Showing posts with label migrant children. Show all posts
Showing posts with label migrant children. Show all posts

Thursday, January 10, 2019

Veg Out! Healthy Food For All is Essential

All families and growing children should have easy access to healthy food. 
 Image result for photos of happy kids eating good food
Have you hear of “food deserts?” I certainly never did until reading last year in the New York Times about entire swaths of urban areas with nothing but corner stores filled with processed packages foods and no produce whatsoever.  I started paying attention and it is true.

There is something you can do about it, by making a donation of www.WholesomeWavge.org who will provide fresh fruits and veggies to these underserved communities.  How great is that? Actually, it is even better, as Wholesome Wave obtains their organic produce from small and mid-sized farmers.

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

Sign up To Be Santa’s Helper #HolidayActsofKindness


You know Santa needs your help, rght? This is soooo easy you gotta do it!
 Image result for photos of santa at the post office
Go to your local Post Office in around Christmastime and pick one of the letters to Santa that they get every year. 
Buy and send the gift before Christmas to the child who asked for it.

Saturday, November 24, 2018

From Growing Up Homeless to Helping the Homeless

NFL player James Jones knows it’s better to give than to receive
mission
“Being homeless made me a better man,” says James Jones, wide receiver for the Oakland Raiders since 2014. “And while I wouldn’t wish anyone to go through that, I wouldn’t change anything as far as how I grew up.” Having slept in shelters and on park benches for the first fifteen years of his life, Jones’ success as an athlete defies stereotypes about homelessness and poverty.

He has taken his challenging experiences to heart. Since being drafted to the NFL in 2007, he has volunteered for many community organizations, and in 2008, started his own with his wife Tamika. The LoveJones4Kids foundation provides funding for school supplies, football camps, and pep talks to underprivileged children, many of them living in the same conditions that Jones did growing up.

“People are used to hearing about a homeless person or kid and don’t think it’s possible to be a professional football player. But down on your luck doesn’t mean down and out.” Touchdown

Friday, November 16, 2018

Some of Our Best Friends Have 4 Legs

Meet your friends at the farm and support kindness to animals:Image result for pictures of kids petting farm animals
Gene and Lorri Bauston found a living sheep abandoned on a stockyard “dead pile in 1986. Once they recovered from the shock, they rescued the sheep, named her Hilda, and went to work created Farm Sanctuary. Within ten years, Farm Sanctuary became the nation’s largest farm animal rescue and protection organization. They now have a New York shelter and one in California, 100 miles north of Sacramento. Their Website is www.farmsanctuary.org. Not only does their organization rescue thousands of farm animals each year, but also they are also involved in groundbreaking campaigns to help animals. Another way you can support this effort is to visit a sanctuary with your kids as they are often quaint petting zoos with critters you can actually pet!

Saturday, October 27, 2018

Spooky Acts of Kindness: Happy Halloween


 Bowl of candy? Check. Costume on? Check. Pumpkins carved? Check. 
Image result for beautiful photos of kids halloween
We are approaching All Hallow’s Eve and what better day to dress up, go out, and overindulge on sugary sweets? However, take a few precautions before venturing out:
·  If you have kids, don’t let them trick-or-treat without supervision
·  Don’t let your child eat candy that doesn’t come in a wrapper
·  Hold a flashlight when outside so drivers can see you
·  But Halloween doesn’t have to be all about the sugar rush and crazy costumes. It can also be a very charitable day:
·       Make cards of kindness
·       Some children are too ill to go out trick or treating. Make homemade Halloween cards for hospitalized children with life-threatening illnesses and mail to either Love Letters: Random Cards of Kindness or Hugs and Hope.2
·       Send candy to the troops
·       Many dental offices participate in post-Halloween candy buybacks. Donated sweets are sent to organizations such as Operation Gratitude or Operation Shoebox. Both organizations include the candy in care packages for U.S. soldiers in harm's way. Find a participating dental office near you or get information to start your own collection.

Thursday, October 18, 2018

Adopt A Classroom: Acts of Kindness

Teaching others is hard work and can be a thankless job. Teachers are very important. Image result for adopt a classroom photos of happy classrooms

Whether you are a student or have kids in school, approach your/their teacher and tell them what a great job they are doing.  Adopt A Classroom goes to the head of the class in my book for the good work they do: AdoptAClassroom.org gives teachers a hand by providing needed classroom materials so that students can succeed.
It is estimated that more than 15 million children don’t have the resources they need to succeed in school and that teachers spend more than $1 billion a year stocking their own classrooms due to a lack of funding in schools. Supporting K-12th grade students, including public, private, and charter school classrooms, AdoptAClassroom.org makes it easy for donors to provide funding and support to classrooms throughout America. Teachers register their classrooms and needs online; donors discover classrooms through simple search tools, and make targeted contributions.   Their goal is to connect donors with every classroom in the country. A plus!


Thursday, October 4, 2018

Thinking With Your Heart: Volunteer!


When I lived in the Lower Height district of San Francisco, I drove for an AIDS food bank in my rusted-out little car had driven across the country from West Virginia.
Image result for photos of volunteers
I had arrived in the mid-eighties, which we may all remember as the height of the AIDS crisis. My best friend delivered meals to patients in their homes and I gave rides and also hauled groceries donated to the food bank by the Church Street Tunnel. One early morning, I was walking to the Market and Church Street MUNI station and there it was with giant pink letters announcing itself as a place to lend a hand for the AIDS cause. I went in and within two minutes had a shift and assignments for the week.  Plus everyone in there seems extremely cool to me and they were not grim at all but seemed to have a mission of importance.  It seemed such a small way to help during that scary time but I also learned that whatever you can give, large or small, it is important to give of yourself. And it all does add up. Feeding America is the LARGEST hunger relief organization the United States and they need YOU. Please visit www.feedingamerica.org to find your local food bank or hunger organization. Get involved and you’ll make a difference and you’ll make friends along the way. I sure did and they remain my friends to this day.


Wednesday, October 3, 2018

Help Girls Score: Support the Women In Sports Foundation


Started in 1987,  the Women in Sports Foundation brings attention to the positive influence that sports participation has and how it advances equality. 
Image result for beautiful photos of girls playing sports
The Women’s Sports Foundation encourages moms to get more involved with their daughters’ sports. Their Website, at www.womenssportsfoundation.org, gives lots of advice on how to get involved, prevent discrimination, and increase participation, along with information on coaching issues, clinics, funding, and more. Sports can be a huge help with young girls’ self-confidence with skill, determination and inner success, a confidence that can carry through into her later years; it is said that if you succeed in sports, you lead in life.


Thursday, August 23, 2018

Veg Out: Everyone Should Have Access to Healthy Food


Don't all families deserve affordable vegetables so they can cook healthy food?
 Image result for photos of kids with vegetables
Have you hear of “food deserts?” I certainly never did until reading last year in the New York Times about entire swaths of urban areas with nothing but corner stores filled with processed packages foods and no produce whatsoever.  I started paying attention and it is true.

There is something you can do about it, by making a donation of www.WholesomeWave.org who will provide fresh fruits and veggies to these underserved communities.  How great is that? Actually, it is even better, as Wholesome Wave obtains their organic produce from small and mid-sized farmers.

Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Declutter For a Good Cause

If you're like me, you dont have any spasce in your drawers for anything extra, let alone all those deceased cell phones! Guess what, you can declutter and help others!
Survivor: Joanne

Donate old cell phones to the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence (http://www.ncadv.org/). They will donate the proceeds to programs that protect families that have suffered abuse. Phone it in for a good cause and help women and kids in your own community.  Being a good neighbor is easy and giving back feels great.

Monday, August 13, 2018

Kicks for Kids


I bet you take shoes for granted, right? Not everybody does so what can you do about it?
 
Next time you are in the mall or wandering the web doing some retail therapy, buy a gift card from Nordstrom’s in support of the Shoes That Fit program. For as little as 10 bucks, you can kickstart a pair of brand new tennies from New Balance that will fit perfectly to a young person who needs a leg up. www.shoesthatfit.org is the place to go. The right shoes can be the first step to in the right direction.

Thursday, August 9, 2018

PJ's and a Book: Gift a Child in Need


Good Night, Moon. Good Morning, Sunshine!
Image result for photo of a child reading in bed
I have to agree with the lovely people of The Pajama Program that some of the sweeter side of life comes from warm, snuggly pj’s, preferable footed in my case, so this is their mission – to provide children who need them the exact set of pajamas and a book of bedtime stories. 
Need I say more? www.pajamaprogam.org Good nights make for good days. 

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

Rewire Your Brain To Be More Positive

There is no doubt in anyone's mind that there is a lot of  negativity in the world right now. All the more reason to develop your ability to reframe. 
 Image result for photo of a happy brain

Neuropsychiatrist David Amen, MD, posits that thoughts carry physical properties and that the properties of negative thoughts can be detrimental to your leading a healthy, happy life. To overturn these negative effects, he prescribes thinking more positively, maintaining that by doing so, you can change the way your brain works and in turn change your life for the better

Friday, June 22, 2018

Fastest Way You Can Help Migrant Children and Families: Post Their Bail


How much does freedom cost? For immigrants detained in the U.S. it can be as low as $1,500 or as high as $8000 but give what you can or gather with other and give:
Image result for photos of immigrant families at border
The public backlash to a new policy from the Trump administration that, in effect, separates immigrant parents from their children at the border has been growing, with criticism from advocates and politicians, including the four living former first ladies, who separately condemned it as “cruel” and “immoral.”
President Donald Trump has said his administration will continue to “arrest people coming into our country illegally” and has called on Democrats to work with Republicans to pass immigration legislation — including funding for the $70 billion border wall he proposed — to put an end to the administration’s “zero-tolerance” policy of separating families. On Tuesday, he said that Democrats want“illegal immigrants to infest the country.”
Financial support for immigrant families affected by the policy began to pour in over the past 48 hours. One Bay Area couple created a fund-raising page on Facebook FB, +0.12%   for Raices, a nonprofit organization providing low-cost legal defense services to immigrant families in Texas, and raised more than $15 million after setting a goal to raise just $1,500. They have since increased it to $15 million.
“The challenge of how to humanely house and process undocumented immigrants, particularly unaccompanied children and children separated from their parents, is not new,” said Michael Rosen, president of Philadelphia-based charity consulting firm ML Innovations, Inc. “Many charity options exist for people who want to help undocumented immigrant children.”
He suggested finding charities with a proven track record rather than new organizations, determining what services you want to help provide, researching the charities before donating, and donating by mail, over the phone, or through a secure donation site to ensure security. Sites such as Charity Navigator and Charity Watch help donors vet charities.
Immigration advocates have noted one sure-fire way to help people separated from their children: Posting their bail. This is one of the fastest ways to reunite immigrants with their family, said Pilar Weiss, project director at the National Bail Fund Network said.
Donating to community bond funds can immediately “lead to freedom,” she said. Community bond funds are charities, like Raices, that use funds to post bail and provide legal defense for detained people.
Bail can cost anywhere from $1,500 to $80,500
When undocumented immigrants are detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) or U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), they are held in detention until they go to trial where the court will decide whether they can stay in the country.
In some cases, the immigration judge will let them go while they await trial if they first pay a bail bond. Bail is set at a legal minimum of $1,500, but can be much higher. The bond is meant as a deposit to ensure the accused will report to their trial. If they attend all of their court appointments, they can get the money back.
But many people have trouble coming up with the funds. The average bail bond issued by the San Francisco immigration courts in 2014 was $3,411 and the average cost of bond in immigration courts nationally is $6,500. Bond amounts could be as high as $80,500 on Central District of California immigration bonds, according to a 2015 study by USC law professor Emily Ryo.
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In theory, bonds are set higher for some immigrants because they are deemed more of a “flight risk,” or likely to skip their court date, said Trevor Houser, director of the Immigrant Family Defense Fund, a nonprofit that pays bonds for detained immigrants.
An immigrant new to the U.S. may have a higher bond than one who has lived there for many years with a family and is less likely to leave, he added. However, in practice there are huge discrepancies in bond amounts across the country largely based on what individual judges decide, Houser said.
By law, immigration bail is set at a minimum of $1,500. That’s higher than traditional criminal court bail, which can be as low as $50. A recent comparison of bail amounts in New York City found that it’s 50% more expensive to get out of immigration detention than regular jail.
Immigrants who are unable to make bail can spend days, months, or even years in detention awaiting their court date. There is no federal limit to how long an immigrant can be detained without trial. In criminal court, the defendant is entitled to a trial between 30 and 60 days of being in custody, according to the law, but the date can be delayed months or even years while they sit in jail without being convicted.
Under the Trump administration, very few immigrants are being offered bail initially, Houser said. Nonprofits that provide free or low-cost legal defense to undocumented immigrants are working to get their clients court dates where defense attorneys can request that bond be set. Those same groups then pay the bond so the defendant can spend the time awaiting trial out of jail with their family.
In one recent case, a client of the Immigrant Family Defense Fund spent the last year and a half in detention after he was denied bond, House said. The immigrant came to the U.S. with his 9-year-old son to flee violence in Guatemala targeting them for their indigenous identities. By the time he is released from jail in the coming weeks, his son will be 10.
Being free on bond also helps immigrants in court
A number of community bond funds have been set up across the country to help those detained by ICE. Paying bail can make a huge difference in the trajectory of a case: Immigrants who are bonded out are eight times more likely to win their cases than unrepresented detainees, according to the Immigrant Family Defense Fund.
“In addition to the reduced financial and mental-health strain on the family, getting released on bond substantially increases the odds of winning relief in your immigration case because you can meet freely and regularly with your attorney and have greater ability to prepare the documentation you need,” Houser said.
The United States has a uniquely expensive bail system compared to other developed countries, according to an analysis from Pricenomics.
The traditional criminal courts’ bail system, which is different but parallel to the immigration detention bond system, has been recently criticized by high-profile advocates. Musician and singer Jay-Z released a documentary in 2017 about Kalief Browder, a New York boy who jailed in 2010 at the age of 16 after being charged with stealing a backpack.
Unable to pay the $3,000 in bail, Browder remained in jail on Rikers Island for three years, including two years in solitary confinement. He maintained his innocence and the charges were dismissed in 2013. But he took his own life in 2015 after his release, a death his parents blame on his treatment in jail.
In California , the state Supreme Court is weighing a proposal that would allow a judge to consider a defendant’s ability to pay when setting bail amounts.
Advocates say the ongoing immigration issue is highlighting the flaws of the cash-bail system in the U.S. “The sheer number of people who are incarcerated in this country has reached crisis levels,” Weiss said. “But with immigrant detention and incarceration due to ICE, there is a new awareness growing around that as well.”
In addition to paying the bail for detained immigrants, some organizations are also able to negotiate the cost of bail down or pay for several bail funds at once. The Eastern Iowa Community Bond Project paid a total of $35,000 to release 20 of the 32 men arrested in a recent raid.
National organizations funding bail across the U.S.
Local organizations funding bail for immigrants
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