate to have been a part of this event, and encourage everyone to take advantage of this amazing opportunity next year!

 

Week 21: Austin Street Center

May 27, 2018

I can’t believe I am already on Week 21 of my 52 weeks of service! I have worked with 21 different organizations so far (actually more, as Week 5 had multiple projects), and have thoroughly enjoyed every experience. While I have not missed a week of volunteering, I have struggled to post to my blog each week. I am doing my best to catch up, and to have my writing keep pace with my volunteering!

For Week 21, I volunteered with one of my favorite organizations, Austin Street Center. Founded in 1983, Austin Street Center is an emergency shelter that serves men ages 45 and older and women ages 18 and older. Each guest at the shelter is provided a safe place to sleep, showers, clothing, and meals. Austin Street Center believes that once their basic needs are met, guests can begin working on other aspects of their lives that will help them transition out of homelessness.

Austin Street Center offers a variety of services, including specific programs focused on women, veterans, and work readiness, onsite partnerships with local hospitals and clinics; substance abuse support, spiritual guidance, and Pathway House, a special program to help prepare guests for the transition to permanent housing.

There are numerous ways to get involved at Austin Street Center, both for individuals and groups. Individuals might assist at the front desk or in the computer lab, distribute items in the clothing room, sort donations, or help staff check in guests during the intake process.

Groups might help with a morning of cleaning at the shelter or by preparing and serving lunch. All lunches are prepared off-site and served at the shelter by volunteers. Austin Street Center will even provide you with recipes, if needed. Other great projects can be done at home or at school, such as holding a donation drive for clothing or toiletries, or making sandwiches to deliver to the shelter.

I have taken several Lakehill groups to volunteer over the years and have worked on a variety of projects. My Community Connections campers love visiting Austin Street to play Bingo with the guests, passing out the bags they made full of prizes to the winners. We have also cleaned, painted a room (definitely not our strongest skill), held donation drives, and made sandwiches to deliver. Now that I know how to cook for a crowd, I would love to lead a group in preparing and serving a meal.

This week, I volunteered with my dear friend Cathleen. She and I taught together for many years at Thomas Jefferson High School in Dallas, and share a love for volunteering and helping others develop a passion for service. We signed up to help with the intake process, but because of the high temperatures that day, guests were let in early, before we arrived. The staff had no trouble keeping us busy, and we jumped in to help serve the afternoon meal: delicious smelling brisket, Bar-B-Q sauce, green beans, rolls, and watermelon. Cathleen commented on what I have noticed every time I visit Austin Street: the sincere appreciation from the guests who we served.

Week 20: The Prom Shop Project

May 16, 2018

Prom season. Some girls might will spend hours selecting their prom dresses – many of which will only be worn once – while other girls won’t even get to attend because they can’t afford a dress. It seems like a problem begging to be remedied.

At Lakehill Preparatory School this spring, the Sisteens (our high school service group for girls) partnered with my friend Kim Peters to collect prom dresses. Kim is the founder and executive director of the Prom Shop Project (website under construction), a grassroots organization whose mission for the past 17 years has been to donate gently used prom dresses and accessories to underprivileged girls.

Peters started in 2001, with just 75 dresses in Dallas, and now gives away thousands of dresses and accessories in cities across Texas. Her hope is to not only provide dresses, but to surround girls in need with positive role models.

Schools participate by hosting a donation drive on campus and dropping off their donations prior to the dress give-away event. I was thrilled for Lakehill to participate, and the response was extremely positive. Not only did girls donate their prom dresses, but parents and teachers went through their own closets to find formals that they could share. I donated several formal dresses that I had kept in my closet for years, reminders of treasured moments and fond memories. I realized it would be better to pass them on, with the hope that they might help someone else create special memories of her own.

Several non-profits conduct similar drives. In Dallas, Comerica Bank has provided dresses to Dallas CASA and the Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Dallas for several years, and the Dallas Public Library holds its Fairy Tale Closet event to distribute dresses to girls. Becca’s Closet, in Florida, was originally founded to collect and distribute dresses to high school girls with financial need. They have now expanded the foundation to raise funds for post-secondary educational scholarships. Chapters can be found across the U.S.

Conduct an online search in your own city to see how you can get involved. Your donation can help make a prom dress dream come true for someone else.

Week 19: Crayola ColorCycle

May 11, 2018

I am amazed at the number of school supplies that are thrown away at the end of the school year, when students clean out their lockers. Each year, our students at Lakehill Preparatory School put their unwanted items into boxes. We collect so many binders, notebooks, pens/pencils, reading books, folders, book covers, that were barely used or brand new. After sorting the items, we donate to organizations in our community that work with children and provide supplies.

We also learned about a new initiative this year. Crayola and schools across North America are banding together to help kids understand the importance of their role in protecting the environment. Through the Crayola ColorCycle initiative, students in K-12 schools across the continental United States and parts of Canada can collect and re-purpose used Crayola markers.

ColorCycle is also a great opportunity for teachers and their students to explore eco-friendly practices. Specially developed standards-based lesson plans are available to enrich instruction and promote lively class discussions.

Getting involved in the project is easy. Simply set up a collection station at your school for used markers. Count up all the markers that are collected, pack them in a cardboard box, print out a shipping label, and send via FedEx Ground. Crayola pays all shipping charges.

Crayola ColorCycle will accept all brands of plastic markers, not just Crayola markers, including dry erase markers and highlighters. This effort helps eliminate placing hundreds of tons of markers into landfills.

Any school, kindergarten through 12th grade in the contiguous 48 United States and some areas in Canada can participate. Check out the ColorCycle registration page to find out more and to register your school.