100% Local

Ever wonder who you’re helping when you check that little box for payroll deduction during your United Way campaign? Look around—because 100 percent of your gift to the United Way Community Fund is going to work to improve lives of people who live right here in the Treasure Valley.

The entirety of your donation is invested in your community, reaching people in 50 different programs at 32 local agencies.

Chances are, you interact with someone touched by your gift to United Way every day; at work, at the grocery store, at school—your gift supports your community. Listen to stories from people whose lives have been changed in the Community Campaign video:

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DIRT: The United Way Direct Impact Response Team

In 2006, Money Magazine ranked Boise, Idaho the eighth “Best Place to Live” in America. In that same year, Idaho was ranked as the eighth hungriest state in the county.

In 2007, Boise was named one of the “100 Best Cities for Children” by America’s Promise. And yet 17 percent of children born in Idaho are born into poverty.

Idahoans built nearly 68,000 new homes since 2001; the 12.8 percent increase was the seventh highest in the nation. And yet there are an estimated 2,000-3,000 homeless people in Boise.

What’s going on here?

We recognized a serious and growing disconnect between those enjoying a high quality of life in the Treasure Valley and those who are struggling to get by. So why is that?

We started talking to people–all kinds of people. We asked them what they knew, what they saw and what, if anything, they wanted to do about this livability gap. Occasionally we would hear how lucky we were to live in a place like Boise, where “there weren’t any of the problems you see in big cities, like hunger of homelessness.”

We discovered that people wanted to do something they just didn’t know what or how or where. Also no surprise, whatever the what, how, where was, it had to be something that could be worked into a life full of jobs, kids, school, commuting; the stuff of life. What we needed was a perspective commitment, not a time commitment. We had to get people out there on the front lines of need, so that they could see it firsthand. The story tells itself; we just had to give people a chance to hear it. It was the perfect example of how United Way could bring people together to address issues in our community.

Thus was born the United Way Direct Impact Response Team, (D.I.R.T.)

DIRT is a loose knit group of volunteers who give one lunch hour a month to volunteer at a project that is dirty or otherwise difficult to recruit help for.

There are only three criteria for DIRT projects:

1. They help people
2. There’s an opportunity for education
3. The project is considered undesirable or too difficult for traditional volunteer groups

Anyone can come and everyone is welcome. The format makes it easy for people—all people, to do a little something that takes them out of their daily routine and into the community to places they may not otherwise see. It is a chance to gain a different perspective on our community, without a large time commitment that might thwart their inclination to do something.

Founding DIRT Clod, Holly Sue Kerns, said this about getting DIRTy:

Holly Sue Kerns, Founding DIRT Clod

Holly Sue Kerns, Founding DIRT Clod

“What I love the most about DIRT is that I have gotten to work with so many different types of people in our community and have had such a great time doing it. I have worked with many non-profits in the past and have gotten a bad taste in my mouth because I felt like I was caught up in red tape and meetings–never really feeling like I actually helped someone. With DIRT I see the end result of what I am doing and who I am helping. I just love it.”

Wanna get DIRTy? Sign up here: www.dirtclods.com

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