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News & MediaIn the News    May 21, 2012
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Spurred by NY, 10 cities launch volunteer programs

Published: 1 years 235 days ago

New York Times:  Ten U.S. cities are recruiting volunteers to help with local problems such as flood recovery and childhood obesity as part of a nationwide emphasis on service led by New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

Bloomberg founded a volunteer corps in his city last year in response to President Barack Obama's call for more Americans to do service work. He then launched a coalition of cities focused on service, and it now has more than 100 member cities.

Earlier this year, the billionaire mayor's philanthropic foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation gave grants to 20 cities to hire chief service officers and start their own service efforts.

Ten of those cities are launching their programs this month, with a wide range of initiatives geared toward solving local issues. The cities are Philadelphia, Detroit, Seattle, Chicago, Los Angeles, Nashville, Tenn., Sacramento, Calif., Savannah, Ga., Omaha, Neb., and Newark, N.J.

"Mayors play a critical role at the local level," Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson said in an interview. "Bloomberg said, 'OK, we're going to create Cities of Service and have mayors be leaders around the country in terms of making service opportunities real.'"

Sacramento's program concentrates on public safety, education, homelessness and the environment. One initiative trains volunteers in emergency preparedness; another will use volunteers to expand an existing effort that uses houses of worship as emergency homeless shelters.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hBI4i79DW8SnzUfncYUvZ7in0TxwD9IHFCH00?docId=D9IHFCH00


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