Archive for June, 2008

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

Doing Something Good – Come Join Us

It’s amazing what can happen when you bring people together. Have you heard this before? Well whether you have or haven’t read on.

So you feel like doing something good and reaping the rewards? Want to see what happens when you bring people together? Well have I got the opportunity for you. You see, the people in Montrose know what happens when you bring people together and it is something good and we want you to be part of it. We invite you to join in on the fun. The fun I’m talking about is the community garden. You’re probably thinking what fun would the community garden be? Come and join us and find out.

This year the garden is even bigger and better and we really need your help. And our community garden is conveniently located right in town. The garden is on the east end of Main Street and behind the elevator or across from the softball field.

All of the plants and the seeds are now planted and are flourishing. If you’d like to join us, we gather every Tuesday (weather permitting) at 7:00 p.m. at the garden. We have tools to use thanks to Horizons so all you need to bring is yourself and maybe a pair of work gloves. Grab a friend and make it even more fun. If Tuesday evening at 7:00 doesn’t work for your schedule please feel free to come down at any time.

Did I mention that garden work is a great stress reliever? Well it is. Although there is some work involved in keeping the garden up, we do have a lot of fun which melts stress away. Come on down to the simple, carefree side of your day and reap the rewards of getting to know your neighbors and make some new friend. You’ll find that it is more rewarding than you could ever imagine.

Once the produce is ready we plan to distribute it on Main Street on Saturday mornings again this year. Come check it out!

Grassroots and Groundwork

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

delegation-cropped-colored-2.jpgThe title Grassroots and Groundwork was extremely appropriate for a conference Charla and I attended in Minneapolis May 28-30. The three-day conference, put on by the Northwest Area Foundation, focused on how we, as individuals and working together in our communities and organizations, can lay the groundwork for reducing poverty. Making a difference in poverty starts with the grassroots, at our level.

Charla and I were part of a large South Dakota delegation.  You can see all of us in the photo, thanks to Martha, who wanted our picture taken. South Dakotans came from Horizons communities and those in South Dakota Extension working with the Horizons program. We interacted with people from North Dakota, Iowa, Montana, Oregon, Minnesota, Idaho and Washington–states covered by the Northwest Area Foundation.

Keynote speakers were excellent and inspiring. Donna Beegle put a different face to poverty. The daughter of migrant farmers, this woman was immersed in poverty most of her life. Finally, at age 25, as a high-school dropout and single mother with no job skills, she bravely took the first step toward breaking her cycle of generational poverty. Today she has her doctorate in educational leadership and works to improve communciation and relationships across race, class, gender and generational barriers. She is also founder and CEO of PovertyBridge, a nonprofit dedicated to changing lives for people in poverty. I was so inspired, I purchased her book “See Poverty. Be the Difference”. If anyone would like to read it, you can certainly borrow it.

Chip Heath from Stanford University is well known for his “How to Make Ideas Stick”course and book that explain why certain ideas survive and prosper–or ’stick’–in society. For all of us at the conference, it makes us think about how we can get people to think differently about poverty. What will it take to make society realize we must be willing to take care of the least among us. What will get these ideas to ’stick’. Charla and I both got a copy of his book at registration–and it looks very interesting. Again, if someone would like to borrow it, please let me know.

We heard a panel of experts discuss what difficult steps we must take to make a real dent in poverty. And our final speaker was Thomas Vilsack. Former governor of Iowa, Vilsack ranas a candidate for the U.S. Presidency until announcing his withdrawal from the race in February 2007. His was a very inspirational message–telling us we must make people really see, taste, feel and smell what poverty is like.

In between speakers, we participated in numerous break-out sessions–hearing specific examples of what people are doing in different states to make a positive difference in reducing poverty–and getting ideas that we can hopefully bring back to Montrose or utilize someway in our lives. These break-out sessions included how to utilize our community’s social capital, tapping into our community’s strengths, advocacy strategies for financial justice, realizing human rights,  acting to end hunger: 40 ways to make a difference..

I walked away from the conference with a better understanding of how we often misunderstand poverty and those who live it, and how as a great nation we must take care of the least among us. Perhaps most important, a lot of people left the conference inspired to come home and make a difference. If anyone would like to find out more, please comment and let’s start a conversation!!

Thanks to the Northwest Area Foundation for covering our expenses to the conference. As I got ready to leave for Minneapolis, all I could think about was the time it would take and what I wasn’t going to get done in terms of my job or at home. But once I got there, I realized this is where the important work is being done–and the rest would wait until I got home! It was well worth the time.