Posts Tagged ‘charity’

FOUR DAYS REMAINING DonorsChoose.org Classroom project requested by Mrs. Houston

Wednesday, March 14th, 2012

The original post is here http://zandri.net/Blog/?p=1503 and the direct link to Mrs. Houston’s project can be found via the DonorsChoose.org website

There are now just FOUR days left BUT we’ve gotten more donations and are down to JUST $561.00 remaining for this project.

When you go to make your donation, once you place your pledge and choose “check out”,  there is a place for you to enter a “Match or gift code” in the PAYMENT section – in that field type BLOOM and the Friends and Family matching donation provided by the DonorsChoose.org Board of Directors will be activated.

Please consider helping a former Wallingford resident – Mrs. Houston – in this very worthwhile cause for some very under privileged kids

FIVE DAYS REMAINING DonorsChoose.org Classroom project requested by Mrs. Houston

Tuesday, March 13th, 2012

The original post is here http://zandri.net/Blog/?p=1503

There are now just FIVE days left BUT we’ve gotten more donations and are down to JUST $765.00 remaining for this project.

When you go to make your donation, once you place your pledge and choose “check out”,  there is a place for you to enter a “Match or gift code” in the PAYMENT section – in that field type BLOOM and the Friends and Family matching donation provided by the DonorsChoose.org Board of Directors will be activated.

Please consider helping a former Wallingford resident – Mrs. Houston – in this very worthwhile cause for some very under privileged kids

DonorsChoose.org Classroom project requested by Mrs. Houston

Monday, March 12th, 2012

This classroom project has been requested by Mrs. Houston, a former Wallingford resident now a school teacher in a High Poverty school district in Baltimore, MD – Dallas Nicholas Elementary School.

Follow this link http://www.donorschoose.org/donors/proposal.html?id=662809 to read more about this project.

From Mrs. Houston:

My students are the most incredible 6 and 7 year old children you could ever imagine from Baltimore City. They are in first grade and love everything about school. As their teacher, I want to give them everything. However, as a first year teacher, in a Title I elementary school in a low income community, I do not have all of the resources to make that possible. I know that my students are going to need more than my help when it comes to having the right supplies for a fulfilling learning experience. First grade students are eager to learn, high energy, creative, and inspiring little children. They want to color pictures, write sentences, read real books, and practice math at their desks with actual supplies. Make believe and pretend are for dramatic play, not addition and subtraction. My students need a document camera, a mobile storage cart, and a Nonfiction Leveled Books Classroom Library to satisfy the core curriculum standards for first grade, and to enrich their minds with factual information. With your help, I can bring a whole new world of education and learning to my students.

So here is the bottom line folks – as I write this there are 6 days left and $930.00 to go. If they don’t reach the total the project is closed as unfulfilled.

Also they will match any donation when at checkout you type in BLOOM in the matching gift box so with that in mind we only need to come up with half that amount.

I am blogging this and it’s going over on MyYearbook.com and on my Facebook account.

We can get this over the line. Let’s make it happen.

FROM WALLINGFORD – How to help students

Sunday, September 12th, 2010

As published in the Record Journal on Sunday September 12, 2010

Jason Zandri

IMG_6621

DonorsChoose.org is an online charity that makes it easy for anyone to help students in need. Public school teachers across America post classroom project requests on DonorsChoose.org for just about anything and it is from these project requests that individuals can search and give any amount to the ones that motivate their desire to give.

When a project reaches its funding goal, DonorsChoose.org delivers the materials to the school.

In the September 1, 2010 issue of the San Francisco Chronicle a story ran about a telephone call that Charles Best, the founder of DonorsChoose.org, received. the woman on the other end of the call wanted to know what it might cost to fund all of the currently posted projects for the state of California as listed on the DonorsChoose.org website.

Charles took a best guess and responded with “something over $1 million.”

Over the next couple of days there was some follow up and the end result was that the woman caller, Hilda Yao, the executive director of the Claire Giannini Fund, made the grant to do just that — to give $1.3 million to cover the entire California wish list — 2,233 projects in all.

The full story can be found at http://bit.ly/00003FW (case sensitive).

While I can only assume how nice it must be to have that kind of money to use for philanthropic causes I know that just because I don’t it doesn’t mean I cannot affect change at my own level and in my own way.

You can too.

There is a project at DonorsChoose.org for a classroom in need at Rock Hill school right here in Wallingford. the project is titled “Window to the World: From Photography to Writing.”

Our family already donated twice to the project back in June and we are from the Stevens School / Pond Hill school district so we’ve done so without any potential gain from it as our own children will not be going to school there.

The project still has $370.95 to go before it is fully funded between now and October 26th when it must be funded or it expires.

My daughter Angela just started Pre-K at Moses Y. Beach and a wish list was provided from the teacher of supplies that the students could use. Crayons, markers, colored pencils and other consumables for the classroom. My wife and I donated what we could afford and other parents did the same; I am pretty sure those 16 Pre-K students have everything extra that they needed in just the first week of school.

Little efforts like these are how anyone can make a difference.

Rather than assuming that someone else will take care of it or that the town will come through with funding from tax dollars, each of us can get skin in the game and help out.

If you don’t have the money to donate then perhaps you have the time — the schools could use that too.

It is so easy to arm chair quarterback what the Board of Education ought to do and how much the town should earmark for the schools. There are only so many tax dollars that can be collected and redistributed to the schools before it negatively impacts the residents and the businesses in town more than it already does.

I realize as well that times are tight, tighter than they have been in generations.

The money is still out there. People are spending it, albeit at a much slower pace than in the few years before the recession.

Pull the car away from the drive through for just one night and consider giving that money to any cause you deem worthy of your hard-earned dollars instead.

You might just find that your investment in someone else’s needs reaps more dividends than you could have ever hoped to have earned on your own for just yourself.

People’s United Bank surprises me twice today

Friday, September 10th, 2010

So in an earlier post today I wrote about how People’s United Bank was stepping up to partner with the City of New Haven to save their Christmas Tree.

I started off the post with a bit of a downer comment because I was having issues with customer service (I had actually just gotten off the phone with them prior to writing the post).

People’s United Bank corporate communications people read that posting and brought it to the attention of Steven Santino, the Vice President that oversees the customer experience department. Steven promptly looked up my information and called me. I missed the call and had to return his voicemail but when I did call back he took my call immediately.

Upon speaking with him regarding what was going on (a discrepancy with what I believe I deposited in the ATM to what was actually being credited on my account) he promised that he would look into it and follow up on Monday with me regarding what he could uncover.

So for me in a world with overall diminishing customer service, that speaks volumes.

I may or may not like the outcome and final resolution of the issue but knowing that People’s United Bank puts that kind of premium on the customer relationship (especially a regular consumer one with not a whole lot of real money for them to make from it) makes for high marks in my book. 

So kudos People’s United Bank for stepping up and partnering with the community to save a Christmas Tree and kudos again for investing the time and effort to ensure good customer experience and service.

While it may not seem like many care about service and will go somewhere else to save a dime, there are many other people like myself that will spend an extra dollar to get it as long as it meets or exceeds expectations.

To have someone reach out proactively like that exceeds my expectations. Thanks Steven – I look forward to the follow up on Monday.

People’s United Bank to save the New Haven Christmas Tree

Friday, September 10th, 2010

I have to admit that right now I am having a customer service related issue with People’s United Bank that will most likely not get resolved favorably to the point where I am liable to sever my 15+ year relationship with them.

Having said that, I give credit where credit is due too and for them to step up like this is commendable.

The City of New Haven is entering into a partnership with People’s United Bank to save the New Haven Christmas Tree.

Much like the cutting of the funding for our fireworks display here in Wallingford out of the budget this past summer, the city of New Haven had to make similar cuts from their budget and one of the casualties of those cuts was the funding for the Christmas Tree.

People’s United Bank will be presenting the City with a $20,000 check donation which will cover the cost of transporting, decorating and maintaining a Norway Spruce on the New Haven Green in the winter months. People’s United will be providing children at this event with piggy banks, chocolate candy canes and other giveaways in celebration of this donation.

So while I try to resolve my own issue with you People’s United Bank, kudos to you for stepping up and partnering with the community. 

REMINDER – Help Mrs. M.’s Classroom at Moses Y Beach Elementary School

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Hi Folks, just a quick reminder on this as there is just a little over a month left to fund this project.

Mrs. M.’s Classroom at Moses Y Beach Elementary School here in Wallingford is trying to raise money for this project at DonorsChoose.org.

Writing About That "Snapshot" Time

Please consider reviewing the need for this Wallingford classroom and if you have a few extra dollars to spare and this is something you feel you could support please consider making the donation and positively impacting 21 students in your own backyard.

Thank you for the consideration.

FROM WALLINGFORD – Helping those in need

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

As published in the Record Journal – Sunday November 22, 2009

Jason From Wallingford

As mid-November passes by, one really gets the feeling of the season around town. Residents are raking up their leaves and brown-bagging them for public works to pick up (keep in mind town ordinance #380 – don’t rake leaves into the gutters); businesses start changing out their displays for Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays while the town starts to put out holiday decorations, as do many citizens.

The other thing that I notice more at this time of the year is the amount of help community and non-profit groups seem to need. I know they have some level of need all year round, but it just seems more predominate now. I am not sure if it’s because the need is greater or, for some reason, I become more aware of it – regardless, it appears more vividly on my radar screen.

Whether it’s helping out personally by donating time selling tickets for the Wallingford Emergency Shelter’s fundraiser or donating gently used items or money to Master’s Manna, there are people that have needs – and some of those needs are being met by those that have the ability and means to help.

Given the recent downturn in the economy, there are people that generally never require help suddenly finding themselves in need. When you compound that with fewer people being in a position to help in the first place, you see a sudden and tremendous drag on the resources and available assistance.

I have never felt it was the responsibility of our government, at any level, to help everyone in need in all instances. Perhaps they should provide some framework and some initial monetary assistance to help an effort get off the ground, but I have always been of the mindset that it should be people helping people.

Sometimes formal government social efforts are a necessary evil but if people come to expect them that is where the whole entitlement issue comes from and to be quite blunt there’s already too much of that line of thinking.

Thus, I go back to people and ask: "What want can you go without today in order to help someone with something they need?"

This comment is on my profile at WishUponaHero.com and at Donorschoose.org. I keep it there to challenge myself when I go to sites to find a wish or a classroom to help and find a way to do it. I know, too, that it has inspired others to help, as well – I have gotten many emails which attest to this fact.

I’ve put it here in "From Wallingford," and I am hoping for the same outcome; that it might compel someone that gives infrequently to perhaps consider trying to give up a cup of coffee a day for one month and redirect those extra funds to a worthy local cause of their choosing. At the same time, if it made someone who never really helped out before find the desire suddenly to do so, it would be equally significant.

There are many people in Wallingford that already give much of themselves all year long. I am challenging them to stretch a little farther this year. There are some that do not help; I appreciate their right not to do so, but I ask them to reconsider if they have the means.

Then there are those in need. Take what you need and give back what you can. Be creative; if you’ve found a place to rest your head, offer to sweep up before you leave. It’s easy to list the reasons and excuses why you can’t help or why your little bit won’t really matter.

Almost everyone has the capacity to help in some way, and deeds are more powerful than you think.