Grants Announced at White House Conference as part of Baby
Boomer Volunteer PSA launch
(WASHINGTON, D.C.) – The Corporation for National and
Community Service announced today that it will award a total
of $3.9 million in "Challenge Grants" to six national
nonprofit organizations to engage baby boomers in helping Gulf
Coast communities recover from the hurricanes of 2005.
The grants, announced at the White House Conference on Aging,
will go to six organizations: the AARP Foundation, Big Brothers
Big Sisters of America, Habitat for Humanity International,
the Hands On Network, Nazarene Compassionate Ministries Inc.,
and the Points of Light Foundation. Together the grants are
expected to support the mobilization of nearly 72,000 volunteers,
most of whom are expected to be baby boomers.
"Baby boomers have an extraordinary set of talents that
can be tapped to help in the Gulf recovery effort," said
David Eisner, the Corporation’s CEO. "From architects
and builders to mentors and counselors, baby boomers have the
skills and desire to make a difference. We’re delighted
to work with these outstanding organizations to find innovative
ways to unleash the volunteer power of boomers."
The announcement was made during a press briefing at the White
House Conference on Aging, a once-a decade gathering that makes
policy recommendations to the President and Congress about
aging issues. Among the key issues being discussed at the conference
is development of a national policy to engage more baby boomers – generally
regarded as the best-educated, wealthiest, and healthiest in
history – in service to their communities as they reach
their later years.
To help achieve that goal, the Corporation today launched
its new "Get Involved" public service advertising
campaign aimed at recruiting America’s baby boomers to
volunteer. The PSAs will begin running in January 2006 and
feature a series of English and Spanish-language television,
radio, and print ads profiling baby boomers of different backgrounds.
Real baby boomer volunteers share their stories and invite
their peers to join them in making a difference. The spots
drive viewers to a new www.getinvolved.gov website which has
a comprehensive online volunteer search engine to make it easy
to find volunteer opportunities.
Corporation Challenge Grants require that each Federal dollar
awarded be "matched" by a minimum of $2 in private
funding. As a result, the grants are expected to leverage nearly
$8 million in non-federal funds for the grantees.
"These grantees are some of the very best at both innovation
and financial sustainability," said Eisner. "We are
excited to work with them to develop new sources of funding,
to build effective and sustainable service, and to engage baby
boomers and other Americans in volunteer programs in the Gulf
region."
The 2005 Challenge Grant competition was designed to address
three significant strategic priorities for the Corporation:
providing disaster relief and recovery for the population affected
by the recent hurricanes, "leveraging" the number
of community volunteers, and engaging more baby boomers in
service, along with private sector resources to match federal
resources
The organizations and programs selected to receive grants
in this competition are:
The AARP Foundation ($500,000)
The AARP Foundation, in partnership with Faith in Action and
Rebuilding Together, will provide needed services related to
hurricane damage recovery, including independent living, home
repair/modification, employment, and consumer assistance for
seniors in the Gulf Region. The foundation will expand existing,
successful programs with the support of baby boomer volunteers
in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas by recruiting more than
1,350 new boomer volunteers to assist more than 12,000 vulnerable
older adults and their families in the affected areas.
Big Brothers Big Sisters of America ($500,000)
Big Brothers Big Sisters of America (BBBSA) will recruit and
provide mentoring opportunities for up to 1,800 baby boomer
volunteers to mentor children who have been impacted by the
hurricanes in the Gulf Coast region. BBBSA will develop new
corporate partnerships as a vehicle to attract and engage babyboomers
in service and will undertake a marketing campaign to engage
the baby boom generation.
Habitat for Humanity International ($1,468,000)
Habitat for Humanity International will establish the Habitat
Disaster Corps to provide volunteer support to various disaster
response activities. The new corps will assist with both long-term
recovery and immediate shelter needs through training of disaster
response volunteers and disaster recovery work teams. The program
will recruit, train, and manage 3,000 baby boomer volunteer
leaders to carry out specific support functions necessary to
assist with disaster preparedness, response, and recovery efforts
within assigned communities. The program will also address
the need for a trained corps of volunteers to implement the
Habitat for Humanity disaster response, recovery, and reconstruction
efforts in Alabama, Mississippi, Texas, Florida, and Louisiana.
Hands On Network ($500,000)
The Hands On Network will establish three Civic Action Centers – one
each in central Louisiana, the Mississippi Gulf Coast, and
southern Alabama – to mobilize the corporate workforce
from the local area and across the country to carry out a range
of disaster response projects. These centers will share a common
structure, program offerings, baby boomer recruitment strategies,
and overall service scope to create projects to meet priorities
and needs of each community. By working with state and local
agencies, as well as local community, faith-based, and voluntary
action agencies, the centers will identify on-going and temporary
service projects and provide Hands On project management and
training and technical assistance to successfully carry out
projects and help re-establish long term civic infrastructure.
The effort is expected to involve 60,000 volunteers, half of
which are expected to be boomers.
Nazarene Compassionate Ministries, Inc. ($500,000)
Nazarene Compassionate Ministries will serve as an intermediary
to develop a long-term volunteer infrastructure to respond
to recent hurricane damage as well as to future disasters in
six states across the Gulf Coast region. Based
on a model successfully piloted in Florida, the group will establish local Rapid Response
Teams equipped and trained to operate in coordination with
local, regional, and national disaster response systems in
each of the Gulf Coast states, from Florida to Texas. These
Rapid Response Teams will mobilize 5,000 new volunteers, particularly
baby boomers, to assist with repairing and rebuilding housing
and community facilities, and helping meet other unmet needs
of disaster victims.
Points of Light Foundation ($500,000)
The Points of Light Foundation will engage volunteers to support
the critical role of providing food, medical care, shelter,
long-term housing, mentoring, and public safety to meet the
basic needs of those who have been impacted by the hurricanes.
Volunteer Centers will assign and place 2,000 volunteers, half
of them boomers, in areas identified by their local emergency
management offices and partners in the hurricane relief and
recovery effort.
The Challenge Grants program is administered by the Corporation
for National and Community Service, which also oversees AmeriCorps,
Senior Corps and Learn and Serve America. Together with the
USA Freedom Corps, the Corporation is working to build a culture
of service, citizenship, and responsibility in America. For
more information, visit http://www.nationalservice.gov.