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Full-time

Program Director

Organization Info

Conservation Corps North Bay

Overview
Headquarters: 
San Rafael, CA, United States
Annual Budget : 
$5-10M
Size: 
51-200 employees
Founded: 
1982
About Us
Mission: 

Conservation Corps North Bay’s Mission is to develop youth and conserve natural resources for a strong, sustainable community.
We achieve our mission by:
• Providing a diverse group of youth and young adults with opportunities to transform their lives through education, employability, civic engagement, and leadership.
• Caring for our environment by conserving and restoring natural resources, and by improving recreational areas.
• Creating the environmental leaders of the future by teaching environmental ethics and behaviors to children, teens and adults.
• Making communities safer by reducing hazards and by responding to public emergencies and disasters.

Programs: 

Employment training and skill building – the path to a better resume

Since 1982, our programs have helped youth develop an ethic of service and community while they advance towards their career goals. At the same time, each and every program we embark on preserves and protects our natural resources for safe, healthy, livable communities.

You may have seen our corpsmembers working in your neighborhood, on your favorite trails, or at Marin and Sonoma County events. Young people join CCNB to earn while they learn. Corpsmembers achieve conservation through these main program areas:

Natural Resources Crews protect precious resources while building yours.

Conservation Corps North Bay’s Natural Resources Crews receive on the job training opportunities in conservation, park improvement, and fire and flood prevention projects throughout the North Bay.

Crews are sponsored by land management agencies, homeowners’ associations, and nonprofit organizations.

Community Recycling Crews  – bottles, cans, diplomas and careers.

Corpsmembers implement a wide variety of recycling outreach and collection projects with parks, schools, businesses and neighborhoods. In the process, corpsmembers can earn a high school diploma and strengthen their job skills. 

Senior Director of Training

Organization Info

Coro Northern California

Overview
Headquarters: 
San Francisco, CA, United States
Size: 
1-10 employees
Founded: 
1942
About Us
Areas of Focus: 
Mission: 

Coro is a nonpartisan nonprofit organization focused on redefining leadership. With substantive programs for youth, recent college graduates, and professionals, we cultivate emergent leaders at all stages of their lives and careers. Coro builds leaders who know when to step up and when to step back – taking ownership, sharing responsibility, and collaborating with others to ignite change in their communities and workplaces.

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Senior Research Associate

Organization Info

Director of Opportunity Development

Organization Info

Episcopal Community Services

Overview
Headquarters: 
Philadelphia, PA, United States
Annual Budget : 
$5-10M
Size: 
51-200 employees
Founded: 
1870
About Us
Mission: 

Our mission is to challenge and reduce intergenerational poverty. We envision a world where the path to prosperity is available to all.

Programs: 

HOUSING

WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT

BUILDING COMMUNITY

WELLNESS

YOUTH AND CHILDREN

Why Work For Us?: 

Episcopal Community Services empowers individuals and families to determine and follow their own paths. It’s the best way to transform communities.

Our mission is to challenge and reduce intergenerational poverty. We increase the ability of people to improve their lives and achieve economic independence. We call upon every person to participate in sustainable, positive change for our communities.

We envision a world where the path to prosperity is available to all.

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Client Resource & Outreach Coordinator

Organization Info

Blaine County Hunger Coalition

Overview
Headquarters: 
Bellevue, Idaho
Annual Budget : 
$1-5M
Size: 
11-50 employees
Founded: 
2004
About Us
Areas of Focus: 
Mission: 

The Hunger Coalition strives to end hunger in our community by providing wholesome food to those in need and by promoting solutions to the underlying causes of hunger through collaboration, education and advocacy.

Programs: 

Flagship Food & Support Programs: As the only full-time food bank within 200 square miles, The Hunger Coalition provides critical programs to Blaine County citizens in need.

  • Mobile Food Bank: The Mobile Food Bank (MFB) provides fresh and non-perishable foods to local children and adults facing hunger. An innovative, choice-model pantry, the MFB allows THC clients to choose the foods that work best for their family’s needs once per week.
  • Empowerment Services: Our empowerment services consist of confidential consultations that allow us to personally assess need, identify appropriate community resources and introduce additional programs for a successful transition out of food insecurity. Please see the section on “Client Policies & Procedures” for more information.
  • Paws for Hunger: In times of financial difficulty, some families must choose between feeding themselves or their pet. The Animal Shelter raises funds through donations to purchase large quantities of dog and cat food at a discounted price. The food is distributed through THC to individuals and families whose situation requires help.
  • Food Rescue: Consisting of grocery store rescue, gleaning, garden and farm donations, and food drives, our Food Rescue Program helps us keep costs low while diverting food that otherwise might go to waste.
  • Education Programs: Working with a variety of partner organizations, we offer vital nutrition and educational opportunities through free, public workshops and private, guided classes focused on improving life skills and increasing self-sufficiency.
  • The Hope Garden: Located at the corner of Walnut Street and South 1st Avenue in Hailey, the garden is 10,000 square feet and produces a wide variety of fruits, vegetables and herbs grown using organic methods that are distributed through our food programs. The Hope Garden also hosts a variety of classes and growing programs for adults and children.
  • Bloom Community Farm: Our newest venture, the farm’s intent is to provide a place for diverse partnerships with local organizations and continued expansion of food production programs supporting the health and well-being of all community members and their families.
  • Bloom Youth Project: Working with partner organizations, our Bloom Youth Project provides kids an avenue to build life skills while participating in food production and a mobile market, selling produce to vulnerable populations.  Youth-focused programs help to develop resiliency, foster life skills, and teach coping mechanisms to help our local youth blossom into healthy, contributing community members.

Children’s Food Programs: In our quest to help build the healthiest community possible, The Hunger Coalition has established six critical Children’s Food Programs to bridge the gap and ensure children are not falling through the cracks.

  • Daily Bites: Supplemental nutritious food pantries maintained by THC at schools, after school programs, summer camps and other organizations working with the at risk youth population. The most important piece of Daily Bites is the advocacy coaching that takes place with those who are working directly with the children in need.  
  • Snack Pack Program: Based on nationally recognized backpack programs, our Backpack Program was designed to ensure the children of our community do not go hungry on weekends during the school year. 
  • Infant Formula Initiative: Ensures babies requiring supplemental nutrition can receive 3 cans of formula every month during their critical first year of development.
  • Summer Food Program: Keeping kids well fed over the summer months is critical to academic and social wellbeing. There are two parts to our Summer Food Program—
  • Lunch in the Park: In partnership with the Blaine County School District, the federally funded Lunch in the Park Summer Food Program feeds kids at a designated location governed by USDA guidelines.
  • Bloom: Utilizing the Bloom food and book mobile, the Bloom Summer Food Program brings food and activities into low-income, isolated Blaine County neighborhoods.
Why Work For Us?: 

Benefits include flexible, fun working environment. Professional development stipend and specialized training on Salesforce CRM. Generous personal time off. The opportunity to participate in group health insurance, matched savings account, and staff wellness program including weekly staff workout sessions, weekly paid staff lunch hour with lunch included and weekly harvest of produce from Bloom Community Farm and Hope Garden.

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Executive Assistant for the Office of the President

Organization Info

National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy

Overview
Headquarters: 
Washington, DC, United States
Size: 
11-50 employees
Founded: 
1976
About Us
Mission: 

NCRP promotes philanthropy that serves the public good, is responsive to people and communities with the least wealth and opportunity, and is held accountable to the highest standards of integrity and openness.

Program Manager

Organization Info

Housing Choices

Overview
Headquarters: 
San Jose, CA, United States
Annual Budget : 
$1-5M
Size: 
11-50 employees
Founded: 
1997
About Us
Mission: 

Housing Choices Coalition seeks to enhance the lives of people with developmental disabilities by creating quality, affordable living options. By engaging the entire community, we look to build a strong foundation that supports individuals in their housing searches and connects them to new options for quality living. We are proud to be part of a community that has demonstrated integrity and creativity that has resulted in new housing opportunities for individuals with developmental disabilities.

Programs: 

1) Housing Coordination: 

Helping our clients – individuals with developmental disabilities – find housing that suits their specific situations is the backbone of our work.

Each client has unique needs and preferences with regards to housing, and we help them identify, apply for, and transition into their new homes. 

2) Homeless program: 

Through the many years of work we’ve done through Housing Coordination, we discovered that a significant number of our clients were currently homeless, and that serving them required a greater time commitment and more resources. In response, Housing Choice’s homeless program was born, meeting the demand for these clients in greater need of support. We focus first on helping them with short-term housing options, and then with getting them into a consistent and long-term housing situation.

3) Resident Coordination And Housing Model

Through the many years of work we’ve done through Housing Coordination, we discovered that a significant number of our clients were currently homeless, and that serving them required a greater time commitment and more resources. In response, Housing Choice’s homeless program was born, meeting the demand for these clients in greater need of support. We focus first on helping them with short-term housing options, and then with getting them into a consistent and long-term housing situation.

4) Constant development of new partnerships with developers to create new set aside units.

Why Work For Us?: 

Housing Choices is an organization that helps the less fortunate have stable and permanent housing. Our agency is devoted in helping the populations we served. We all work as a team and Housing Choices understands that it is not an easy task, so we encourage team work and highly encourage self care. We want our employees to have the tools necessary to do their work. And encourage to let their supervisor know when things should change. As a nonprofit that is growing, things must change and it is harder to see once you have been working here for some time, so we encourage the new staff to bring ideas to the table to better support staff and our clients.

Child Welfare Senior Policy Associate

Organization Info

Children Now

Overview
Headquarters: 
Oakland, CA
Founded: 
1988
About Us
Areas of Focus: 
Mission: 

Children Now is a nonpartisan umbrella research, policy development, and advocacy organization dedicated to promoting children's health, education and well-being in California. Children Now also leads The Children’s Movement of California, a grassroots network of more than 2,100 business, education, parent, civil rights, faith, and community-based organizations, as well as thousands of individuals, working together to make children a top priority in public policy. Learn more at www.childrennow.org.

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Manager of Member Services

Organization Info

Association of Developmental Disabilities Providers

Overview
Headquarters: 
Framingham, MA
Size: 
1-10 employees
About Us
Areas of Focus: 
Mission: 

ADDP's mission is to promote and ensure strength of community-based providers so provider members can be successful in improving quality, access and value of services in the community. ADDP is committed to enhancing political, financial, and educational health of member organizations that serve people with disabilities, including intellectual and developmental disabilities and acquired brain injuries.

Programs: 

ADDP STRIVES TO:

  • Promote for sufficient funding of members to secure resources necessary to provide a high quality, stable environment for consumers.
  • Share effective practices among members to promote high standards of care and services for all individuals.
  • Inform public of invaluable contributions made to a community by its provider members and consumers.
  • Raise salaries for its members' workforce and establish fair rates across the system.
  • Create an environment where members are able to provide supportive communities in which consumers can live with independence and dignity.

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