Posts Tagged ‘Serve America Act’

The Serve America Act, Year Two: Looking Ahead

Friday, April 30th, 2010

In the current environment, we witness service:

  • easing the effects of a recession that has one in ten people jobless;
  • strengthening our nonprofits at a time when their services have never been more needed;
  • through partnerships, bridging the gaps left by state and local governments whose budgets have been slashed so that schools are furloughing teachers, state parks are closing, govt offices and libraries have reduced hours, after-school programs have been eliminated; and
  • propelling a civic-minded millennial generation just entering the workforce, who want to make a difference, are tech-savvy, and love a challenge; they are 75 million strong.

As it has been just over a year since the passing of the Serve America Act,  I’m thinking about the power of an extensive push to fully implement the Act and the power of the positive change that could unleash.

The passage of the Act was an all-too-rare example of bipartisanship.

It’s clear that we need to seize the momentum created by a dramatic confluence of events:  urgent economic needs, a President committed to service, a huge civic-minded generation of young people, and our own passion to truly make service part of our schools, our workplaces, and our culture.

We need to look at what and how we teach, how we rate companies, how companies incent their employees, how government and nonprofits partner with each other, how we measure success and how we benchmark best service practices.

Looking ahead, we need to think about the intersection of  service and social innovation – how can innovative, high-impact organizations to further leverage citizen service?

We must define strategies to sustain the momentum from the Serve America Act how can we seize the moment to fund the Act at the level it needs?  How can we demonstrate to the public and to government the high quality of programs made possible by the first investments in the Act?

We must re-imagine service how can communities leverage volunteers effectively to drive real social change?

Change Notes: Volunteer Generation Fund

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

Friends,

One year ago, as President Obama signed the Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act into law, he proclaimed that this landmark legislation would “connect deeds to needs. It creates opportunities to serve for students, seniors, and everyone in between. It supports innovation and strengthens the nonprofit sector. And it is just the beginning of a sustained, collaborative and focused effort to involve our greatest resource — our citizens — in the work of remaking this nation.”

Remaking this nation with engaged citizens is exactly what we will focus on during National Volunteer Week 2010, and one exciting, new tool for this work is the Volunteer Generation Fund created by the Serve America Act. With many states anticipating cuts in critical social services and the federal government facing low or no growth in domestic spending, we must apply creative, cost-effective initiatives to address pressing social ills. The Volunteer Generation Fund is such an initiative.

Competitive, small grants issued through this Fund to nonprofits and state service commissions will be applied to strategies to strengthen the nation’s volunteer infrastructure. Specifically, funds would be designated for activities that expand the reach of and enhance the effectiveness of volunteer activities that support the nation’s priorities of education, poverty, health care, unemployment, and the environment. For instance, an organization receiving a Volunteer Generation Fund grant could focus on recruiting, screening and placing corporate volunteers to tutor in at-risk schools. Another might apply the grant to training volunteer leaders to implement hundreds of volunteer-run financial literacy sessions for low-income, working families.

A modest investment to tap great potential

The Fund is not about spending money to get people to do what they already could or should do.

- it is about a modest investment in how public and private institutions – hand in hand with the millions of individuals who have stepped forward to serve — can unlock tens of millions of dollars in volunteer time and talent to meet the needs of our most vulnerable citizens.

- it is about recognizing the vast potential in concentrated community service initiatives. The federal government’s full-time national service programs engage approximately 100,000 individuals annually — the vanguard of our service leadership. But there are millions of Americans who are or could be engaged in part-time community service.

- it is about seeding the commitment to a lifetime of service in a vast segment of the population.

- It is about utilizing community service as a source of local innovation, applying the vast pool of committed volunteers to address real community problems in creative ways.

For instance, we know that engaging community volunteers as mentors with our youth has a direct effect on achievement and graduation rates. With a Volunteer Generation Fund sub-grant, a local nonprofit could design a program, unique to that local community, that trains and screens willing adults to mentor those young people most in need of intervention.

Building a Secure Foundation

Congress appropriated $4 million for the Fund last year, and the President’s proposed FY2011 budget for the Fund is $10 million.  But even at $10 million, that level of funding is only 16 percent of the amount authorized by the Serve America Act. During National Volunteer Week and beyond, we must let our elected representatives in Washington know that millions of people are ready to serve.

Our citizens have rallied around the President’s call, but the challenge before us as a nation is this: do we have the infrastructure, in our nonprofit sector, to meet the demand? Are we constructing a secure foundation to connect those willing to serve to meaningful, results-driven volunteer activities? The Serve America Act’s Volunteer Generation Fund can be that foundation.

National Volunteer Week is an opportune time to contact your lawmakers in Washington and convey your strong support for a fully funded Volunteer Generation Fund at the $60 million level for FY2011.

In the News

In Service,

Michelle Nunn

A Tribute to Ted Kennedy

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

On April 21, we will celebrate the first anniversary of one of the service movement’s greatest accomplishments: the passage of the Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act, which authorized the largest expansion of national service in America since FDR created the Civilian Conservation Corps during the Great Depression.

Please help mark the passage of the Act and honor Senator Ted Kennedy, who dedicated so much of his legislative work to building the service movement, by sending ServiceNation a short video thanking him and/or telling us how your life has been touched by service. (No need for professional editing – ServiceNation would just like to have your personal story.)

ServiceNation will collect these videos and edit a select number of them together into a video reel that will be shown at an event in Washington, DC celebrating the anniversary of the Serve America Act. They will then present Victoria Reggie Kennedy with a DVD of this video compilation.

Here are some tips for recording your video:

Make sure your face is well-lit, and don’t sit with a window or light source behind you

Sit close to the camera for better sound quality and speak clearly into the microphone

It’s OK to speak more deliberately

Do a couple of takes and make sure you can hear everything that is said

You can do this by yourself or in a group, and consider filming in a place that has significance for the testimonial

If using a webcam, stack your computer on books so that the camera is level with your face

Lastly, don’t compress the quality of your video – you’ll probably want to upload the highest resolution file that your webcam or handheld camera outputs.

Please submit your video response by April 12th – upload your videos .

Updated:

Here’s Michelle Nunn’s video tribute…