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UnitedHealthCare offers funding opportunity for organizations dedicated to the health and wellness of our community

September 29, 2016 by Meredith Handakas Filed Under: Worth Reading

UnitedHealthcare will award $10,000 to a Richmond-area small business with a promising idea for improving community health and wellness.
The health insurance company is partnering with two area business organizations, BizWorks and RVA Works, in selecting the winning project.
Businesses in Richmond with two to 100 employees are eligible to submit project ideas. Submissions using an online application are being accepted through Sept. 30, at http://www.bit.do/ccarichmond. Projects must benefit a local nonprofit organization.
Judges, including government officials and business leaders, will evaluate the submissions, selecting the top five. The selection criteria include potential community impact, creativity/uniqueness and feasibility.
The top five applicants — and representatives from nonprofits benefiting from their proposals — will be invited a pitch and networking event in October.
A panel of government officials, business leaders and health-care experts will pick the UnitedHealthcare Community Care Award winner.
Contest Rules are available at http://www.bit.do/ccarichmond.

Chesterfield Center for the Arts – coming soon!

February 29, 2016 by Meredith Handakas Filed Under: Our Clients

Posted: Thursday, February 25, 2016 10:30 pm
By MARKUS SCHMIDT Richmond Times-Dispatch
The groundbreaking for the planned Chesterfield Center for the Arts is set for late spring, and the $8.1 million, 350-seat theater is still expected to open in 2017 at Chester Village Green.
“It’s exciting, it’s been a long time coming. Some folks are saying, ‘We’ll believe it when we see it,’ and that’s why we are anxious to get construction started,” said Hugh Cline, chairman of the Chesterfield Center for the Arts Foundation board of directors.
In December, the Chesterfield County Board of Supervisors gave final approval to funding the theater, authorizing the Economic Development Authority to raise $6.9 million in bonds on behalf of the county.
The Chesterfield Center for the Arts Foundation, a nonprofit partnering with the county in the project, has raised nearly $1.5 million in funding so far — and the donations keep coming in, Cline said.
“We raised the money to meet the community’s portion for construction, but we are still raising more money,” he said. “If somebody stepped up to write another check, we’d take it.”
While the design phase has not concluded, Cline said that the facility has a 20,000-square-foot floor plan. The main theater has an orchestra pit and comes with state-of-the-art sound and light equipment.
The building will also have classrooms and a 75-seat multipurpose room at just under 2,000 square feet with a video screen that will be rented for businesses, conferences or weddings. Other amenities include a large patio, a kitchen for caterers and concessions and an art gallery, most likely to be installed in the lobby area.
“It’ll be a pretty impressive structure; it will be 50 feet tall once the steel goes up,” Cline said.
A now-defunct local theater group first proposed the arts center in the 1980s, and voters in Chesterfield first agreed to fund the facility in a bond referendum in 2004. But the project was shelved when fundraising efforts stalled during the 2008-09 recession.
“The Economic Development Authority is involved as a partner to assist in the financing mechanism, (because) the board’s authority to issue those bonds have expired,” said Chesterfield County Budget Director Allan Carmody.
But because the board is still supportive of the project, the development authority will be issuing bonds on behalf of the county, Carmody said. “There is a series of agreements between the county, the EDA and the foundation that are permissible under the code,” he said.
After the theater opens next year, the Chesterfield Center for the Arts Foundation assumes day-to-day operational responsibility.
“There is not a county contribution to those operations, but there is some obligation on long-term building system replacement costs,” Carmody said. “But from staffing to cleaning and utility bills, all that is a responsibility of the foundation. They hope that the revenues will offset the cost of that structure.”
Cline said that the foundation plans to open the theater daily for events and performances. A full-time staff of three to four employees will oversee daily operations, including a budget director who will be hired next spring. Volunteers and part-time staff will help.
Following a relaunch of the fundraising campaign, the foundation asked Virginia Non-Profit Associates LLC to identify the kind of programs to put on in Chesterfield. The group surveyed 18 local organizations, from the Virginia Repertory Theatre to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.
The center is envisioned as a community performing arts center with primarily regional programming.
“We would be similar to what the Glen Allen Cultural Center or Swift Creek Mill Theater (in Colonial Heights) do, but we don’t really see a competition there. In fact, we might collaborate,” Cline said, adding that the foundation wants the venue to be a model for other localities.
“As the largest public-private endeavor Chesterfield has done, the Center for the Arts will have a huge impact on the area,” Cline said.

Legal Aid Justice Center’s Donors to Court Project

February 22, 2016 by Meredith Handakas Filed Under: Our Clients

“Thank You for your work at Legal Aid Justice Center (LAJC). You save many.” The words of Judge Bryant to Tanishka Cruz, Legal Aid Justice Center’s Immigrant Advocacy attorney, rang true for Bessy, Yanci and Karla who are undocumented immigrant children at risk of deportation. Yesterday, Legal Aid Justice Center launched the Donors To Court Project, a day where our supporters can eat lunch with our clients, serve a moral support to the families in court, hear their stories, and debrief the experience.

Over a very emotionally filled intimate and powerful lunch, Yanci spoke candidly about the aggressive harassment of a young gang member in the community who stalked her every day and threatened to kill her if she would not join a gang and be his girlfriend. Bessy and Karla told the story of being abandoned by their mother in Honduras, mourning the loss of their grandparents, and the fear of rape, robbery or death as the reasons they escaped to the states to live with their father.

Immediately following lunch we walked over to the court which was overflowing with children and families with a look of pure desperation and the fear of deportation on their faces. It was quite evident the difference having an attorney meant for our clients. The girls felt secure and happy going into their hearings, as compared to the youth who appeared before the judge unrepresented. They were all giggles and smiles on the ride home illustrating what an uplifting event this was for them too. Yanci shared with our team that she has always dreamed of becoming an attorney when she grows up, but now actually believes that it’s a possibility!

The resilience of these young women was truly inspiring. Our supporters were able to put a face to the stories and understand the devastating reality of many undocumented immigrants, especially children, in our country. Thank you for investing in the wellbeing of families and restoring hope and possibility in so many lives.

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