Posts tagged ‘Providence’

PVD Sustainability Festival!

The first PVD Sustainability Festival is happening this Saturday between 8am and 6pm, at Burnside Park. Head downtown for “an amazing musical line-up and terrific resources, sustainability workshops, vendors, and kids area. The Festival will provide you with opportunities to learn about sustainable living, the Green Economy and to showcase your products or services.”

http://apeiron.org/slf2009/index2.html

September 24, 2009 at 7:27 am Leave a comment

A secret weapon?

CGF should invest in thank-you notes – a significant conclusion I’ve come to over the past month or so, working as the Capital Good Fund’s community partners coordinator. In each one-on-one meeting with partner organizations, I try to figure out where they want the partnership to go and how to ensure that CGF is giving back all the help we’ve gotten. I’ve found that a little “thank you” can go a long way in making people open, friendly, and willing to offer more resources and advice.

I realized this through a written evaluation form sent back by our partner at the Rhode Island Economic Development Corporation (RIEDC). She had referred one of our first clients to us, and suggested that we have a policy of formally thanking those who give us referrals. In response, I brought a short note to our meeting that she seemed to appreciate. (“I’ll put this right on my desk. Oh I’m going to cry!” Perhaps a mild exaggeration on her part, but I’ll take it!)

Of course, ideally we can accompany the words with something more substantial. Sometimes it works out so that by helping out our partners, CGF benefits too. For example, RIEDC asked us to write a borrower “success story” for the woman who they sent to us to post on their website. It will indicate that they make good connections for their clients, publicize the effective partnerships they have, and attract more community members to their services. CGF will be happy to collect information for and draft this story because a) we want to reciprocate RIEDC’s help, and b) we can use the same story for similar purposes.

Other times, we have to put in work to thank our partners that doesn’t have an immediate payback – which is fine. I’m definitely willing to make sacrifices to help make Providence’s nonprofit community more tight-knit. I’ve come across so many organizations that do the same things here that I wonder how much of the sector is redundant and wasting resources. Like SII, I hope that I can contribute a little to streamlining social efforts in this city. To make this impact I’m arming myself with active listening, sensitive doing, and a big handful of thank-you notes.

Julie

July 10, 2009 at 4:10 pm 1 comment

The Capital Good Fund, part II

By Julie Siwicki

 

The fundamental objective of changing my world has guided me through a past of coursework, jobs, and community service. These have given me strong leadership skills, a solid academic background, and hands-on experience, which I will apply as I build a coalition of community partners for the new microfinance initiative in Providence, CGF. My qualifications do not guarantee that I will avoid obstacles this summer; in fact, I will inevitably face challenges in my work. Entering this project I am aware of my strengths and weaknesses, and throughout it I expect to grow both professionally and personally.

 

I will bring to CGF a wealth of leadership experience, since I hold an executive role for three major groups on campus. Academically, I have a foundation in economics and development studies that will inform my work. I also have hands-on experience with microfinance and coalition-building projects (albeit those in Mali, West Africa). I have worked with inner-city education projects, too. Close relationships with students from poor, immigrant families have shown me the extent of urban troubles in the US. They have also exposed me to community members’ drive to confront the problems – one that I want to join by working with CGF.

 

Despite these assets, I will undoubtedly face challenges as CGF’s Community Partners Coordinator. Most tangibly, my responsibilities may require Spanish language skills that exceed my abilities. When necessary I will hire professional translators and turn to CGF’s bilingual partners. In addition, I expect some feelings of hesitation as a leader on unfamiliar terrain. I understand less about CGF than many of its other personnel, since I joined the initiative much later than they did. I will have to learn quickly about logistical aspects of CGF before I can act confidently as a leader. I will also have to adapt my knowledge of Malian microfinance to American structures. My frame of reference will have to shift to include larger loans and more bureaucratic procedures. Finally, I am not fully accustomed to realities of daily life in poor, urban America. My experience in this setting prepares me for what to expect, but does not guarantee that I will fit in or be immediately effective.

 

I am confident, however, that I possess the skills to rationally assess difficult situations. I will absorb advice offered by CGF’s leaders and partners who better understand them. I know that my strong foundations and my potential for growth qualify me to be CGF’s Community Partners Coordinator. I am thrilled for this opportunity to foster an effective coalition ensuring the Capital Good Fund’s long-term sustainability.

 

March 14, 2009 at 6:15 pm Leave a comment

Project HEALTH Summer Institute

by Emma Anselin

I believe that you can only come to know and understand a place if you have walked it. A friend who returned from study abroad once told me that she would always feel closer to Prague than to Providence, because she had spent her time in that foreign city weaving through back alleys and markets and neighborhoods. Her insight really struck me. I rarely make the time to wander and wonder about Providence. It is deeply saddening that I could leave Brown without forging a personal connection to the surrounding urban environment. 

This past weekend, I walked to Federal Hill with a group of friends for a birthday dinner. The walk took us through downtown Providence and across the highway, which roars and churns like an impenetrable barrier. The blocks that immediately surround the highway seem deserted. There are a lot of empty corporate buildings on one side of the divide, and boarded-up warehouses on the other. Was there once a neighborhood, a community, here? I’m sure that many Providence residents could tap the collective memory of the city and answer that question. I cannot. 

There is a cobblestone square in Federal Hill, complete with a sculptured fountain, that can transport your imagination to a European plaza. It serves as a hub for a network of bustling Italian restaurants and boutiques. When my parents visit, I take them to Federal Hill to indulge in food outside the sphere of Thayer Street. I think of this community as a world far beyond college hill, and I give myself a pat on the back whenever I venture there. Yet I know this neighborhood entirely through the energy of its restaurants, rather than the energy of the people who live or work there. 

The only time that I ventured beyond the strip of Italian cuisine in Federal Hill was for a Project HEALTH event, in which Sophia and I photographed neighborhoods with affordable housing. We only had to walk one block to leave behind the neon facades and enter a quiet residential area. Project HEALTH has given me the opportunity to get acquainted with the side of Providence that families witness, love, and struggle with. Clients have graciously shared with me the memories, emotions, and experiences that shape their knowledge of this city. I think that the Summer Institute will allow I and other volunteers to connect to the Providence community on a new dimension – through the organizations that tap into the political and economic structures of this city. I hope that this summer will yield plenty of time for walking, for learning, and for finding a sense of belonging in Providence. These experiences can further lay the foundation for us to work together with Providence residents to create change.  

March 12, 2009 at 1:57 am 2 comments


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