Compassionate, dedicated, and adaptable. These words were repeatedly used to describe the 9 individuals, families, and groups who were honored Saturday, August 29th, by New Hope Housing at our Annual Volunteer Appreciation Breakfast for their service over the past year. This was the first time in 15 years that we did not have an in-person event to recognize volunteers; all volunteers and guests joined by Zoom. During the pandemic, New Hope Housing has suspended onsite volunteer activities but have had hundreds of groups and individuals volunteer virtually through online service and meal preparation. In addition to these awards, several other volunteers were highlighted for special contributions during the pandemic.
Ollie & Ellie were named Outstanding Volunteers and have been the leaders of their families’ efforts for volunteer service during the pandemic. Students at St. Stephen’s & St. Agnes School and neighbors in Alexandria, Ollie and Ellie have helped prepare meals for shelter and outreach sites over 30 times since they began volunteering in May – a total of 1,000 meals! They also lovingly decorate and write notes on all of the bags to provide a moment of sunshine for guests. Ollie and Ellie have also signed up for service throughout the fall and look forward to being old enough to volunteer onsite at the shelters once they reopen for volunteers. (Per family requests, we are not sharing their last names)
Christine Sennott of Alexandria received the Volunteer of the Year award for her personal service and for leading tremendous service efforts on behalf of Keller Williams MetroCenter for the past two years. With her leadership, the Culture Committee of KW MetroCenter has organized projects for their RED (Renew, Energize, Donate) Day of Service which have included renovations of apartments for formerly homeless people, employment assistance, and cleaning and makeovers of shelters. They also “adopted” two apartments at the new Bailey’s Shelter & Supportive Housing (BSSH) facility in October by purchasing and providing household items to make the apartments move-in ready. Christine also got support from friends and businesses to adopt 4 more.
This spring, they were deep into planning service for RED Day and several Keller Williams offices were going to participate before everything had be called off in March. A few weeks later, Christine invited New Hope Housing into a partnership for a new project called Front Yards 2 Front Lines. This volunteer group raised money from agents and friends to purchase meals from struggling local restaurants to donate to frontline workers. Over two months, thousands of meals were purchased for first responders, firefighters, sanitation workers, and more. Hundreds of masks and other supplies were collected and donated too. Toward the end of this project, the group realized there would likely be greater needs than meals before the pandemic is over. They contacted INOVA hospital to determine what these needs might be and then took action. In July, this group presented $15,000 to INOVA hospital to be used to build a needed “negative pressure room” that is ideal for treating COVID-19 patients. They also secured a matching grant from a local foundation to raise that total to $30,000. We are grateful to have been in this partnership to help our community.
“We miss seeing the faces of our volunteers, but we see the effects of their efforts daily,”shared Pam Michell, executive director of New Hope Housing.
The Falls Church Episcopal was named an Outstanding Volunteer Group and has been making and delivering hot and delicious dinners for everyone at the Bailey’s Shelter on the 2nd Sunday of the month since 2017. The care and attention they put in to creating a great menu every month has been commented on by shelter guests regularly. At the beginning of the pandemic, the church group realized it might not be safe to gather to prepare meals, so they researched local restaurants that were still preparing and delivering meals at affordable rates and found Spin Pollo in Falls Church. Since April, Spin Pollo meals have been a highlight at the shelter. Falls Church Episcopal members have also been preparing bagged meals for new outreach programs and hosting food drives for other local nonprofits.
Stephanie Johnson of Alexandria was named an Outstanding Volunteer for her participation in several projects. Stephanie first served with New Hope Housing through Keller Williams day of service in 2019. She had such a great time meeting staff, interacting with guests, and serving with her team, that she’s been involved ever since. Last October, Stephanie adopted one of the units at the Bailey’s Shelter & Supportive Housing site! She bought everything for the unit and joined us to decorate before the building opened. She made sure that the resident that moved into the apartment would feel loved and cared for when they moved in. This year, she has been preparing and dropping off meals for our smaller shelter sites, has created an Amazon wish list to encourage friends and family to donate items needed at the shelter, and created several fundraisers on Facebook to encourage more people to donate.
Fern & James Winbush of Fairfax County were presented with the Jim Lund Lifetime of Service Award (named after a volunteer who has been serving for more than 30 years!). They have been involved with New Hope Housing in dozens of ways over their many years of service. Fern served on the board of directors, they were table captains at Giving Hope breakfasts, and have prepared dinners for the guests at Mondloch House Shelter every fourth Saturday of the month for the last 10 years. They encourage their friends and family to connect, notably encouraging a partnership between New Hope Housing and their church, Bethlehem Baptist Church. During the pandemic, they haven’t stopped giving. They donated more than $1,000 worth of needed items from our Amazon wish list.
“We miss seeing the faces of our volunteers, but we see the effects of their efforts daily,” shared Pam Michell, executive director of New Hope Housing. “The past few months have been difficult. The next few years will likely be even harder. But ending homelessness has always been hard work. I’m grateful to know that there are neighbors like you who work side-by-side with us to make sure everyone has a safe and happy home in which to thrive.”
For more information on volunteering, please contact Sami at 703-799-2293 x 11 or ssmyth@newhopehousing.org