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The Goodletter
The good life: live it, be it, do it.


Thursday, August 9, 2001
www.goodthings.com

A few favorite goodthings from Jonathan Darr of Washington, DC:
Toni Morrison. Justice. Flexibility. Appreciation instead of tolerance. Pad Thai. Diversity. Blue.
- Jonathan is the director of Stand for Children Day and member services at Stand for Children, a non-profit advocacy organization. (Learn more about it in today's "Upshot.")

[ What are YOUR favorite goodthings? ] Read more


In this week's issue:
[GoodLetter] Voices of Freedom
[Readers Respond] Teachers Without Borders
[Good Gravy] Dear Exile -- Circle of Friends -- Down from the Mountain -- plus a new Good Photo
[The Upshot] Stand for Children
[Housekeeping] Subscribe/unsubscribe and other tools for your back pocket


Voices of Freedom
Does doing the kind of work that brings opportunity, empowerment, and flexibility to others mean you have to give up your own? One non-profit providing support for troubled teenage girls has built a better mousetrap.


Dear GoodLetter readers,

Contemporary workplaces are remarkably different from how they were fifty, even twenty years ago. The conservative business suit now appears to have the approximate popularity of the typewriter. Telecommuting keeps just as many people away from the office as in it. Sometimes dogs and small children even roam the hallways. Clearly, the office of today is not your parents' workplace.

The name of the game is flexibility. Long-distance collaboration between colleagues is easier than ever. But workdays are ever longer for most people and responsibilities more intense. What if we could keep the whole picture in better perspective, doing our jobs better and -- at the same time -- infusing our lives with balance?

A non-profit with a mission no less daunting than to reverse the downward spiral of troubled teenage girls is giving its dedicated team all the balance it needs -- and reversing a number of long-standing trends in non-profit work in the process. Traditionally, non-profit employees have been woefully under-compensated for the amount of responsibility they're expected to shoulder. Further, many non-profits struggle from a staggering turnover rate, making progress difficult. What's more, most non-profits can't afford to offer the kinds of benefits that make it easy for employees to have lives outside of work. From its humble beginnings five years ago, Seattle-based Powerful Voices had a different plan.

Powerful Voices began with a grant to establish a pilot program to help provide educational, vocational, and mentoring services for girls in juvenile detention, but struggled early on from attrition as employees left for better paying jobs. The group became convinced that a part-time strategy might be able to stem the tide. If they could keep people around longer, they could channel the significant resources they were expending on training every year to help make salaries among the most attractive of comparable organizations. With its board of directors and funders in agreement, PV took the leap and has never looked back.

How has part-time worked for employees? It's freed up employee time for other part-time jobs, volunteer opportunities, continuing education, and extracurriculars. But it's also required executive director Julie Edsforth -- herself a part-timer, distinguishing her in a crucial way from the heads of similar organizations -- to lead by example. She continually reiterates that employees, despite normal human tendencies to take work home (especially when the futures of struggling youth are at stake), need to set real limits. Even so, she says, it's often easier said than done: "You can't just be a prima donna and blindly say you believe in this kind of workplace philosophy. It's difficult."

How does Powerful Voices guarantee its work gets done? After all, the staff of eight women has served 1200 girls in the past three years. PV runs an After-School Girls Leadership program for 11 - 14 year olds, where they mentor and teach self-awareness and self-sufficiency to 100 at-risk girls twice a week for an entire school year. It manages MAPS (Making A Positive Step), a peer education program for 13 - 18 year olds. It spearheads the Young Women's Support Project for 12 - 18 year olds in juvenile detention, with a goal of meeting with as many as 450 girls at least once. Efficiency is the key, and given the organization's investment in its employees, expectations are high. Edsforth says her team is made up of pacesetters convinced anything is possible and that solutions to problems are many: "Everyone feels so good about the organization. We're all set up to get 90% of our work done in a couple of days each week."

While we're talking flexibility, it's important to note that Edsforth is also a mom, having just had a child and beginning a three-month leave. But the teenage girls Powerful Voices is committed to helping will still have their mentors. Edsforth, who's filled in for colleagues in similar circumstances, says keeping the show going in her absence will be simple: "I'm asking everyone to step up."

Wood Turner
Editor/Publisher, GoodThings, Inc.

[what did you think of this goodletter?]


TALK ABOUT IT
Is your workplace good for you? Is it good for the world? Is it good for you AND the world? Share your stories.

LEARN MORE ABOUT IT
::Powerful Voices

Next week, Powerful Voices will participate in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Young Women's Health Summit 2001 in Los Angeles, California. Learn more about the conference

DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT
::Girls, Inc. has an amazing site full of ideas for nurturing strong, smart, bold, and inspiring girls
::Find out how to participate in the Woodhull Institute's Young Women's Leadership Retreat
::Get information on Take Our Daughters to Work Day from the Ms. Foundation for Women

To support girls near you, contact your local community foundation and asking for names of organizations in your neck of the woods.

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Here's a goodthing: everyday, we add a new Good Grab on the GoodThings home page. We scan the world for good news and good ideas and give you a reason to keep checking back with us everyday. The August 6 "grab" is one of our favorites this week: it's a review of author Nick Hornby's new book, in which he wonders How To Be Good and determines it's not all cut and dried. Come take a look and tell us the goodthings you've found.



Readers Respond
Fred Mednick of Seattle, Washington, wrote to add to the conversation on creatively expanding educational opportunities worldwide:

"We only hear horror stories about the Middle East. However, I have a good thing to report. I helped to set up a Community Teaching and Learning Center in Laqiya, in the Negev desert, in Israel, for the Bedouin villagers. Now, Jewish and Arab teachers volunteer to provide education in information technology, cultural preservation and celebration, and literacy. Though I am Jewish, I was embraced by new Arab friends."

Fred helped to set up this cross-cultural teaching center with the support of the non-profit Teachers Without Borders. Learn more.

What organizations, programs, and ideas are inspiring you?

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The Upshot
Did you see Jonathan Darr's favorite goodthings today? Jonathan works for an organization -- Stand for Children -- that's one of our favorite goodthings. A national nonpartisan membership organization, Stand for Children is building a voice strong enough to speak for all children in a world where their health, education, and safety are at risk.

Stand for Children seeks lasting changes for the children it works for. When the Stand for Children chapter in Laurel, Maryland, chose to address the lack of safe and educational places for young people in the community, rather than try to start and run a teen club themselves, Stand for Children asked local decision-makers to fund a teen club to be run by the City Department of Parks and Recreation. That teen club is now serving 40 teens every Friday and Saturday night, and Stand for Children has moved on to confront other pressing children's issues in the community.

Learn more about Stand for Children.

THE UPSHOT. Thinking big.


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Good Gravy
Be sure to click through to our Web site to see what we're reading, watching, and listening to and, while you're at it, share some of yours with us so we'll know what we're missing.

Books
Good Reading! Dear Exile: The True Story of Two Friends Separated (for a Year) by an Ocean Hilary Liftin and Kate Montgomery (1999). Cultural differences, divergent values, and geography infuse the letter-writing of two old friends with energy. Read the review.

Movies
Great Movie Rental! Circle of Friends (1995). The film that made Minnie Driver a star is a story of maintaining friendships despite the different directions life takes us. Read the review.

Music
Great New Music! Down from the Mountain Various Artists (2001). The musicians from the wildly popular O Brother, Where Art Thou soundtrack perform favorites from movie and a few more dandies. Read the review.

Good Photo
New on our Home Page! It's from the Bread and Roses Cultural Project's exhibit Unseen America. Come see the new photo on our home page and be sure to click it to get the rest of the story.

GoodThings on Public Radio
Have you been checking out the summaries of our favorite public radio stories? Here's a sample from this week's All Things Considered on National Public Radio:

Watching the Waves
Gloucester, Massachusetts, has just unveiled a new 12-foot bronze statue honoring the wives of that community's generations of fishermen. Fishermen's wives have long lived a lifestyle without their husbands for days, sometimes weeks, at a time, managing life's joys and sadness on their own. They also have endured amazing uncertainty, considering the dangers of work on the sea, and have been Gloucester's "rock." They've been politically powerful, as well, advocating for the fishing industry and in opposition to dumping and oil drilling off of New England's coast. Visit our site to listen to this story and to see what else has been on the radio this week.


Want to share some Good Gravy of your own? Tell us what you're reading, watching, or listening to and why you think it's good.

Housekeeping
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Copyright 2001 GoodThings, Inc. All rights reserved, but we love it when you forward the GoodLetter with abandon.

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