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Volunteer
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The American Red
Cross works within communities, providing relief to people who
have suffered a disaster. We also help people prepare for, and
respond to a variety of emergencies. For over 100 years, we have
been THE organization our troops and their families have turned to
in times of need. With your help, the promise of neighbor helping
neighbor in times of trouble becomes a reality and our communities
become safer places to live. The Rio Colorado Chapter of the
American Red Cross recruits and trains volunteers. There are many
ways you can help save lives. Be a hero and get involved!
Colorado and Fayette County
Residents: Call: (979)
968-8931(Monday-Thursday 8-5) or Email:
stacey_norris@riocoloradoarc.org
Matagorda County Residents:
Call: (979) 245-3056 (Monday-Friday 9-5) or
Email:
chapter@riocoloradoarc.org
Wharton
County Residents: Call: (979) 531-1128
(Monday-Thursday 8-5) or Email:
keven_chin@riocoloradoarc.org |
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Here's a list of
what you could do,
and how you can do it
___Teach youth
how to be safer.
Become a Basic
Aid Training Instructor.
___Help families
when they need help the most.
Join a Disaster
Action Team.
___Keep local
military families in touch.
Become an Armed
Forces Emergency Services
Caseworker.
___Build
leadership skills.
Join the American
Red Cross Teen Volunteer Corps.
___Save lives.
Become a CPR,
First Aid, & Automated External Defibrillator Instructor.
___Help guard
lives at pools & lakes.
Become a Water
Safety or Lifeguard Instructor.
___Provide office
support.
Answer
telephones, data entry, inventory control, make deliveries,
greet Red Cross guests.
___Take a helping
vacation once a year on your American Red Cross or help your
neighbors.
___Raise money
and build Chapter Capacity & Resources.
Join the Board of
Directors.
Become a disaster
volunteer qualified to help families recover from major disasters
in your local community or across the country by becoming a(n):
*Damage Assessment Technician
*Family Service Caseworker
*Disaster Mental Health Volunteer (License Required)
*Disaster Health Service Volunteer (License Required)
*Mass Care Technician/Shelter Manager
*Logistics Technician
*Accountant
*Disaster Services Instructor
*Community Disaster Education Presenter

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10 Ways Volunteering
Can Help Your Career
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Volunteering offers incredible networking opportunities.
Volunteering in your community allows you to meet new people,
including community leaders. You don't have to join a club or attend
meetings. You can volunteer at a time that fits your schedule. You
not only develop life long personal and professional relationships
(friends), you can also hear about job openings, gather insider
employment information and develop great references.
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Volunteering helps you retain and sharpen old skills. Sometimes job
duties change and you may no longer be doing things you used to do,
and liked. Volunteering is a perfect venue for keeping those skills
sharp and current. A young colleague at the university serves as a
volunteer advisor for a student honorary group to keep her in touch
with today's students - their likes, interests, music, concerns. She
says it helps her in her counseling work to be aware of current
tends and interests among the students.
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Volunteering is the perfect place to develop new skills. Employers
are often seeking well-rounded individuals who have good teamwork
and goal setting skills. Serving on a volunteer committee or board
is a great way to learn group dynamics and teamwork. Serving as a
committee chair increases facilitation skills. Planning and
implementing a major fund raising event can develop goal setting,
planning and budgeting skills. Supervising and training other
volunteers helps to develop supervisory and training skills.
Volunteering offers unlimited opportunities to cultivate new skills
that can enhance a career.
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Volunteering offers opportunities to practice skills in a relatively
risk free environment. It is much more effective to practice a skill
than to read about it or study it in a classroom. Volunteering is an
excellent place to experiment, practice and try out new techniques
and skills. If offers you the opportunity build your self-confidence
through practice. Additionally, volunteering provides you
opportunities to observe others and select best practices. You can
stretch yourself in new way that can benefit your career.
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Volunteering can help you expand your horizons and explore new
career options. Demographics are changing rapidly in our society and
volunteering is a great way to enhance cultural awareness. Group
work not only fosters teamwork, but also offers opportunities to
learn more about different perspectives. If you are thinking of a
career change, volunteering is a perfect way to explore new fields.
Sometimes a volunteer experience can lead you to something you never
even though about or help you discover a skill or interest you were
unaware of. You can strengthen your personal/professional mission
and vision by exploring opportunities and expanding your
horizons.
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Volunteering give you the satisfaction of knowing you are doing good
and being involved in your community. A young professional man was
very troubled by the Columbine High School shooting because he had
personally felt like an outsider in high school and decided he would
become a big brother to serve as a positive influence in a young
life. He now feels connected in a whole new way. He is also gaining
valuable personal skills such as patience and tolerance that have
enhanced his professional standing. There are so many options for
being involved in your community, through professional associations,
neighborhood organizations, arts and historic organizations and
social service organizations. If you feel strongly about something
that is happening or not happening in your community, get involved.
Get others to join with you and craft new solutions to community
problems.
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Volunteering gives you visibility. A young manager at a major bank
once told me that he loved to volunteer at the local food pantry on
the same night as the bank's vice president. This was his
opportunity to be seen and known personally by the vice president.
Volunteer work can indeed expose you to a wide range of people,
including many strong, influential community leaders. Our city has a
young professional association called the "Movers and Shakers"
because they want to be seen as people who get things done.
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Volunteering can be energizing/renewing. Sometimes we simply need a
break in our routine, or an opportunity to create a balance in our
lives. Volunteering around a personal interest or hobby can be fun,
relaxing and energizing. That energy and sense of fulfillment can
carry over to a work situation and sometimes helps to relieve work
tensions and foster new perspectives for old situations.
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Volunteering can create leaders. By watching those around you, you
can begin to identify the qualities of leadership that you most
admire and you can develop those qualities in yourself. Managing a
group of volunteers is not the same as managing employees.
Volunteer groups are often groups of peers and they respond more to
leadership than management. You will have opportunities to lead by
persuasion, innovation and your ideas and ideals. Working in
volunteer settings will help you learn strategic thinking, change
management and conflict resolution skills. You will learn about your
community, about trends and issues, about people and about
resources. All of which can help you develop your leadership
potential.
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Volunteering demonstrates workplace skills/management
skills/customer service skills/leadership skills that can be
documented in a resume. Work experience is work experience, with or
without a paycheck. If you are developing new skills or thinking of
pursuing a new career, volunteer work can give you valuable,
practical experience. Career counselors, and headhunters encourage
job seekers to document pertinent volunteer experiences. Volunteer
work support skills, character and balance in life. 90% of
executives in a national survey of Fortune 500 companies believed
volunteering built teamwork and provided valuable professional
development opportunities.
Life is a wonderful journey and you never know where it will take
you. Volunteering can help you be more than a passive traveler. You
can make a plan and actively build skills to enhance your
professional lives. No fees and no tuition. A commitment of time and
energy and you are on your way.
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