
Check out this week's spotlight feature: Friends of Belle Isle.
Did you know that every week, One D highlights a non-profit initiative in the SE Michigan that is making a difference in the region?
If you'd like to share your story, contact us at kat.owsley@oned.org!
700,000...that is the number of individuals and families in metro Detroit area that are currently in need of food. Rising unemployment rates in our region are leaving an estimated one in six people facing hunger problems.
United Way for Southeastern Michigan has been working in partnership with foundation, community and business leadership to develop a solution for addressing this crisis with long-term, sustainable results.
Please join the us for a briefing on Wednesday, January 20, 2010, from
10:00-11:00 a.m. in the Cadillac Square Conference Room at United Way
Headquarters, located in the First National Building at 660 Woodward
Avenue in Detroit.
“Today marks the launch of WDET 101.9’s Support The Arts (STAR) Program, an initiative established to provide on-air promotion at no cost to Southeastern Michigan’s non-profit arts and cultural organizations. Visit www.wdetstar.org to learn more. Help spread the word by sharing the site with five people you know who would be interested in our program or could benefit from it!”
Oakland University student's class project lands a $979,400 federal grant for jobs program
By The Associated Press
November 30, 2009, 8:45AM
An Oakland University student's class project has landed $979,400 to help older laid-off workers find new jobs.
Bernice Kerner wrote a successful grant proposal to the U.S. Labor Department as part of a research project in a master of public administration class at the Rochester school. Hers was one of 10 successful grant applications among 130 made nationwide.
Kerner says people who are 55 and older often need to update their job skills to find new work.
The Southeast Michigan Works! Agencies Caucus will use the three-year grant to support 30 staff members who will help older workers find jobs.
Kerner is a management information system supervisor for the Macomb-St. Clair Workforce Development Board.
Resource:
http://www.mlive.com/business/detroit/index.ssf/2009/11/oakland_university_students_cl.html
The Detroit News is highlighting ideas from various groups to promote discussion on reform, restructuring government and the economy.
Full high school access to two-year colleges
Idea 45: Let high school students choose to take some or all required courses for a high school diploma from community colleges.
Why: Michigan pays twice when high schools and community colleges overlap services and offer the same courses. In addition, studies estimate that community colleges spend one-third of their time providing remedial education, essentially doing the job that high schools are supposed to do. Allowing students to skip some high school extracurricular courses and move on to college earlier would lessen this redundancy and give many students a jump start on job training or a four-year degree.
Read full article here at DetNews.com:
http://detnews.com/article/20091124/OPINION01/911240315/1008/opinion01/Full-high-school-access-to-two-year-colleges
Great news!
Detroit schools report financial progress
Marisa Schultz / The Detroit News
Nov. 12, 2009
Detroit -- Detroit Public Schools has whittled its deficit nearly $87 million and resolved most of the financial reporting issues that have plagued the district, according to an audit DPS released Wednesday.
The deficit had been estimated at $305.9 million if no action was taken to curb expenditures, but the recent Comprehensive Annual Financial Report and Annual Single Audit has put it at $219 million.
DPS submitted the report to the state Tuesday -- six days prior to the deadline, a change from DPS' history of late filings.
"We will not ever again repeat the actions and inaction that led to this budget being out of control, including seven consecutive years of deficit spending," said Emergency Financial Manager Robert Bobb. "And we know that our financial operations are directly linked to providing strong academic programs."
Gov. Jennifer Granholm appointed Bobb to oversee the district's finances in March. To combat the anticipated deficit, he closed 29 schools, announced layoffs of nearly 2,500 employees and conducted audits to weed out fraud and waste and boost accountability. Bobb agreed this fall to stay on for a second year.
"We fully acknowledge that significant work still needs to be done to completely eliminate the deficit over the next three to four years," said DPS Chief Financial Officer Ricardo Kisner.
Last year's audit found 84 areas the district needed to improve -- 53 involved financial reporting and 31 were for administering and compliance of federal programs. Bobb and his work group of financial experts have developed strategies that to date have resolved 76 percent of them.
The areas targeted include restructuring the finance division to recruit and retain competent staff; preparing comprehensive written policies for financial operations, establishing better oversight of bond money and other assets and leveraging new technologies for budget and forecasting systems.
The Travel Channel will take it to the streets of the Motor City on Wednesday night when "Man v. Food: Detroit" premieres at 10 p.m.
Host Adam Richmond has a power-packed episode planned that finds him taking a bite of the world's biggest burger (from Southgate's Mallie's Sports Grill and Bar), sampling the Triple Threat pork sandwich from Slows Bar BQ in Detroit and, of course, visiting coney islands (downtown Detroit).
Also on tap: wrestling shenanigans with the Bump-N-Uglies and Revolucha, a visit with Motown legends the Contours, a look at the KISS tribute band War Machine and a spin around the rink with the Detroit Derby Girls.
Seriously, the burger is a mean 190 pounds. Don't miss this.
One D and Detroit Public Television are partnering over the next several months to raise awareness around the regional indicator, Educational Preparedness, and the promising work that supports progress against those indicators.
We are interested in hearing from people who have an impact on increasing high school graduation rates, including administrators, elected officials, nonprofits, parents, community groups and others.
Interviews will run on the OneD.org website and be promoted on Detroit Public Television.
If you are interested in participating, please use the contact information below for more information about the interviews, including dates, location and interview questions, please contact:
Kathleen Bushnell Owsley, CAE, Director
Email: kat.owsley@oned.org
Phone: 313.202.6309
Or use the contact form to send a message: http://oned.org/contact
For more information on these indicators, go to the One D Regional Scorecard Educational Preparedness page - http://onedscorecard.org/ScoreCard.html#
We hope to hear from you soon!
We all know that gas prices are headed back up, yet why do many of us not carpool to work? I know I do four days a week. It saves quite a bit of money in a year if you are spending half as much on gas on a weekly basis.
According to the One D Scorecard www.OneDScorecard.org, out of 54 major metropolitan areas studied, Detroit ranked 50 for the percentage of people who carpool to work.
Lets do the math, say you drive 15 miles to work, 30 miles total per day, five times a week. That is 150 miles per week. Say you car gets a generous 25mpg, that is 6 gallons of gas per week just to get you to and from work. Multiply that by 52 weeks per year. This equals 312 gallons of gas per year. Current prices are $2.75/gallon. That means that driving to work alone, you spend $858 on gas per year.
Now think what you can save if you carpool with one person and only drive half of the days to work. You could save $429 per year.
That is a lot of extra spending money, or money for living expenses! The numbers kind of speak for themselves.
Lets carpool more Detroit!
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