Play the Lottery, Help a Veteran. Yes, It’s That Easy

Buying scratch-off lottery tickets might not be the best use of a person’s cash, but since there’s little chance that everyone is going to cease playing their lucky numbers, many states are smartly dedicating a portion of money earned from lottery proceeds to vital programs.
In Colorado, for example, the state lottery funds bike and hiking trail maintenance, parks and recreation construction and maintenance, wilderness education for kids and more. New Jersey’s lottery benefits a variety of schools and education programs. And Missouri legislators recently proposed that lottery funds be dedicated to helping veterans.
Missouri State Representative Sheila Solon decided to sponsor the amendment when she learned that the state’s Veterans Commission was operating at a loss. “The lottery ticket would be one way that we could cover shortfalls for our veterans homes, to help with the upkeep of our veterans’ cemeteries, and also to restore full funding for the outreach programs which are so important for our veterans,” Solon told Linda Ong of Ozarks First.
The amendment proposed that those playing the game of risk be given the option to buy a special veterans ticket, which would generate funds for the Veterans Commission Capital Improvement Fund. Currently, lottery funds benefit education in the state.
Ong spoke with one local veteran, John Dismer, who disagreed with the idea. “It’s going to take away from education, because there’s only so many dollars in the lottery system, so you’re going to take some of it away. Now if the education system was real fat and everything, that might be alright. But I don’t think it is.”
In a close vote, many Missouri voters agreed with him — on August 6, 55 percent of voters rejected the amendment.
But this probably isn’t the last we’ll hear of this funding idea.  After all, since 2006, a veterans lottery ticket in Illinois has generated $11,000,000 for that state’s former service members.
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When This Dog Lover Realized There Weren’t Enough Search-and-Rescuers, She Set Out to Train More

When Wilma Melville retired from her career as a gym teacher in New Jersey, she never imagined that her second career was about to take off.
Melville used her newfound free time to pursue her dream of owning a highly-trained dog, and enrolled in FEMA’s Advanced Search Dog certification program, a process that can take three to five years and can cost up to $15,000. Soon after receiving her certification, Melville was asked to assist with finding victims in the rubble following the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City in 1995.
“This disaster made it clear that there were too few certified search dog-handler teams,” Melville writes on the website of the Search Dog Foundation (SDF), the California-based nonprofit she started after that experience. “Out of this heartbreaking experience came a determination to find a better way to create highly skilled canine search teams.”
When Melville began her efforts, there were only 15 dog-and-handler pairs with advanced training across the country. Today, there are more than 250, according to David Karas of the Christian Science Monitor. Of those, SDF has trained 150 teams, providing their services for no cost to any community that needs them.
But search-and-rescue missions aren’t the Search Dog Foundation’s only mission. Melville’s organization exclusively trains dogs adopted from shelters — transforming rescued pets into rescuers. An effective team requires “the right dog, matched with the right handler, and professional training for both,” Melville told Karas.
“I never expected to found and lead an agency that would make a significant difference nationally in how dogs are selected, plus how handlers and dogs are trained for this specific work,” she said. After she knew she “could make a giant sized contribution,” she said, “I never looked back.”
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A Garden Grows in Camden

In the midst of abandoned lots in one of America’s most dangerous cities grows a beautiful oasis of fruits and vegetables.
The produce garden represents not only a food source for the residents of Camden, New Jersey (which is known for its high crime rate and drug use), but also a sign of renewal and recovery for the area’s children and families.
The year 2012 saw Camden named the most dangerous city in America, and times only got worse in 2012 when Camden lost its last central supermarket. Now, all that is left for food shopping is a grocery store that’s too far away for the city’s poor, car-less population and packaged food that can be purchased at the city’s bodegas. With access to fresh, healthy food so limited or nonexistent, it is no surprise that obesity is common.
However, not all is lost thanks to the introduction of community gardens. Across the city, they’re sprouting up in the abandoned lots sponsored by churches, neighborhood organizations, and private growers. The University of Pennsylvania’s Center for Public Health Initiatives reported in 2010 that Camden’s gardens were the fastest growing in the country. The 130 gardens in the city produced  $2.3 million worth of food and fed 15 percent of the population.
Who is responsible for this change? The answer can be traced back to one man: Mike Devlin. Devlin came to Camden in the late 1970s and has since been trying to develop agriculture in the area. Under his guidance, the Camden City Garden Club was created in 1985.  The organization provides support for the area by offering educational classes, materials, structural help, and food distribution. Under the club are a number of other organizations such as the Camden Children’s Garden, Camden Grows, the Food Security Council, and the Fresh Mobile Market.
Camden has been wrestling with violence and economic troubles since the late 1970s. Although those issues are still prevalent in the area, the community gardens provide an alternative life.  Many students who work at the Camden Children’s Garden go on to attend college. While the gardens may not solve all of Camden’s problems, it provides a stepping stone for residents and a hope that change is possible.
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When it Comes to the Planet, Children (Not the Government) Really Are the Future

Warmer temperatures. Rising sea levels. Toxic air. Overflowing landfills. The world our children will inherit has taken quite a beating.
So with lawmakers unable to agree on plans to cut carbon, children are taking matters into their own hands.
In an inspiring (and ridiculously adorable) video from Good Will Students for Peace, students from Lincoln Avenue School in Orange, New Jersey aren’t just learning the basics of reducing, reusing and recycling.
With this semester’s theme, “My Home is the Planet Earth, Our Role as Environmentally Aware Citizens,” students are taking action and becoming leaders in their local community. Students upcycle paper, plastic bottles, cans and cardboard rolls, plus each classroom also has their own perennial garden.
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They also really get their hands dirty with community clean-ups. In the video, one student poignantly points out after one such project, “To the people who didn’t participate in this activity…you should have, ’cause it was actually a fun experience.”
She adds, “This is your community — not just mine. We all live here and other people would like to live here but can’t because of the way we treat our community.” (Don’t you just want to give her a hug?)
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It’s not just the kids in New Jersey who are taking charge in saving the planet. It’s happening all over the country. As Al-Jazeera America reported last month, children as young as 13 are tying to sue the U.S. government for violating their constitutional rights for failing to develop a climate change recovery plan.
The suit — dubbed Kids vs. Global Warming — is backed by more than 30 climate scientists and legal scholars. The complaint reads, “The welfare of youth is directly affected by the failure of government to confront human-made climate change, and unless the government acts immediately to rapidly reduce carbon emissions … youth will face irrevocable harm: the collapse of natural resource systems and a largely uninhabitable nation.”
Looks like children can teach us a thing or two.

This Supportive Startup Hires Veterans to Help Organizations Go Digital

To say that the government of Englewood, New Jersey had a paper problem was an understatement. Stacks of forms were backed up in the city’s construction office — creating a headache for people trying to obtain building permits. And that wasn’t the only problem that the department had. Since the office was only open during regular business hours, it was difficult for permit-seekers with full-time jobs to come in to fill out forms and check on how the permit process was progressing.
City workers weren’t in denial about the inefficiency of their office, either. Englewood city manager Tim Dacey told Miles Ma of NewJersey.com that obtaining a construction permit was “a very time-consuming, paper-oriented process.”
So they contacted Bright Star, a startup that specializes in helping businesses transition from paper-based transactions to digital ones. But Bright Star isn’t just any startup. It’s a nonprofit that hires veterans to do the digitization work. Dorothy Nicholson founded Bright Star in 2008 after seeing her veteran family members and friends struggle with transitioning to civilian life. Nicholson told Ma, “There really was no leeway to enable them to slowly get back to the practice of working with other people.”
She wants Bright Star to provide that support and understanding for veterans through such programs as job sharing. That way, if a veteran can’t hold a full-time job, he or she can work a part-time one. Nicholson also allows employees to miss work for the physical therapy, counseling, or medical appointments — all things that many returning veterans need to attend. Additionally, Bright Star has a job sampling program through which employees can give different jobs a try until they find the right fit.
Bright Star has updated Englewood’s construction office, and now each building inspector in the city has an iPad to use to efficiently complete forms. Beginning on May 13, digital permitting will be available for all Englewood residents. And as for the veterans that Bright Star employs, “Yeah, there’s a bottom line that you’ve got to be aware of,” Nicholson told Ma, “but at the same time the humanity of helping soldiers needs to be a priority.”
It sounds like Nicholson is a woman with her priorities straight.
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The Air Up There: New Jersey Helps Raise Shore Homes After Sandy

New Jersey is giving some of its residents a lift—about five or six feet into the air.
The state’s Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) announced it would provide up to $30,000 per resident to elevate 26 homes, which were some of the hardest hit by Hurricane Sandy two years ago.
Sandy, which rocked the Jersey shore on Oct. 29, 2012, devastated 346,000 homes in New Jersey, leaving behind an estimated $37 billion in damage.
The recipients, who live in the Atlantic County coastal town of Brigantine, are the first of 630 primary homeowners expected to be announced over the next month, according to Philly.com. The Hazard Mitigation Grant Program, which will dole out $100 million in grants through the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), will aid residents with raising homes to meet new federal flood elevation requirements, prevent future flood damage and secure the cost of insurance rates.
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The state is providing funding to the nine counties hit the hardest by Sandy, which include Atlantic, Ocean, Union, Bergen, Cape May, Essex, Hudson, Monmouth and Middlesex, N.J.com reports. State officials are still reviewing the more than 3,000 applications they received through last September.
“Life in the air is fine,” 58-year-old Lee Popick, whose home was raised two months ago, told philly.com. “It’s kind of nice up here. You get a nice view. More wind.”
But for some, specifically older residents, higher homes poses problems. Which is why local companies like Mobility 123, a local independent living solutions company, are pitching in. Mobility 123’s Ryan Penn  told philly.com his company has already installed 15 wheelchair lifts, around $15,000 each, as well as 50 stair lifts in the wake of the program. Penn expects that number to double or triple this year.
But uprooting a home is not as simple as Pixar’s Up tells us. Boosting a house can cost an upward of $25,000 with prep and post-lift costs notching an additional $10,000 to $20,000. But Scott Brubaker, the DEP’s elevation grant manager, said there is no damage or income criteria for the federal funding, which means the program is fair game for those with Sandy wreckage. However, those who received some of the $600 million from the Reconstruction, Rehabilitation, Elevation, and Mitigation (RREM) program cannot receive the Hazard Mitigation grant, so not all residents are jumping on board.
The DEP hopes to help around 2,700 primary homes across the nine counties, coinciding with the state’s buyout program of homes in damaged areas as well as the RREM program.
For now, the state continues to work through  grant applications for the next round of recipients, raising the bar—and roofs—on safety and damage prevention.

Here’s a Smart Solution That Stops Immigrants From Being Robbery Victims

The recession and subsequent nosedive of the stock market during the late 2000s probably had you wishing that you had stashed all your money under the mattress instead of in mutual funds and stocks. But carrying your cash around or hiding it in your home isn’t safe, as immigrants who often lack access to traditional banking services know all to well.
Adrian Mendez of the Trenton, New Jersey Police Department told Carlos Avila of The Trentonian that keeping money at home or in a pocket turns immigrants into “walking ATMs,” frequent victims of robbery and violence. On March 30, Sergeant Mendez presented the Trenton police department’s plan to help keep non-U.S. citizens safe from robbery at a community meeting. One of the department’s key plans? Asking local banks (serving areas where many immigrants live) to open savings accounts for people — even if they can’t document their immigration status.
So far, TD Bank and Santander Bank have agreed: Anyone with either a Social Security Number or an Individual Tax Identification Number (which is issued by the IRS) to open an account. Immigrants who work but do not have legal status in the United States often receive an ITIN.
Alba Lopez, who leads a women’s group at the church where Mendez spoke said, “I think this is a very helpful gesture by the TPD [Trenton Police Department], because many of our congregants fear the police and don’t report crimes. This goes a long way to helping build good relationships between our community and the police.”
Mendez added that the police department is “interested in educating the Hispanic community about their rights and responsibilities.”
While Congress continues to debate federal immigration reform, this local connection between immigrants and financial institutions is just the kind of grassroots immigration advocacy that we like to see.
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Meet the Teenager Whose Efforts Keep Hundreds of People Warm

Instead of focusing on things like prom and where to go to college, MaryRose Purdue, a high-school senior in Hopatcong, New Jersey, relentlessly serves others.
Purdue has collected over 200 coats and donated them to Project Self-Sufficiency, a nationwide non-profit that serves the needy in her New Jersey area. Its mission is to help low-income people achieve stability through a variety of programs, including parenting classes, G.E.D. preparation, job-seeking help, and more.“She saw a need and decided to do something about it,” her mother, Barbara Purdue, told Lisa Pachnos, the publicist for Project Self-Sufficiency. “She knew that they would be given to people who really needed them.”
MaryRose set up donation boxes at her high school, and her principal, Noreen Lazariuk, helped her spread the word about the coat drive. “I believe that one of the most valuable skills we can give to our students is the awareness of their place in a larger community and the fulfillment they will experience when giving to those in need,” Lazariuk said.
MaryRose gathers coats for the poor for the winter, but she’s also busy helping others every other season as well. She volunteers for the Special Olympics as a “hugger,” greeting the finishers at track and field events, and she speaks out about juvenile arthritis, a condition from which she suffers. Last year, she was chosen to represent the cause in meetings with senators and representatives in Washington D.C., advocating for increased funds for research and lower medication prices. MaryRose plans to study nursing in college, and she wants to specialize in pediatric rheumatology to help others suffering from juvenile arthritis.
Regardless of where she decides to go to school, we’re sure that MaryRose will continue to make a difference in her community.
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Want to Fight Urban Blight? Wield Art as a Weapon

I’m barreling down Interstate 280 toward Newark, N.J.  Navigating an eight-lane highway, I give exactly .001 seconds of attention to the sign I’m passing beneath: Exit 10 The Oranges.
Slowly, I turn my head to the right. Using my bionic vision, I see through blocks of urban blight, vacant buildings, chain-link-fenced lots, and discover a mural, full of color and motion, at the end of Stetson Street. I see a creative, innovative neighborhood taking root in an almost desolate triangle of Orange and West Orange. This is the Valley Arts District, affectionately known as “Hat City.”
Hat City is easy to miss. A highway crosses one corner, and a major commuter railroad crosses the other. I’m an avid practitioner of and advocate for the arts, but I’m also a skeptic; a mural does not a creative place make. But something tells me to circle back and check things out. It’s not an illusion. The vibrant revival of a once-ailing neighborhood — powered by art — is real.
One hundred years ago, these streets were crammed with industry. As the hat-making capital of the world, the neighborhood attracted thousands of immigrants looking for jobs. Just to the east, Newark hummed with factories. The manufacturing boom could be felt far and wide.
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And then the boom went bust. Hats went out of fashion, heads went bare, and 34 hat factories whittled down to zero.
By the late ’60s, I-280 dug a wide trench through the middle of Orange, and effects of the Newark race riots rippled west. The neighborhood emptied out. Families who stayed behind in the shadows of empty warehouses fought for the few remaining jobs — and a way out of harsh living conditions.
Enter Patrick Morrissy.  In the early 1970s, Morrissy was a bearded college grad from Detroit who enlisted in the war on poverty. An idealist and an activist, he found his way to Orange with a group of community organizers, eager to take on a pressing urban issue: tenant rights. His mission — then, as now — included giving local residents “a sense of belonging, a sense of pride.”
Morrissy put down roots, and helped others to do the same. He worked to stabilize the neighborhood by acquiring, renovating and selling affordable one- and two-bedroom homes. At that time, 1 in 4 properties in Orange were identified as vacant or deteriorated — a huge number. In 1986, he started HANDS, Inc., a real estate development nonprofit designed to fulfill Morrissy’s mission, one space at a time.
HANDS, Inc., made an impact on the area by renovating hundreds of properties and making them available to homeowners. But progress moved slowly. “Real estate takes a long time to make happen,” says Morrissy, 67, whose beard is now trim and white. “There wasn’t enough activity in the neighborhood.”
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In 2004, HANDS, Inc., reviewed its strategy for the area with community leaders. “We made a list of all the goals you might imagine for a place,” says Morrissy. They included beautification, attracting business, creating career opportunities, engaging residents. “And it hit us:  The arts could be a driver for all of these goals.”
The idea started as a hunch. The community would leverage its greatest resource —vacant space — and open it up in daring and innovative ways. “But not so that we could sit in a gallery and sip chardonnay,” says Morrissy.  “We wanted to draw talent and culture up from the community and give it expression.”
How do you encourage the residents of a post-industrial, impoverished neighborhood to embrace their own creativity? That’s the 10 million dollar question.
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Catherine Lazen, an educator and activist, took up the gauntlet. As a long-time resident of a neighboring community, Lazen connected to this vision, and committed herself to it. She wanted to get to the bottom of one question:  “What role do the arts play in building communities and relationships?” In 2008, Morrissy, Lazen and a group of community organizers co-founded the nonprofit organization Valley Arts to put an answer into motion.
They had their work cut out for them. Encompassing a 15-block area designated by the city of Orange as an impoverished commercial/industrial zone, the Valley Arts District would plant its seeds within an area long known for its vacant and dilapidated hat factories. As a nonprofit organization working alongside HANDS, the goal of Valley Arts was to act as a catalyst for artistic growth and creative neighborhood development. The challenge:  Valley Arts wanted to create an area that not only attracted arts organizations to take root there and spur economic growth, it also intended on drawing from the creative energy of the residents who had lived in Hat City for years.
“There is more here than just empty hat factories,” says Lazen. “There is a deeply rooted community that has been here for generations.” Much of that community, however, lacked a common, unfenced space. “They had no place to make a connection, no place to say ‘I know you.’ That’s exactly what the arts can provide.”
Lazen, 45, knew that the arts could serve as a powerful starting point for conversations about change and growth.  And it began with that mural at the end of Stetson Street.
For months, she walked the neighborhood trying to gather input on what story the mural should tell. “No one opened the door,” she says. Lazen gained their trust only after chatting with a young girl. “She ran up to her mom and said, ‘She just wants to make a mural.’ That was all I needed to get the dialogue started.”
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Nine years and thousands of conversations later, Hat City is humming — and dancing and singing — once again. As trust between residents and community activists grew, so did the output of ideas, and access to space. Artists, both from Hat City as well as from neighboring communities, began to put down roots, just as Pat Morrissy had done years before. Affordable studio and work/live spaces opened up, even attracting artists from Manhattan (less than 20 miles away). The original mural on Stetson Street gave way to more murals, and galleries, and performances venues, and spaces where there is no distinction between residents and those who create art.
Accessible space has had a liberating effect on the area. And even though you won’t find a latte shop on every corner, you will find something much more stimulating: locally produced art integrated into the fabric of a raw, urban landscape.
You will find Luna Stage, a 99-seat professional theater; the Ironworks Gallery, home to ORNG Ink, a studio for local teens; Hat City Kitchen, a three-star restaurant and haven for local musicians; and Arts Unbound, a gallery and studio (founded by Lazen herself) dedicated to creating avenues of expression and empowerment for people with developmental disabilities.  You’ll also find the greenhouse of Garden State Urban Farms, teeming with hydroponic plants.
The organizations that took the Hat City leap of faith see their missions as more than just presenting talent. Luna Stage, who made the move to Hat City from nearby Montclair, jumped at the chance to “become part of something larger,” according to Cheryl Katz, Luna’s artistic director. She sees it as a celebration of community.  “I want our neighbors to feel like Luna is their theater. That our doors are open to them and that we welcome their ideas and their contributions and their participation.”
There is little more precious to an arts organization than space, and access to it. The key to leveraging vacant space in Hat City has been to make it affordable — that is how growth is made both possible and sustainable. “The growing energy and pride of the neighborhood is palpable. It’s tangible. It’s really an exciting place to be right now,” adds Katz.
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The hunch is paying off. That’s why HANDS, Inc., has pledged to create 100 permanently affordable artist live/work spaces.  They’ve already occupied 46 spaces and control the real estate for the remaining 54. This commitment to artists goes beyond their need for a place to work; they are being valued in their own right.
“Artists are bringing more than their art, they’re bringing their voices,” says Richard Bryant, Valley Arts District’s executive director. “They’re getting back to the table as leaders in their community.”
But the business model for selling art in a struggling region is a tricky one. Can neighbors afford to buy the paintings hanging on gallery walls? The challenge ahead is to continue to invest in local families, even with pressure for commercial success. “It’s a delicate balance between fostering a neighborhood conversation and bringing outsiders in,” says Lazen.
It remains to be seen whether or not the more affluent communities of South Orange, Maplewood and Livingston to the south and west appreciate Hat City for what it is — an organic, eclectic mix of local artists — and will support the neighborhood in a sustaining way.  Even with the help of HANDS, Inc., and Valley Arts, the neighborhood depends on the faith of individuals to take those risks:  to create art, to make their voices heard or to get off the highway and take a closer look.
“We cannot have an isolated arts district,” cautions Morrissy. True to his original vision, he adds, “This is our goal for all of Orange: to become the urban village of the 21st century. A just and beautiful city.”
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This Paper Can Heal Veterans

Artists Drew Matott and Drew Cameron started The Combat Paper Project in 2007 as a way to help veterans returning from war process their experiences by turning their old uniforms into meaningful art. Combat Paper volunteers with veterans to show them how to cut up their uniforms, beat them to a pulp, and turn them into beautiful paper which they then cover with stories and images.
The two Drews met in 2004 when Cameron returned from a deployment to Iraq and took one of Matott’s papermaking workshops in Burlington, Vt. Cameron continued his involvement in papermaking, and eventually hit upon the idea of making paper out of his old uniform. The experience was so powerful for him that he decided to offer it to others. Matott and Cameron began traveling the country, offering papermaking workshops for soldiers. Since then, Combat Paper has started paper mills in San Francisco, Nevada, New York and New Jersey.
In November, Combat Paper NJ received a $125,000 grant from the Wounded Warrior Project and a $135,000 grant from Impact 100 Garden State. Combat Paper NJ will use the money to expand its classes and develop mobile paper-making facilities to reach more veterans throughout the state. David Keefe, an Iraq War veteran and the director of Combat Paper NJ told Ralph J. Bellantoni of the Courier News, “We deconstruct, reclaim and communicate. It’s the perfect marriage of concept and medium. It transforms the material, the artist and the viewer.”
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