From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org
ELCA Promotes its Domestic Hunger Grants
From
Brenda Williams <BRENDAW@elca.org>
Date
16 Sep 1998 15:29:11
Reply-To: ElcaNews <ELCANEWS@ELCASCO.ELCA.ORG>
ELCA NEWS SERVICE
September 16, 1998
ELCA PROMOTES ITS DOMESTIC HUNGER GRANTS
98-33-189-FI
CHICAGO (ELCA) -- In the past 25 years churches have learned that
feeding people was not enough to solve the problem of hunger in the United
States, said Gaylord M. Thomas. The root causes of hunger would have to be
addressed through relief, development and community organizing projects,
and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) is working to improve
the process it uses to fund such projects.
Thomas, ELCA director for community development services, spoke to
representatives from 46 of the church's 65 synods who met here Sept. 12-13
to learn more about the church's domestic hunger grants program and to
share stories of how the process is or is not working.
Each year on July 15 the ELCA's Division for Church in Society sends
blank grant applications from Chicago to synod bishops and to organizations
that have previously applied. Applicants have until Oct. 1 to return the
completed forms with budget information. More than 600 blank applications
have been sent out this year, said Amy Honore, who staffs the program.
The division organizes the applications and sends them to the
appropriate synods on Nov. 1 for review and prioritizing. The applications
are returned to the churchwide offices by Jan. 15 and reviewed by a
granting committee. Notifications and lump-sum disbursement of grants are
mailed out on April 1.
"We have very few people who are aware of the domestic hunger program
in the church," Thomas said in an interview. He called the people who came
to the conference "seeds that go back into the synods to start everything -
- start more communication, more awareness, more participation in the
granting process, more relationship-building with the community -- the
seeds for all activities around the domestic hunger program."
The Rev. John L. Halvorson, coordinator of the ELCA World Hunger
Program, noted that participants expressed some frustrations with
definitions and how the churchwide offices communicated with the synod
offices and with congregations about the domestic hunger grant application
process.
"We all learned from each other," said Halvorson, "and now the
avenues of communication are much more open." He said, "The people who
came were eager to listen and to share their concerns. The chemistry for
the weekend was wonderful."
Halvorson said this was the first conference of its kind since the
start of the ELCA in 1988. Participants were appointed by their synod
bishops.
"This was a training event. This was an awareness-building event.
This was an idea-exchanging event. This was a concerns-expressing event,"
said Halvorson. "With many synods the process is working smoothly. With
many there is a lot of work to do."
The ELCA's World Hunger Appeal has been raising about $12 million a
year recently to fund programs at home and abroad. About $1.4 million or
11.9 percent of that money is distributed through domestic grants,
including $816,000 awarded through the application process.
"In 1998, the ELCA received 299 grant applications totaling $2.1
million," read a poster at the conference. "We were able to fund 249
projects -- 125 in direct relief, 58 in community organizing, 66 in
community development -- totaling $816,000. With increased support for the
Hunger Appeal, what more could we do?"
Lita Brusick Johnson, director for the ELCA's World Hunger Appeal,
asked the participants to send her ideas of how to observe the appeal's
25th anniversary in 1999.
For information contact:
Ann Hafften, Director 1-773-380-2958 or NEWS@ELCA.ORG
http://www.elca.org/co/news/current.html
Browse month . . .
Browse month (sort by Source) . . .
Advanced Search & Browse . . .
WFN Home