Friday, December 24, 2010

Monday, December 13, 2010

Press Release 2011 Grant Cycle Announced

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:  Muriel Roux
                   Chair of Grants Committee of Women’s Giving Circle of Fayetteville
                  Email: rroux@nc.rr.com
                   Home# 910-764-1380

2011 Grant Cycle Announced

Fayetteville, N. C.:  The Women’s Giving Circle of Fayetteville announces its 2011 grant application cycle.  Non-profits in Cumberland County may apply for grants up to $45,000.  Homelessness is the focus area chosen by the membership for 2011.  Grant requests must be for new or existing projects to primarily assist women and children and secondarily whole family units dealing with homelessness.  Programs and services must be provided in Cumberland County.
Grant information may be obtained at the Cumberland Community Foundation (308 Green Street, Fayetteville, NC 28301) or online at http://www.cumberlandcf.org/WGCFGrantInformation.php.

The deadline for submission of Letters of Inquiry is 5 p.m., Friday, January 7, 2011. 

The Women’s Giving Circle is an organization of more than 125 women in Cumberland County whose purpose is to impact substantial, positive change for women and children in Cumberland County through philanthropy and education.  Funds are held and maintained by Cumberland Community Foundation who serves as host for audit, bookkeeping and administrative purposes.  All women are invited to join and can find more information at www.cumberlandcf.org or by calling 483-4449.

Monday, November 22, 2010

A Visit to the White House in Washington, DC

http://www.google.com/
On December 18th, 2010, ten women from the Women's Giving Circle will tour the White House all decorated for the Holidays.  The WGC was given ten tickets by Jenny Kaplan, a Fayetteville native who is on the staff at the White House and spoke to our group at the member meeting in November of 2009.  Her mom, Chris Yeager, is also a member of the WGCF. 

The members who will travel on behalf of the WGC are:

Alisa Debnam
Michelle Courie
Christin Bellian
Kim Nagowski
Laura Devan
Libby Daniel
Mary Flagg Haugh
Patty Collie
Denise Lynch
Susan Barnes

We promise to share pictures when we return!

Friday, November 19, 2010

Fayetteville Observer: Homeless need more than food, shelter

Originally published on Saturday, November 13, 2010 in the Local & State category.

Homeless need more than food, shelter

By Bill Kirby Jr.

Columnist
Terri Union says there’s more to addressing the homeless issue than just providing shelter and food, and she is part of an organization that wants to do its part.

On my blog — The Gospel Truth, I Think, at www.fayobserver.com — Jason Brady is back, and he says more than 300 people have registered for today’s fifth annual Ribbon Walk & Ride for Cancer at Festival Park, with more anticipated.

Your turn: “I found your (Oct. 9) article about the homeless, in response to the question from Carol Anderson, interesting,” Mrs. Union writes. “I didn’t know there had been a group appointed several years ago to work on this issue. I thought you would like to know the Women’s Giving Circle of Fayetteville presented a community scorecard on homelessness to a number of people who represent the agencies who work with or provide funding for homeless people and homeless families. This is an important issue that must be addressed in our community.

“The focus for grants this year ...will be on funding to help resolve this issue. It is not just about providing beds; it is about helping people change their lives. We need to help these people become employable so they can again be contributing members of society ... It is important to provide beds in a safe environment and acceptable food. However, this is treating a symptom and not really providing the help and means of changing the situation. What do you think?”

My turn: I think, Mrs. Union, that the WGCF is on to something. There is, as you suggest, more to it than just providing shelter and food. If concerned leaders in this community really want to address the homeless issue, they have to work at getting our homeless brethren back on their feet with social involvement and, if possible in these difficult economic times, employment. And if that is where the Women’s Giving Circle of Fayetteville is placing a measure of its focus, then I say all the better, and the best to you.
Local leaders did form a coalition in February of 2006 as part of a nationwide effort to reduce homelessness, but Mrs. Anderson said she had not seen much action from the group. If anyone would know about helping the homeless in this community, it would be Mrs. Anderson. She is dedicated to ending the plight of the homeless. All I remember is that I wasn’t impressed with some of the coalition’s members, who had a lot of capital letter alphabet behind their names, plenty of lip service and little more. Otherwise, I’ve looked at the WGCF website, and the facts and figures provided about homelessness in the county are eye-opening. Kudos to Alisa Debnam, Cynthia Wilson, Michelle Courie, Kaki Van Sickle, Jean Harrison, Christin Bellian, Patty Collie, Denise Wyatt, Lucy Jones, Mary Lynn Bryan, Laura Devan, Margaret Dickson, Sarah Moorman and you, Mrs. Union, who are among the WGCF members striving to make arealdifference in helping those who brave winter and summer under bridges and in wooded areas without homes to call their own. For more information on the WGCF, contact Susan Barnes at susan@cumberlandcf.org or call (910) 483-4449.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Editorial: Shelter - Homelessness hits women, children hardest

Monday, October 18, 2010

NC Gives highlights the WGC on their Website

http://ncgives.org/news/local-giving-circle-reaches-out-to-homeless-women-and-children/

Local giving circle reaches out to homeless women and children

October 18, 2010
The Women's Giving Circle of Fayetteville was founded through a partnership between NCGives and the Cumberland Community Foundation. (A "giving circle" is a group of everyday folks who join forces to give their time, talent and treasure to a common cause.)

Here's a story about how these local ladies are coming together to give back and help homeless women and children in their community:

"Women's Giving Circle focuses on helping the homeless"
(The Fayetteville Observer)


A home helped change the trajectory of J.R. Williams' life. "We were doomed, statistically speaking," Williams told a group of about 80 people at the Holiday Inn Bordeaux Tuesday morning.
When he was 9, his family lived in housing that was unreliable and sub-par at best. Both his parents had grown up poor, and his mother had gotten pregnant with Williams at age 17. It wasn't a promising life script.
Then the family was able to get a home through Habitat for Humanity and, through it, they achieved stability and the opportunity for a better life. "It meant so much to us," said Williams, who went on to graduate near the top of his high school class and then to both UNC-Chapel Hill and Duke. He's now a first vice president and regional business development manager with Morgan Stanley Smith Barney in Charlotte.
His listeners included people from throughout the community who'd been invited by the Women's Giving Circle of Fayetteville to help brainstorm ideas to help homeless women and children in Cumberland County. The philanthropic group concentrates on local projects that meet the basic needs of food, shelter or health care for women and children, and members said Tuesday that homelessness is a particular problem...
Read the full article

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Women's Giving Circle Focuses On Helping the Homeless

Published in the Fayetteville Observer: 12:00 AM, Wed Oct 13, 2010
Women's Giving Circle focuses on helping the homeless
A home helped change the trajectory of J.R. Williams' life.

"We were doomed, statistically speaking," Williams told a group of about 80 people at the Holiday Inn Bordeaux Tuesday morning. When he was 9, his family lived in housing that was unreliable and sub-par at best. Both his parents had grown up poor, and his mother had gotten pregnant with Williams at age 17.
It wasn't a promising life script.

Then the family was able to get a home through Habitat for Humanity and, through it, they achieved stability and the opportunity for a better life.

"It meant so much to us," said Williams, who went on to graduate near the top of his high school class and then to both UNC-Chapel Hill and Duke. He's now a first vice president and regional business development manager with Morgan Stanley Smith Barney in Charlotte.

His listeners included people from throughout the community who'd been invited by the Women's Giving Circle of Fayetteville to help brainstorm ideas to help homeless women and children in Cumberland County. The philanthropic group concentrates on local projects that meet the basic needs of food, shelter or health care for women and children, and members said Tuesday that homelessness is a particular problem.
Patty Collie, a member of the giving circle, said the number of homeless people in Cumberland County dropped 10 percent from 2008 to 2009. But the numbers of homeless women and children grew.
Of 965 people identified as homeless on a specific date in 2009, 256 were women and 399 were children. Both numbers were up nearly 17 percent over 2008.

Meanwhile, she said, Cumberland County's homeless numbers are striking when compared with other counties. Forsyth County's total population is close to Cumberland's - 337,198 in 2008, compared with 309,542 here. But it had half the number of homeless people.

Wake County's total population then was 829,218, more than twice Cumberland's, but its homeless population was only slightly higher than Cumberland's, at 1,152.

"The statistics were so heart-breaking to us," Collie said later.

After Williams spoke, the meeting broke into small groups, each addressing ways to deal with homelessness locally, especially with women and children. Their ideas were written down and will be combined into a summary that will be the focus of another meeting on the subject in November.

"The hope from that is that we actually do get a pilot project to fund," Collie said.