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June 21 = Day of Action
Get involved in your community!

          
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Education Projects
•   Sign up to volunteer with Cram the Van, United Way of Santa Rosa County’s school supply drive for children in need. (623-4507 or 
marianne@unitedwaysrc.org)
•  Organize a book drive with your family, co-workers, school, club or faith community and donate the books to a local library, jail or shelter. (Early  Learning Coalition 983-5313)
•  Stuff backpacks with school supplies and donate them to Cram the Van at United Way of Santa Rosa County(623-4507).
•  Host an arts and crafts fair for mentally challenged adults and auction the finished products. (The Arc Santa Rosa 623-9320)
•  Organize transportation to a summer reading program at the local library for kids in your neighborhood.
•  Call your local library and volunteer to help re-shelve books or run a children’s program.
•  Allow a high school student to shadow you at work and show them how you apply the things you learned in school.
•  Work with an agency to organize an outing for a group of children to a local museum, exhibit or play.
•  Mentor an at-risk youth at your neighborhood school. (Big Brothers, Big Sisters: 983-5579; Girl Scouts: 434-1333; Boy Scouts: 476-6336)
•  Invite a friend, neighbor, family member to attend a school board meeting with you.
•  Create a family story hour and read to children in your neighborhood.
•  Organize a “making music” afternoon for kids in your neighborhood. Help them make instruments out of coffee cans,bottles, beads, etc.
•  Collect art supplies for kids in shelters or hospitals. (FavorHouse 626-5600)
•  Teach computer skills at a literacy center, community center or shelter.
•  Record your favorite book on tape for a child who is visually impaired or for a literacy group.
•  Donate a newspaper subscription to a local school.
•  Donate old musical instruments to a charity or community center. Offer to teach kids how to play them.
   Host a Born Learning Play Party to help parents, grandparents and caregivers explore ways to turn everyday moments into fun learning opportunities. (
www.bornlearning.org )
Income Projects
  • Sign up to help champion the cause of Financial Stability in Santa Rosa County through our Money Cents program: 623-4507 or marianne@unitedwaysrc.org.
  • Bring a group of children to a bank for a tour and show them how to open a savings account.
  • Tutor at an adult literacy or technology program. (Learn To Read of Northwest Florida: 432-4347)
  • Participate in a poverty simulation to better understand economic disparities in your community.
  • Donate new or gently used professional clothing to an organization assisting individuals seeking employment. (Workforce EscaRosa: 983-5325)
  • Volunteer to prepare tax returns for low-income families to help them acquire additional dollars in earned income tax credits.
  • Organize a food drive with coworkers or neighbors. (Family Resource Program: 626-2054; Interfaith Ministries: 934-8385)
  • Knit baby blankets for expectant mothers or newborns. (Catholic Charities: 436-6425)
  • Bring bags of groceries to a shelter.
  • Help build a home or shelter (Habitat for Humanity: 434-5456 or www.pensacolahabitat.org).
  • Contact your local representative about an issue affecting working people in your community.
  • Provide babysitting services for parents participating in job skills and training programs. (Workforce EscaRosa: 983-5325)
  • Help seniors in your community make their homes more energy efficient. (Covenant Hospice: 433-2155; Council on Aging: 983-4500)
  • Find out which banks offer free checking and savings accounts to low-income families and promote them in relevant neighborhoods.
  • Engage with youth-serving agencies to teach a class on how to save money and watch with them as it grows.
  • Help senior citizens learn how to detect and prevent fraud.
  • Take your family or friends with you to prepare, deliver or serve meals at a homeless shelter. (Loaves & Fishes: 438-7616)
  • Plan a summer jobs fair for high school students and offer tips on job preparation and interview skills.
  • Start a vegetable garden and donate part of your harvest to a food pantry.
  • Organize a voter registration drive to support local and national issues important to you and your community. (Contact the Supervisor of Elections office: 983-1900)
  • Distribute emergency preparedness packets in your neighborhood. (Information available at the Emergency Operations Center: 983-5360)
  • Host a preview party of the PBS documentary series Unnatural Causes to spark discussions about racial and socioeconomic inequalities in hea

Health Projects
  • Organize a field day or health fair with your neighborhood to get kids active and exercising.
  • Contact your local health clinic to offer assistance in anything from distributing flyers to serving on an event committee to writing a letter to the editor on their behalf. (Good Samaritan Clinic: 934-0064; Santa Rosa Community Clinic: 981-9433)
  • Find out what your local schools are doing to promote good nutrition and fitness among students and find ways to help them improve.
  • Start a walking group for friends, families, neighbors and/or community members that meets regularly at a set time and location. 
  • Buy pedometers for your friends and have a friendly “most-steps-in-day” competition.
  • Purchase personal care items (deodorant, shampoo, toothbrushes, feminine hygiene products, etc.) and donate them to a local women’s shelter. (FavorHouse: 626-5600)
  • Organize a sing along at a children’s hospital.
  • Fill diaper bags with items for new mothers and donate to a crisis pregnancy center. (Milton: 983-2730 or Healthy Start: 626-6751)
  • Invite children over to bake cookies then deliver them to a local nursing home or other families in your community.
  • Organize a “beauty day” for a women’s shelter and give manicures, makeovers or haircuts. (FavorHouse: 626-5600)
  • Volunteer to drive homebound residents to medical appointments, the grocery store or to visit friends.
  • Certify your pet as a “good citizen” and bring it to a nursing home to spend time with residents.
  • Canvass neighborhoods with information about low or no cost health services in the community.
  • Organize regular kickball games for kids in your neighborhood.
  • Sign up for a 5K, half-marathon or marathon to benefit a cause. If you’re not a runner, offer to help with registration or refreshments.
  • Collect sports equipment and donate to a local school, shelter, community center or after-school program.
  • Create care packages for overseas military personnel.
  • Reclaim a neglected park for kids in your neighborhood.
  • Deliver meals to homebound seniors. (Council on Aging: 983-4500)
  • Coach a youth sports team. (Pullum Family YMCA 936-0049)
  • Take a group of teens on a brush-clearing hiking trip to keep park trails in good condition.
  • Take five friends to a CPR class. (Call the American Red Cross for classes near you: 626-7333)
  • Take friends with you to give blood. (Northwest Florida Blood Center: 434-3853)
  • Organize a senior prom at a nursing home.


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  Pictures on this site ©scottrobinsonphoto.com, United Way of America, United Way Creative Studio Photos 
Netwotk Solutions,United Way of Santa Rosa County, and Partner Agencies.

United Way of Santa Rosa County,Inc.
2009-All Rights Reserved.
United Way of Santa Rosa County
PO Box 284
Milton,Fl.32572
(850) 623-4507
info@unitedwaysrc.org

Web Site Created and Maintained by David Bell
  United Way of Santa Rosa County
webdesign@unitedwaysrc.org