Discussion of WorldLegacy Leadership, Teen and other projects in the community.
ByLori
#11 The NC30 leadership team is an extraordinary group of people. For their Leadership project they concentrated on the domain of incarcerated families and did a project in a Low Security Correctional Institution in North Carolina.

Without using any of their own money and in a short period of time, they completely renovated the visiting area, created a children's room and a garden.
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By ruby
#108 NC 76 Leadership And Volunteers Joined To Renovate an Assisted Living Facility in Chapel Hill

On Monday August 29, 2005 there was a Ribbon Cutting Ceremony at the Carrboro Senior Living Center to honor the success of a weekend project. This project was completed solely by the enduring work of volunteers and members of WorldLegacy’s NC76 Leadership Program. The weekend project focused on renovating 10 rooms in the Assisted Living facility to improve the quality of life for current residents and to welcome additional residents into the facility.   The work had to be completed in 48 hours and the team could not use any of their money. They were empowered to enroll the community to support the facility.
     
The team was driven by a vision of providing the residents of the Carrboro Senior Living Center with the comforts of living in a clean, loving and home-like environment. They renovated an entire wing of the facility in a very short amount of time. With the help of local volunteers, 10 rooms of the facility were completely refurbished and updated with new carpet, paint, air conditioning units and artwork. The team enrolled businesses in donating supplies necessary in making the environment warm and welcoming. Many Assisted Living facilities are on a fixed-income budget leaving little room for building improvements. The residents can often feel segregated from the community due to age-related changes and specific disabilities. The community volunteers and NC 76 created a safe and comfortable environment which honors and respects the needs of those who now call this facility their home.
Last edited by ruby on Fri Oct 03, 2008 1:11 am, edited 1 time in total.
By dgarside
#114 I would like to share what we (NC76) created in the domain of the elderly during our service project. The project involved renovating one wing of an assisted living center. We had no idea how it was going to happen or look but if there is one thing that NC76 learned through our experiences during LP, it was that it is better to leap towards the goal than to plan every move and contingency.
The project spanned several states - ten brand new state-of-the-art air conditioners, donated from Wisconsin, a roll of new carpet from Georgia, and paint from North Carolina. In addition, consultant construction services, professional painters, food donation, and volunteer time were all essential to the success of the project.
Not only did we prevail in what many of us saw as a very daunting and overwhelming project during the first few hours of work, we created a space of love and respect from squalor and depression for our senior citizens. The gratitude, disbelief, and interest in what we were doing from the residents were priceless. Not only will our elders have a home when there is nowhere else to go, they are also able to personalize their rooms, including keeping their beloved pets. It is not the material touches so much as the personal touches that are important in life.
The name of the game was team, enrollment, and fun!

"WorldLegacy" Raleigh Morrisville
Love,
Diana
By Charlene
#129

We (NC77) just completed an AMAZING community service project in the domain of ANIMALS. We chose to be in service to Happy Hills Animal Shelter in Staley, NC. Happy Hills is a non-profit shelter that had a fire a couple of years ago. The fire destroyed most of their facility. They have been struggling to rebuild ever since and have been stuck in survival mode. They have been working around the clock at times to provide the animals with care with only a fraction of their workspace and a port-a-jon. The staff of Happy Hills really believes that animals matter, and they ensure that each animal they adopt out will have the greatest experience possible in their new home. They rescue animals and provide them with shelter, food, vet care, and lots of love until they are adopted. Ours was a four part project. First, we declared that we would raise $10,000 for Happy Hills. Next, we declared that we would support Happy Hills by enrolling a construction company to donate some skilled labor to help the staff tackle some of their renovation projects. We also did some research and put together a fundraising plan that Happy Hills can use in coming years as they develop the funds necessary to build a new office space. Finally, we held a large adoption fair and fundraising benefit event for Happy Hills at Barber Park in Greensboro, NC! We had live music, food and games galore! Individuals and local businesses donated materials, entertainment, and prizes for the event. Volunteers from the community showed up and donated their time and energy! The director of Happy Hills was just glowing during the event! It felt incredible to acknowledge a group of highly committed people who usually get very little recognition for the amazing job that they do. We have raised just over 9.000 dollars for Happy Hills and our team is still committed to raising that last 1,000 in days to come!!! We have made an ENORMOUS and lasting difference for the Happy Hills staff and the animals at that shelter. Why? How? Because we said so! All it took was intention and leadership!!! - Charlene (NC 77) :

read more: http://www.worldlegacyextremegivers.com
BySue NC84
#160 In July of 2006, the NC84 Legacy Leadership team led the transformation of the courtyard and meeting room of Camelia Gardens Assisted Living Facility. In the courtyard, many trees, bushes and flowers were planted, a birdbath installed, new walkways created, and outdoor seating and tables with umbrellas were added. The result was a shaded, beautiful environment where Camelia Gardens residents could sit and relax or visit with others. The meeting room was furnished with comfortable armchairs, tables, lamps, and bookshelves filled with books and games. In addition, a valence was hung over the window and a quilt hung on the wall for decoration. The quilt was also created by our leadership group--it is a "vision quilt" made up of squares of fabric, each square having a vision for the world written on it by local community members.

The proud NC84 leaders are on the verge of completing the Leadership Program at WorldLegacy. We have received coaching to translate our vision for life, community and world into concrete action and to act with a commitment to excellence that achieves extraordinary results. The vision of this group for the Camelia Gardens facility is to create spaces, both inside and outside the center, to allow connections to be made across generations. The courtyard is to become an oasis full of beautiful plant life and comfortable seating where generations of residents and guests can step out, sit, and share their experiences and thoughts. The meeting room is to become a comfortable reading and conversational area where the residents can sit, read, play games or work puzzles with visitors. The residents and guests can connect in these venues and develop stronger relationships across generations.

An additional component of the project is to arrange to have a local scout troop or youth group visit the facility on a regular basis, to create more opportunities for communicating and forming friendships across generations.

To carry out the project, our team could not use any money of our own, completed the project in one weekend, and enrolled other members of the community to participate in the project. Thus, while this project was inspired and led by the leadership team, the vision was realized through extensive community involvement.

Authored by Carolyn, posted by Sue
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By ruby
#164 Refurbished Community Room Serves West End Teens
Local residents join effort to spruce up an important resource for the community

Thursday, January 22, 2004

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Hard work by volunteers from as far away as Florida brought a new sparkle to the inside of one of Duke's partner community centers this past weekend. In two and half days, more than 50 people stripped away the boring interior of a former law office that is now the Juanita McNeil-Joseph Alston Community Center and replaced it with bright turquoise and green paint and striped window shades reminiscent of a tropical scene.

About 75 people -- black, white, young and old -- attended the Sunday dedication of the refurbished center on Kent Street.

"It's one of the greatest feelings we've had in a long time. It almost produces tears," said Juanita McNeil, who used to bring neighborhood children into her home before there was a facility. "Thank you for all the work you put in. I didn't think it could be done."

Thirty-two participants in a leadership training seminar offered by WorldLegacy in Morrisville chose to spearhead the renovation of the center's community room as their required community service project. They worked alongside residents and teens who are served by the center, which is located in Durham's West End and is a part of the Duke-Durham Neighborhood Partnership.

The goal of the Neighborhood Partnership is to improve the quality of life in the 12 neighborhoods near campus and to boost student achievement in the seven public schools that serve those neighborhoods. The nonprofit West End Community Center purchased the center in 2000 with $195,000 from the university. Duke also provides annual operating support with help from The Duke Endowment.

Percy Covington, a member of the Legacy team who is a resident of Southwest Central Durham, convinced his team to "adopt" the center. Covington's aunt, Mary Davis, is the director of the teen center. "I watched the center and always told myself it was holding on by grace," said Covington, who works at Measurement Inc. "It's important for any kid to have an environment that is safe and suitable and to have a space to keep them off the streets."

The tan rooms needed a major face-lift, especially the community service room, which serves as an after-school classroom for students and a meeting place for parents and community members.

The Legacy team solicited chairs, tables and bookcases and artwork from Duke's Community Affairs Office, as well as numerous other sources. Duke Dining Services, Guglhupf and Fosters provided free food for the volunteers. A local interior designer donated her services. Triangle Residential Options for Substance Abusers helped with moving services, lights and ovens for the center's kitchen. Mr. Maid, owned by Glenister Franklin, made the rooms and furniture smell fresh.

"I thought it was particularly fitting that this project took place on the weekend of the annual Martin Luther King Jr. celebration," said Diana Bello, one of the Legacy participants. "What we did together as a community exemplified what this wonderful man fought and died for."

For more information, contact: Susan Kauffman | (919) 681-8975 | susan.kauffman@duke.edu
Home>2004>Refurbished Community Room Serves West End Teens

http://dukenews.duke.edu/2004/01/residents_0104.html
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By ruby
#173 SeeSaw Studio, a training center in Durham enabling disadvantaged teens to
develop professional skills in art and design, is awarded a state-of-the art
computer laboratory.


DURHAM - At SeeSaw Studio disadvantaged teens, some referred by the court
system, have the opportunity to turn their lives around by preparing
themselves for careers in the art and design professions. SeeSaw Studio’s
new computer laboratory and state-of-the art design software will be
inaugurated Monday, October 16 at a ribbon cutting ceremony at 6:00 pm at
SeeSaw Studio, 326 W. Geer Street, Durham, NC. Students will display their
portfolios and speak to the public about how SeeSaw Studio training has
turned their lives around.


The $15,000 donation for the computer laboratory was raised over a
three-week period of time by a group of people from across the US enrolled
in leadership trainings at WorldLegacy in Morrisville, NC.

SeeSaw Studio's mission is to teach design, entrepreneurship, and life
skills to inner city youth and providing a safe haven and business and
educational opportunities. SeeSaw Studio holds public workshops and an
apprenticeship programs for more than 300 pre-teen and teenage youth each
year. These workshops address the lack of opportunities for career training
in art and design for low-income youth and the chronically high number of
teen dropouts from Durham schools.

SeeSaw Studio is the only design and entrepreneurship program in North
Carolina that makes available opportunities and training traditionally not
found in public school curricula. The program offers opportunities for young
designers to create and sell their own work and empowers them to dream big
and take personal responsibility for their success. Young designers receive
training and experience in a variety of skills including graphic design, Web
design, silk screen-printing, welding, and illustration, as well as
portfolio preparation, technical writing, and marketing and sales. Students
practice interview skills where they dress in business attire, fill out
applications, solicit references and apply for jobs.

The new computers, printers and design software were donated by a leadership
team from WorldLegacy in Morrisville, NC that chose SeeSaw Studio for
their community service project to promote teen empowerment. WorldLegacy
is a coaching company that provides personal effectiveness and leadership
workshops for people to live extraordinary lives. For more information, go
to www.WorldLegacy.com <http://www.worldlegacy.com/> or call (919)
678-6000.

more http://www.worldlegacyextremegivers.com
Last edited by ruby on Sat Sep 18, 2010 3:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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By ruby
#174 Herald Sun
SeeSaw Studio to open new lab

SeeSaw Studio, an art and design training center for disadvantaged youth, is celebrating the opening of its "state-of-the-art" computer laboratory at a ribbon-cutting ceremony Monday.

The studio offers workshops and apprenticeship programs for low-income youth and court-referred young people to learn a variety of design skills, including silk-screen printing, graphic design, welding, illustration and Web design.

The computer lab is the result of a $15,000 donation raised over a three-week period by a group of people from WorldLegacy in Morrisville.

Alan DeLisle, head of the city's Office of Economic and Workforce Development, is scheduled to attend the event, scheduled for 6 p.m.
Last edited by ruby on Thu Feb 08, 2007 1:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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By ruby
#175 What's NEW! at SeeSaw Studio?
Ribbon Cutting

What: A new computer lab! Thanks to WorldLegacy in Morrisville, NC.

Where: SeeSaw Studio, 326 West Geer Street, Durham, NC 27701.

When: MONDAY, October 16, 2006 at 6:00 p.m.

Who: YOU - SeeSaw Studio youth, board, staff, friends and supporters. What: A ribbon-cutting by Durham city officials, refreshments, studio sale and exhibit of SeeSaw Youth Designers work.

WorldLegacy provides a full curriculum of workshops, seminars and leadership programs to challenge peopleÕs belief systems, to see beyond current paradigms and explore possibilities that make success possible. The Center raised the funds to support this wonderful gift to the youth at SeeSaw Studio.
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By ruby
#178 Planters' fruits of labor not all edible

BY JAMIE SCHUMAN, The Herald-Sun
January 6, 2007 8:38 pm
CHAPEL HILL -- Spence Dickinson started his farm out of concern that family-run farms -- and with them places for children to feel needed, work hard and learn about nature -- were dying.

"We have a world and a country that doesn't really value children's time as a contribution to the needs of the community," said Dickinson, owner of Spence's Farm.
On Saturday, Dickinson and a group of volunteers did their best to offset those concerns.
More than 50 people gathered to celebrate the recent planting of about 150 blueberry bushes and a few rows of blackberry shrubs at the farm.
The berries aren't just meant to be eaten, though many at the open house said they looked forward to tasting the literal fruits of their labor. Instead, they are intended to show area residents, and especially children, where their food comes from and to encourage them to work on similar projects.
A group of about 20 adults from WorldLegacy, a Morrisville-based company that offers leadership and personal-development courses, organized the planting.
A center goal is for students to take lessons they have learned and help the community, co-founder Rob Katz said. One way groups do this is by organizing service projects, which have included beautification at a Ronald McDonald House and a prison.
Katz called the berry project a perfect fit with the center's mission. "It's going to grow both figuratively and literally," he said.
WorldLegacy group, whose members came from the region and even other states, also set up educational signs about farming and the ecosystem near the berry patches.
Its members want to partner with teachers, so children can learn about farming -- and help with the process -- through the display.
The group, along with friends and family members, planted the berries on Dec. 23, a day when many people were finishing their holiday shopping.
"It was about creating instead of consuming," said Melissa Malkin-Weber, a student in WorldLegacy class who, along with other volunteers, wore blue shirts to the celebration.
Malkin-Weber, of Durham, said another goal for the project was to foster community. That goal was, in a way, accomplished on Saturday.
Volunteers and local families listened to a bluegrass band play, watched jugglers toss bats into the sky and ate blueberry crisp.
The bushes will live for about 60 years, so two or three generations will be able to enjoy their fruit. The first harvest will be this summer, Dickinson said.
Dickinson lamented the fact that many family farms were closing because people didn't want to do the work. He intends to ensure the longevity of Spence's Farm through a foundation or other leadership, and said someone who may want to help manage the farm approached him Saturday after learning about the celebration.
Dickinson's farm also hosts farm-themed camps and after-school programs for children. A troublemaker as a child, Dickinson said his farm was a way to empower kids to feel good about themselves.
"On a farm, there's something for everybody," Dickinson said. "Everybody can have a contribution."
Claire Carson, 14, was one of many children who helped plant the berries. Carson, whose mother did WorldLegacy course, said she had done little farming, outside of home gardening, before helping with the project.
She said she was looking forward to returning to Spence's Farm when the berries were ready for harvest.
"It will be nice to come back and say 'I helped create this,' " Carson said.
Last edited by ruby on Thu Feb 08, 2007 1:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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By ruby
#179 Berries aren't just for eating
Farm helps teach kids responsibility
by Meiling Arounnarath

CHAPEL HILL - Blueberry bushes at Spence's Farm are so much more than just blueberry bushes.
They're learning tools for children who visit the farm off N.C. 86 for the after-school program, summer camp or field trips.

Like many activities on Spence's Farm -- feeding the chickens, gathering the eggs, sweeping the wood shop -- the blueberry bushes will help children learn how everyone in a community plays a role in the fruitfulness and harvesting of the blueberries.

More than 150 blueberry and blackberry bushes will be revealed today at 1 p.m. during a ribbon-cutting ceremony at the farm.

WorldLegacy, a personal and leadership development company in Morrisville, put together a team about a month ago to design and lead a project that would involve a community.

"They wanted to create a learning area for everyone, so children can come and learn and reconnect with the land, with nature, with farming," said Rob Katz, director of the center.

"It's not just to have blueberries grow, to pick them and then make blueberry pies," he said. "It's really about creating a place where everyone is involved in growing the blueberries and taking care of them and harvesting them."

The blueberry bushes are a model for Spence Dickinson's entire farm. The children who step onto the property learn at a young age that their chores on the farm are just as important as the adults' jobs, he said.

"Kids [today] aren't being asked to be responsible for their community," Dickinson, 58, explained. "Before, it was more of a community, a team effort, to milk cows. Children were involved with milking cows.

"So where do kids learn that they have a contribution? Where they can have a relationship with animals?" he asked. "They're being taught that they're not responsible for anything until they're 21."

Dickinson has owned the 202-year-old farm for about 22 years and is now looking to pass it on. His two children, 28 and 30 years old, don't want to run the farm.

He'd like to pass it to a nonprofit organization, a foundation or a cooperative, he said, and he has asked for help from UNC-Chapel Hill's Kenan-Flagler Business School.

"Farms are in danger of disappearing. Nobody can afford to buy a farm today, and nobody can afford to start up a farm today," he said. "Replacement costs are so high that no one person can afford it. That's why they all go to corporate farms. That's why we're losing farms.

"The main takers were the children who would inherit the farm," Dickinson said, "but they don't want to do it today."

Staff writer Meiling Arounnarath can be reached at 932-2004
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By ruby
#180 A "Sensory Garden" has been built for the children at the Governor
Morehead School for the Blind. Your child(ren) is/are cordially
invited to join other children to perform for the ribbon cutting
ceremony that is being held on Monday, February 12, around
lunchtime. Delicious foods have been donated for the celebration by
some of our area's most prestigious restaurants. The local news and
media will be present.

This "Sensory Garden" was beautifully crafted, from beginning to
end, entirely by the hands of loving volunteers. Designed to
delight and stimulate children, year after year, through their sense
of smell, touch, sound and taste, the garden is now home to a
variety of fragrant plants, wind chimes, a birdbath, various pottery
designs, and more.

I hope you will join us as we celebrate children, and the marvelous
world of sensation! The choir will be singing two or three songs
that they are already familiar with. Your child may be able to sing
solo, if they would like to. If you are interested in your child, or
children, participating in this performance, please contact me
ASAP.

http://www.worldlegacyextremegivers.com
Last edited by ruby on Sat Sep 18, 2010 3:39 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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By ruby
#184 You Are Invited!

Sensory Garden Ribbon Cutting Ceremony

Monday, February 12, 2007
12 o’clock noon

The Governor Morehead Preschool for the Blind
303 Ashe Avenue
Raleigh, North Carolina


Ceremony and Remarks
Music and Refreshments

With sincerest thanks and appreciation from the
NC 89 WorldLegacy Leadership Team for your contributions and help
to make this incredible community service project possible.
YOU made it happen!

You Are Invited!