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Boys
Hope Girls Hope, a
nonprofit children’s
social services
organization, has found gold
in golden agers.
Boys
Hope Girls Hope takes
children of potential and
possibility whose
circumstances—shattered
families, blighted
neighborhoods, overcrowded
or under performing schools—stand in the way
of their success. By putting
them in non-institutional,
family-style homes and
first-rate schools, and
providing academic,
emotional, spiritual, and
financial support through
college, the program
restores hope to children
and their communities.
The
children are cared for by
both full-time Residential
Counselors—24/7/365 house
parents who live with them
and take care of them—and
by volunteers provided by
the Federal AmeriCorps
program, who serve as both
Community Resource
Coordinators, who canvass
the community for support,
and Scholar Support Corps
members, who provide
tutoring and other academic
support.
To
fill these positions, Boys
Hope Girls Hope has
traditionally relied on
recent college graduates.
But that picture is
changing. Some Affiliates
have been hiring outside the
traditional parameters, with
unexpected results.
“Traditionally,
positions like these attract
younger applicants,” says
Tom Casey, Boys
Hope Girls Hope’s Director
of Human Resources. “They
see it as a way to get their
foot in the door of the
children’s services and
social services world. But
these positions can be
rewarding to people at all
stages of their career.
It’s stimulating work that
you can feel good about
doing. We’re seeing our
kids benefit tremendously
from being with people with
more life experience and the
wealth of knowledge they
have to share.”
Jane
Jensen Saint, Executive
Director of Boys
Hope Girls Hope of
Nevada, was seated next to
septuagenarian and longtime
Las Vegas community
volunteer Angela Wallin at a
charitable function and had
the chance to share with her
what Boys
Hope Girls Hope does.
Angela has been a mainstay
of Las Vegas’ nonprofit
community for
years—“There isn’t a
body part I haven’t raised
money for,” she
jokes—but Boys
Hope Girls Hope caught
her interest.
“I’ve
always loved children,”
says this mother of two and
grandmother of four, “and
I love a program that helps
youth. So when Jane told me
about the AmeriCorps
program—specifically, the
Community Resource
Coordinator—I asked her if
she’d ever considered
anyone in the senior
population for the
position.”
At
Jane’s encouragement,
Angie applied for the
position and was accepted.
She immediately put her
extensive network of
contacts and her experience
to work on behalf of the
children in the program.
Since coming on board, she
has spearheaded instituted
several different programs,
excursions, and implemented
innovative approaches to
raising the organization’s
profile in Las Vegas,
finding new mentors for the
children, and creating
opportunities for them to
broaden their horizons.
“My
parents were immigrants,”
Angie says, “and they
taught me important lessons
about the importance of
participating and giving
back. They were so grateful
to be in this country. I get
more out of it personally
than people realize—giving
back and helping youth is
not only the right thing to
do, it’s necessary for
me.”
The
Chicago Affiliate is also
having success with
nontraditional hires. George
Dotson, 60, joined the
program this autumn as a
Residential Counselor. After
a 35-year career working
with children in his native
Evanston, IL as a coach,
Community Center Director,
and Youth Programs manager,
George was facing
retirement, but wasn’t
ready to stop working.
George had learned about Boys
Hope Girls Hope through
his own children, who
attended Chicago’s Loyola
Academy with Boys
Hope Girls Hope scholars,
and one lunch with Boys
Hope Girls Hope of
Chicago’s Executive
Director Pat Hughes was
enough to convince him to
join the program as a
Residential Counselor.
“I’ve
been involved with youth
activities my entire working
life,” George says.
“It’s not so much a job
as it is a vocation. I need
to be helping
people—it’s the way
I’m built. And this is a
perfect place for me to be.
I can see the growth
potential in all of these
kids—given the chance to
be around solid people and
get a solid education, every
one of these young men can
go to the moon or higher.
They all have the potential
to be great.”
“I
am very impressed with
George,” says Dianne
O’Donovan, who serves on
the Illinois Affiliate’s
board. She’s a member of
the Program Committee and is
chair of its Mentor
Committee. “He has such a
gentle, nurturing presence
about him and I love his
insight into the boys.
He’s a great hire!”
The
success of hires like Angie
and George has encouraged
the organization to broaden
its hiring parameters and
actively seek out retirees,
empty-nesters, and those
looking for a change of
career.
For
more information, please
contact Jim Palmer,
Communication Specialist,
Boys Hope Girls Hope
National Headquarters, at
314.298.1250 or by email at jpalmer@bhgh.org.
To
learn more about Boys Hope
Girls Hope, please visit us
online at www.boyshopegirlshope.org
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