Thursday, December 15, 2011

Holiday Food Resource

This holiday season, families are more in need of food than previous years.
One of our star partners, the Alameda County Community Food Bank, has a holiday help line that assists families in need.
The number to call is 1.800.870.FOOD to initiate the process detailed below:


When a person calls the helpline they will be greeted by one of the Food Bank's friendly volunteers that will assist the client access food the same day in their neighborhood. The helpline will ask the client a few personal confidential questions (such as their name, DOB, address, household size & income source).  With this information they will locate a pantry near their home.

The helpline will call the food pantry to verify that the pantry is open and have food available for the client to pick up. The client does not come to the ACCFB warehouse to pick up the food; rather it will be somewhere near the clients home.  

The type, quality and quantity of food varies depending on the food pantry. Some food pantries have multiple food programs such as EFB, USDA and pantry food.  Generally the pantry will try to give the client a 1-2 days of emergency food supply. The amount will also vary depending on how many persons are in the household.  

The client will also be informed of other programs they might be eligible for, such as USDA food commodities, CalFresh (food stamps), WIC, school meals, and senior programs. They will receive an information packet with all this material.

Please re-post and pass this along to get the word out that there are resources for families that need food for the holidays in Alameda County!

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Gift of Hope

Have you ordered your gift of hope yet?















Each card that you order will give a student's family a bag of food for the weekend OR provide a book bag (with age-appropriate stories) to a child OR send a 5th-grader to science camp.

Each card will come with the gift that you specify and fall into these price ranges:
Weekend food bag: $4
Bring-home story bag: $35
Science camp scholarship: $125

Please call us at the office, or email Madalyn to find out how you can participate.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Thank you, Champions!

A huge THANK YOU to everyone who participated in Faith Network's Champions for Children Walk/Run!
The event was a huge success with costumes, prizes and lots of friends and family. The weather was perfect for snocones after the race, and the youth marimba band made the day even sunnier with their peppy music. Overall, there were over 170 participants and volunteers. Several school students walked in order to raise money for their classes to go to science camp. The coveted iPad 2 went to Wilson Leong as the top fundraiser of almost $3,000!

Click here to see photos from the event.

Special thanks to our sponsors:
Presenting Sponsor:
Legato Capital Management LLC

Gold Sponsor:
The Morrison Foerster Foundation

Silver Sponsors:
Alameda Magazine
Kirby and Amy Wilcox
Oakland Magazine
Parents’ Press
PricewaterhouseCoopers

Participating Sponsors:
Bakesale Betty
Berkeley Bowl
Femi Macus
Great America
Great Western Power Co.
In-N-Out Burgers
Landmark Theatres
Monclair Bakery
Noah’s Bagels
Safeway: Fruitvale
Safeway: Redwood Rd.
Trader Joe’s
Union Bank
Village Market
Whole Foods
Z Cafe and Bar

Thursday, October 27, 2011

School Closures Are Just the Beginning

Occupy Oakland has taken much of the spotlight off the vote that was cast yesterday concerning our public school system. With five board members approving and two against the proposal, five schools on the closure list will close at the end of this school year. These Oakland public schools are Lakeview, Lazear, Marshall, Maxwell Park and Santa Fe.

Faith Network has a volunteer presence in each of these schools; we have been developing relationships with Lakeview, Lezear and Santa Fe for over five years.
Katy Murphy of The Education Report took notes from the meeting, which can be found here.
Superintendent Tony Smith's plan for restructuring also includes the expansion (and potential relocation) of Burckhalter and Kaiser elementary schools, the merging of Sobrante Park Elementary and Madison Middle School, and uniting several of the small high schools on the Fremont and Castlemont campuses.


Another piece of the equation to consider is the announcement that ASCEND and Learning Without Limits are going to become charter schools, potentially taking 800 students from the OUSD public system. Through closing and restructuring, the school board hopes to save two million; with two schools going charter, OUSD will lose four million from the state.


It is speculated that ASCEND and Learning Without Limits voted to go charter in order to avoid being next for closure. Unfortunately, both schools are close to Lezear, a fact that could potentially make it more difficult for Lezear students to find nearby schooling options come the 2012-2013 school year.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Champions for Children

Champions for Children is in just nine days away.
Have you signed up yet?

Here is some inside information:
The top fundraiser will get an ipad 2.
There will be a local marimba band to play fun music at the event.
Some students will be diligently walking to raise money so they can go to science camp this year!
There will be lots of goodies just for showing up: magnets, snacks, prize drawings--courtesy of local businesses.
Costumes are definitely welcome--watch out for Grecian runners and other pedestrians in disguise!

Keep checking back for more details and updates!

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Growing Hunger in the Bay Area

The New York Times recently published an article about the growing demand for food in Alameda County. The article mentioned the Alameda County Community Food Bank (ACCFB), one of Faith Network's direct partners: "In September, the Alameda County Community Food Bank received 3,770 calls to its emergency food helpline — the highest volume of calls to date."

Many schools in Oakland have increased their nutritional programs, and now 90 schools offer free breakfast to all students. Some even allot some class time so that all students can eat together. A handful of after school programs will begin offering dinner to students who stay after school.

The goal is to give students the option of nutritious food--fresh fruit, juice, milk, bread, etc.--so that they can focus in the classroom. Faith Network volunteers help the ACCFB bag weekend food for families so that children will be well-fed and ready to learn on Mondays.

There is no way that a single organization can meet the growing nutritional needs of Oakland's students and families. Please read the article to learn more about other organizations that are trying to meet the need for free food in Alameda County. Also, please click here to learn how you can be a part of Faith Network's partnership with the ACCFB.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

The Office of School Transformation

With all the commotion about school closures and consolidations, the introduction of "The Office of School Transformation" for the 2011-12012 school year has slipped under my radar.

All public K-8 schools are grouped into three regions. Each region is headed by an executive officer and all the public high schools in Oakland are in a single network with an executive officer as head. The new change for this year is an added Office of School Transformation. The goal of this additional network of schools is to lead the "transformation of the District's most challenged schools into high quality learning centers." The network, headed by Matthew Duffy, consists of five middle schools and six high schools that are mostly dispersed throughout East Oakland. All four schools that were named by the state Board of Education as "persistently low-achieving schools" are also in the network. Duffy, a former assistant principal from Harlem, served as principal of Elmhurst Community Prep, a school created from a small-schools initiative.

While I have not been able to find a publicized plan for how the OUSD intends to transform these eleven schools, I will definitely continue to update about this matter. This is a pivotal time for Oakland's public schools as the district seems to be taking on upper grade schools with the goal of transformation as well as the lower grades with the hope of consolidating resources.