1 / 50

2012-2013 INDIANA AMERICORPS INFORMATION SESSIONS

2012-2013 INDIANA AMERICORPS INFORMATION SESSIONS. August 17, 2011 Evansville August 18, 2011 New Albany August 24, 2011 Merrillville August 25, 2011 South Bend August 26, 2011 Ft. Wayne

amelia
Download Presentation

2012-2013 INDIANA AMERICORPS INFORMATION SESSIONS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2012-2013 INDIANA AMERICORPS INFORMATION SESSIONS

  2. August 17, 2011 Evansville August 18, 2011 New Albany August 24, 2011 Merrillville August 25, 2011 South Bend August 26, 2011 Ft. Wayne August 31, 2011 Indianapolis September 1, 2011 Kokomo INTEREST SESSION SCHEDULE

  3. OFBCI • CONNECTorganizations and communities to grants, services, and each other • PROMOTEvolunteerism and service to improve the lives of Hoosiers • ENCOURAGE public and private resources to seed and sustain innovative and high quality community and faith-based initiatives • HIGHLIGHT the good works of individuals and their communities with best practices and innovative models. 

  4. Agenda • Hear from those who are living it! • Learn about AmeriCorps • Discuss the Grant • Explore the Application Process • Consider the Budget

  5. AmeriCorps at the National Level • Administered by the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS) – Estab. 1993 www.nationalservice.gov • Serve America Act – 2009 – Increased funding and programs (SIF, VGF, NCBP) • Programming includes VISTA, State/National, and NCCC • 85,000 AmeriCorps members serve nationwide each year!

  6. 637,000: Number of people who have served as AmeriCorps members since 1994.  774 Million: Total number of hours served by AmeriCorps members.  $1.77 Billion: Total amount of Segal AmeriCorps Education Awards earned by AmeriCorps members since 1994.  2.4 Million: Number of community volunteers managed or mobilized by AmeriCorps members in 2008.  3,300: Number of nonprofit, faith-based, and community organizations served by AmeriCorps members last year.  $6.3 Billion: Amount of AmeriCorps funds invested in nonprofit, community, educational, and faith-based community groups AmeriCorps Fast Facts

  7. The State Level • Each state has a Governor-appointed state service commission that administers the “formula” funds. • Indiana Commission on Community Service and Volunteerism (ICCSV). • 11,000 AmeriCorps members have served 13,000,000 hours in Indiana • $29,400,000 awarded in the form of Education Awards

  8. 2011 Indiana AmeriCorps In A Nutshell $3.6 million awarded ($2.4 M formula) 18 programs; 3 planning grants. 810 members 332 member service years (MSY)

  9. 2011-2012 IndianaAmeriCorps GranteesPY September 1, 2011-August 31, 2012 • American Red Cross-St. Joseph Co. • Boys and Girls Clubs of Indianapolis • Boys and Girls Clubs of Wayne County • Department of Natural Resources (DNR) • Entrepreneurial Ventures in Education • Habitat for Humanity of Indiana • Hannah and Friends • Indiana Campus Compact • Indiana State University • Indiana University • Notre Dame (RCLC) • Public Allies • Scott County Partnership • United Way of Bartholomew County • United Way of Jackson County • United Way of Porter County • University of Southern Indiana • YMCA of Greater Indianapolis

  10. What is AmeriCorps? • National Service Program • “Domestic Peace Corps” • Areas of Focus: • Disaster Services • Education • Environmental Stewardship • Healthy Futures • Opportunity • Veterans and Military Families

  11. What is AmeriCorps? • Getting Things Done. AmeriCorps helps communities meet needs in the areas of education, public safety, the environment, and other human needs through direct and demonstrable service. • Strengthening Communities. AmeriCorps builds the capacity of community organizations and other institutions to more effectively engage community volunteers to improve our communities. • Encouraging Responsibility. Through service and civic education, AmeriCorps members become agents of community solutions and develop an ethic of lifelong service. • Expanding Opportunity. AmeriCorps helps those who help America. Members develop professional skills, gain invaluable experience and receive education awards for education or job training.

  12. Strengthening Communities • Programs strengthen communities by: • Mobilizing Community Assets • Generating Volunteers • Involving the Community • Engaging diverse staff and AmeriCorps members

  13. ParticipantDevelopment

  14. AmeriCorps is about: • Meeting the needs of our communities • Building relationships and partnerships • Strengthening civic engagement • Developing members' skills and experience • Providing carefully planned, well managed and important projects   • 'Getting Things Done'

  15. AmeriCorps is not about: • 'Busy work' • Temporary solutions • Financing your organization • Employee/volunteer replacement or displacement… • Programs must provide specific measurable service outcomes that • Are not already provided with existing funds or volunteers • Do not duplicate the functions of existing workers, or displace paid employees

  16. Prohibited Service Activities for AmeriCorps*State • Attempting to influence legislation • Organizing or engaging in protests, strikes, petitions or boycotts • Assisting, promoting, or deterring union organizing • Any political activities

  17. Prohibited Activities • Engaging in religious instruction, proselytization, worship activities • Administrative duties (i.e. acting as your agency’s receptionist, clerical work, etc.) • Constructing or maintaining a facility inherently devoted to religious instruction or worship • Providing a direct benefit to a for-profit organization, labor union, political party, or religious organization

  18. Prohibited Activities • Providing services and activities that would otherwise be performed by employed workers or volunteers, or that will supplant the hiring of, or result in the displacement of, employed workers in the community

  19. Tutoring at-risk youth Recruiting volunteers Teaching conflict resolution skills Environmental conservation activities Assisting crime victims Building homes Restoring parks Mentoring at-risk youth Teaching computer skills Running after-school programs Other direct service or capacity-building activities… Examples of Appropriate Service Activities for AmeriCorps*State

  20. What about fundraising? AmeriCorps members can devote 10% of their service time to fundraising activities. • Members may: • Raise funds that benefit your organization’s service activities • Members may not: • Raise funds for living allowances or for your organization’s general operating expenses • Write a grant application to CNCS or any other Federal agency

  21. AmeriCorps Lingo: It’s not a job, job training, or typical volunteer position, it’s …Service We’re not employees, apprentices, or typical volunteers, we’re… AmeriCorps Members It’s not a wage, salary, or paycheck, it’s a…Living Allowance It’s not a work site or job site, it’s a…Service Site

  22. Programs must have: • Successful recruitment and placement strategies • A clear structure within which members serve • Integration of service learning principles • Provision of training and learning opportunities for both staff and members • Ongoing support and supervision of members and service sites • Leadership, teamwork, and diversity opportunities

  23. Program Expectations • All AmeriCorps programs: • Measure and account for impact • Are Inclusive • Partner with faith-based and/or community-based organizations • Generate volunteers

  24. Numbers for 2009-2010 (A Digression) • Volunteers: 14,336 • Hours of Service: 108,860 • Benefit to Communities: $1,917,024.6 • Based on Independent Sector Indiana 2009 rate of $17.61 http://www.independentsector.org/volunteer_time

  25. Program Responsibilities Program Provides: • Member Contract • Grievance Procedure • Evaluation/ Outcome measurement • Identification (Site and Member) • Site agreements Programs also: • Supervise sites • Report programmatically and financially • Attend director trainings • Participate in statewide events

  26. Program Responsibilities Continued… • Programmatic: • Quarterly Progress Reports • Monitoring Reviews/Responses • New Program and All Program conference calls • Fiscal: • PERs – monthly • FFRs – bi-annual • Closeout-annually

  27. Member Terms of Service • Members serve • Full time (1,700 hours) = $5,550 ed award • Half Time (900 hours) = $2,775 ed award • Reduced Half Time (675 hours) = $2,114 ed award • Quarter Time (450 hours) = $1,468 ed award • Minimum time (300 hours) = $1,175 ed award • Members must complete term of service within grant contract timeframe. • Members can serve up to four terms in AmeriCorps State/National but can only receive the equivalent value of two full time education awards.

  28. Member Eligibility, Recruitment & Selection • Members are recruited, selected and trained by each individual program. • Must be at least 17, possess high school diploma / GED (or agree to work towards it) or equivalent, and be a U.S. Citizen or legal resident alien. • Meet any additional qualifications as determined by the program.

  29. Member Benefits • Living Stipend • Full-Time (min./max.) $12,100-$24,200 • Part-Time living stipends prorated • Health Care (FT Only) • Child Care (FT Only) • Training/Development • Loan Forbearance/Forgiveness • Education Award

  30. The Education Award: Things to Know • Can be used to pay education costs at qualified higher education institutions, to assist with continuing education or to repay qualified student loans. • The Education Award is taxed. • However, there are strategies to minimize the pain. • There are more uses for the Education Award than you might realize: • Many schools will match the Education Award • There are alternative options for the Education Award • NOLS, Outward Bound, Study Abroad, Scuba Diving • For more information: http://edaward.org/ • Or just google “Segal AmeriCorps Education Award Tutorial”

  31. About the Grant CNCS and the ICCSV seeks to fund programs that can demonstrate community impact and solve community problems through an evidence-based approach. Eligible Applicants • Educational institutions • Government/State Entities • Non-profit organizations with a 501(c)3 status

  32. Applicant Type: • New Applicant • Those eligible organizations that have: • Not previously operated an AC*State program • Not operated a program in more than five years • OFBCI approval needed to request more than 50 slots. • Recompete Applicant • Organizations completing their third year of operating an AC*State program • Continuing Applicant • Organizations in their first or second year of operating an AC* State program

  33. Funding Opportunities • Operating Grants (Active Programs) • Fully developed plans ready for implementation • Planning Grants (New programs only) • Not to exceed $50,000 • Provides time and resources to plan, develop, and propose a successful program • 3/9 Planning Grants (Hybrid of the two) • 3 months of preparation 9 months active • New programs only

  34. Program and Grant Size • Programs must request a minimum of 10 Member Service Years (MSY): Recommend 15 MSY • Target average federal cost per MSY should not exceed $13,300. • Grant size is determined by size of the program. • Grant size may be limited based on funding availability. • 3 year grant cycle; renewable in year 1-2 • Operate on annual program year schedule

  35. CNCS Priorities/Objectives

  36. State/National Program Models • Program design is determined by applicant • Single Site Model • Multi-site Model • Local, Regional, Statewide • Education Award Only Model • Fixed Award Model • Programs that enroll Full-Time members only • Apply for a fixed-amount per MSY; no match requirement

  37. Professional Corps Places AmeriCorps members as teachers, health care providers, police officers, engineers, or other professionals in communities where there is an inadequate number of such professionals Apply for up to $2,500 per MSY eligible to apply for funding for a portion of program costs, and use their own or other resources to pay the members’ living allowance and additional member costs.

  38. Encore Programs: • Programs that engage a significant number of participants 55 years or older • 10% of AmeriCorps funding is set aside by Congress to support these programs.

  39. Elements of the Narrative Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives

  40. Program Design (50%) • Provides persuasive evidence that the identified need(s) exist in the targeted community(ies). (5 points) • Describes the ways in which members are a highly effective means to solve the identified need(s). Communicates the unique value added by AmeriCorps(15 points) • Describes how the interventions the AmeriCorps members and volunteers are engaged in are both evidence-based and will have a measurable community impact.(15 points) • Describes the program components that enable the AmeriCorps members to have powerful service experiences. (10 points) • Convincingly links the above elements: (5 points)

  41. Organizational Capability (25%) • Adequate experience, staffing and management structure • Secured (or ability to secure) financial and/or in-kind resources • Structure that ensures compliance with rules and regulations

  42. Cost Effectiveness/Budget Adequacy (25%) • Budget is clear, reasonable and cost effective • Amount requested does not exceed the maximum cost per Member Service Year (MSY)

  43. When Writing your Narrative… • Lead from your program strengths and be explicit • Do not try to relate your program to every strategic priority or special initiative • Be clear and succinct • No jargon, boilerplate language, rhetoric, etc. • Don’t make assumptions • Do not assume the readers know anything about you or your program • Use an impartial proofreader

  44. Performance Measures Required as part of your application • How will you measure your program’s impact? National Performance Measures • Funding priority given to programs that opt into these pre-existing measures • If your program fits, it’s required Self-Nominated Measures • Permitted…if your program does not fit a national measure

  45. 2012-2013 Application Process • RFP and NOFA to be posted on OFBCI website • Will include specific deadlines for process • Submit Notification of Intent to Apply (September 30) • Indiana AmeriCorps*State Application Instructions • Attend Technical Training • Draft and Submit AmeriCorps*State Grant Application • Submit through the eGrants system

  46. Sources of Funds COMPETITIVE & EAP FUNDS: • Must compete successfully at state level • National competition with other applications • Corporation for National and Community Service makes final decisions FORMULA FUNDS: • Must compete successfully at the state level • ICCSV awards funds • Informs the Corporation of its decisions

  47. The Review Process • Peer Review Panel reviews, scores, and ranks proposals – November, 2011 • OFBCI Staff Review – November 2011 • ICCSV decides which applications will enter national competition– December 2011 • Pre-Award Risk Assessment on NEW applicants – December through March, 2011 - 2012 • CNCS notification of Competitive Awards – June 2012 • New, Recompete, and EAP • ICCSV allocates Formula Funds – June 2012

  48. Is AmeriCorps Right for My Organization? • Is my organization an eligible applicant? • Would this program support my organization’s mission and strategic plan? • Does my organization address compelling needs in the priority areas? • Does my organization have the organizational, technological and fiscal capacity to manage a federal grant (take Readiness Assessment)? • Does my organization have the resources to match the federal funds (cash and in-kind)? • Are we seeking funds for a program that would recruit 10, 15, or more full-time members or equivalent? • Do we have the resources to manage a program for 30-60 days before receiving reimbursement?

  49. For More Information on AmeriCorps Visit: www.americorps.org www.americorps.gov/fitfinder/ http://www.in.gov/ofbci/2347.htm • Prohibited Activities • Readiness Assessment • AmeriCorps Lingo Questions can be emailed to: jgaskill@ofbci.in.gov

More Related