The Iowa Commission on Volunteer Service (ICVS) today approved $179,000 in state-funded RSVP grants and up to $5.75 million in federal AmeriCorps grants and Education Awards that together will leverage and support approximately 44,000 community volunteers and nearly 650 AmeriCorps State members who will provide direct support to thousands of local nonprofits, schools and communities throughout Iowa. All of these projects operate as a public-private partnership leveraging over $4.5 million in local and private funding.
"National service is an essential part of the solution to many of the social challenges facing our communities," said ICVS chair, Patti Fields. "The AmeriCorps members and RSVP volunteers supported by this funding will accomplish amazing things to meet pressing local needs and strengthen Iowa communities."
AmeriCorps and Senior Corps, of which RSVP is a part, are national service programs administered by the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS), a federal agency that engages more than 5 million Americans of all ages and backgrounds with opportunities to give back to their communities and their nation. The Iowa Commission on Volunteer Service is responsible for administering federal funding of AmeriCorps State programs and state funding of RSVP.
AmeriCorps State grants provide funding to local organizations to support AmeriCorps members meeting critical community needs in the areas of: education, disaster services, health, environmental stewardship, economic opportunity and service to veterans and military families. The Commission announced the following AmeriCorps State grants today:
Organization
Members
Federal Grants
Local/Private
Education Awards
Program Grants:
Organization Members Federal Local/ Education Grants Private Awards
Iowa State University* 50 $531,874 $539,981 $214,000
Iowa Legal Aid 10 $132,600 $106,799 $53,500
UNI - Green Corps 25 $330,248 $226,225 $133,750
Des Moines Independent Community School District
15 $132,680 $75,208 $53,500
Department of Natural Resources (Green Vets)*
15 $132,405 $392,015 $53,500
City of Davenport 38 $148,136 $138,260 $59,599
Prevent Child Abuse Iowa*
11 $139,700 FP $58,850
Iowa Coalition Against Domestic Violence
10 $115,050 FP $53,500
Iowa Public Health Association Foundation
10 $130,000 FP $53,500
Iowa Campus Compact
170 $29,632 FP $198,164
Community Corrections Improvement Association
49 $460,435 $401,940 $185,378
Graceland University 25 $175,146 $162,597 $70,460
Department of Natural Resources
87 $506,727 $483,997 $246,314
Boys and Girls Clubs 25 $216,581 $226,691 $98,975
Habitat for Humanity of Iowa
31 $274,576 $294,908 $122,569
Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Mississippi Valley
14 $130,000 $99,844 $56,068
City of Dubuque 48 $210,587 $143,430 $88,917
Planning Grants
Public Allies** $50,000 $15,793
Community Youth Concepts** $46,400 $21,725
United Way of Wapello County **$29,847 $11,963.28
University of Northern Iowa ** $28,357 $11,605.68
AmeriCorps National Grants Funded
Conservation Corps Minnesota and Iowa***
17 $170,000 $272,000 $90,950
TOTAL 650 $4,160,981 $3,624,982 $1,891,493
TOTAL FEDERAL $6,052,474
*Approved Award Conditional of Awarded Federal Supplemental Funding and/or Education Award Slot Request
** Part of Approved award is Conditional of Awarded Federal Supplemental Funding or Education Awards Slots
*** Applicant applied to commission but was funded directly by the Corporation For National and Community Service and thus grant will not be administered by ICVS
FP - Fixed Price grants, not required to report matching funds
RSVP connects volunteers age 55 and over with service opportunities in their communities that match their skills and availability. From building houses to immunizing children, from enhancing the capacity of nonprofit organizations to improving and protecting the environment, RSVP volunteers put their unique talents to work to make a difference.
A state appropriation of more than $179,000, which is used to leverage additional federal and local funding, is coordinated by the Iowa Commission on Volunteer Service for RSVP projects. Grants were approved today to the following entities:
. Boone County Hospital, Boone, $10,920.68
. Carroll County RSVP, Carroll, $5,081.39
. United Way of East Central Iowa, Cedar Rapids, $5,081.39
. Mobile Meals United, Clinton, $5,081.39
. Decorah Public Library, Decorah, $13,341.31
. United Way of Central Iowa, Des Moines, $5,081.39
. Finley Hospital, Dubuque, $5,081.39
. Fairfield Volunteer Center, Fairfield, $5,081.39
. City of Fort Madison, Fort Madison, $5,081.39
. Elder Services, Inc., Iowa City, $30,279.62
. North Iowa Area Community College (NIACC), Mason City, $5,081.39
. Henry County Health Center, Mt. Pleasant, $10,920.68
. ISU Extension, Jasper County, Newton, $5,081.39
. West. IL Area Agency on Aging, Quad Cities, $5,081.39
. The Center for Siouxland, Sioux City, $5,081.39
. Iowa Lakes Community College, Spencer, $5,081.39
. Voluntary Action Center of the Iowa Great Lakes, Inc.,
Spirit Lake, $13,282.54
. Story City Senior Citizens, Inc., Story City, $32,443.89
. Covenant Medical Center, Waterloo, $5,081.39
State Service Commissions have the responsibility of developing and communicating a statewide vision and ethic of service and promoting that vision throughout their state. The Iowa Commission on Volunteer Service (ICVS) and its partner agencies work with volunteerism on two main fronts. The first is to help agencies develop quality programs that use service as a strategy to fulfill their missions and address Iowa's greatest areas of need. The second is to help engage Iowans in their communities by promoting an ethic of service in Iowa and supporting Iowa's volunteer infrastructure.
In addition to RSVP and AmeriCorps State, the federal government directly administers the AmeriCorps NCCC, AmeriCorps VISTA, Senior Companion and Foster Grandparents programs that support an additional 1,400 National Service participants in Iowa. Together these national service and volunteer programs administered and supported by the Commission are leveraging hundreds of millions of dollars worth of services to the people of Iowa for a fraction of the cost. Twenty-four percent more Iowans volunteer today than they did in 1989 when the Commission was created by Governor Terry E. Branstad; today Iowa has the second highest volunteer rate of any state. In total, Iowa volunteers provide an estimated $2 billion in services annually to Iowa.
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