Resolve to Volunteer in 2015

FIVE great reasons to make a volunteering resolution this year:

Very few things are as mutually beneficial as volunteering – to our community, to a nonprofit, to a recipient, and even to the volunteer themselves. Here are a few reasons to add volunteering to your resolution list this year! Very few things are as mutually beneficial as volunteering — to our community, to a nonprofit, to a recipient, and
even to the volunteer yourself. Here are a few reasons to add volunteering to your resolution list this year!

1. VOLUNTEERING IS A GREAT VALUE to the volunteer and the nonprofit to the recipient and the community. Did you know that the average value of a volunteer hour to a nonprofit is $22.55? (Of course, communities benefit if members are better off; the clients served are the direct beneficiaries of your time.)
2. VOLUNTEERING IS GOOD FOR YOUR HEALTH. Countless studies have proven that doing good is actually good for your physical and mental well being. Get the health boost from making a difference!
3. VOLUNTEERING ACTUALLY DOESN’T TAKE THAT MUCH TIME. Studies of volunteers have shown that people who volunteer don’t really do more than those who don’t, nor do they have to give up other activities in order to find the time. Well, actually, the one area shows a change is that regular volunteers do watch slightly less television than non-volunteers. And isn’t that on your resolution list anyway?
4. VOLUNTEERING HELPS CREATE AND FIND JOBS. If you are searching for employment this year, keep in mind that volunteers are 27% more likely to get hired, and that more than 3/4 of hiring managers consider volunteer experience to be important when assessing a candidate.
5. VOLUNTEERING IS GOOD FOR THE ENVIRONMENT. Efficient use of resources helps all of us. Need we say more?
*BONUS REASON: VOLUNTEERING STRENGTHENS THE COMMUNITY AND WORKPLACE. Studies show that workplace volunteering benefits both the community and the employer and employee relationship. Because employees are happier, they can be more productive, and everyone benefits when the community is stronger. Get started today!

 

DEMOCRACY IN ACTION

Civic engagement is a cornerstone of our democracy.

flag map Participate by serving as an election worker in Alameda or Contra Costa Counties for the November election.

To help in Alameda County, click here.

For Contra Costa County, click here.

 

Earthquake Volunteers

This note is from The Volunteer Center of Napa County  (http://www.volunteernapa.org/)we heart napaNapa Quake Update –  If you are able to respond as a volunteer, please go to the Emergency Volunteer Center at Grace Church,  3765 Solano Ave, Napa, CA 94558. ALSO: Napa County has opened a Local Assistance Center (LAC) to help Napa County residents recover from earthquake. Volunteers, especially bilingual (Spanish/English) volunteers are needed to help translate.
LAC hours are 11am to 7pm every day starting today (no end time yet).  They will take any volunteers any time they are available during these hours.  The LAC is located at: 301 1st St, Napa, CA
(Corner of 1st Street and Silverado Trail- formerly JV Wine & Spirit) or please contact Mark Woo at 510-666-7494.

VCEB in the news

The Volunteer Center of the East Bay is in the news! Please check out the good news in the Contra Costa Times by following the link here:

http://www.contracostatimes.com/pleasant-hill/ci_25707963/good-neighbors-by-faith-barnidge-meals-wheels-borges

Voluntourism article

Perhaps your summer plans are already booked. Perhaps you even know what you are doing for holiday break two years from now. One thing we know is that volunteering while traveling is becoming more popular, so we thought, just in case you were still making some plans, that we’d share this article. If you are thinking about combining some travel with some volunteering, give it a read. Especially if you are new to volunteer tourism, it can be a helpful place to start. If you’ve been a voluntourist since you were in the Peace Corps years ago, it might have some fresh perspective. It has some good tips to keep in mind as you begin to plan your next trip.

Here is the link (If you don’t wish to be redirected, here’s the url: http://honestblue.com/the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly-of-volunteer-travel/)

AND, if you plan to be close to home, just search The Volunteer Center of East Bay site here for some volunteer opportunities.

Looking for ways your business and employees can engage in the community?

Your business can become part of the East Bay’s  Business Volunteer Council
The Business Volunteer Council (BVC) is a coalition of East Bay businesses sharing a common interest in workplace volunteering and community engagement.
See more here!

GIVING TUESDAY IS HERE! December 3, 2013

Hard to decide which nonprofit to support today? Please consider a donation to theThe Volunteer Center of the East Bay – your contribution supports the work of more than 600 local (Alameda and Contra Costa Counties) nonprofits! Donate today! /donate/

Walnut Creek Community Service Day 2012

vertical csd logo
Time to sign up for the 2012 Community Service Day

NEW! For a complete list of all projects including how many spaces are available, click here.

The 2012 Community Service Day will be Saturday, October 6. Check in and breakfast will be from 7:30-8:30 a.m. at Heather Farm Park, with projects starting at 9 a.m.
PLUS, this year, there are several projects offering afternoon shifts!
With 50 projects to choose from, there is something for every age, every interest and every skill level.
Just read the project descriptions below, then click on a specific project’s link to go straight to the registration page.
OR, for a complete list of all projects including how many spaces are available, click here.

Questions? Email the Community Service Day organizing committee, or call 925-256-3505.

When Kids Volunteer: Liability Basics

This article is reprinted with permission from Blue Avocado, a practical and readable online magazine for nonprofits. Subscribe free by contacting the Blue Avocado editor or visiting here: www.BlueAvocado.org.

By Ilona Bray, J.D.

Two kids with groceries for the hungryWhether kids sell cookies or help clean up a park, they are welcome volunteers. Just be sure you know the basics of how to protect them and your organization when it comes to liabilities (at the end of this article is a link to a sample waiver):

As a kid, I sorted food donations for Lithuanian refugees because my mother was a leader in the Seattle Lithuanian Community. I sold Camp Fire Girls’ mints because, well, I had to. I interned at the Seattle Aquarium where I wore a badge that said, “Ask me! I know everything!” And I interned at Children’s Hospital because I hoped it would make my college applications look better.

But somewhere along the way, something must have clicked, because by the time I finished law school, I asked my corporate law firm employer, “Could you wait six months while I intern at Amnesty International?” And a few years later when I quit corporate law, the first thing I did was a volunteer internship at Northwest Immigrant Rights Project.

If my experience is a guide, a childhood experience as a volunteer can lead to a lifelong commitment to giving back. And if kids are among your clients or constituents, then getting them involved is a natural. But you’ll want to be sure you’ve got basic protections in place (I guess I haven’t completely shed my lawyer hat!).

Liability basics for children volunteers

Here are the first things to think about:

  • Screening process: If you don’t already have a screening process in place for adults who will be working directly with children, or will be driving them around, now’s the time to start one.
  • Accident-prevention procedures: If the kids will be doing anything remotely risky, then you’ll want to give explicit accident-prevention strategies in your trainings and written materials, and be ready to enforce compliance. For example, if long-sleeved shirts are advisable when the kids are working with animals, then you’ll have to not only give advance notice of this, but turn kids away who are improperly dressed, or at least have a spare sweatshirt on hand for them to borrow.
  • Liability insurance: Make sure your liability insurance covers the activities planned within your volunteer program. Review your policy and talk to your insurance provider.
  • Parental consent: When children younger than 18 are involved, you’ll also need to get written parental consent. Your permission form will document not only the parent’s permission for the child to partake in your activity, but should also contain a promise that the parent will not sue your organization in the event that the child is injured as a result of the carelessness of your volunteers or participants. Note that the effectiveness of parental waivers is a fraught topic in the law; when challenged, some waivers do not hold up—their effectiveness depends on the law in your state and the way the waiver was written.

Attached to this article is a sample parental waiver; click here to download it for free. It’s impossible to create a sample waiver that does the trick for all states for every type of activity. But this form can give you and your attorney something to start with . . . and I do suggest you hire a competent lawyer for advice and drafting help.

Scaring parents?

You’ll see that the sample waiver lays out a whole host of possible risks, from broken bones to death. Will you be scaring parents by doing the same within your form? Don’t worry: Most parents would rather know what’s possible than be surprised later, and will understand that this type of language is legally required. In fact, the more specific a waiver is regarding the actual risks that the child, student, or other volunteer will be exposed to, the more likely a court is to uphold its validity.

So why have kids as volunteers?

There are important roles for kids to play as volunteers, whether to help on their own projects (like raising money for their soccer team) or to help others. And such activities are good for kids, too. If you have adult volunteers with children, think of activities they can do with their children — maybe passing out water bottles at a walk-a-thon, or staffing a table at a street fair.

Margo, a parent, told me of her daughter’s sales of Girl Scout cookies and items for school fundraisers: “In addition to learning how to make change and use basic math, one of the most important things she learned was how to take ‘No’ for an answer.” And another life lesson I learned from my own childhood volunteer work: Rich people don’t necessarily buy more mints.

Ilona Bray, J.D. is the author of The Volunteer’s Guide to Fundraising: Raise Money for Your School, Team, Library or Community Group, available here. The book has A-to-Z information on a host of fundraising activities that are right for grassroots and community groups, as well as material on recruiting and organizing volunteers.

It’s available, along with Nolo’s other line of nonprofit books, at www.nolo.com/products/nonprofits/.

Using Social Media to Recruit Volunteers – Part 3

Turning Followers into Volunteers

“OK thanks for the social media tips, but how would a social media presence help my organization recruit volunteers?”

Social Media is just another tool in your toolkit. And it’s a very powerful one because studies have shown time and time again, word-of-mouth is the most effective way to attract new volunteers.

Social media networks like Facebook and Twitter make it easy for your supporters to share information about your organization with a greater number of people. The average number of friends for a Facebook user is 120, according to the Economist. If only a quarter of those friends read a post about your org, 30 is a larger number of impressions that traditional word-of-mouth (AKA in-person interaction) would garner. Someone would have to be pretty psyched to repeat the same story to 30 people but it happens every day online.

Thus, it is important that you engage your current supporters via social media because it 1) enables your supporters share your messaging with their friends, and 2) gives potential supporters a low risk way to get know your organization.

Recruiting volunteers via social media relies on the same techniques volunteer coordinators have used for years.

  • Make a clear request for help. Set appropriate expectations up front by stating what the volunteer would do, how it supports your mission, and what the time commitment is.
  • Target specific types of volunteers you want (students or working professionals, etc.) and craft messages that will appeal to them.
  • Explain the benefits of volunteering with your organization. Volunteers can benefit from service by developing new skills, meeting new people, expanding their professional network, and exploring new hobbies/career paths.

Last but not least, be sure to ask for help in 20% or less of your posts. It wouldn’t be fun to have a conversation with someone who only talks about himself; and it would be worse if he spent the whole time asking for help! Be sure to engage people in other topics related to your mission.