Showing posts with label help needed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label help needed. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Help Give Inner City Kids New Experiences and Fun

The Fresh Air Fund, a nonprofit group that provides summer vacations to inner-city children from low-income communities, is looking for host families, mostly from the northeast area of the country.

About Fresh Air Children:
They are boys and girls, six to 18 years old, who live in New York City. Children on first-time visits are six to 12 years old and stay for either one or two weeks. Youngsters who are re-invited by the same family may continue with The Fund through age 18, and many enjoy longer summertime visits, year after year. A visit to the home of a warm and loving volunteer host family can make all the difference in the world to an inner-city child. All it takes to create lifelong memories is laughing in the sunshine and making new friends.

The majority of Fresh Air children are from low-income communities. These are often families without the resources to send their children on summer vacations. Most inner-city youngsters grow up in towering apartment buildings without large, open, outdoor play spaces. Concrete playgrounds cannot replace the freedom of running barefoot through the grass or riding bikes down country lanes.

See the Fresh Air website for more information.

Foster Parent Association in Central Florida Needs Larger Meeting Space

This request is from a CGC board member.  Please contact us if you can offer any suggestions!

The foster parent association has asked me to help with their childcare when they have their monthly meetings. I agreed to help but the space that they are using to meet in is really small and the kids were all in a very small room with little to play with. I would love to find some churches who would be willing to donate space so that the foster parents could meet and I could watch the kids for them in a separate area. (Preferably a playground or kid-friendly space) We need a church that is in Seminole county and one that is in East Orange. If any of you have any ideas or contacts that I could ask, I would greatly appreciate it.
Thanks for caring about foster kids and thanks for any help you may be able to give me!

Friday, May 13, 2011

Shoes for Orphans In the Ukraine

Northland Church in Longwood is hosting a service project on May 21, 2011 where families can decorate TOMS shoes to send to Ukrainian orphans.   TOMS Shoes is a company that matches every pair of shoes purchased with a pair of new shoes to give to a child in need.  You can find more information about this event and  register here.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Joint Council on International Children's Services' Emergency Campaign for Ethiopian Children







Because Ethiopia has decided to drastically reduce the number of international adoptions, JCIC has undertaken an emergency Ethiopia campaign.  If you would like to help, they have a petition and suggestions for other things you can do here.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Family Services of Metro Orlando's "Give a Child a Childhood" Fundraising Breakfast to be help April 29

The annual Give a Child a Childhood Fundraising Breakfast is your opportunity to learn how your support has a profound impact on the lives of children and families in central Florida.
Did you know...

•more than 37% of former foster youth cost rather than contribute to society because they never received the supports and resources they needed to grow into healthy and productive citizens?

•more than 200 central Florida children died in 2008 due to abuse? While each life is priceless, the economic impact of these needless deaths is in excess of a half billion dollars every year.

•there are enough central Florida children awaiting adoption each year to fill fifteen classrooms?

•families of abused children generally suffer from as many as eight major life challenges - job loss, homelessness, domestic violence, addictions, physical and mental illness - all at once?

•even as the need increases, government provides only a shrinking fraction of what it costs to provide basic protection of children? We rely on individuals like you for support of our programs to improve the quality of life for children and families in our community.

The challenges children and families face are too large for nonprofits alone to solve. Family Services of Metro Orlando empowers everyone to be part of the solutions many in our community so desperately seek.

To register:  http://events.constantcontact.com/register/event?oeidk=a07e2opqff970b1a227

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Orphanage in the Philippines Needs Just $500 to Reach Their Goal

Update
From Safe Harbor International Philippines - S.H.I.P:
We are now $500 short of reaching our goal of $5,000 for the jeep. Thank you to all of you who have sent money for this need; please continue to pray that we receive the $500 that we are lacking towards this purchase. God bless all of you for keeping this ministry in your prayers.

http://www.shipfoundation.org/

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Residential Center for Children in the Philippines In Need of a Vehicle

Safe Harbor International Philippines Foundation, Inc. helps abandoned, neglected, abused and orphaned children in the Philippines.  For their accreditation evaluation they need to purchase a vehicle.  They've found one that meets their needs that costs $5,000.  So far $4,200 has been donated for this purchase.  They now need less than $1,000!  Can you help?  If you can or for more information - http://www.shipfoundation.org/index.cfm

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Orphan Care Groups Come Together to Help Haiti

An article from Yahoo news:
Disaster Response Experts Team With Orphan Care Organizations to Create Long-Term Solutions in Haiti
Unique team to deploy Valentine's Day

RALEIGH, N.C., Feb. 9 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- A volunteer team of U.S. disaster response experts and orphan care providers is coming together to provide strategic help to Haitian churches. The team will equip and train Haitian church leaders to provide local, long-term care for orphaned Haitian children in the aftermath of the January earthquake.

The Haiti Orphan Relief Team (HORT) is a cooperative volunteer effort of disaster response experts and orphan-care professionals from many U.S.-based ministries that have joined forces to respond to the crisis in Haiti. An initial HORT on-the-ground team will deploy for a two week period beginning on February 14, 2010. The team will work to identify churches in Haiti that can be paired with U.S. churches for ongoing partnerships in caring for orphaned children, so that local resources can sustain this effort beyond the HORT team's deployment.
"We know that this disaster is not going to be fixed overnight, but by putting in place key pieces of infrastructure, efforts can be sustained and strengthened long after the HORT team has returned to the United States," said John E. Roberts, past Director of the Federal Government's National Interagency Training Center, and Incident Command System (ICS) team commander for HORT. "We are looking to build a long-term solution to the immediate crisis."

Recognizing that many Haitian church facilities were destroyed, HORT will use advanced mapping techniques developed by the U.S. government to physically identify the church facilities that are best able to provide long-term solutions to children now and in the future.

"We are looking for churches that want to become part of the long-term solution to the orphan need in Haiti. Â We encourage U.S. churches to come alongside the churches of Haiti to address this catastrophe," said Paul Myhill, President, World Orphans, and a member of the deployment team.

A Valentine's Day fund-raising drive is under way to help HORT deploy. Donors can personalize an eCard with a Valentine message and for every eCard sent, the team will personally deliver a Valentine to a Haitian orphan.

"Outside help alone won't reach Haiti's deepest need. If we're serious about helping Haiti's orphans toward a bright future, it'll be absolutely vital to equip and support committed local Haitian churches to care for the orphans in their communities," said Jedd Medefind, President of the Christian Alliance for Orphans.
More about HORT can be found at: http://www.haitiorphanrelief.org/

Collaborators in this effort include:
Christian Alliance for Orphans, http://www.christianalliancefororphans.org/
Global Aid Network, a ministry of Campus Crusade for Christ International, http://www.gainusa.org/
Hope for Orphans, a ministry of FamilyLife, http://www.hopefororphans.org/
Lifesong for Orphans, http://www.lifesongfororphans.org/
Love Haiti, http://www.lovehaitimissions.com/
Loving Shepherd Ministries, http://www.loving-shepherd.org/
Sweet Sleep, http://www.sweetsleep.org/
Together for Adoption, http://www.togetherforadoption.org/
University of North Carolina, School of Public Health, http://www.sph.unc.edu/
World Orphans, http://www.worldorphans.org/


(http://news.yahoo.com/s/usnw/20100209/pl_usnw/DC52297)

Friday, January 22, 2010

Haitian orphans' adoptive parents wait, worry, battle red tape


Story from the Orlando Sentinel

Since the first earthquake hit Haiti last week, Suzanne Hetherman has careened between despair and elation as she waits for news of the two Haitian girls she has tried to adopt for two years.

On Monday morning, the Winter Garden woman was told they could arrive any minute. By afternoon, the U.S. State Department and the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services were asking for more paperwork.
 Continue story

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

CCAI Sends Aid to Haitian Orphanage


From Josh & Lily, CCAI's co-founders:
We landed at Port-au-Prince International Airport at 13:59 pm yesterday and hand delivered your contributions to the orphanage staff and volunteers in the form of water, formula, medicine, food, and $10,000.00 cash.

Maison des Enfants de Dieu, an orphanage that has been caring for about 130 kids, was badly damaged by the powerful earthquake that hit the poor Caribbean nation last on January 12, 2010. Although no children were severely hurt, their dorms were devastated beyond repair. The older children have been living under five tents and the babies are being cared for in the trunk of a big truck. Fox News and CNN managed to reach the orphanage three days after the quake, but their reports of the terrible conditions did not lead to the immediate and adequate aid of food and water that they desperately needed.

On 1/17 at 18:24, Patrick, an American missionary from Denver sent us an urgent message, pleading, “We need water, food, medicine, and charcoal quickly!!!”


We immediately contacted one of our long time supporters who had offered their family private jet for emergency use the day before. They wholeheartedly supported our request to use their plane to send supplies to the orphanage. We spent the next five hours storming several Wal-Marts and Walgreens purchasing formula, medicine, food, water, and charcoal. At 5:30 am, over 2000 pounds of supplies were loaded onto the jet and the plane took off at 6:33 am Denver time.

Five and half hours later, at 13:59 pm, we successfully landed at the war-zone like Port-au-Prince International Airport in the midst of many dozen landing and taking-off aid aircrafts and helicopters from around the world.


We were totally surprised as soon as we opened the gate. Five orphanage staff and volunteers including Patrick and his wife, Kim, were right there, ready and waiting with a SUV and a truck! We had no idea how in the world they were able to drive and park right by our plane.

We have never in my life seen people so excited, so thankful and tearful, nor who hugged so hard!


We unloaded the supplies as quick as we could and covered the truck with tarps. We offered them an advise we received prior to our departure from another pilot who has been transporting aid to Haiti the day before: Cover the supplies with tarps and let a couple of guys lie on top of it pretending dead so supplies will not be high-jacked on the way back to the orphanage.


At 16:00 pm, we left the airport with seven completely exhausted American and Belgium doctors who had been working in Haiti non-stop for over three days! A free ride in a fancy private jet could provide a little physical and emotional comfort to these heroes.


A huge thank-you to all of you unsung heroes who took action to care and to love. Thank you for entrusting us with your loving donations.

Please visit www.haitiadoption.org  to view our Haiti trip photos.

Adventures in Missions Haiti Response



Please stay connected to http://haiti.adventures.org/ for the latest information about how one of Children's HopeChest partners, Adventures In Missions, is responding to the Haiti earthquake.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Joint Council on International Children's Services: Haiti Call to Action


- released Jan. 19, 2010

It has come that time that we request our dear friends and family help us ensure the safety of children in Haiti. Please read the message below and contact your Senators and Representative.

To find your senators go to, http://www.senate.gov/
To find your representative go to, http://www.house.gov/

Suggested Talking Points
Hello, my name is…
I am in the process of adopting a child from Haiti…

OR

My

OR
I am concerned about the orphan children of Hati...

I know that many Members of Congress continue to support efforts on behalf of Haiti’s orphaned children. I extend my thanks to the Congressman/Senator.
I am calling because…
* We need your help to get our adoptive child out of Haiti safely.

* Water, food and medicine are running out.

* Gangs have looted some of the orphanages and even travel is not safe for the children.

* The Department of Homeland security has granted humanitarian parole, but it is only the first step.
* The devastation from the earthquake is vast and our child’s safety - and even life - is at risk.

Joint Council on International Children’s Services, the Congressional Coalition on Adoption Institute, and a team of congressional offices and relief organizations are working to coordinate a staging and housing center to provide:
* Physical safety

* Medicine

* Food

* Water

* A Staging Center for USCIS (U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services) to process humanitarian parole

The groups working to launch the staging and housing center already have most of what the children need.

But they do not have:
* Water
* Security to protect the children and supplies from gangs
* Transportation to bring the children into this safe haven

We are asking that (name of Member of Congress) personally call:
* Secretary of State Clinton, and
* Dr. Shah, Administrator Designate at USAID

And specifically request that they authorize security forces be sent to the offered staging center and assist in the extraction and transport of these children from their orphanages to the staging center. All other pieces of a successful operation of this staging center are currently in place, but all hinge on this authorization of security and transport.

If this security does not reach the site within 24 hours, children being adopted and many other children will continue to suffer and may in fact not live long enough to be united with my family and the other 300 U.S. families.
http://www.jcics.org/

Plight of Haiti orphans grips U.S


Jan. 19, 2010 Orlando Sentinel story by By Megan O'Matz of the Sun Sentinel.

Roman Catholic leaders in Miami on Tuesday applauded the federal government's announcement that it will bring hundreds of Haitian children already orphaned before the deadly earthquake to the United States as soon as possible.

The plan, unveiled by Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, was greeted by some as the first step in opening the door to the countless other youngsters in Haiti left without homes or parents since last week's disaster.

"We'll take any child that needs a place to sleep and to live. We will do that. And we know we're not the only organization," said Mary Ross Agosta, spokeswoman for the Archdiocese of Miami.

Catholic Charities' offer to temporarily house and clothe Haitian orphans until they can be adopted or reunited with surviving relatives has created a groundswell of support, as well as logistical confusion, and inevitably resulted in comparisons with the church's 1960s "Pedro Pan" airlift of 14,000 children out of Cuba.

"You always have to look out for children," Gov. Charlie Crist said Tuesday, lending his support to talk of evacuating children from the sorrowful conditions in Haiti.

Yet, at the same time, Florida child welfare officials sought to quell speculation about a mass "influx of orphans" into the state.

"That's just not going to happen anytime soon, if at all," said Mark Riordan, Department of Children & Families spokesman in Broward County. "All the proper authorities and agencies have been in contact with one another on the subject. But there is no plan to roll out, at this point, to accept or even begin processing large numbers of orphan Haitian children to bring here for adoption."

But clearly, some children are coming. Local and national media have captured heart-wrenching pictures of Haitian children wrapped in blankets and being carried off planes to new lives in the United States. Among them: the governor of Pennsylvania stepping off an Air Force jet in Pittsburgh with 53 tots gathered from a badly damaged Haitian orphanage.

How many more are en route?

Homeland Security said it estimates fewer than 1,000 young Haitians will qualify under its newly announced plan, which applies only to children legally available for adoption prior to the Jan. 12 quake. Some have already been matched with new parents. The State Department put the number closer to 500.

Catholic officials couldn't say how many Haitians it estimates were orphaned after the quake. "We don't know," Agosta said. "Who can tell us even how many people are dead or missing?"

But church leaders say the need is great and immediate. And so they're talking with federal officials, the Haitian government and other agencies about how best to care for children who now have nothing and no one.

Agosta said the Miami Archdiocese can temporarily house children in church facilities that can be converted into "child-friendly residential situations" with clean beds, clean clothes and people to look after them. The children could stay until they are adopted or reunited with relatives located here or in Haiti.

Families across the United States have already contacted the archdiocese offering to help. "I was on MSNBC this morning and 20 minutes after I was off the air I had over 100 e-mails from people saying we can open up our homes," Agosta said.

But locally, other child welfare providers say they know of no specific plans as of yet.

"We're really unclear, at this point, if the kids are coming here, what would be needed," said Sasheika Eugent, spokeswoman for ChildNet, which provides foster and adoptive care services in Broward County.
"Right now, reunification with families is the ongoing theme of everything we're doing," said Chris Bentley, spokesman for U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/fl-haiti-orphans-airlift-0119-20100119,0,5392361,full.story

Children's HopeChest Ministry's Plan to help Haitian Children



Haiti's devastating earthquake may triple the number of orphans (http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/americas/01/16/haiti.earthquake.carrefour.orphanage/index.html)
living on this small impoverished island. Already one of the poorest nations in the Western Hemisphere, Haiti's new orphan crisis will bring incredible strain upon the country's resources to care for children.

Our ministry team has developed a two-stage plan to assist organizations in caring for an expected 300% increase in orphaned children in Haiti.

EMERGENCY FOOD RELIEF

Through our "5 for 50 (http://www.5for50.com/)" program, we have already contributed $3,000 to Kids Against Hunger. In 2009, they shipped over 500,000 meals to our carepoints in Africa. From Jan 1 - Feb 28, HopeChest will donate 100% of all 5 for 50 (http://www.5for50.com/) contributions to Kids Against Hunger to feed Haiti's orphans. To join us, please go to http://www.5for50.org (http://www.5for50.com/) to make a gift. 100% of all contributions made before Feb 28 will support emergency food relief for orphans in Haiti.

LONG-TERM CARE
Organizations are rushing into Haiti--just as we watched them pour into the former Soviet Union in the early 1990s. Today, less than 10 percent are still ministering in Russia. Right now, HopeChest is conducting extensive due diligence on several orphan ministry partners in Haiti. Our COO, Bob Mudd, has been on the phone every day with new potential long-term partners.
We are looking for ministries with a pre-earthquake track record of caring for orphans, and who will experience a substantial increase in the number of children they are serving. Through a ministry partnership with Children's HopeChest, we will explore providing long-term care through our CONNECT COMMUNITIES outreach, as well as our TRANSFORM church sponsorship programs.

Above all, please pray for everyone affected by the earthquake, especially David Hames and his family. David attends Vanguard Church, one of our Swaziland carepoint sponsors. David was in Haiti to film stories of children for Compassion International and was in the Hotel Montana when it collapsed during the earthquake. Search and rescue teams are working to locate David, and we ask you to join us in asking for God's miraculous hand to work in Haiti today.
Thank you for your support and prayers.
Sincerely,
The HopeChest Ministry Team
P.S. If you haven't contributed to disaster relief in Haiti, we would encourage you make a financial contribution to one of the following organizations:

- The Red Cross (http://www.redcross.org/)

- Compassion International (http://www.compassion.com/)

- Samaritan's Purse (http://www.samaritanspurse.org/)

World Vision Provides Update on Haiti's Relief Effort

One Week After Haiti's Earthquake, New Challenges in Helping
World Vision's Laura Blank on what makes this relief effort different—and on being surprised by hymns.
from Christianity Today
With 70,000 bodies officially recovered after last Tuesday's earthquake, World Vision says the total death toll likely will be well over 100,000. Meanwhile, aid and relief organizations have raised more than $220 million to help. World Vision, one of the world's largest Christian ministries, has raised $31 million to provide food, medical aid, and shelter. Christianity Today online editor Sarah Pulliam Bailey spoke by phone with World Vision media relations manager Laura Blank, who is in Port-au-Prince.


Continue story here - http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2010/januaryweb-only/13-21.0.html

CNN Report On Six Haitian Orphans Starting Their Journey Towards a New Life

Click for story:
http://www.cnn.com/video/?/video/world/2010/01/17/tuchman.haiti.orphans.cnn

A Church-Centered Initiative to Serve Haiti’s Orphans


Announcement from Together for Adoption:  Please help us spread the word as we seek to mobilize the church to be the hands and feet of our Haitian brothers and sisters to care for their orphaned and vulnerable children.

As you know, the Haitian church has been devastated by the earthquake.
Pastors are dead.
Church buildings have been demolished.
Our Haitian brothers and sisters are suffering in inconceivable ways.
To use an analogy, if the Western Hemisphere is the setting of The Parable of the Good Samaritan instead of the land of Israel, the church in Haiti is the man half dead and we are the neighbor. Our Haitian brothers and sisters in Christ have immense needs, and God has given us the opportunity and responsibility to care for them as the Good Samaritan cared for the man who fell among thieves.


As you have likely heard, many more children have become orphans as a result of the earthquake. What was already an orphan crisis in Haiti has become an exponentially greater crisis. Since the church in Haiti is itself suffering terribly from the devastating earthquake, they are not in a position to even begin to care for their orphans.


So, we are actively working on an initiative to mobilize the U.S. church to be the hands and feet of the Haitian church to care for its orphans. We want to serve our Haitian brothers and sisters in Christ by coming alongside them and doing for them what they cannot do themselves: care for their orphans in crisis.

As you can imagine, executing an initiative like this is complicated. We are working to put a clear plan of action together. If you are interested in knowing how you and your church can participate, please send an e-mail to dan.cruver@TogetherforAdoption.org and keep checking the T4A website for updates.

More information will be coming. In the meantime, pray that we as the church will rise up to come alongside our Haitian brothers and sisters in Christ for the sake of Haiti’s orphans

http://www.togetherforadoption.org/?p=5175

Friday, January 15, 2010

More Haitian Ministries that Need Help

A blogger who has adopted several times from Haiti has identified three reputable ministries that need help:
Heartline Minitries, World Wide Village, and Real Hope for Haiti Rescue Center.
To read her post:  http://mcbridefamilyblog.blogspot.com/2010/01/its-time-to-give-big.html

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Earthquake Relief for Haiti


http://www.forhisgloryoutreach.org/home
For His Glory Adoption Outreach supports an orphanage in Port-Au-Prince.  They are in desperate need of cash donations.  They will also need construction and medical volunteers.  For more information or to help:  http://www.forhisgloryoutreach.org/earthquake_relief