Check your LinkedIn or Facebook page to provide your response.
“The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write,
but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.”
-Alvin Toffler
Thursday, April 4, 2013
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Reentry Program: New Report Highlights Lessons Learned by Law Enforcement Agencies
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Training: HUD. April 2013. Capacity Building – Grant Writing
Capacity Building – Grant Writing
HUDTraining Schedule for 2013 Date
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Location
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Address
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Registration Information
and Contact Persons
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April 9 – 10, 2013
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Houston, TX
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Neighborhood Centers Inc. Ripley House
4410 Navigation Blvd.
Houston, TX 77011
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Click Here To Register: http://www.hud.gov/emarc/index.cfm?fuseaction=emar.addRegisterEvent&eventId=1593&update=N
Contact Name: Gwendolyn Berry
Phone: 713-718-3110
Email.com: gwendolyn.d.berry@hud.gov
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April 24, 2013
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Jamaica, NY
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York College / City University of New York - CUNY
94 - 20 Guy R. Brewer Blvd
Jamaica, NY 11451
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Click Here To Register: http://www.hud.gov/emarc/index.cfm?fuseaction=emar.registerEvent&eventId=1649&update=N
Contact Name: Gayela Bynum
Phone: 202-402-6618
Email: gayela.a.bynum@hud.gov
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Would you like to know about
finding grants, leveraging funds, grant writing tips/do’s and don’ts, capacity
building, 501c3 info, and many more exciting topics?
This exciting
two day training event will include:
- Learning the key elements of how to prepare and compete for federal funding streams, how to understand the grant application process, the important factors for award, and capacity building. Attendees will also learn about other local Houston HUD programs such as Center for Faith Based and Community Partnerships, Community Planning and Development, Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity, Federal Housing Administration (FHA), Public Housing, Multifamily Housing,and other Housing related programs and how they are being utilized in the Houston area.
Everyone
must be registered to attend. A certification of completion will be given those
who attend both training days.
UN: Haitians aren't getting enough food
NOTE:
It's not a matter of just shipping off food supplies to assist Haiti. This is a prevaling problem since the devastating earthquake. Were long term risk assessments, rapid environmental, and rapid health assessments conducted to foresee problems that have affected Haiti since the earthquake (dysentery, sanitation, food supply, etc.). This does not involve a national level planning by the Haitian government, but local\division planning for all the divisions of Haiti.
Charles D. Sharp. CEO. Black Emergency Managers Association.
http://news.yahoo.com/un-haitians-arent-getting-enough-food-000739149.html
It's not a matter of just shipping off food supplies to assist Haiti. This is a prevaling problem since the devastating earthquake. Were long term risk assessments, rapid environmental, and rapid health assessments conducted to foresee problems that have affected Haiti since the earthquake (dysentery, sanitation, food supply, etc.). This does not involve a national level planning by the Haitian government, but local\division planning for all the divisions of Haiti.
Charles D. Sharp. CEO. Black Emergency Managers Association.
http://news.yahoo.com/un-haitians-arent-getting-enough-food-000739149.html
UN: Haitians aren't getting enough food
Associated Press
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — The United Nations said Tuesday that a growing number of people in Haiti are not getting enough to eat following a heavy storm season that damaged food crops.
The humanitarian department of the U.N. mission in the Caribbean nation of 10 million people said in its monthly bulletin that a spike in malnutrition has been recorded in some areas since October. At least one in five households faces a serious food deficit and acute malnutrition despite efforts to reduce hunger, the study said.
Malnutrition is worst in Haiti's far western corner in the administrative department of Grande-Anse, the U.N. said. There have also been reports of acute malnutrition in southeastern Haiti.
Widespread flooding damaged crops in the country's south when Hurricane Sandy and Tropical Storm Isaac brushed Haiti last year.
The U.N. said that more than more than 1.5 million of Haiti's people are at risk of malnutrition because of crops lost in the hurricane. As much as 90 percent of Haiti's harvest season, much of it in the south, was destroyed in Sandy's floods.
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