Posts Tagged ‘AmeriCorps’

Voices of AmeriCorps – Katie Gladki

Tuesday, February 14th, 2012

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Since I have been at United Community Housing Coalition (UCHC), I have assisted with both mortgage and tax counseling. Considering the fact that Detroiters have not been working for many, many years (at least not consistently for most), those who have been able to purchase homes did so outright and therefore did not get a mortgage. Much of my work involves tax issues – folks often cannot pay their taxes because the assistance they obtain from the government or past employment is just not enough to live on, let alone use to pay taxes. I have been involved in the intake process, the auction, obtaining of deeds, and I am learning so much about the city of Detroit.

On Saturday, December 10th, I held a workshop (with the assistance of my supervisor Kim) on weatherization for over seventy people and we helped folks apply for assistance. We are hoping it works out so we can keep many folks warm in the future! So many of them are seniors and/or have children in their home and I was happy to be able to help them because they do not know where to go to even apply for such programs. They do not have access to the internet so they rely on us for help.
 
My coworkers as well as clients are such wonderful people and I am so very fortunate to have been placed at this site. There is so much heart in the city of Detroit and I hope all of the AmeriCorps members are having the experience that I am having. When I first started my service I was very much surprised to see the suffering that these folks were going through because I, like most Americans (even Michiganders, sadly), do not know anything about Detroit. These people are not going through a “housing crisis”, they are dealing with being left behind and they need help. They are good people who need another chance at life and happiness. UCHC, along with Michigan Legal Services, busts their behinds to make sure that happens. I am so proud to work with people who see the city (and its people) for what it is and what it can be, and not for the emptiness that most Americans see when they look at Detroit.
 
Ted Phillips, the Executive Director, has been involved with UCHC for many years and I hope someday you get the chance to meet him. There really is no one like him. He has a heart of gold and I have learned a great deal from him. He has been fighting for his community for a very long time as an attorney, and I hope someday to have the selfless type of work ethic that he does. Both Ted and Kim have taught me a great deal about working in a nonprofit and put a lot of trust in me and my work. I do not feel as though I am “the AmeriCorps person” just put here for a year. When I was brought in they were ready to teach me from the beginning and have always expected the best from me. I appreciate that. I feel as though I am part of their team each and every day and I look forward to getting up and heading in to the office each morning!
 
Alright, there is my story, only three months in. I can’t wait to see what awaits me during the next nine months! It’s going to be busy, but I know it will be wonderful.

Katie Gladki is an AmeriCorps member at United Community Housing Coalition
This post is part of a blog series highlighting the viewpoints of Michigan Foreclosure Prevention AmeriCorps members serving at different foreclosure host sites around Michigan. View information about the program or see more stories in this series.

Voices of AmeriCorps – Natalie Ciampichini

Tuesday, January 31st, 2012

In October of 2010, I found myself recently graduated from college, working a minimum wage, horribly dull job. My major was in anthropology and I was stuck reading residential water meters. It was a decent enough job for the summers between school semesters, but not what I had in mind after earning my degree. I knew that I wanted to work for a non-profit organization and help people, but wasn’t sure what kind. I had considered the Peace Corps, which I would have loved because of my background in anthropology, but I spent a lot of time helping my mom take care my grandparents and so did not want to leave the state, let alone the country. I began applying for jobs at various non-profits, but didn’t receive any calls for interviews. I almost gave up until I saw a newspaper ad for an AmeriCorps opportunity which was located not far from my home. I was discouraged, but the thought of working outside, reading water meters during winter in Michigan really motivated me to apply.

Now, I am in my second year in the Michigan Foreclosure Prevention Corps, serving at the MSU Extension in Macomb County. I help our wonderful, overworked, yet dedicated foreclosure counselors in addition to providing intake and triage for new clients. I maintain our agency’s client referrals in the Step Forward portal and am responsible for making that first contact to homeowners who may have been declined from the Hardest Hit program. I am also proud this year to represent my AmeriCorps program in Michigan’s LeaderCorps, a statewide effort to promote AmeriCorps and service in general.

Of course things often turn stressful given the uncertainties many homeowners face, but at the same time this has allowed me to greatly improve my people skills. I am now more comfortable in difficult situations and have gained some much-needed confidence in my abilities. Whether it’s helping a homeowner who has a sheriff’s sale scheduled next week, or just guiding a caller in the right direction, I actually feel like I know what I’m doing. Unlike past jobs, I feel that my service is both helpful and valuable. It has been a very constructive and satisfying experience, personally as well as professionally. At a time in my life when it seemed like nothing was going my way, I was truly fortunate to have received this opportunity.

Natalie Ciampichini is an AmeriCorps member at the MSU Extension in Macomb County.

This post is part of a blog series highlighting the viewpoints of Michigan AmeriCorps Foreclosure Prevention Corps members serving at different foreclosure host sites around Michigan. View information about the program or see more stories in this series.

Voices of AmeriCorps – Guy Cox

Tuesday, January 17th, 2012

As I have done for the past two years, I went into this fall planning to volunteer for the Goodfellows in the City of Taylor. I do not belong to the Goodfellows, I just believe in what they are doing. As a member of the board of the Little League, I am friends with the president, who just so happens to be the member of the Goodfellows responsible for the “No Child Without a Christmas” program. They stand on the corner or in front of local businesses every year gathering donations to help with their cause and I have been blessed to have been asked to help.

This year, after becoming an AmeriCorps member, I realized my opportunity to participate may be in danger. I have been unemployed for the past two years, but all that has changed. When I brought up volunteering with Goodfellows to my site supervisor Carol Meyers, she was very supportive and said, “we will work it out.” Armed with this vote of confidence, I then turned to my friend in the organization and asked if I could put my flyers for the Foreclosure Prevention Program and classes in each of the boxes that we hand out this year. He thought for a minute and said he would have to see if it was ok. I then said, “If these are people who cannot afford presents and food during the holidays, surely they are in need of help with their mortgage also.” After thinking for a brief moment he said ” You print the flyers, we will put them in; but I do need help.” “Of course,” I said. “We can help each other.”

So, on December 15-17, I will be hauling boxes of food to cars for people in need (which was 12 hour days and snow storms last year). I will get to shake the hands and hug the appreciative recipients (400 registered), and personally talk to each one. It is a lot of work, but it will be worth it all around. Incidentally, I have now also applied to Southgate Goodfellows with the same offer as they are open on different days; we await their answer.

Guy Cox is an Americorps member at Wayne Metro Community Action Agency.
This post is part of a blog series highlighting the viewpoints of Michigan AmeriCorps Foreclosure Prevention Corps members serving at different foreclosure host sites around Michigan. View information about the program or see more stories in this series.

Voices of AmeriCorps – Kate Lambert Lee

Thursday, January 5th, 2012

My name is Kate Lambert Lee. I am a second year AmeriCorps member with the Michigan Foreclosure Prevention Corps. I am serving at Community Action Agency of Jackson, Lenawee & Hillsdale in Foreclosure Prevention. Community Action Agency is a private non-profit serving Jackson, Lenawee and Hillsdale counties. They provide services to families and individuals with assistance in areas from Adult Literacy to Home Weatherization.

Two years ago, I had not even heard of AmeriCorps. I had heard of foreclosure. I didn’t know much about foreclosure, but I knew it was starting to affect people in my hometown community, even my own neighbors. When the AmeriCorps position opened up, it felt like a way that I could help. It wasn’t helping unknown people; it was helping my own neighbors and those in my community.

My primary role has been as an Intake Specialist. What I have seen over the past year is that many of the individuals that we have helped have been individuals who may have never experienced financial hardship in their lives. Many workers have fallen off the unemployment rolls. There are still no jobs available for them. Even when they are willing to take minimum wage jobs, the jobs just weren’t there. Some have been battling cancer, and still had to worry that they may not have a home when they leave the hospital.

The blessing in all of it has been that we have been able to help and make a positive difference when people have been at their lowest point. For that I am grateful.

 

[This post is part of a blog series highlighting the viewpoints of Michigan AmeriCorps Foreclosure Prevention Corps members serving at different foreclosure host sites around Michigan. View information about the program or see more stories in this series.]

“We love connecting people to things they need and supporting our neighbors in a real way.”

Monday, December 12th, 2011

To say that Scott Alan Davis is busy is a gross understatement. Scott is the Executive Director of Vanguard CDC, a nonprofit serving Detroit’s North End. Something you need to know about him is that he greets everyone with a hug. That hug gives you great insight into Scott and the principles at work at Vanguard: connection, warmth, authenticity, community.

At our meeting various staff members were popping in and out of his office with questions about the Thanksgiving turkey donations to neighborhood churches and they were getting a new phone system installed at the same time. The office was supposed to close at 1:00 pm, but at 3:40 pm I counted 5 people still there scurrying around trying to get turkeys and food baskets ready for distribution. “My staff is incredible,” Scott tells me. “Why are we still here when the office is supposed to be closed and it’s a holiday weekend? It’s because we are all crazy…” he laughs. “No really it’s because we love what we do. We love connecting people to things they need and supporting our neighbors in a real way.”

I asked him about the types of resources they provide to residents; I was literally stunned by all of the ways that Vanguard connects their neighbors to things they need. Let’s start with their North End Community Connection telephone service. This is a weekly service that calls residents and shares updates for community events and news. If you miss the call, you can call in yourself or look on their website to find out what is happening. “People LOVE this!” he says. “We just did a survey to find out what residents liked best about what we offer here and the weekly telephone call was something that a lot of people said they found useful.”

Scott explained to me that the programs Vanguard offers fall into three different categories: Educational Development, Economic Development and Community Development. He mentioned that the organization started as a result of their educational programs, specifically before and after-school programs where they partnered with neighboring schools. Under the Educational Development umbrella they currently focus on early childhood education and youth development. One way they do this is through Camp Jump Start. This is a summer camp for children ages 5-11 that uses real-world experiences to teach math, reading and fitness. One of their largest goals is to begin the conversation about changing the education system as a whole (“our education system is janky, broken and tired”).

When we began discussing the Economic Development branch of Vanguard’s programming, it took three pages in my notebook to capture the services and programs that they offered. Milwaukee Junction Small Business Center was started in April of 2009. It is a small business incubator staffed by Vanguard that provides North End entrepreneurs with assistance in starting a business and also provides support to existing businesses.

A program that I found particularly impressive was the Next Steps Community Reintegration program. This program serves formerly incarcerated men and women who have ‘maxed out’ of prison (served their maximum sentence). Next Steps provides them basic needs (food, housing, transportation) and opportunities to build new skills, start a business, complete their educations and connect to their community again. Scott told me that they were just finishing with the first year of their AmeriCorps program. Vanguard hires 20 of the returning citizens from the Next Steps program to work for up to a year as an AmeriCorps and gives people a chance to work in and serve their community. These AmeriCorps run the Get it Done Team; this is a service that helps seniors and other neighborhood residents with everyday tasks or projects. They will help you move your furniture, mow your lawn, clean your gutters, haul away debris- you name it, they will ‘get it done’.

Impressed? I haven’t even told you about the Youth Leadership program yet! Partnering with the Skillman Foundation, JP Morgan Chase Bank and City Connect Detroit, Vanguard was able to hire 60 youth from various North End neighborhoods. With $60,000 dedicated to youth stipends, Camp Positive Influence allowed kids from ages 12-18 to develop marketable skills by doing work focused on community beautification, digital media and community awareness. At the end of the summer the youth had created 12 murals, participated in classes that taught them how to deejay and produced a documentary about domestic violence. In the fall they are using all of the skills they learned about creating and operating a business to launch a teen night on Friday nights where they will do the deejaying, marketing, coordination and run the concession stand.

Last, but certainly not least, is the Community Development ‘bucket’ at Vanguard. These programs help North End residents with food, utility bills, appliances, clothing, transportation and housing (Vanguard has built over 75 units of affordable housing). The Store House of Hope is a partnership between Vanguard and several area churches and is a pantry of choice for food, clothing and a place that you can do your laundry. ‘The beautiful part of this is that when someone comes to Vanguard and needs something, let’s say a stove or to pay a large utility bill, an email goes to the community members and churches and most of the time they can find what the person needs within the community…someone has an extra stove or can pay the other persons bill…without going to another agency for support,’ Scott tells me.

I also asked Scott to explain to me their somewhat unconventional slogan of ‘Connect to the Power of the V.’ He explained that they are harnessing the power of community connection to get everyone through difficult times together. Connecting to the Power of the V is connecting community members together so they can share what they have and get what they need. Makes sense.

Tiffany Lemieux-McKissic is CEDAM’s Manager of Membership and Communications. She spends time traveling around the state and meeting with CEDAM members to find out about all of the awesome things they are doing to help their communities.