Archive for the ‘operation’ Category

NGO’s and nonprofit make the Move to Mobile

When the Richland High School marching band travels to competitions across Texas, parents at home sometimes know how the band performed before it has even left the field. They just keep their cell phones close and wait for Pam Donahoo to text them.

“The opportunity is—and I know there are other parents just like me—if I’m not home or if I’m traveling this weekend and I have my phone with me and I get this text message that says the kids made finals or they came in second in this contest, how good does that make me feel that I’m now connected with my kid? I get home and I can jump off the plane and say, ‘Hey, I heard you did great yesterday,’” says Donahoo, CAE, who is both chair of the band booster club and executive director of American Mensa.

Parents of about two thirds of the 240 band members have signed up. Donahoo says the mobile updates have helped draw in new parents sooner, upped the level of volunteer involvement from parents throughout the year, and, most of all, “really helped connect the parents with their kids.”

Of course, a marching-band booster club isn’t as complex as a trade association or professional society, but the same principle applies: The ubiquity and increasing power of mobile phones means time, place, tech savvy, and being plugged in are no longer barriers to the exchange of information.

via asaecenter.org

20 Ways to Change the World in Only 15 Minutes a Day

We know, we know: you really want to get more involved in changing the world, but you just can’t ever seem to find the time. The kids need chauffeuring, the house needs cleaning, and the refrigerator is astonishingly empty again already. And don’t we know there’s a recession going on, for Pete’s sake?!

Yes, all of the above may be true. But it doesn’t mean you can’t carve out just 15 minutes a day to be a better citizen of the planet — forego a couple of TV shows per week, set a timer to cut your Facebook and/or Twittersessions by 15 minutes, or curtail that long hot shower habit. If you can find just a small amount of time per day, you can give back to your local or global community in a way that can reap benefits to your mood and psyche that far outweigh the time you’ve “given up” from another hobby or habit

via mashable.com

NGO works on improving lives of elderly people

A non government organisation is working closely with the Health Ministry to improve the lives of those elderly people who are taking shelter at the Natabua Old People’s home.

Soroptimist International Lautoka President, Sarojni Harris said they are now embarking on a $40,000 dollar project, to refurbish the Natabua Old People’s home.

She adds that this will add light to the lives of the senior citizens staying at the home.

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The project is expected to be completed by the end of this year.

via fijivillage.com

Human Rights Watch Says NGOs Face Tough Time in Russia

Opening and maintaining a non-governmental organization in Russia is not easy, according to a recent report from Human Rights Watch in Moscow. Mounds of paperwork, ineffective laws and even threats of violence face those who want to perform what they see as their civic duty.

Working in Russia can be full of bureaucratic red tape for the average citizen. There are lots of rules to follow, forms to fill out, licenses to obtain, job descriptions to be approved. But, the situation can be even more complicated for those who work for non-governmental organizations that the government sees as a threat. That is according to Matthew Schaaf, an NGO liaison for Human Rights watch here in Moscow.

“Organizations that work on controversial issues or that are affiliated with political opposition have more trouble with the authorities,” he said.

via voanews.com

China snares NGOs with foreign funding

It began with a tax notice for $200,000. Three days later, on July 17, officials raided the group’s Beijing office and seized its computers. Then, just before dawn on July 29, police detained its founder, Xu Zhiyong at his home

On the same day, government officials went to the office of Yi Ren Ping, another nongovernmental organization, and confiscated copies of its newsletter on the grounds that it didn’t have a publishing license.

Taken together, the raids appear part of a tightening of controls on critical voices in the run-up to Oct. 1, the 60th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China. The two NGOs are among a growing number here using the law to hold authorities to account on issues such as food safety, patient rights, and illegal detention.

via csmonitor