Community Services Consortium

Serving Linn, Benton, and Lincoln counties in Oregon. Helping people. Changing lives.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

FREE Homebuyer Workshop

Community Housing Services (CHS) a program of Community Services Consortium, will hold a free homebuyer Workshop in Lincoln City.

Thursdays
August 5 and 12,
1:00pm to 5:00 pm


At: Beacon Crest Apartments,
Oceanspray Center
2897 NE 47th St.
Lincoln City

Please register by calling 866-245-1780 or E-mailing blarsen@communityservices.us

THIS CLASS WILL HELP YOU
:
• Search for and evaluate homes
• Work on damaged credit and evaluate credit worthiness
• Work with housing industry professionals
• Gain knowledge and confidence with the home purchase process
• Learn about financing the purchase of your home and learn about loan products for low-income homebuyers
• Learn how to close on a purchase and protect your investment

Serving Linn, Lincoln and Benton Counties as the Regional Housing Center since 2004, Community Housing Services(CHS) is the center for access to home ownership and housing resources.

CHS provides information and access to low and moderate income individuals and families for homeownership, home rehabilitation, and educational programs available from the housing providers in the Tri-County area.

CHS helps encourage a vibrant and thriving community by providing counseling on homeownership and foreclosure prevention, workshops on home buying and financial fitness, and connecting current and potential homeowners to resources, including Individual Development Accounts.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

CSC Offers Foreclosure Counseling



Are you or someone you know facing FORECLOSURE? We offer Free HUD Certified Mortgage Intervention Counseling at Community Housing Services, a member of the Community Services Consortium.

Call us: (541) 758-2786
Toll Free: 1-866-245-1780

Happenings in Housing and Community Resources


As reported in the latest Management Team meeting minutes, Tom Hatley's crew continues to be busy on all fronts:

Pelican Place permanent supportive housing in Newport started construction. The open house is scheduled for September 29.

• The Weatherization Program continues its multi-family projects, with 31 units completed in June as well as counting substantial progress on four to five other multi-family units.

Housing Rehabilitation is busy fixing up owner-occupied houses, which includes housing purchased by the program utilizing the Neighborhood Stabilization Program (NSP) funds. NSP funds are part of the federal stimulus program and is related to the purchase of foreclosed properties in counties with high foreclosure rates. The homes, once rehabbed, will be turned over to already-identified organizations to be used as transitional housing to assist people out of homelessness.

Community Development met with Sunshine Industry in Sweet Home and Sweet Home City Manager Craig Martin to talk about how the department might assist Sunshine Industry with acquiring a new facility.

Please check out the website for more information on the Housing and Community Resources department.

CSC Head Start of Lincoln County Now Enrolling

CSC Head Start, a no-cost preschool serving Lincoln County, is now enrolling for the 2010-2011 program year at their sites in Lincoln City, Toledo, and Newport. Children must be 3 or 4 years old by September 1, 2010. Applications with enrollment information are available at each site or by calling 541-996-3028.

Head Start sites:
Lincoln City: 2130 SE Lee Street Lincoln City, OR
Newport: 253 NE 1st Street Newport, OR
Toledo 845 NW A Street, Toledo, OR

Summer Status No Slow-Down for CSC Head Start


CSC Head Start (CSCHS) continues to be busy, even though the Program is on summer status.

Donations
We are pleased to have received donations from:
$4,800 from Spirit Mountain for classroom related expenses
$700.00 unrestricted funds from the Eagles of Newport

With the budget cuts that CSCHS is experiencing from the state, the generosity of the community becomes more and more important. WE are very grateful to our supporters!

Public Outreach
Head Start Director Suzanne Miller has been on two local radio interviews and will be invited back to Newport KCUP radio in September and possibly before for further interviews and specialized focus on Head Start. We are looking into public presentations as well as possible public television for continued public relations.

Our “Friends of Head Start” group has met regularly and although small in size are committed. To celebrate the National Week of the Young Child in April, our Friends helped set up a children’s art show titled “Head Start Art” throughout Lincoln County which was covered by newspapers in Newport and Lincoln city. We currently have good media relationships and will continue to maintain these relationships.

Graduation
Graduation occurred at each Site on Wednesday, May 12. Over 400 family and community members attended programwide to participate in the festivities as 92 children moved on to Kindergarten and 67 children commenced into their second year of Head Start.
For the upcoming Program year, Lincoln City is expecting 33 returning children; Newport is expecting 27 returning children; and Toledo has 7 children who will return.

Enrollment
We are actively enrolling families throughout the County. We have had a major reduction in state grants this year and will have to reduce the number of children served by six. This is very sad news particularly in light of the underserved population throughout Lincoln County. Nonetheless, we are nearing our capacity numbers and will, of course, waitlist families.

In order to remain fiscally responsible, CSCHS’s Director, Suzanne Miller, announced that the current transportation system provided by CSCHS would have to be cancelled, which resulted in employee reductions.

It is important to remember that Head Start is the cornerstone of early education in our nation. So many people do not know all the services that Head Start offers that serve the child and families beyond school education and include health, nutrition, emotional well being, family involvement, as well as a host of other services offered through CSCHS by monthly family visits and continual outreach. Many families have utilized our services for job training, new home purchasing and other vital services.

Please check out the website for more information on CSC's Lincoln County Head Start Program.

Community Services Consortium Creates Summer Jobs



Community Services Consortium (CSC) is pleased to announce its Workforce & Education Department has received 11 grants of $32,000 each in funding for summer Youth Employment Crews from the Oregon Youth Conservation Corps (OYCC) and the Oregon Youth Employment Initiative (OYEI) for a total of $352,000.

At risk youths in Linn, Benton and Lincoln counties will have an opportunity to earn up to $2,000, gain work experience, team building and leadership skills as well as an opportunity to recover school credits.

Friday, July 9, 2010

YouthBuild Mentorship Program

 CSC’s YouthBuild AmeriCorps program recently hired Katie Stubblefield as the program’s Mentorship Coordinator. Katie is actively recruiting community volunteers to mentor YouthBuild participants in job and career related activities.

The program is now looking for volunteer mentors.

Mentoring: Small Steps – Huge Rewards

What’s in it for you as a Mentor?· Shape the future by empowering youth today. Receive exceptional training and support.

What’s in it for the youth?
· An individual who is there to support them without judgment
· A friend who has their interests at heart

Orientation: 6:00 PM Tuesday, August 3rd
Community Services Consortium, 380 Market Street, Lebanon
Contact: Katie Stubblefield at (541) 451.1071 or kstubblefield@communityservices.us.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

CSC is Hiring!

Healthy Kids Coordinator ( Benton County ) - closes July 16

Director of Development & Community Relations - closes July 26

Project Instructor 1 – Youth House Garden - Position open until filled

CSC is an Equal Opportunity Employer. All Employment Applications must be sent to the Corvallis office address, 545 SW 2nd St, Suite A,Corvallis, OR 97333. If you have questions about the job application process, please call (541) 752-1010 or email the human resources department at hr@communityservices.us.

Please check out the Jobs website for job descriptions and application materials (in Word and .pdf formats).

Getting Things Done for CSC's Communities!


The following is a breakdown of the value VISTA members bring to the communities CSC serves:*

Number of Volunteers Recruited: 1692 community volunteers
Number of Service Hours Performed by Volunteers Recruited: 18,703 hours
Total $ Amount of Resources Generated: $1,607,218 (cash & non-cash).

For more information on CSC's Building Bridges program, please contact Tifani Erpelding at 541-752-1010.

_____________________________
*Data from July 14, 2006 to December 30, 2009.

Homeless Prevention and Rapid Rehousing Program Makes a Difference

As part of the federal stimulus funding opportunities provided with the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), CSC's Emergency Services staff helped 160 households find housing or remain in their homes in the last fiscal year, which equates to 500 individuals.

Following is a brief rundown of how each office — and CSC as a whole -- utilized the Homeless Prevention and Rapid Rehousing funds.

Homeless Prevention
Albany Regional Office: 30 Households served/ $25,626 spent
Lebanon Regional Office: 34 Households served/ $26,662 spent
Corvallis Regional Office: 28 Households served/ $23,303 spent
Newport Regional Office: 18 Households served/ $17,791 spent

TOTAL homeless prevention: 110 Households served/$93,382 spent

Rapid Re-Housing
Albany Regional Office: 13 Households served/ $11,321 spent
Lebanon Regional Office: 20 Households served/ $16,820 spent
Corvallis Regional Office: 16 Households served/ $14,258 spent
Newport Regional Office: 4 Households served/ $4,744 spent

TOTAL rapid rehousing: 50 Households/ $47,143 funds spent

TOTAL FUNDS SPENT: $140,525 (Dec. 1, 2009 thru June 21, 2010).

For more information on other CSC stimulus/ARRA projects - or CSC programs and services generally - please go to CSC's website.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Volunteer Conference in NYC



Beth Fox, Director of Linn-Benton RSVP, a program of Community Services Consortium, recently returned from the 2010 National Conference on Volunteering and Service in New York City.

The Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS) and the Points of Light Institute hosted the conference, supported by corporate sponsorships. Each conference workshop offered opportunities to network with colleagues in volunteer management from across the nation, with a few attendees from around the world, including the Deputy Minister of Sports and Youth Activities from the country of Liberia.

One of the network opportunities was held in Chinatown. This immersion session focused on the literacy work of four local nonprofits supported by AmeriCorps members. A second opportunity to network sponsored by Target was called “Party With a Purpose”, where one evening 2,000 attendees gave their time to build enough food boxes to provide 150,000 meals.

Dr. Erwin Tan, the new director of Senior Corps was introduced to Beth's group. He shared that his wife is from Corvallis! Amy Dailey, the Oregon CNCS Director, invited him to Oregon to see the best and brightest Senior Corps projects the country has to offer and specifically to see the impact the program has in Benton County.


Congratulations to the 81 CSC graduates





Community Services Consortium (CSC) graduated 81 students this year in Linn, Benton, and Lincoln counties. The students graduated with either a high school diploma or a GED. The graduates came from CSC’s 3 alternative schools, in Corvallis, Albany or Lebanon, CSC’s charter school, Career Tech, in Lincoln City and from CSC’s partner, Angell Jobs Corp campus in Yachats.

Following are excerpts from remarks made by Clay Martin, Director of the CSC Workforce & Education program while addressing the class of 2010 in Corvallis. Martin spoke at several CSC graduations this June.

“Events like graduation that mark a significant achievement and a significant transition in life are special – a significant achievement for each of you.

“Many people talk about the value of a high school diploma in terms of real dollars. According to the US Census Bureau a high school graduate was expected to earn $1,216,000 over a 40 year career. That is $300,000 more than a person who did not graduate from high school. A college degree will add another $250,000-a higher degree even more. So, don’t ever stop learning. It almost always pays in real dollars over the course of your career.

“But, I think the value of a high school diploma is more than the real dollars. It demonstrates that you can stick with something difficult and challenging and persevere until it is complete. It is what most people call a good work ethic.

“Thank you to the teachers and staff who helped you. Thank you especially to the families who supported you. And congratulations class of 2010!”

Welcome to CSC's blog and e-newsletter!

These communications tools can be used to make announcements, acknowledge donors and volunteers, post videos and slideshows–whatever we want to share with our online community.

There are 3 ways to deliver info to stakeholders:

  1. The blog itself, which can be linked to our current website
  2. Email news blasts (blog articles sent via email as eNewsletters)
  3. RSS Feed (subscribers read in Google Reader or other feed reader, can also send posts to Facebook and Twitter)
We're excited about these communication tools and look forward to both your input and feedback for continuing improvement and positive information-sharing.

If you have agency/program information you'd like posted on this blog, please send full text and/or photos and videos, ideas, or suggestions to Janet Hessel and she will take the next steps.

Enjoy!