News

Putting Our Best Faces Forward

Monday, January 18th, 2010

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The United Way Services Building  at 903 West Center Street in Rochester got a new look recently with the addition of three panels featuring the LIVE UNITED calls to action – GIVE. ADVOCATE. VOLUNTEER.

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The signs feature members of the community who “don’t just wear the t-shirt.”  Sierra and Constance are two neighborhood youths who volunteer with us frequently after school. Laura is active in Emerging Leaders in Giving. John serves on the Education Solution Team.

The 5′  x 10 ‘signs were sponsored by Paramark Real Estate Services, the Rochester Area Chamber of Commerce, and IBM. The photos are all courtesy of Rochester Magazine.

We appreciate the contributions of all involved.

Rich Harwood featured at 2010 Celebration

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

harwoodwebRich Harwood will be the featured speaker at the annual Celebration of Caring and Giving, March 23, 2010.

“If we are to improve politics and public life,” says Richard C. Harwood, founder and president of The Harwood Institute for Public Innovation, “then we need to release ourselves from our resignation that public life and politics has to be the way that it is today, and declare that it can be better, that we can be better!”

Over the past 20 years, he has become a leading national authority on improving America’s communities, raising standards of political conduct and re-engaging citizens on today’s most complex and controversial public issues. Harwood, who has been called “one of the great thinkers in American public life,” has dedicated his life to helping people make good on their urge to do good.

Rich Harwood seeks to uncover answers to some of the most pressing questions of our time. He has worked with thousands of people in dozens of U.S. cities, spreading a vision for what American society should be, and putting innovative practices to use on the ground to turn that vision into reality.

Rich is the author of The Organization-First Approach Report (2009), Make Hope Real (2008) as well as Hope Unraveled (2005), and numerous articles, essays and op-eds.

A dynamic and inspirational public speaker, Harwood has been featured at hundreds of events and is a frequent keynote speaker for foundations and national organizations. He is a commentator and contributor on national and syndicated television, newspapers, radio and web sites, including MSNBC, NPR, The Christian Science Monitor, CNN’s Inside Politics, The Jim Bohannon Show, Special Report with Brit Hume, C-SPAN, and many other media outlets.

In October of 1999, Harwood was a featured speaker along with Colin Powell and Doris Kearns Goodwin at the White House Fellows 35th Anniversary Program. He is a faculty member of the Public Affairs Institute and also has lectured at the prestigious Poynter Institute, a national school of journalism.

Rich did his undergraduate work in Political Economy at Skidmore College. He graduated Phi Beta Kappa and was a Harry S Truman Scholar. He received his M.A. in Public Affairs from Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. Rich lives in Bethesda, Maryland with his wife Jackie and their two children.

Harwood’s “The Top 10 Ways to ‘Live United’ “ is featured in our LIVE UNITED: A User’s Manual. Number nine on his list, “civic parables,” is the inspiration for the section of the same name appearing in this blog.

“Ask Amy” columnist featured at 2010 Power of the Purse

Monday, October 12th, 2009

amyportraitcolorwebAmy Dickinson will be the featured speaker at the 5th Annual Power of the Purse luncheon, June 15, 2010.

Dickinson’s syndicated “Ask Amy” column appears in over 200 newspapers nationwide. She is a regular panelist on the popular radio current events quiz show, Wait,Wait, Don’t Tell Me, heard on 400 NPR stations.Dickenson is also an occasional guest on such programs as The Today Show, The Rachel Ray Show, NPR’s Talk of the Nation and CNN’s American Morning

Keynote Address:

Ask Amy: An Afternoon with Amy Dickinson
How and why was Amy Dickinson chosen to replace Ann Landers? How does Amy Dickinson know how to answer the hundreds of questions that come in to her “Ask Amy” column? Where does she get her ideas and how does she know what to say to people in distress?

Dickinson relies on techniques learned as a reporter, speaking to experts in various fields. She also relies heavily on her own life and experiences.

From 1999-2002, Dickinson wrote a column for TIME magazine focusing on family life and parenting, often drawing from her experiences as a single parent and member of a large, extended family. For the past ten years, her commentaries and radio stories have been featured on NPR’s All Things Considered. She also has provided commentary to CBS Sunday Morning.

Dickinson attended Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts and graduated from Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. In the early days of the Internet, she wrote a weekly column for America Online’s News Channel. She also has worked as a receptionist for The New Yorker, a producer for NBC News, a lounge singer, and a freelance writer. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Esquire, Allure, O magazine and other publications.

Dickinson hails from the Finger Lakes region of New York and is a distant relative of poet Emily Dickinson. Her large family has lived in and around her hometown (pop. 450) continuously since the Revolutionary War. She often jokes, “Life in my hometown was like growing up in Lake Wobegon, only with worse weather and high unemployment.”

“My extended family is a collection of married and divorced parents, single mothers, step-relatives, adoptees, devoted siblings, cousins, aunties, uncles, and grandparents. I grew up hearing stories about my ancestors’ exploits. My great grandfather was warden of Sing Sing Prison and my great uncle ran off to Europe and joined the circus when he was 40.” Dickinson fondly describes her family as “hilarious, short-waisted Methodists.”

Her New York Times bestselling memoir, The Mighty Queens of Freeville: A Mother, A Daughter and the People Who Raised Them, was released in February 2009.

Dickinson has been a Sunday school teacher for ten years and is a substitute teacher at a local nursery school. She lives in Chicago with her teenage daughter. You can check out her website here.

The Power of the Purse luncheon and silent purse auction is hosted by the Women’s Leadership Council. Proceeds from the event support the Imagination Library.

Volunteer Attends Homecomin’ ’09

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009
Debbie Hoffman (far right) with Dolly Parton

Debbie Hoffman (far right) with Dolly Parton

Debbie Hoffman, who volunteers with United Way of Olmsted County as the Coordinator for the Imagination Library, attended Homecomin’  ’09 June 9 -12 in Pidgeon Falls, Tennessee. This annual conference of Imagination Library partners from around the country (and the world) dpil-web-small-pic2provides information and training; and, receives input ffrom local programs.

Since the June 2006 launch of the Imagination Library partnership in Olmsted County, over 120,000 books have been delivered to local children. Over 5,500 children are currently enrolled. More than 1,600 Olmsted County children have graduated from the Imagination Library.

In 2007, Debbie received the United Way of Olmsted County President’s Award for her volunteer services in many areas, including the Imagination Library and was recognized as one of “10 Who Make a Difference.”

Rochester Public Schools Releases MCA-II Results

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

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The Minnesota Department of Education recently released the results of the 2008-09 Minnesota Comprehensive Assessments, or MCA-IIs.

During the 2005-06 school year, Minnesota shifted its accountability tests from the MCA to the MCA-II. School year 2008-09 was the fourth year that approximately 9,300 District students took the MCA-II tests in reading and the MCA-II/MTELL tests in math. Listed below is the percentage of District students who are meeting or exceeding state standards, as compared with state results.

Percentage of ELEMENTARY Students Meeting or Exceeding READING Standards

  

All

        Asian PI1

        Hispanic

        Black

        White

        LEP2

        SpEd3

        FRP4

RPS District         78.26%        77.36%

        54.44%

        55.25%

        84.67%

        47.00%

        47.81%

        59.16%

State         75.03%        64.50%

        51.43%

        49.48%

        82.03%

        39.68%

        42.60%

        57.73%

1. Asian/Pacific Islander, 2.Limited English Proficient, 3. Special Education, 4. Free and Reduced Price Lunch

Percentage of ELEMENTARY Students Meeting or Exceeding MATH Standards

    

All

        Asian PI

        Hispanic

        Black

        White

        LEP

        SpEd

        FRP

RPS District         76.01%        78.03%

        53.41%

        48.51%

        82.56%

        47.21%

        46.45%

        56.96%

State         71.88%        66.04%

        47.81%

        43.86%

        78.89%

        41.02%

        43.49%

        53.85%

Percentage of MIDDLE SCHOOL Students Meeting or Exceeding READING Standards

  

All

        Asian PI

        Hispanic

        Black

        White

        LEP

        SpEd

        FRP

RPS District         74.05%        69.05%

        44.00%

        44.77%

        81.30%

        31.20%

        33.88%

        50.31%

State         68.05%        56.80%

        42.69%

        40.93%

        74.73%

        23.87%

        27.69%

        47.47%

Percentage of MIDDLE SCHOOL Students Meeting or Exceeding MATH Standards

  

All

        Asian PI

        Hispanic

        Black

        White

        LEP

        SpEd

        FRP

RPS District         69.32%        72.08%

        37.14%

        35.37%

        76.44%

        34.12%

        29.97%

        44.25%

State         60.44%        57.56%

        32.80%

        27.96%

        67.38%

        24.33%

        21.87%

       38.85%

Percentage of HIGH SCHOOL Students Meeting or Exceeding READING Standards

  

All

        Asian PI

        Hispanic

        Black

        White

        LEP

        SpEd

        FRP

RPS District         78.56%        73.81%

        61.22%

        35.77%

        85.88%

        25.42%

        34.38%

        52.03%

State         74.16%        58.53%

        47.08%

        42.29%

        81.08%

        27.10%

        31.43%

        51.91%

Percentage of HIGH SCHOOL Students Meeting or Exceeding MATH Standards

  

All

        Asian PI

        Hispanic

        Black

        White

        LEP

        SpEd

        FRP

RPS District         54.99%        49.47%

        25.71%

        8.89%

        61.57%

        6.58%

        14.71%

        22.89%

State         41.03%        35.06%

        15.58%

        10.09%

        46.55%

        10.09%

        6.97%

        19.47%

Percentage of All Students Meeting or Exceeding READING Standards

 

    All

        Asian PI

        Hispanic

        Black

        White

        LEP

        SpEd

        FRP

RPS District         76.50%        73.27%

        51.27%

        48.21%

        83.40%

        38.47%

        40.07%

        54.70%

State         71.92%        60.40%

        47.34%

        44.93%

        78.74%

        32.35%

        34.90%

        52.67%

Percentage of All Students Meeting or Exceeding MATH Standards

 

      All

        Asian PI

        Hispanic

        Black

        White

        LEP

        SpEd

        FRP

RPS District         70.22%        72.03%

        45.10%

        38.74%

        76.72%

        38.93%

        36.20%

        48.57%

       State         62.32%        58.07%

        38.25%

        32.72%

        68.81%

        31.55%

        29.91%

        43.37%

“I am proud of our students and staff for their continued focus on student success,” said Dr. Romain Dallemand, Superintendent. “At a district level, the proficiency rates for nearly all sub groups are rising for the second year in a row, and once again, our District scores exceed those of the state.”

The MCA-IIs are used to determine whether or not states are meeting target goals for Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP), as required by the federal No Child Left Behind (NCLB) legislation. NCLB also requires all students, including nine different subgroups, to be proficient in reading and math by the 2013-2014 school year.

During the month of July, Rochester Public Schools will review MCA-II data for accuracy, will review AYP preliminary results, and will prepare appropriate AYP appeals to submit to the state. As required by NCLB, schools must meet their target AYP goals in all subgroup populations. Schools that do not meet all their AYP goals are cited by the Minnesota Department of Education and placed on the state’s “Needs Improvement” list.

In August, Rochester Public Schools will report district and school AYP results as well as the Minnesota Department of Education Growth Data for MCA-II tests. MCA-II Science results will also be reported. In September, Rochester Public Schools will complete district specific analysis of school level results and will complete effectiveness studies related to interventions and supports.

Statement from Superintendent Romain Dallemand regarding MCA-II Results

I am very pleased that students’ proficiency on the District’s MCA-II assessments results increased again this year. This is important feedback to the District and an indication that we’re on the right track for raising proficiency for all students. At a District level, the proficiency rates for nearly all sub groups are rising for the second year in a row, and once again, our District scores exceed those of the state.

As part of the Five Year Plan, we will continue to monitor student achievement, will learn from successful instructional strategies employed in classrooms across the District, and will adjust instructional strategies where improvements and growth must be made.

Student success is a result of the dedication of many people. I am grateful to the teachers, paraprofessionals, administrators, parents, and community for their hard work and continued focus on the proficiency of all our students.  Most of all, I am pleased that our students’ efforts have resulted in continued growth.

10 Who Make A Difference

Monday, June 29th, 2009

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 The 10 Who Make A Difference Award recognizes 10 outstanding individuals or groups within Southeastern Minnesota and Northern Iowa who have made an impact in their community through volunteering.

kttc1Each year KTTC Television and the United Way of Olmsted County ask non-profit organizations and the public to nominate an individual or a group who have made a difference in their community.

The 2009 Award Recipients are: Mary White; Gary Komaniecki; Red Wing Shoe Company;  Bob & Bunny Yanish;  Audra Quandt & Heather Marx – Universal Playground Project; Rochester Network for Re-Entry; Dr. Tamara Berg – College Connection Project, Winona State University;  Jerry Monson Bryon; and  Strei Katie Niemeyer.

Read more about these award winning volunteers here. View their KTTC news stories here.

The Maude Finch Awards – 2009

Sunday, June 28th, 2009

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 ”I desire you would remember the ladies and be more generous and favorable to them than your ancestors.” So wrote Abigail Adams from her home in Massachusetts on March 13, 1776 to her husband John who was in Philadelphia as a delegate to the Continental Congress, a congress that was debating a declaration of independence from King George.

Mr. Adams and his fellow delegates may not have listened to Mrs. Adams’ plea but, here in Rochester, Minnesota, we have listened.

Maude Finch

Maude Finch

Throughout history, women have made a difference but have not always been remembered.  In fact, in our own local history, Maude Finch, the first recording secretary of the Community Chest of Rochester, the ancestor of the United Way of Olmsted County, made a difference. The minutes record that on December 23, 1925, when the board of directors voted to pay her the sum of $20 for clerical services, Mrs. Finch immediately donated the entire sum back to the Community Chest fund.  Thus, a first very generous donation through payroll deduction.

On June 15, the United Way of Olmsted County Women’s Leadership Council [WLC] honored Maude Finch and the three recipients of the first annual The Maude Finch Award. The award recognizes women for the work they do that helps advance the common good in the areas of education, income, health, or community basics.

weigel1Karel Weigel was recognized for a career of service and achievement throughout the community. 

Throughout her years of community service, she has given her time and talents to advance the common good.  For that service, we thank you and celebrate your accomplishments through this award.

 rwmag1Rochester Women magazine was recognized for the hope, inspiration, encouragement and fun the publication brings to countless women-and men-in our community.

Its work in recognizing women’s accomplishments as family members, business women, artists, workers, friends and all the other roles women take on inspires people throughout the community and advances the common good.

 habitat1Rochester Area Habitat for Humanity  – Women Build was recognized for their dedicated work in building homes for Olmsted County families, building the lives of those who dwell in the homes they build, and building community through their generous spirit and labors.Their work brings hope and stability to the families who are now home owners while it also brings hope and pride to our community.

WLC remembers the ladies.We think Abigail and Maude would be proud. And they would join with us as we say, “Thank you!”

All Means All: Great Education Results Celebrated

Friday, June 5th, 2009

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Statement of community members responding to recent reports of results of the Five Year Plan initiatives – June 5, 2009

Two weeks ago, representatives of a variety of community organizations interested in education gathered for presentations on programs and initiatives included in the district’s Five-Year Plan. These presentations provided the results of the most recent assessments of student progress.

These results are remarkable. Frankly, those of us who heard them that morning were thrilled. We committed ourselves to sharing this good news – this great news – with the community.

While the community has spent much of the year focused on other issues, something else was going on in schools and homes throughout the district. Teachers were teaching. Parents were engaging. Students were learning. Gaps were closing.

The results reported to us on May 22nd demonstrate that, in the first year of its implementation, the district’s Five-Year Plan to close the opportunity gap is indeed succeeding. It is succeeding to the benefit of all students- all students.

Even though there may be questions about our school district, we believe the most important question is: how are our students doing? The answer given in these results is: our students are doing better – in fact, better than we hoped.

Even though there may be questions about any plan implemented to improve education in our district, we believe the most important question is: is the plan working? The answer given in these results is: the plan is working – in fact, it is exceeding our expectations.

The results also begin to provide an answer to that other question with which the community wrestles – can all students improve their performance? The answer to that question is: yes, all students can improve – all means all.

Here are the results we heard that we want to share with the community:

(1) ALL MEANS ALL.
a. Not only is the achievement gap narrowing, the proficiency gap for all students is closing.
b. Registrations for advance placement [AP] classes are up in all three district high schools.

(2) ALL MEANS EVEN MORE THAN WE EXPECTED.
a. The Five Year Plan interventions that provided additional time and support needed for students who have historically underachieved are good for ALL students.
b. Students enrolled in Read 180, Mathletics, and Voyager Math are showing exceptional growth.
c. These results are being seen not only in Tier 1 schools where the Five Year Plan interventions have been initially launched, but also (in the case of Read 180 and Voyager Math) in Tier 2 and 3 schools that have adapted these interventions early based upon the strong research supporting them.

(3) ALL TAKES ALL.
a. These results are not an indication of a school system that was somehow broken and is now getting somehow fixed. On the contrary, these results are possible because a school system that was strong is now getting stronger. These results are built upon a strong educational foundation already in place.
b. ALL that a student experiences in our schools – the complete educational experience that includes excellent instruction and a strong core curriculum – produces these results.
c. ALL of us who care about students are required to help them make these results possible.

In sum, here are what we believe are the important questions for this district and the answers the results are now giving us:allmeansall

• Are students doing better? YES
• Is the Five Year Plan working? YES
• Does all mean all? YES

In closing we would add:

• Do we owe ALL who have taken up the hard work of making our schools stronger our thanks and continued support? YES
• Do we owe ALL students – who do the hard work of learning, who embrace these opportunities to achieve and improve – our admiration, best wishes, and whatever it takes to ensure their continued success? Emphatically, yes, YES, we do.

____________________

The following persons were participants in the discussions that resulted in the statement above (affiliations are included for reference): Dave Beal, United Way of Olmsted County; John Edmonds, Olmsted County; Karen Erlenbusch, United Way of Olmsted County; Patrick Gannon, Child Care Resource and Referral; Jenny Hegland, Winona State University – Rochester; Margo Herman, University of Minnesota Youth Work Institute; Kay Hocker, Diversity Council; Marlene Jehnke, Girl Scouts; Colleen Maddox, Rochester Community and Technical College; Mike Podulke, Olmsted County; Nancy Sears, Reading Center; Sandy Simar, Head Start; Kristine Stensland, Child Care Resource and Referral; George B. Thompson, Community Member; Barbara Zelinske, Reading Center.

This group is grateful for the opportunity to discuss the results reported above with the following representatives of the district: Fred Daly, Board member; Susanne Griffin-Ziebart, Executive Director of School Improvement and Accountability; and Rachel Hicks, Communication Coordinator.

Free-Tax Preparation Partners Help Return Over $1.1 Million to Olmsted County

Friday, May 15th, 2009

1040-blue-web1This tax season United Way of Olmsted County Financial Stability Partnership once again joined with the long-standing free tax preparation services provided by AARP Tax-Aide Program to promote free tax preparation in Olmsted County. Other partners include The Salvation Army. The Rochester Senior Center, and Hawthorne Education Center as well as the Internal Revenue Service and the Minnesota Department of Revenue.

AARP Tax-Aide Program had five tax sites in Olmsted County that were located in Rochester, Eyota, and Stewartville. These sites provided free tax preparation for low- and middle-income families. 2,256 federal tax returns were filed by AARP Tax-Aide counselors; 36% of the returns filed were eligible for the Earned Income Tax credit (EITC). An additional 1,198 tax returns were filed and included state only, prior year, and amended returns.

EITC is the largest and most effective federal aid program for low- to moderate-income workers.  For many eligible families, the EITC can increase their annual income by as much as 15 percenteitcfamily_web4.

Recognizing that free tax preparation services and EITC’s potential economic benefit to both families and communities, the Financial Stability Partnership supports educating families about the availability and benefits of the EITC and providing support services, such as free tax preparation, to facilitate receipt of the credit as well as the importance of being “banked.” Unbanked individuals and families were referred to US Bank and First Alliance Credit Union to set up an account prior to their tax appointment to take advantage of direct deposit refunds, getting their refund faster.

When combined with the Minnesota Working Families Credit, an estimated $1,138,175 in tax credits was returned to Olmsted County households though AARP Tax-Aide’s free-tax preparation sites. Because these services were provide without charge, families and individuals received more of the dollars for which they qualified.

Further, economists suggest that every increased dollar received by low and moderate-income families has a multiplier effect of between 1.5 to 2 times the original amount, in terms of its impact on the local economy and how much money is spent in and around the communities where these families and individuals live. Using the conservative estimate, for every $1 in EITC funds received, $1.50 ends up being spent locally.

Free tax preparation is still available for filing property tax and rent credit. Even if you don’t pay taxes, you may still qualify for these credits. You can even sign up to file a regular or back year tax return. Call United Way’s 2-1-1 or 507-287-2000 to set up an appointment.

DPI – Discharge Planning Initiative

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

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Mayo Clinic, Olmsted Medical Center (OMC), and United Way of Olmsted County are pleased to announce a partnership that has resulted in the development of a new on-line database called the Discharge Planning Initiative (DPI). In real time, this tool assists acute and post-acute care facilities by expediting communications and patient placement.

The DPI tool uses the latest web-based technology to create a new level of efficiency within the discharge planning process. Our expectation is that this tool becomes the primary communication device for Mayo and OMC discharge planners and Olmsted County social workers for available bed types within each post acute care facility. Discharge planners and social workers can use the DPI tool as their one stop in locating an appropriate facility throughout the day thus reducing the number of calls made to find available beds. Care facilities see reduced number of calls, greater visibility of available services, empty beds filled more quickly, and increased number of referrals. -more-