Home Blog Page 174

Madison Needs Network offers Northside students free school supplies

By Dawn Henkel
Madison Needs Network

The fourth annual School Readiness Campaign will be held Saturday, Aug. 17, 10:30 am‒6:30 pm, and Wednesday, Aug. 28, 5‒7 pm, in the Black Hawk Middle School parking lot. Students attending Gompers, Lake View, Lindbergh and Mendota Elementary Schools, Black Hawk Middle School and East High School are eligible for supplies.

Madison Needs Network (MNN) is committed to making sure every child in our community arrives at school prepared for learning, as we believe this is an essential component of a thriving community. One way we can help our community’s learners succeed is by providing the necessary school supplies. 

Half of all students enrolled in the Madison Metropolitan School District live below the poverty line. The financial burden of purchasing school supplies is difficult, if not impossible, for families in need. 

For the last three years, MNN’s School Readiness Campaign has focused on providing school supplies to students at Black Hawk Middle School, whose low-income enrollment rate is more than 70%. We have hosted a pop-up store with over 6,000 units of school supplies where students shopped for their needed supplies at no cost.

Our fourth annual School Readiness Campaign aims to continue to make a difference in students’ readiness for school. This year, our school supply store is open to any student in the Black Hawk attendance area — elementary, middle and high school.

Please consider becoming a sponsor to help us stock our store and express our dedication to each and every student in our community. Visit madisonneedsnetwork.org for more information about MNN and how you can help.

OutReach LGBT Community Center offers services and support

By Oona Mackesey-Green
Northside News 

Tucked in an office building just down the street from the airport, on a summer weekday afternoon OutReach LGBT Community Center is sunny and quiet, lined with bookshelves and a long table of brochures and pamphlets from other local organizations. Snippets of conversation float out from the offices off of the shared space, which includes a small seating area, computer and printer/copier machine for public use, and a small two-shelf food pantry, a recent addition following a new partnership with The River Food Pantry that is already seeing use from community center visitors.

Within the center is an all-gender restroom, and around the corner is a small kitchen and additional community room to host support groups, board meetings and other large gatherings and events. 

In addition to coordinating Pride celebrations (see page 1), for over 47 years OutReach LGBT Community Center and previous community organizations have provided supportive spaces for LGBTQ+ communities in Madison and surrounding areas. 

OutReach’s current services range from advocacy to running the Earl Greely Memorial Library — a free lending library and one of the largest and most extensive LGBT libraries in the Midwest, to resource referral, convening over 20 social and support groups (both in-person and online), and more. Additional OutReach programs include the Trans Health Project, LGBT Senior Alliance and Wilma’s Fund, which provides assistance to homeless LGBTQ community members in Dane County. 

True to their name, OutReach’s work extends beyond the physical space of the community center. Find their annual directory of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender supportive organizations and businesses, as well as their monthly events calendar and guide, at local businesses and online at outreachmadisonlgbt.org. For more information or for resource referral, contact OutReach at 608-255-8582.

Groundswell Conservancy welcomes new conservationist

0

By BJ Byers
Groundswell Conservancy 

As the newest member of the Groundswell team, I’d like to introduce myself and share some of my objectives as conservationist. I’m excited to work with such a motivated and goal-oriented land trust, and I’m looking forward to using my knowledge and skills to help give back to the community and improve the quality of our green spaces.

In 2017 I graduated from UW-Madison with a master’s degree in Wildlife Ecology. I was hired by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service as a biologist, where I worked with private landowners to restore their land to prairie, oak savanna and wetland habitats. While there, I worked jointly with Ducks Unlimited to help write and administer North American Wetland Conservation Act grants, which resulted in two grants totaling $2 million. All grant funds will be used for wetland acquisition, restoration and enhancement in Wisconsin.

One of my goals as conservationist is to maintain and improve the quality of our green spaces. Every month I work side-by-side with our extraordinary volunteers who help pull invasive weeds and cut brush at Westport Prairie and Patrick Marsh. During the summer, I supervise five Prairie Partners interns who join my quest to eliminate invasive plants.

Every spring and fall I will monitor our many conservation easements and coordinate site improvements at community farms and “green school yard” projects. This includes well installation for our community farms so growers can irrigate their crops, as well as helping to install rain gardens and outdoor educational infrastructure at local schools so children can play and learn about their natural world.

When I’m not working, you’ll likely find me pulling weeds at other natural areas (I just can’t stop), hiking, camping, fly fishing, canoeing, playing soccer or vegetable gardening with my wife, Carolyn, and 2-year old son, Jay (yes, named after the bird).

The River has set the table to nourish a community

0

By Lauri Lee
Northside Economic Development Coalition

When the table is set, everyone gets to eat. The River Food Pantry finalized their strategic plan last fall, which set the table for the organization to achieve a fully nourished community through partnerships and collaboration around their holistic service model that focuses on household stability in the areas of food, housing, health and work/life. As the busiest food pantry in the county, leadership at The River realized they needed to optimize efficiencies and enhance distribution processes in order to serve more than 1,000 Dane County households per week. 

To align their services delivery model with the organization’s core values, The River implemented a number of changes. They’d like to move to a new facility on the Northside in the future, but until then, they wanted to optimize the current facility and be ready when the right opportunity presents itself.

  • JLA Architects analyzed and recommended a reconfigured traffic pattern to achieve a less congested shopping experience, a more open and welcoming space and room for a volunteer center. 
  • The UW helped devise a better method of food distribution that has resulted in 25% more food being distributed than last year. Food is now distributed by nutritional categories instead of by the weight of the food. Based on household size, visitors receive 20% more nutritious food by using points for each nutritional category. 
  • Pantry hours were updated to reflect the efficiencies of the improved shopping experience. See the highlighted box on page 21 for details.
  • Community meals are available five times (six times for seniors and veterans) each week for Dane County residents, when the pantry is open for grocery distribution. No registration is needed to attend a community meal and there is no limit on how many meals you can attend each week.

Partnerships and working together with other organizations are key to serving more people and better meeting their needs. A new collaboration, Food for Success Coalition, started June 15 to more efficiently provide food to homeless and high-risk students and their families in Madison Metropolitan School District schools with high percentages of students qualifying for free or reduced lunch. 

When Food for Thought came under the fiscal umbrella of The River Food Pantry in early June, the groundwork was set for Selfless Ambition to join them in the coalition that was announced June 15. With synchronized services, the enterprises are stronger than they were as individual organizations. The coalition qualifies for lower food prices, eliminates service overlap and competition in volunteer solicitation. 

Food for Thought Initiative is a volunteer organization with in-school pantries at Mendota, Sandburg and Hawthorne Elementary, Cherokee Heights Middle and East High school. Selfless Ambition operates food pantries in Leopold, Glendale and Lake View elementary schools, and plans to expand into nearly 25 schools. 

To help nourish a connected community, volunteer at The River. Visit riverfoodpantry.org. to help with:

  • public shopping sessions, stocking shelves, sorting donations and cleaning.
  • computer skills to assist with client registration and check out.
  • preparing and serving community meals for up to 250 people.
  • assisting with lunch production and/or distribution. Volunteers are needed every day of summer break.
  • raising funds, food and awareness in the community by hosting a food drive or starting your own fundraiser.

To learn more about The River, visit riverfoodpantry.org.

Literacy Network seeks volunteer tutors for spring 2020 semester

0
Sabrina and Adriana studying together. Photo by Cathy Kaplan

By Shawn Steen
Literacy Network of Dane County

Classes at Vera Court Community Center this year include ESL (English as a Second Language) and Citizenship Study for adults living on the Northside. Both programs can have far-reaching impact. With improved English, adults are better equipped to find well-paying jobs; help their children with homework; communicate with doctors, teachers or neighbors; and most importantly, feel more confident and comfortable moving through the community they call home.

Literacy Network is a local nonprofit that partners with neighborhood centers like Vera Court to offer free classes and tutoring programs to immigrants and refugees looking to gain citizenship or improve reading, writing and English-speaking skills. 

“All of our tutors are trained volunteers from the community,” said Shawn Steen, director of volunteer services for Literacy Network. “And we could not do this important work without them.” Many folks think they need to speak Spanish or have professional teaching experience to volunteer in the programs, but neither is true. Students come from over 70 different countries and speak hundreds of languages, but all of them speak enough rudimentary English to work with tutors. 

“Volunteers just need to be patient, kind and reliable,” Steen explained. “We train our tutors very well, provide weekly lesson plans for them based on the goals of their assigned student, and have a group leader there every week to offer help as needed. We want to set our students up for success, so we work hard to set our tutors up for success.”

Literacy Network is currently recruiting tutors and group leaders for the spring 2020 semester. For more information and to apply, visit litnetwork.org or call Shawn Steen at 608-244-3911.