Community Foundation of the Ozarks


Archive for the ‘Jacks Fork CF’ Category






New Funds Friday: March 2-8

Friday, March 9th, 2012

Every Friday, we share the news of new groups and individuals choosing to make philanthropic gifts and investments in their community. You can read more about types of funds available at CFO here. Click here for a full list of non-profit Agency Partners. For more information on fund types and how to get involved, contact Winter Skelton at wskelton@cfozarks.org.

CAC Intermediate Fund – The Child Advocacy Center established this fund to hold reserve funds.

CAC Long-Term Fund – The Child Advocacy Center established this fund to hold long-term monies.

Lonnie Combs Memorial Scholarship Fund –Linda Combs and her family established this scholarship fund to honor her late husband, Lonnie.  This is a component of the Community Foundation of Taney County.

Conway Schools Continued Commitment Fund – The Conway School Foundation established this fund to assist Laclede Country R-1 students past their first year of college.

Dora Baseball – Athletics Fund – This fund will first assist the baseball program and facilities in Dora, and then help general athletic programs. It is a component fund of the Dora School R-III School Foundation and Ozark County Community Foundation.

James Kimbrow Scholarship Fund - Three Rivers Endowment Trust established this fund to assist with student scholarships.

Frances Loveall Stroke Recovery Fund – Bothwell Regional Health Center Foundation established this fund to assist patients with stroke recovery care.

Meramec Regional Planning Commission Capacity Fund – This fund will support the community and economic development work of the MRPC. This is a component fund of the Meramec Regional Community Foundation.

MVBT (Mountain View Birch Tree) Back to School Fair Fund – The Mountain View Church Council established this fund to provide school supplies to those in need through the Back to School Fair. It is a component fund of the Jacks Fork Community Foundation.

Owensville Area Endowment Fund – This unrestricted community grantmaking fund will support the charitable purposes in the Owensville area. This is a component fund of the Meramec Regional Community Foundation

Leonard Query Scholarship Fund – Three Rivers Endowment Trust established this fund to assist with student scholarships.

Southern Missouri Emergency Communications Fund – The 145.49 repeater group established this fund to support a regional backbone system for the N0NWS repeater system and other supporting repeater systems which are an integral part of emergency services.

Rob Summers Memorial Fund – The Conway School Foundation established this fund to support scholarships for students interested in agriculture.

Willow Springs Youth Empowerment Fund – This fund will support youth programming in Willow Springs. This is the 38th YEP chapter, and the fund is a component fund of the Willow Springs Community Foundation.

 

 






Affiliates, Food Programs Partner to Raise $125,000 for Hunger Challenge

Monday, December 5th, 2011

CFO affiliates and their local food programs completed the Ozarks Million Dollar Hunger Challenge II this fall by raising $125,000 to match an equivalent challenge grant from the Walmart State Giving Foundation to Ozarks Food Harvest.

In all, 23 of the CFO’s 44 affiliates participated in the Hunger Challenge, which leverages the total of $250,000 at a 10:1 ratio of buying, transporting and distributing food through the OFH network of feeding programs and pantries.

The Walmart State Giving Foundation awarded a $125,000 grant to Ozarks Food Harvest for a second challenge opportunity earlier this year after last year’s success with a $100,000 grant for the original Ozarks Million Dollar Hunger Challenge.

In this year’s Ozarks Million Dollar Hunger Challenge II, 25 food programs across the region worked with the 23 CFO affiliates to raise matching funds by the end of September.

Grant presentations, shown in the gallery below, have been made with affiliate and food program leaders in a number of the communities over the past month. The participating affiliates were: Aurora, Bolivar, Cassville, DACO, Dallas, Dent, El Dorado Springs, Finley River, Houston, Jacks Fork, Lockwood, Marshfield, Monett, Mount Vernon, Mountain Grove, Neosho, Nixa, Oregon County, Seymour, Stockton, Southwest Missouri, Taney County and West Plains.

“We appreciate the cooperative spirit between our affiliate foundations and their local food pantries to jointly tackle this matching grant opportunity,” CFO President Brian Fogle said.

This program began in response to a national report  – “Hunger in America 2010” – describing the extent to which hunger plagues Ozarks communities. An estimated 155,000 Ozarkers face chronic hunger issues, according to the report.

“We are grateful for the funding from the Walmart State Giving Program which allows us to leverage hunger relief support to our local Ozarks communities,” said Bart Brown, CEO at Ozarks Food Harvest.

“There’s a growing population of clients who are not eligible for government assistance such as WIC or the National School Lunch Program. This ‘gap’ truly relies on our member pantries and feeding sites to help feed their families,” Brown said. “The current child food insecurity rate is sobering. More than a quarter of our children — five percent higher than the national rate — now face hunger, or do not know where their next meal is coming from.”

Ozarks Food Harvest is the Feeding America food bank for southwest Missouri, serving more than 300 hunger relief organizations across 28 Ozarks counties in addition to long-term relief sites in Joplin. The Food Bank reaches 20,000 individuals weekly and distributes one million pounds of food monthly. OFH was named the 2011 Small Business of the Year by the Springfield Area Chamber of Commerce. Learn more at ozarksfoodharvest.org and at facebook.com/ozarksfoodharvest.






CFO Affiliates to Support Pantries in 2nd Million Dollar Hunger Challenge

Thursday, March 24th, 2011

The Community Foundation of the Ozarks is again teaming up with Ozarks Food Harvest and the Walmart State Giving Program to tackle the chronic hunger problems that affect our region.

The 2nd Annual Ozarks Million Dollar Hunger Challenge kicked off at a news conference at Ozarks Food Harvest today. The Walmart Foundation State Giving Program pledged a $125,000 grant toward a 1:1 match with regional food pantries served by Ozarks Food Harvest.

The participating food pantries were selected in 27 communities that have CFO affiliate foundations so that those foundations could offer fundraising support, community grantmaking awards or other types of assistance to partner with their local food banks.

“This is a great way to address hunger across one-third of the state of Missouri using a great trio of partners,” OFH President and CEO Bart Brown said.

He also discussed a new analysis of local “food insecurity” levels that support anecdotal information and a 2010 Hunger Study. The analysis shows that many people facing “food insecurity” have income and/or resources that make them ineligible for assistance programs. Many of them are people who have lost jobs, but still have homes or cars that count as assets.

“More and more clients who come to food pantries are the unemployed middle class who need assistance,” Brown said. “Technically, they’re not poor, but they don’t have any money.”

Through Ozarks Food Harvest’s buying program, the $250,000 in potential funds from the challenge grant and matching funds will leverage about $1 million worth, or 2.5 million pounds, of food for the participating pantries, food banks and mobile food banks.

The first Million Dollar Hunger Challenge was completed last year when 19 CFO affiliates raised $105,000, which was matched with $100,000 from the Walmart State Foundation.

CFO President Brian Fogle said this represents another example where charitable dollars are filling the gaps created by decreased public funding at all levels. He said this model works well because it directly serves residents in the communities where the money will be raised.

“That is philanthropy at its best,” Fogle said.

Becky Wood, Walmart’s Senior Foundation Manager from Bentonville, Ark., said the company’s State Giving Councils are comprised of local associates who determine the best use of foundation resources for  their states.

“It’s great to be a partner with you in Springfield,” she said.