Categories for Community Foundations

Edina rotary Club and St. Patrick’s Church address water quality in Guatemala

July 15, 2018 12:52 am Published by

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Roxbury historic preservation projects land $270000 from Morris County

July 15, 2018 12:07 am Published by

Roxbury historic preservation projects land $270,000 from Morris County | Roxbury Register News | newjerseyhills.com

The Lake Hopatcong Foundation has received a $180,000 grant to continue renovating the former Lake Hopatcong Train Station building in Landing as its new headquarters.

Roxbury historic preservation projects land $270,000 from Morris County

The Lake Hopatcong Foundation has received a $180,000 grant to continue renovating the former Lake Hopatcong Train Station building in Landing as its new headquarters.

ROXBURY TWP. – The township fared well in gaining a piece of the competitive pot for historical preservation projects administered by Morris County.

When this year’s grant recipients were named Thursday, July 12, Roxbury landed $89,920 for a stone wall extension at the historic King Homestead in Ledgewood.

In addition, the township gained another $180,000 for interior and exterior work at the former Landing Train Station, soon to be the Lake Hopatcong Foundation’s headquarters.

The Morris County Board of Freeholders Wednesday night unanimously approved $2.2 million in county historic preservation grants to be financed by the countyas 2018 Preservation Trust Fund to help preserve, restore, or protect historic sites in 16 towns across Morris County.

The vote was taken at the Freeholder Boardas meeting held in Mount Olive, which will get $198 000 in construction dollars for the townshipas Seward House historic restoration project.

All of the grants had been recommended last month by the countyas Historic Preservation Trust Fund Review Board.

In addition to Roxbury, awards were approved for projects in Boonton, Denville, Florham Park, Hanover, Kinnelon, Mine Hill, Madison, Morristown, Mount Olive, Parsippany, Pequannock, Randolph, Rockaway Borough, Washington Township and Wharton.

For the King Homestead Museum, which is located on Main Street in Ledgewood, the applicant was the Roxbury Historic Trust, Inc.

The circa 1815 former store and post office is two and a half stories in height. This grant, specifically, will assist with the stabilization and rebuilding of a stone wall.

At the train station, the Lake Hopatcong Foundation is the applicant for the $180,000.

The 1911 train station was designed in the Jacobean style as part of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad and the Lackawanna Cutoff project. The grant will provide interior rehabilitation including a waiting room, vestibule and baggage room, benches and doors.

Countywide, grants ranged from as little as $5,994 for construction documents for the Union School House in Washington Township to a high of $355,143 for rehabilitation of the Craftsman Farm Administration Building in Parsippany.

The grant money comes from the voter-approved Morris County Open Space, Farmland, Floodplain Protection and Historic Preservation Trust Fund.

aThis historic preservation grant program, which was overwhelmingly approved by county voters, helps to finance the protection our countyas heritage, and helps to ensure that we maintain important links to our past,aa said Freeholder Director Doug Cabana.

aThe restoration, rehabilitation, and preservation work that is aided by these county grants helps to allows future generations to enjoy these historic sites, allows us to better understand our countyas history and our historic roots, and enhances the quality of life for all residents of Morris County, aa added Freeholder Christine Myers.

aThe dedicated people working to preserve our links to the past, provide lessons for the present and ensure an inheritance for the future deserve our sincere thanks,aa said Ray Chang, Historic Preservation Program Coordinator for Morris County. aTheir efforts, supported by these grants, ensure that our countyas heritage and architectural legend are sustained.a

Awards are recommended for projects that best meet the programas evaluation criteria in categories of construction, preservation planning, and creation of construction documents.

These criteria include the historic significance of the resource, relationship of the project to community revitalization, preservation of the built or natural environment, and heritage education and tourism.

Other factors include the degree to which projects promote preservation activity, represent innovative design, reach new audiences, offer significant contributions to the advancement of historic preservation; and restoration, rehabilitation, and adaptive use plans of historic buildings and cultural landscapes.

Projects receiving 2018 grants include, Boonton, Holmes Public Library and the Stone Arched Bridge; Denville, Ayres Farm Tenant House; Florham Park, Hancock Cemetery; Hanover Township, Whippany Burying Yard; Kinnelon: LaEcole Kinnelon Museum; Madison, Mead Hall; Mine Hill, Bridget Smith House; Morristown, Acorn Hall Carriage House and the Womanas Club of Morristown; and Mount Olive, Seward House.

Other projects include: Parsippany, Craftsmans Farms Administration Building and Smith-Baldwin House; Pequannock, Martin Berry House; Randolph, Friends Meting House; Rockaway Borough, Foxas Brook Culvert; Roxbury, King Homestead Museum and Lake Hopatcong Train Station; Washington Township, Union School House; and Wharton: Morris Canal Lock 2 East.

County voters in 2002 approved an amendment to the countyas Preservation Trust Fund to include the acquisition and preservation of historic sites and facilities.

Since 2003, when the first grants were awarded, 98 sites or resources in 32 municipalities in 32 Morris County municipalities have received funding assistance.

For more information on Morris Countyas historic preservation program, visit: https://planning.morriscountynj.gov/divisions/prestrust/historic/

Cascade Health Alliances awards scholarships to four

July 15, 2018 12:07 am Published by

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From left, Emy Hernandez, Grant Ysen and Mackenzy Gentry.

Four students were named recipients of Cascade Health Alliance scholarships.

They are MacKenzy Gentry of EagleRidge High School, Emy Hernandez of Bonanza High School, Cassidie Picou of Henley High School, and Grant Ysen of Klamath Union High School.

Gentry, who has lived all of her life in Klamath Falls, said she is proud of her academic achievements.

Cheers for July 15

July 15, 2018 12:07 am Published by

Dawson also serves as the ambassador director for Ugo Convenience Delivery based in Tuscaloosa.

Shelby’s Congressional Internship Program is open to students who exhibit an interest in government and public service.

Cusimano earns
top-10 ranking

Gadsden attorney Gregory Cusimano has been recognized by the American Institute of Personal Injury Attorneys as one of 2018’s 10 Best Personal Injury Attorneys for Client Satisfaction in Alabama.

The AIOPIA is a third-party attorney rating organization that publishes an annual list of the top 10 personal injury attorneys in each state. Those selected must pass the institute’s rigorous selection process, which is based on client and/or peer nominations, research and independent evaluation.

Chamber officials
attend Institute

Will Mackey, program manager of The Chamber of Gadsden & Etowah County, has graduated from the Institute for Organization Management, the professional development program of the U.S. Whitney Carter, The Chamber’s development manager, recently completed her second year in the four-year nonprofit leadership training program at the University of Georgia.

IOM Graduate Recognition signifies the individual’s completion of 96 hours of course instruction in nonprofit management.

Studio B donates $1000 to trail development

July 14, 2018 11:56 pm Published by

Studio B Art Gallery announced a donation of $1,000 toward the Secret Valley Trail Feasibility Study toward the development of 6 or more miles of the trail in Boyertown, Colebrookdale Township, Douglass Township and possibly Amity Township, a press release stated.

Studio B’s recent Secret Valley Bike Tour generated the funds toward the donation through the riders’ registration fees. The project included a fine art exhibit featuring all types of wheels, coupons for reduced or free rides on the Colebrookdale Railroad and Pottstown Carousel, free admission to the Museum of Historic Vehicles, a caricature by cartoon artist Alan MacBain, and wheel-related activities at Boyertown Community Library and the Boyertown Area Historical Society.

Building a Better Boyertown and the borough of Boyertown have been awarded a matching grant of $35,000 by the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.

For more information, visit Boyertownpa.org for updates on the upcoming planning meetings.

Penn State Extension Master Gardener programs announced

The Penn State Extension Master Gardener program in Lehigh and Northampton Counties will be training a class of volunteers this fall, according to a press release.

The program provides 40 hours of horticultural training for citizens that have an interest in gardening, a willingness to learn more and a strong desire to make a difference by volunteering in the community. at Penn State Lehigh Valley, 2809 Saucon Valley Road, Center Valley.

Penn State encourages qualified persons with disabilities to participate in its programs and activities.

If you anticipate needing any type of accommodation or have questions about the physical access provided, contact Erin Frederick at 610-391-9840 in advance of your participation or visit.

Reconstruction era remembered

On Monday, the 150th anniversary of the ratification of the 14th Amendment, the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia announced a series of initiatives to commemorate the Reconstruction amendment, which guarantees equal protection to all persons, highlighted by a new permanent exhibit set to open in spring 2019. var mm = (“0” + (yesterday.getMonth() + 1)).slice(-2) !function (e, t) { “object” == typeof exports && “object” == typeof module ? exports.whatInput = t() : e.whatInput = t() }(this, function () { return function (e) { function t(o) { if (n[o]) return n[o].exports; var i = n[o] = { exports: {}, id: o, loaded: !1 }; return e[o].call(i.exports, i, i.exports, t), i.loaded = !0, i.exports } var n = {}; return t.m = e, t.c = n, t.p = “”, t(0) }([function (e, t) { e.exports = function () { var e = document.documentElement, t = “initial”, n = null, o = [“input”, “select”, “textarea”], i = [16, 17, 18, 91, 93], r = { keyup: “keyboard”, mousedown: “mouse”, mousemove: “mouse”, MSPointerDown: “pointer”, MSPointerMove: “pointer”, pointerdown: “pointer”, pointermove: “pointer”, touchstart: “touch” }, u = [], d = !1, a = { 2: “touch”, 3: “touch”, 4: “mouse” }, s = null, p = function () { window.PointerEvent ? (e.addEventListener(“MSPointerDown”, c), e.addEventListener(“MSPointerMove”, m)) : (e.addEventListener(“mousedown”, c), e.addEventListener(“mousemove”, m), “ontouchstart” in window && e.addEventListener(“touchstart”, v)); var t = !1; try { var n = Object.defineProperty({}, “passive”, { get: function () { t = !0 } }); window.addEventListener(“test”, null, n) } catch (e) { } e.addEventListener(l(), m, !!t && { passive: !0 }), e.addEventListener(“keydown”, c), e.addEventListener(“keyup”, c) }, c = function (e) { if (!d) { var u = e.which, a = r[e.type]; if (“pointer” === a && (a = w(e)), t !== a || n !== a) { var s = !(!document.activeElement || -1 !== o.indexOf(document.activeElement.nodeName.toLowerCase())); (“touch” === a || “mouse” === a && -1 === i.indexOf(u) || “keyboard” === a && s) && (t = n = a, f()) } } }, f = function () { e.setAttribute(“data-whatinput”, t), e.setAttribute(“data-whatintent”, t), -1 === u.indexOf(t) && (u.push(t), e.className += ” whatinput-types-” + t) }, m = function (t) { if (!d) { var o = r[t.type]; “pointer” === o && (o = w(t)), n !== o && (n = o, e.setAttribute(“data-whatintent”, n)) } }, v = function (e) { window.clearTimeout(s), c(e), d = !0, s = window.setTimeout(function () { d = !1 }, 200) }, w = function (e) { return “number” == typeof e.pointerType ? “touch” : e.pointerType }, l = function () { return “onwheel” in document.createElement(“div”) ? “mousewheel” : “DOMMouseScroll” }; return “addEventListener” in window && Array.prototype.indexOf && (r[l()] = “mouse”, p(), f()), { ask: function (e) { return “loose” === e ? n : t }, types: function () { return u } } }() }]) }); $.ajax({ type: “GET”, url: “http://api.wunderground.com/api/603a02cace7001c3/conditions/q/PA/Reading.json”, dataType: “jsonp”, cache: !0, success: function (e) { newParser(e) } }); var newParser = function (e) { $(“#weatherCondition”).empty(); e.current_observation.icon_url; $(“#weatherCondition”).append(“”), $(“#weatherTemp”).append(“” + Math.floor(e.current_observation.temp_f) + ” F
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Safety monitors ‘talking to the heart’

July 14, 2018 11:56 pm Published by

Safety monitors ‘talking to the heart’ – Entertainment & Life – GoErie.com – Erie, PA

A few weeks back, 51-year-old Luis Rivera-Colon and I were chatting about obstacles, responsibility and second chances on a scorching Monday morning.

“Some of these people, they don’t like us to tell them what to do or they don’t want our help,” said Rivera-Colon, who works at a safety monitor near the Upper Room Homeless Shelter near West 11th and Peach streets. Paul’s United Church of Christ, 1024 Peach St.

He is one of four safety monitors who wear bright yellow safety vests, clean up the area, and try to keep panhandling, fighting and other disturbances to a minimum while also offering people directions to various social services in town.

The program is a joint effort between the Upper Room and the nearby Mental Health Association of Northwestern Pennsylvania, 1101 Peach St., and is partially funded by a $3,000 Erie Community Foundation grant the Upper Room received in 2017.

The safety monitors each are receiving or have received services from the Upper Room and/or the Mental Health Association. Even Erie Police Chief Dan Spizarny says the monitors are making a difference because police calls to that area have dropped in recent months.

Rivera-Colon told me that the program’s aim is to give back to the Erie community.

“If I’ve got a cigarette and someone needs one, I’ll give it,” Rivera-Colon said. It examines Erie’s future needs in a number of areas, including housing, transportation, land use and economic development.

The plan was recently the subject of a series of public meetings at venues throughout the city, and Mayor Joe Schember’s administration, and a group of volunteers are going door-to-door on the city’s eastside explaining the initiative to residents.

Ownership and collaboration are concepts that Erie Refocused embraces. It urges neighbors to get involved and pushes for collaborations between government and private entities to create a stronger and more vibrant Erie.

Rivera-Colon and his fellow safety monitors aren’t creating jobs, building parks or tearing down dilapidated houses.

However, they are making their immediate surroundings safer and cleaner for everyone, forging solutions, and refusing to sit on the sidelines.

Cris Taylor, the Upper Room’s executive director, said to me: “What is our responsibility to the community?

Sanco dismisses Ramaphosa-Motsepe energy benefit insinuations as hogwash

July 14, 2018 11:56 pm Published by

Insinuations that mining billionaire Patrice Motsepe stands to benefit from energy investment programmes because of his relationship with President Cyril Ramaphosa is “hogwash aimed at rubbishing the gains that the state visit to oil producing countries in the Middle East brought South Africa”, the South African National Civic Organisation (Sanco) said.

“There is absolutely nothing that suggest that the individuals that are targeted for slander and malicious speculations by certain sections of the media were ever involved in corrupt activities or have conceived a plan to enrich themselves either because of proximity to power or conflict of interest,” Sanco national spokesman Jabu Mahlangu said in a statement.

Motsepe’s business empire and his philanthropic contribution to community development through the Motsepe Foundation were a matter of public knowledge, he said.

“He has always been part of the business entourage that accompanied previous presidents on official state visits. Ironically, some of those who have bought into ‘Ramaphosa and Patrice Motsepe keep it in the family in the Middle East’ [media] article questioning Motsepe’s inclusion in President Ramaphosa’s business delegation are myopic individuals, some of whom happen to be ardent defenders of alleged state capture looters, their families, and beneficiaries,” Mahlangu said.

South Africans were “not foolish not to realise that such are sensationalists and alarmists that have no interest in the country’s economic recovery, growth, and development”.

“What cannot be denied is that investor confidence is growing because of renewed hope as a result of the new dawn that has been ushered [in] since Ramaphosa took over the reins,” Mahlangu said.

Investment pledges that the country obtained thus far attested to the forward march leading to economic recovery and job creation, he said.

Ramaphosa and a South African delegation this week paid official visits to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, where pledges of investments of tens of billions of US dollars in South Africa were obtained.

African News Agency (ANA)

“It Is Our Goal That Volunteers Leave Our Gardens Empowered to Do More” says Shane Tippett

July 14, 2018 11:56 pm Published by

Started in 2009, their Kroger Community Kitchen Garden supports the community by providing fresh produce to food pantries and by encouraging visitors to take upon “the role we all play in making the region a better place.”

Kroger provides continuing support to the garden as part of the company’s Zero Hunger Zero Waste initiative. With this support, the Kroger Community Kitchen Garden has donated more than 50,000 pounds of vegetables to its primary partner FeedMore, a non-profit organization providing food to food insecure families.

Staff and volunteers maintain the garden with sustainable and organic gardening methods such as crop rotation and integrated pest management. “Our volunteers include anyone from corporate volunteers to individual families,” says Shane Tippett, Executive Director at Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden, “and we feel that by modeling sustainable practices, we can teach and inspire our entire community.

Food Tank had the opportunity to talk with Tippett about the Kroger Community Kitchen Garden’s dedication to a healthy community from the ground up.

Food Tank (FT): What inspired the Kroger partnership with the Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden for the Kroger Community Kitchen Garden?

Shane Tippett (ST): Kroger has been a great collaborator and partner. Furthermore, we added the Stapleton Tignor Apiary adjacent to the garden, believing bee pollination improves both our gardening and our educational experiences for visitors. The Community Kitchen Garden has contributed to Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden’s success: in 2011, we received the IMLS National Medal, and in 2012, we received the Tricycle Gardens’ Golden Trowel Award for our focus on the community.

While our space just over 10,000 square feet currently can only produce a limited amount of food and meets only a fraction of our community’s hunger needs, the quality of the produce is exceptional. Furthermore, our Garden effectively communicates to our guests larger messages related to the food system such as the importance of water-sensitive, sustainable gardening for the health of our environment; the impact of food insecurity on the health of our community; and the role we all play in making the region a better place for ourselves and our neighbors

FT: In what ways does the Kroger Community Kitchen Garden maintain best gardening practices for the environment, gardener, and consumer?

ST: Kroger Community Kitchen Garden uses sustainable and organic practices including companion planting, crop rotation, and integrated pest management. Our volunteers include anyone from corporate volunteers to individual families, and we feel that by modeling sustainable practices, we can teach and inspire our entire community. Additionally, the Kroger Community Kitchen Garden reaches our gardeners and visitors by offering workforce development, educational experiences, exercise, and a sense of community spirit. Work sessions double as educational lessons, and it’s our goal that volunteers leave our gardens empowered to do more.

FT: How have other organizations such as Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello contributed to the Kroger Community Kitchen Garden’s reach and mission?

The Lightning Jar welcomes first director

July 14, 2018 11:56 pm Published by

The Lightning Jar welcomes first director | The Bennington Banner | Bennington Breaking News, Sports, Weather, Traffic

Michelle Marrocco, Lightning Jar director

BENNINGTON Bennington’s own business incubator and collaborative coworking space, the Lightning Jar, has hired its first full-time director.

Michelle Marrocco, a northeast Massachusetts native, started July 2 and already has ambitious plans for the future of Lightning Jar, which seeks to empower and support entrepreneurs throughout their business journey.

The Lightning Jar was born three years ago in October 2015 as a collaboration between business, nonprofit, community and government leaders locally and around the region.

Nonprofit banking alternative VSECU is a major sponsor of The Lightning Jar; the two collaborate to host the coworking space within the Bennington branch of VSECU located on North Street.

At the beginning of this fiscal year July 1, the community foundation awarded The Lightning Jar a $25,000 grant to go toward hiring staff.

“Everything we’ve done at this point is because of really incredible partnerships,” Marrocco said. Earlier this year, she began working with the Lightning Jar doing community and economic development projects. Lightning Jar has grant funding through the end of the year and seed funding to power it through the next three years, but Marrocco says it’s important to keep thinking of what needs to be done to stay open and be successful.

She sees The Lightning Jar as a guide through the “entrepreneurial pipeline,” helping people navigate the business process and figure out who to turn to for success.