Showing posts with label vista. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vista. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Eyes in the Sky: Voices from Youth on the Street


While I'm waiting to hear back from a potential funder to start my music lessons and receive an approval from my organization's board for an exclusive art club with an amazing local retail store, I'm happy to inform you of an exciting event that the Street Outreach & Advocacy Program (SOAP) is putting on soon.  On Friday, September 3rd from 5-8pm at The Artisan's Courtyard, we'll be showcasing photos and videos that have been taken by our homeless, runaway, and at-risk youth clients over the past few weeks.  My colleague Anna Dale and stellar, multimedia extraordinaire Caleb Kuntz have been working hard in compiling their artwork this month and getting it ready for the big show.  It's been great to see our clients' creative skills at work and allow their stories to be told - stories they can tell through their eyes.


We invite the general public to attend this First Friday event and open your eyes, heart and mind to some breathtaking imagery.  These snapshots and short video clips should give you a great idea of what our clients experience on a daily basis on the streets of Fairbanks.  See the flyer above for more details and we hope to see you there!  If you have any questions, please contact Anna at 907-374-9913.  Do your part by helping those around you who might otherwise not be easily recognized in our usually busy lives each and every day.  My AmeriCorps VISTA experience thus far has only enhanced these values in my personal life and I invite you research the same.

Monday, June 21, 2010

An AmeriCorps VISTA Update


It's been amazing getting used to the 20+ hours of daylight.  It's funny having nightly events starting at 10pm or later and not being done till like 4 or 5am!  It really causes for lack of sleep if you're not paying attention, but I love it!  Today's the Summer Solstice.  There was NO sunrise this morning and will be NO sunset tonight due to the sun riding just above the horizon at those times and hanging high and bright in the sky during the day.  I picked up some fabric at the local thrift shop the other day and fashioned my own curtains to keep at least some sanity to experience my own version of night for sleeping here in the summer.

Other than that, I've adjusted very well here from Minnesota seeing as though the woods, streams, rivers and bluffs/foothills remind me a lot of my hometown in La Crescent, MN.  I've been living in Minneapolis for the past nine years, surrounded by plenty of asphalt, people, traffic and skyscrapers, but this is great to explore the great outdoors again.  So far, I've taken on the fun challenge of living in a dry cabin (no running water), run the ski trails of UAF, and hiked the 6,060-ft summit of Wildhorse Mountain off the Denali Highway.  This weekend, I'm planning on either climbing the 6,480-ft summit of Rainbow Mountain or road tripping to the Arctic Circle and Ocean with some friends.  Tough decision!!  Over July 4th Weekend, I'll be headed to Skagway, AK and Whitehorse, Canada with a couple friends to visit a friend of mine who gives helicopter and dog sledding tours on glaciers in the area.  I guess you can say I'm trying to take in as much of this great state not only while I'm here but because the warm weather only lasts so long, haha.

One other thing I've been involved with is the Fairbanks music scene.  I drum in my rock band Paragraphs back home and knew that I couldn't go an entire year without my drum set, so I shipped it up here and have befriended several local musicians and bands.  I was involved in a music mish-mash event called Fairbanks Pub League a couple weekends ago where they take about 25 local musicians and randomly put them into four-person bands.  They give you four hours to put together two covers and an original to perform at a bar later that night.  I'm happy to say my band (Lil' Wayne feat. Lil' Wayne) performed with few mistakes, haha.  I hope to be playing in a band sometime in the coming weeks.

To be honest, my time as a VISTA has been challenging so far here in Fairbanks.  I come from a very formal, dress-up, commute-to-work-in-a-skyscraper-cubical type of career, and being exposed to the nonprofit, social services sector has been very eye-opening to say the least.  I'm learning how to open up to my at-risk homeless and runaway youth clients and understand their needs as a population so as to find appropriate partnerships that should help them.  One thing I'm working on now is starting up formal music lessons at the local library for a few of my clients to participate starting in mid-July.  This will give those interested in music performance the ability to not only express themselves creatively but also know what having time management skills is like.  It's sustainable partnerships like this that I hope leave at least some sort of impression on those I'm serving even after my service year is done.

Overall, I'm having a blast here while missing my family and friends in Minnesota.  It was great meeting all the new faces at PSO in April as well as making new friends so far here in Fairbanks, including other VISTA's Bryan Whitten, Randy Russell, Krista Cassidy, and former VISTA's Katie Robb and Cassidy Phillips.  I'm looking forward to many more adventures and meeting many more people.

From the land of the midnight sun,
Danno

Thursday, May 20, 2010

First Impressions of Alaska & My AmeriCorps VISTA Service Work

Hey everyone!


I hope this note finds you warm and well wherever you may be in the lower-48. I'm safe and sound in Fairbanks, Alaska. It's beautiful here! I'm living in a dry cabin just outside of town with no running water and LOVE it. Most everyone lives sustainable up here mainly by filling a few water jugs once a month, utilizing an outhouse just outside their cabin, recycling materials, and composting food waste. Regarding my volunteer service, I had orientation in downtown Seattle from April 13-16 and had a blast! I saw a Mariner's game, Pike's Place Market, Space Needle, and rode a ferry across the bay at sunset to Bainbridge Island. Seattle is beeaaaauuutiful! I'll be there again this Weds through Friday to meet up with my mom and a couple friends before heading up to Vancouver, BC on Saturday morning to run the marathon on Sunday, then back to Fairbanks on Tuesday the 4th. I'll do my best to act as a tour guide in Seattle, at least.
 
[Groovin to 80's music as Miami Vice's Don Johnson.]

Since arriving in Fairbanks, I've been busy meeting people and seeing the main sites around town. I stayed with my volunteer supervisor and my AmeriCorps volunteer leader the first few days before moving into my supervisor's old cabin. Here's a list of what I've done so far: Tokyo Police Club concert + 80s Dance Party + Spring Fest (Earth Day Celebration w/music) --> all at UAF (U of Alaska - Fairbanks); Fairbanks Grizzlies arena football game, listening to some acoustic folk music at The Marlin Pub, ultimate frisbee and sauna with lots of people about 20 minutes West of town. I also had a great conversation with a well-known Fairbanks musician who plays guitar in the band, Work, who's going to get me in touch with some people to hopefully play drums in a band or two while I'm up here, too. Aside from that, my mom and her coworker Pam are coming to visit me July 28th - August 4th, where I'll take the train to Denali National Forest to meet them, stay the night, then get up early for an all-day wilderness tour in/around Mt. Denali, then train it later that evening to Fairbanks. Not sure what we'll while they're visiting Fairbanks, but we'll figure it out. My next time back in Minnesota will be in late August for my friend/guitarist's wedding on August 28th. Until then, I'll be rockin out here in Fairbanks, maybe get in a couple hiking/camping/fishing trips, and volunteering my time with AmeriCorps at Fairbanks' Street Outreach Advocacy Program (SOAP).


[Fairbanks Grizzlies game. The hard hat came in handy when the players got smashed into the padded boards in front of us.]

Speaking of work, I'm volunteering under Fairbanks Counseling & Adoption's Youth Drop-in Center called SOAP. I'm here to help with grant writing to expand and establish programs that help the area's youth runaway and homeless population. Drug, alcohol and sex abuse are a big problem for families in/around Fairbanks and are a big reason why the youth resort to living on the streets. Sure, it's springtime and summer's approaching fast, but think about how difficult it would be to live on the streets in the winter. Dry, sub-zero temperatures that dip down to -60ยบ sometimes are life-threatening. We are here to support their basic food and shelter needs for a few hours each day as well as offer assistance in affordable housing and work options. I'm excited to learn more and hopefully leave some sort of tangible and intangible impression on the institution and children of this area. The goal is to have this be a fully operational youth shelter within the next couple years. Here is the website of the site I'm working with through April 2011. http://bit.ly/cTkDI0

I think I should wrap this up seeing as though I really want to start up a journal/blog/photo blog within the next few days. I'll let you know when I have that link. Many, many, many more adventures to come for sure! If you'd like to stay in touch via physical mail, feel free to check out these two addresses listed below. Have a great day!

Best,
Dan

Physical Address:
435 Betters Ln
Fairbanks, AK 99709
Google Map:
http://bit.ly/dyFWQA

Mailing Address:
PO Box 81043
Fairbanks, AK 99708