Barnstable: $62,928
Alzheimer’s Services of Cape Cod & the Islands, Inc
Program Name: The Regional Caregiver Support and Dementia-Specific Respite Program
Amount: $62,928
The ASCCI propose the Regional Caregiver Support and Dementia-Specific Respite Program. While this program is a multi-faceted approach to the barriers to service in their region, Cape Cod, Martha’s Vineyard, and Nantucket, a large component of the program is focused around dementia-specific volunteer based respite. The pilot program would include 2 full time and 4 part time members.Bristol: $118,000
Positive Action Against Chemical Addiction, Inc.
Program Name: NEW BEDFORD Corps
Amount: $64,400
The New Bedford Corps project’s primary goals are to serve at risk youth through the New Bedford Youth Court and expand the City of New Bedford’s GIVING Network to maximize the number of volunteers engaged in service throughout the City by 20%. The project will host 2 part time members and 3 full time members. Some of the members recruited will be individuals whose lives have been touched directly or indirectly by substance abuse. For the members that are in recovery, this experience is a second lease on life, allowing them to further their education, enhance skills and give back.University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
Program Name: L.E.A.D.S. Leadership for Educational Attainment through Service
Amount: $53,600
The University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, in conjunction with Bristol Community College, seeks 15 Commonwealth Corps members for the proposed Leadership for Educational Attainment Developed through Service (LEADS) program. Pairs of Corps members working as LEADS teams will be assigned to work with middle school students in the Fall River and New Bedford schools, educating them about leadership, educational attainment, and service to the community. The goals of this project include increasing civic engagement of students and Corps members, increasing leadership skills of students and Corps members, increasing the engagement of students in their schools to prevent future dropouts, and increasing their awareness of and aspiration to college level studies.Essex: $16,750
North Shore Elder Services
Program Name: Benefits Check-up
Amount: $16,750
The proposed program is Benefits Check Up. It would be the go between, connecting elders to the National Council on Aging information bank, helping many to take advantage of benefits they are eligible for. Three part time corps members will become the primary team responsible for implementation of this program with oversight from a North Shore Elder Services program coordinator. Corps members would be recruited from the local area. The technology involved will require corps members to be computer proficient.Franklin: 52,688
Young Entrepreneurs Society, Inc.
Program Name: Cultivating Economic Self Sufficiency in the North Quabbin
Amount: $52,688
The Young Entrepreneurs Society, Inc. is proposing the program Cultivating Economic Self Sufficiency in the North Quabbin to help address the interrelated educational, economic, and social cohesion needs of area residents. Five Commonwealth Corps members are being requested including: a full-time volunteer coordinator for the North Quabbin Adult Learning Center; two full-time mentor coordinators for the Young Entrepreneurs society; and a full time co-coordinator and a flex-time assistant for the North Quabbin Time Bank.Hampden: $479,924
HAP, Inc
Program Name: Community Housing Ambassadors
Amount: $68,000
Hap, Inc., Hampden and Hampshire counties’ regional housing partnership, works to improve housing and neighborhood conditions for all residents of the counties, particularly low income households, those with special needs, and those who face discrimination. Hap is requesting four Commonwealth Corps members to assist with its Community Housing Ambassador program. The overall goal of this program is to help HAP increase its capacity to address the region’s unmet housing needs, expand the impact of neighborhood revitalization activities, and fortify its own financial strength. The Corps Ambassadors will accomplish this by working to generate additional community support.Mercy Hospital, Inc.
Program Name: Mercy Healthy Communities Corps Team
Amount: $131,200
Mercy Hospital Inc. seeks to host a team of 12 Commonwealth Corps Members on the Mercy Healthy Communities Corps Team that will serve at two prenatal care centers and the hospital’s Volunteer Department, Brightside Treatment and Campus School. A diverse team will address unmet community health needs ranging from (a) serious health issues that are associated with poverty, low educational attainment, and unemployment; (b) critical labor shortages of doctors, nurses, and other skilled health care professionals; (c) chronic homelessness; (d) teen pregnancy; and (e) children who are abused and psychologically distressed. Corps members will provide healthcare career information to students; deliver vital health education and outreach to vulnerable community members; recruit and train additional volunteers, and provide mentoring services to children.Mount Holyoke College
Program Name: Community Based Learning Program
Amount: $40,200
Mount Holyoke College, Holyoke Community College, and the University of Massachusetts Amherst jointly propose a Commonwealth Corps team comprised of 12 corps members – 4 students from each campus – to support Latino/ educational achievement in Holyoke, MA. Corps members will provide college awareness programming for Holyoke public school students that connects them to six-College (Five College consortium institutions + Holyoke Community College) campuses, students, faculty, and staff through college fairs, workshops, and campus visits, and direct tutoring and mentoring through in-school and after school programs. Activities will improve Holyoke students’ academic performance, aspirations, and access to higher education. Corps members will improve partner organizations’ recruitment, training, and placement of volunteers supporting these aims.The Martin Luther King Jr. Community Center, Inc.
Program Name: MLKCC Commonwealth Corps Dream Keepers
Amount: $149,824
This program will focus on 3 components: building community capacity, promoting civic engagement within the youth population and providing opportunities for unemployed youths between the ages of 18-21, who come from low income families to develop leadership skills and help foster their economic and social independence in order to become self sufficient. Specific emphasis is placed on recruiting young adults who reside in Mason Square area where 32% of families live below the poverty level, which is the third highest poverty rate in Springfield’s 13 neighborhoods.Valley Opportunity Council
Amount: $90,700
The Valley Opportunity Council seeks to enlist a corps of 15 members to help erase an adult literacy gap that is negatively affecting the futures of the region’s residents. This will be achieved by having these individuals serve at half a dozen sites in the Literary Works network. Literary Works was created five years ago to bring literary providers together around their common cause and to provide a framework for collaborative efforts. The roles of the 15 members will include coordinating and recruiting additional volunteers, and tutoring adult education students in areas ranging from basic literacy to English as a Second Language to job development and computer literacy. The short term goal of the proposed program is to build a citizen army toward creating change. The long term goal is to erase the language and learning deficits that have left Western Massachusetts cities ranked at or near the top statewide for per
capita poverty.Hampshire: $23,450
Center for Human Development
Program Name: BBBS of Hampshire County
Amount: $23,450
Big Brothers Big Sisters (BBBS) of Hampshire County has identified a need for increased support in the areas of volunteer recruitment, match support, and fundraising. The Commonwealth Corps program will consist of 5 members filled both by local college students and year-round community residents. The Corps members will reflect the diversity of the community and this structure will give college students the opportunity to collaborate with and learn from older community members who already have a strong commitment to service.Middlesex: $424,160
Boys and Girls Clubs of Middlesex County
Program Name: New Everett Clubhouse / Club Tech
Amount: $92,400
Boys and Girls Clubs of Middlesex Country is seeking six Commonwealth Corps members to help institute Club Tech (a national, award winning program) at the Mystic/Healy Clubhouse, as well as to help open a new clubhouse in Everett. The three Corps members at Club Tech will facilitate all aspects of Club Tech programming at the Club, and will promote the Club and Club Tech program to the Somerville community and the area surrounding the Mystic/Healy Club. The three members working at the Everett Club will create community outreach, marketing, and public relations plans to introduce BGC to the Everett Community, and will also create programming derived from community needs assessments and meetings with community leaders and school officials.Generations Incorporated
Program Name: Revere Literacy Program Expansion
Amount: $81,150
Generations Incorporated is a mentoring and literacy program at 3 schools in Revere Mass: The McKinley, Whelan and Garfield elementary. They are looking to expand the existing programs by obtaining 3 fulltime and nine flex time Commonwealth Corps members to serve 600 students during 2009. They will serve 600 students at those schools. The program goals are as follows: to increase Reading Coaches student literacy scores by 2.5 reading levels in 2009, decrease Lunchtime Mentors student behavioral infractions and increase self esteem and academic performance, and increase teacher rating of student literacy ability within Language Arts classrooms.Minuteman Senior Services
Program Name: Minuteman Access Corps
Amount: $186,750
Minuteman Senior Services is requesting 15 Commonwealth Corps volunteers to be a part of its ACCESS (Assure Consumer Choice through Effective Supportive Services) program. ACCESS corps members will enhance Minuteman’s capacity to identify, reach, educate, and connect elders and caregivers with the vast array of resources available to them locally. Corps members will help create and sustain collaborative relationships with partner agencies, create and implement highly visible outreach opportunities, and reach out to a diverse population of underserved seniors and disabled adults.The Revolving Museum
Program Name: Commonwealth Corps 2008-2009
Amount: $10,260
The Revolving Museum is an evolving laboratory of creative expression for people of all backgrounds, ages, and abilities who seek to experience the transformative power of art. The organization seeks three Commonwealth Corps members to work on three distinct projects: 1) Volunteer Program Coordination; 2) Website Manager; and 3) Facilities Coordinator. Some goals for the projects are to 1) establish a permanent volunteer program; 2) use web technology to increase community participation, provide better services to the public, expand audience, improve communication; and 3) serve the mission of TRM by insuring facility needs are met.University of Massachusetts Lowell
Program Name: Project IMPACT
Amount: $53,600
Project IMPACT will provide a program of consistent math tutoring for 9th grade students at Lowell High School to increase the passing rate in Algebra One and prepare students for success on the MCAS test required for graduation. The goal is to increase the passing rate in Algebra One by 68%. UMASS Lowell will recruit 1 part time Corps member and 24 flex-time members from the student body at the university to tutor the Freshman Academy.Suffolk: $352,009
Action for Boston Community Development, Inc
Program Name: ABCD’s Senior Services Volunteer Program
Amount: $93,480
ABCD is going to recruit a total of 14 members, 10 part-time and 4 flex-time. Of the total 14 members, 3 will be trained as SHINE counselors and serve on a part time basis at ABCD’s Elder Services Department and in the community through a network of Neighborhood Service Centers. Four members will be trained to facilitate three evidence-based educational trainings related to disease prevention and designed to promote healthier lifestyles among older adults. These 4 flex-time members will be trained on content matter related to fall prevention, healthy eating, and chronic disease self management and will co-facilitate (in pairs) at least 20 trainings to over 300 seniors per year at community centers throughout Boston on a flex-time basis, starting with ABCD’s own Neighborhood Service network. The remaining 7 will work exclusively at their North End/West End Neighborhood Service Center on a part time basis as the center expands its services to seniors in neighborhoods characterized by a large percentage of low-income elder residents.Boston Chinatown Neighborhood Center
Program Name: Oak Street Youth Center: Chinatown After School Enrichment Program
Amount: $23,940
The Boston Chinatown Neighborhood Center has grown to become the premiere Asian American multi-service center in Greater Boston. They proposed to provide the creation of service opportunities within The Oak Street Youth Center. Through Commonwealth Corps they want to recruit one part-time member who will coordinate the Tutoring Involvement Program. In addition, they will recruit 5 flex time members who will work as tutors during the school year. Then in the summer, they will recruit 2 flex-time members who will act as youth worker assistants, running clubs and field trips.Codman Academy Charter Public School
Program Name: “Tutors for All” Academic Support Program
Amount: $63,900
Codman Academy’s mission is closing the “poverty gap” related to student achievement and they believe “it takes a village” to do so. The Tutors for All program will put individualized literacy and numeracy instruction at the center of students’ instructional experiences. This program will enlist 15 Commonwealth Corps members as program leaders, individual instructors, and as agents of recruitment and program development. It is believed that these Corps members will profoundly affect students learning, leading to proficiency in state measurements (e.g. MCAS), success in Codman’s demanding course load, and success in college and beyond.Literacy Volunteers of Massachusetts, Inc.
Program Name: LVM Volunteer Recruitment and Support Project
Amount: $34,200
Literacy Volunteers of Massachusetts (LVM) is a private nonprofit organization whose mission is to promote literacy skills that empower adults to realize their goals. The LVM Volunteer Recruitment and Support Project seeks five Commonwealth Corps members to serve in Boston, Framingham, and Southbridge. Although services provided by the corps members will vary according to each community’s needs, they will primarily consist of community outreach.MATCH-UP Interfaith Volunteers
Program Name: La Cadena de Amistad (The Chain of Friendship) (MATCH-UP Interfaith Volunteers’ Jamaica Plain Chapter)
Amount: $20,940
MATCH-UP Interfaith Volunteers is seeking support for its La Cadena de Amistad program. Three Commonwealth Corps members will receive training to serve in the role of
medical escort, health care system educator, and advocate. The project has several direct service, organizational and civic engagement goals including: improving access to and understanding of the American health care system for Latinos; increasing community awareness of La Cedena de Amistad services; and increasing volunteer interest and opportunities within the Spanish speaking population.University of Massachusetts Boston
Program Name: Harbor Point Outreach Partnership
Amount: $50,250
The University of Massachusetts Boston is proposing the Harbor Point Outreach Partnership (HPOP) to address community identified needs for tutoring, mentoring, access to higher education, and technology workshops for youth and adult residents of Harbor Point Apartment Community. Fifteen low income, first generation, college students of color enrolled at UMB will be recruited as Commonwealth Corps members. Members will enroll in a service learning class and will participate in a high quality service learning project. Students will work on-site at Harbor Point, providing tutoring, mentoring, and technology training and will plan workshops to promote community understanding and access to higher education.Year Up (Greater Boston / Massachusetts)
Amount: $65,299
Year Up is a one year intensive education program for low income and disconnected urban young adults, ages 18-24, individuals who are neither employed or enrolled in post-secondary education. The mission is to close the “opportunity divide” by providing urban young adults with the skills, experience, and support that will empower them to reach their full potential through professional careers and higher education. Year Up seeks four Commonwealth Corps members who will support Boston’s program in teaching, learning, advising and mentoring.Worcester: $238,301
LUK Crisis Center
Program Name: Connect & Serve
Amount: $30,780
LUK Crisis Center Inc, a non-profit youth and family serving agency established in 1970, will work with 6 Commonwealth corps members to develop leadership skills, civic responsibility, and community service among youth in Fitchburg. LUK’s Connect and Serve program will recruit 6 diverse Corps members – 3 part time and 3 flex time, who will create a middle school Youth Leadership Institute that will take place in 3 middle schools, create a Youth Leadership Institute for older youth outside of school setting, promote positive youth development activities in Fitchburg, coordinate service learning for at-risk youth and coordinate media projects for youth. Program objectives include: preparing youth to assume leadership and volunteer roles, Corps members participating in additional responsible civic actions, increasing the number of youth who volunteer in Fitchburg, and preparing and supporting middle school peer mentoring.Mount Grace Land Conservation Trust
Program Name: Common Ground
Amount: $57,700
Mount Grace Land Conservation Trust Inc.’s proposed Common Ground Program is designed to address documented needs for increased collaboration and land protection capacity of land conservation groups in north central Massachusetts, while engaging the community, and in particular young people, in land protection and stewardship efforts. The project will provide direct service and support to community groups within the region. Mount Grace is requesting five Commonwealth Corps members. These volunteers will work in the program areas of Landscape Partnership, Land Stewardship, Service Learning, and Conservation Connection.North Central Charter Essential School
Program Name: Teaching and Community Outreach Apprentice Corps
Amount: $65,571
North Central Charter Essential School (NCCES) is a public school which serves middle and high school students from close to 30 cities and towns across Central Massachusetts. The Commonwealth Teaching and Outreach Apprentice program at NCCES is requesting eight volunteers and will increase the capacity of NCCES to serve its students, increase the number of people available to serve in volunteer roles at the school, and increase the number of NCCES students, staff, and families serving in volunteer roles in the region. Six Corps members will serve as part-time Teacher Apprentices who will work closely with and support grade level team leaders. Through their work they will help identify and codify specific volunteer needs in the school. The seventh Corps member will serve as Coordinator of the Teacher Apprentice Corps and facilitate corps members work with grade level team leaders. A final Corps member will serve as a Community Outreach Apprentice.Pernet Family Health Services, Inc.
Program Name: Green Island and Lower Vernon Hill Neighborhood Development Program
Amount: $44,050
PFHS, in partnership with the Oak Hill Community Development Corporation, proposes to create a program that targets economic and social barriers that the Green Island and lower Vernon Hill neighborhoods of Worcester face in their efforts to become a thriving and healthy community. The program will include 4 Corps team members, a full time volunteer community organizer, a full time community organizer, a part time youth development specialist and a flex time. The goals of the program are: foster family engagement at the community and family unit levels, identify and foster the development of new adult and youth leaders with GIVH, provide academic and social enrichment for school-aged children, recruit community volunteers to help meet community needs, and increase the capacity of PFHS and OHCDC to provide family and community development programs by expanding their funding.Worcester State College Intergenerational Urban Institute (IUI)
Program Name: Ending Hunger Together
Amount: $40,200
Worcester State College Intergenerational Urban Institute (IUI) is seeking funding to create a cadre of Commonwealth Corps members to implement a new program: Ending Hunger Together (EHT). The goal of EHT is to develop a model Intergenerational Fellows Program that creates hunger awareness while providing active roles to people of all ages in fighting it. With assitance of 10 Corps members EHT will provide food stamp outreach and application assistance to elders, assist with the outreach and management of volunteers, create an outreach program to involve urban schools, and develop and maintain a new hunger website that connects people across the Commonwealth in the fight against hunger.Multiple County Partnerships: $616,450
Quaboag Valley Community Development – Berkshire, Franklin, Hampden, Hampshire & Worcester
Program Name: Western Massachusetts Community Development Collaborative
Amount: $136,000
Quaboag Valley Community Development Corporation, on behalf of the Western Massachusetts Community Development Collaborative (WMCDC), seeks to engage nine Commonwealth Corps members to work with seven community development corporations (CDCs) in Western Massachusetts. Corps members will work with the CDCs in WMCDC on outreach and marketing, helping to broaden public awareness of and draw more participants to the organizations’ programs and services. They will also develop written materials, communicate with community members one-on-one as well as in groups, help organize events, and develop databases of volunteers who want to work with the CDCs on an ongoing basis. The CDCs will benefit from corps members work in that they will see an increase in the numbers of community members participating in their activities and taking advantage of their services.Horizons for Homeless Children – Essex, Hampden, Plymouth, Suffolk & Worcester
Program Name: Playspace Programs
Amount: $78,000
Horizon for Homeless Children (HHC) is requesting five Commonwealth Corps members for its Playspace Programs, a growing network of more than 140 sites providing more than 2,000 homeless childr
en each week with the opportunity for developmentally-appropriate play and learning. Through its Playspace programs, HHC installs and maintains Playspaces in family shelters and recruits, trains, places, and supports volunteers who serve homeless children. Commonwealth Corps members will play a key support role in improving program quality and expanding the scope of the program by helping to maintain the Playspaces and by helping HHC to reach its goals for volunteer recruitment and retention.YouthBuild Boston – Essex, Middlesex, Norfolk & Suffolk
Amount: $95,076
YouthBuild of Boston proposes to launch the YouthBuild Boston Commonwealth Corps Community Impact Program in September of 2008. Members will create 3 community focus/advisory teams, and increase student service involvement by 50%, define areas of opportunity for targeting needy populations ages 5-12, build 15 corporate partnerships, increase the volunteer base by 500 active members, serve 5-10 organizations through major service projects, partner with 3-5 local organizations to multiply resource effectiveness, have a positive impact on student behavior/attendance, and improve the GED attainment rate of students by 35% and provide a variety of services to senior citizens. The total personal impact reach of these efforts will exceed 4000 individuals in Metro Boston alone.Boston Learning Center – Essex & Suffolk
The Girls Connection Program
Amount: $76,608
Boston Learning Center is a private, community-based, non-profit tutorial center whose mission is to transform motivation in order to promote ownership of the learning process in middle and high school students so they can realize their full potential in school and in life. The Girls Connection Program was launched in 2006 as an after school program designed to meet the unique needs of at-risk and high-risk teenage girls. A total of eight Commonwealth Corps members will be assigned to work at the two Roxbury sites, the Lynn YMCA, and the BLC headquarters in Dorchester. Most Corps members will work directly with the girls as tutors/enrichment instructors and those members in the headquarters will be working with the Executive Director and Program Coordinator to develop a fundraising plan and a communications/marketing strategy for the upcoming year.Commonwealth Land Trust, Inc. – Essex & Suffolk
Program Name: STEPS Project
Amount: $49,248
Based in Lower Roxbury, the Commonwealth Land Trust provides supportive affordable housing and social services to very low income families and individuals struggling with multiple disabilities, including chronic mental and physical illnesses, additions, and a chronic history of homelessness. The primary goal for the STEPS (Supportive Training Education & Property Services) Project is to help CLT residents at high risk of returning to homelessness achieve and maintain stable housing, access health care, and learn the living skills they need to provide for themselves and their families. CLT is requesting funding for four Commonwealth Corps members who will focus on providing outreach and supportive services to help residents break the cycle of chronic homelessness and stabilize their lives.Boston Cares – Franklin, Hampshire, Suffolk & Worcester
Program Name: Mass Volunteers
Amount: $57,450
Boston Cares’ MassVolunteers program will address three important yet often overlooked challenges facing volunteerism in our communities: 1) the need to drastically improve the non-profit infrastructure it takes to engage volunteers, 2) a real dearth of volunteer opportunities for youth, 3) limited access to best practices among volunteer coordinators. Six Commonwealth Corps members will build the program infrastructure needed for dozens of local non-profits to engage 2,500 new volunteers in Greater Boston/Metro West, Central Mass., Greater Leominster and the Franklin-Hampshire-North Quabbin region. Additionally they will participate in volunteer coordination networks through which they can both share and learn best practices in volunteer engagement and retention innovations.Samaritans, Inc. – Middlesex & Suffolk
Program Name: Close the Gap Corps
Amount: $103,968
Samaritans, Inc. is a suicide prevention agency and pursues its mission through core services in the areas of prevention, intervention, and post-vention services. Samaritans is seeking to launch a Commonwealth Corps to support its volunteer based suicide prevention programs called the Samaritans ‘Close the Gap’ Corps. Twelve Corps members will serve primarily with the organization’s helpline programs doing volunteer recruitment, and training and retention activities, but will also provide support within the Grief Support Services and Development Programs. The goal of the Close the Gap Corps will be to provide additional capacity to the Samaritans as long-term solutions to the gap that currently exists between the demand for services and the organization’s ability to fully respond to that demand.The Center for Teen Empowerment, Inc. – Middlesex & Suffolk
Program Name: Arts-Based Youth Organizing Initiative
Amount: $20,100
The Center for Teen Empowerment’s (TE) Arts-Based Youth Organizing Initiative will engage three Commonwealth Corps members in empowering low income, urban youth through arts instruction and experiential education. The work of TE’s Commonwealth Corps members will take place as part of the organizations youth organizing projects in Somerville and in three Boston neighborhoods. The members will work directly with youth organizers every afternoon to help develop original performance and visual arts pieces about the community issues the youth groups are trying to address.
Breaking! Governor Patrick announces over $2 million in Commonwealth Corps grants
Please share widely!
frankskeffington says
…we’re spending $2.3 million for volunteers?
afertig says
We’re spending $2.3 million to give volunteers the infrastructure necessary to make their volunteering successful. Volunteers can’t pay for office space, books, etc.
mcrd says
This is BS.
gary says
Not enough, right?
yellow-dog says
Gary,
<
p>Do you actually have info on a former state legislator with a flagging business who’s pushing the issue?
<
p>I’d email you, but you don’t list one.
<
p>Mark
gary says
Sure I have info, but they’ve gone to ground. Too hot a potato for now.
yellow-dog says
any details you have?
<
p>markbail@comcast.net
heartlanddem says
Why not list the City of Holyoke and Mt.Holyoke/UMass/HCC project in both Hampden and Hampshire counties? Great model to bring a world of differences together.
<
p>Still not sure why volunteers are getting paid? Why not a tax credit and use the funds for essential services that are starved? How much administrative/management is needed to oversee the program and how is accountability measured? Just askin?
lynne says
For every coordinator, though, you can have dozens if not hundreds of volunteers. Coordinating, having an office, etc costs money. But the money is far reaching because that coordinator is able to accomplish big things with their corps of volunteers.
<
p>Ask CTI if they spend any money on coordinating on volunteers. Then ask anyone in my area if CTI isn’t one of the best organizations around here bar none. They accomplish huge things with their well-organized, well-used corps of volunteers.
cougar says
heartlanddem says
Looks like a great program/website. Is this a model the Administration is promoting? What is the operational budget and how is it funded? I am wondering if the receiving organizations all have the type of infrastructure necessary to support managing a volunteer corps?
mcrd says
It’s called feeding at the trough. Volunteerism is voluneerism. YOU DON’T TAKE MONEY!
eaboclipper says
So he vetoes Santa Claus so he can spend on volunteers. Nice. Spend Spend spend em all Deval.
<
p>I’m sick of it. Really I am. I am reaching my bursting point. New Hampshire here I come if this keeps up.
gary says
Does seem extraordinarily high price to pay per volunteer, no?
jamie-sabino says
It is not really $8k per volunteer — the post notes that there will be 300 volunteers by November. 300 is the total of all volunteers, just the first wave.. Once the systems are in place to recuit, train and supervise volunteers they can go on to bring in many more volunteers
<
p>JAS
mcrd says
tblade says
Say hi to Bruce for us.
<
p>Still, you gotta admit that what Deval spends is nothing compared to the spending explosion of the Bush administration.
mcrd says
tblade says
Interesting theory.
<
p>I’m just wondering why, if Eabo hates spending so much, he continuously supports the Republican Party given their record of raising spending.
peter-porcupine says
tblade says
News to me.
<
p>The rubber-stamping that occurred in the first 6 years of the GOP congress and the steamrolling of the spineless Democrats of the last two years must all be some sort of mysterious dream that played out in my tin foil hat-adorned little head.
<
p>I guess when the news talks about how President Bush submits his budgets to Congress, the news people must be confused as to where the federal budget originates. And all that stuff about Bush vetoing the Democrats’ proposals on spending and getting all of his war spending requests further weakens my thought that Bush has the wielded balence of power in spending over the last 8 years.
<
p>Silly me.
tblade says
To use your line of reasoning, you should also correct EaBo for blaming Deval for his spending on this issue, since the post clearly says, “The legislature enacted the Commonwealth Corps proposal last year”.
<
p>So I guess both Deval and Bush are off the hook.
peter-porcupine says
Deval is only complicit in that he thought the whole Corps up in the first place.
centralmassdad says
what it is about Bush’s wasteful spending that makes all other wasteful spending so noble and good. I don’t see the Democratic Congress racing to undo Bush’s absurd agricultural and steel subsidies, or the unaffordable prescription drug benefits added to Medicare.
<
p>Indeed, one suspects that the resort to the non sequitor about Bush, in a conversation about a new boondoggle program in Massachusetts enacted by a Democratic legislature at the behest of a Democratic governor happens because the boondoggle is not otherwise easily defensible.
tblade says
The data has yet to come in to show that it is a boondoggle, a smashing success or something else. I don’t know that this program is difficult to defend, but you would be correct in assuming that I am not well versed enough on this topic to present a cogent defense. And frankly, I don’t think the Eabos of the world are informed enough to offer criticisms of the grants program beyond “Cadillac Deval is spending money and I’m a Republican, ergo I must get outraged!“.
<
p>My swipe about Bush is more about how amused I am at the perpetuation of the myth that there is only one party that likes to spend and the other party is filled with earnest, clear-thinking stewards of the taxpayers’ money when the evidence shows that both parties love to spend money, the difference lies in where the money is spent and who benefits most from the spending.
<
p>Being against wasteful government spending is valid; being against any and all spending proposed by the Democrats while blissfully ignoring waste, fraud and corruption perpetrated by the one’s own party – especially when the degree of waste exceeds this grant program by many orders of magnitude and has gutted the US Treasury while doing no favors for the nation’s current economic situation and saddling the future with hefty, perhaps crushing debt – is laughable.
<
p>How can anyone take Eabo’s lament seriously? If a similar comment (minus the chuckle-inducing histrionic threat to move north) came from a libertarian-oriented right wing commenter who applied the criticism of limited government spending to everyone at every level, there wouldn’t be so many snide replies and this thread of the discussion would probably be more informative. I just have a hard time believing that a person concerned with wasteful government spending would move out of a state over a relatively small grant for volunteer work for such controversial programs like helping Alzheimer’s patients, drug rehab, and coordinating benefits for seniors, yet remains silent on or defends vigorously the bogus Republican-driven spending orgy presided over by Bush of the last 8 years. Either Republicans like Eabo are against all wasteful spending, or they’re just against spending supported by their opponents.
<
p>Maybe you, CMD, thinks this program is wasteful spending. But at least that criticism coming from you isn’t a hackneyed political tactic that’s an automatic reflex to anything a Democrat used in under the guise of political debate. I think given your willingness to criticize bluntly any spending or policy with which you disagree evidence that you would say you liked this program if you liked it. In other words, unlike Eabo, your criticism or praise for Commonwealth Corps is not dependent on scoring political points in hopes that Jim Ogonoswski or whichever Republican comes along in 2010 captures and retains the corner office.
david says
… you know the rest.
stomv says
<
p>Please help him pack.
lynne says
Middlesex (as one of the largest counties) has almost plenty of money allotted to it, but it’s given out to only 4 entities…one of which is the Revolving Museum, which, while an awesome organization, is really pretty Lowell-based from what I can tell.
<
p>What about Community Teamwork, Inc? They are spread out all over the Greater Lowell area, and have a wonderful, amazing network of volunteer stuff going on. They affect a lot of people. Expanding their volunteer efforts could go a loooong way. Whenever I hear about a great or innovative program, it’s CTI at the helm. They do everything from housing to after school programs to senior programs to running Lowell’s farmers market! Why weren’t they included in getting a grant? What, too successful?
<
p>Anyway, other than scratching my head at the awardees in my area, it sounds really cool. And the Revolving does do a lot of great work especially with kids.
eaboclipper says
the director/owner of the revolving museum is a donor to deval patrick? I’ll check later on OCPF and get back to you.
gary says
Michael Gllagher. Connected dem attorney in Lowell, maxed out to Mr. Patrick.
gary says
lynne says
You’re point? Does Gallagher have anything to do with Jerry Beck and the Revolving?
<
p>You people are a sad, sorry broken record. Not even worth much in refuting you people any more.
gary says
Can you not read?
<
p>You write “Does Gallagher have anything to do with Jerry Beck and the Revolving?” when I just wrote he’s a director and chairman of the board. Then, you follow up with your typically stupid ad hominem attack. Look, if my post are tiresome, igore them. Is that so hard?
<
p>If you can’t figure out that when I wrote he was director/chair, it meant he was, you know, director and chairman. Too hard?
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p>He’s connected with the Democratic Party in Mass, and manages to get a few government bucks for his pet causes. Anything wrong with that? You decide. But, please either read and respond intelligently, or just ignore.
centralmassdad says
Seems to me that gary just demonstrated that the program is designed to give taxpayer money to political supporters.
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p>I’m shocked, shocked that the Democratic political leadership of our Commonwealth would allow such a thing.
hlpeary says
Other than a $14K Senior Services grant to an established agency, Essex County sure got the snub. Cities like Lynn, Peabody, Salem, Gloucester, Beverly, Newburyport, Haverhill, Lawrence….ignored…
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p>After reading through the descriptions of the grants given, I must say it is not clear just how this money will accomplish the maze of high minded but action non-specific goals.
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p>Enlighten me if you know the answer.
frankskeffington says
Per capita, it looks like Hampdem is the winner…
yellow-dog says
If this increases volunteerism, it will be a great accomplishment. I’m often critical of the governor, but I think he’s on to something here, something fairly original and new. I think it’s part of the excitement about Obama as well.
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p>If there’s any hope for our country, it will be in increased civic engagement, something which our conservative brethren with their divide and conquer, nickel and diming are against.
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p>NOTE to Frank: I don’t know about Norfolk County, but we don’t tend to get much largesse out here in Western Mass.
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p>Mark
mcrd says
stomv says
is it possible that it was lost in a copy/paste?