Mission Closed Beginning December 19th

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The mission will be closed December 19th – January 2nd. To honor the year-long commitment volunteers have made, we like to provide a season of rest. Thank you volunteers! Our Sunday night worship will begin again January 2nd.

Note: Please do not drop off donations at the mission December 19th – January 2nd. These items will be left unattended while the mission is closed.

During the break, donations would be greatly appreciated at the Salvation Army Donation Center located at 311 Southwest 5th Street, Oklahoma City, OK. Thanks.

Opened Gift

Last night, the Rock Island youth swarmed Bricktown. As a reward for plugging in to the many opportunities during 1st Semester, 20 students were chosen to take a trip as a Christmas present. Even though the kids are cream of the crop, we had nervous moments near the canal including muddy bare feet.

At Earl’s, we had to divide up into 4 tables due to the Thunder game crowd. This made Luke and I tense up a bit. Good news. All the wait staff complemented the kids behavior. We then went on to watch the new Narnia movie. Minus endless trips to the concession stand and group bathroom, we saw most of the movie!

A big thanks to Carley and her students from Church of the Servant who not only joined us, but helped fund the evening. Also, a special thanks to the Walker group from Life Church for their amazing sponsorship as well.

OKC Schools Going To Year-Round School

http://www.news9.com/Global/story.asp?S=13667035
Posted: Dec 13, 2010 6:49 PM
by Rusty Surette, News 9

The Oklahoma City school board unanimously approved a new school year calendar that will reduce the time off students get for the summer.

The approved Continuous Calendar will shorten the summer break from 12 to 8 weeks, and will lengthen other breaks scheduled throughout the year.

“The time is right. It’s a bold thing to do, but we have to do it now,” said OKCPS Superintendent Karl Springer. “During our strategic planning community meetings, parents and teachers asked for dramatic and effective changes to help students be successful. This plan moves the district to a seamless educational calendar that will have a positive effect on student growth and achievement.”

The new Continuous Calendar begins next school year.

Old Calendar
-Classes Begin August 22, 2011
-Fall Break- 2 days
-Thanksgiving Break-3 days
-Winter Break- 2 weeks
-Spring Break-1 week
-School Ends-May 25, 2012

Continuous Learning Calendar
-Classes Begin August 1, 2011
-Fall Break- 2 weeks
-Thanksgiving Break- 3 days
-Winter Break- 3 weeks
-Spring Break-2 week
-School Ends June 1, 2012

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Tis The Season

Tis The Season from http://www.lukewhitmire.blogspot.com/

There has been lots of activity at Cross and Crown during this Christmas season and if you’re interested in being apart of all or some of what’s left then here is how you can help…

1. Sunday Worship

This Sunday (December 12) we will be having our Christmas celebration. It starts at 6:00 with our meal followed by a time of worship at 6:30. Then, around 7:15 or so, following the worship, we will wrap up the night by giving away warm jackets/coats, beanies/toboggans, gloves, scarves and blankets to each family member or individual.

During this time we will, also, be keeping our eyes open for families with younger children to select a toy or present from a small selection of gifts that we have collected throughout the past year.

2. Food Pantry/Clothing Room

As usual, the food pantry and clothing room will be open Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday to the neighborhood and we are always excited to have some new volunteers helping and praying for the people that come with need for the day.

3. Rock Island

Historically, during the Christmas season Rock Island has done something memorable with and for the most consistent, regular attendees during the previous school semester. This year we’re planning on the same.

In years past we have done gift exchanges (Dirty Santa), delivered gifts to families of Rock Island students and even had the old, traditional ‘Christmas Party’ with punch and cookies but this year we want to do something that we have, somewhat, gotten away from at Rock Island.

We want to get them out of their normal, comfortable setting of their neighborhood and experience, for some the first time, another part of Oklahoma City. It may seem, kinda, silly or insignificant to you or someone else reading this but what we have learned is anytime we can get the kids out of their routine, everyday environment we are able to see a whole different side of some of the kids.

This year we are teaming up with a small group of youth from a church in another part of the city for dinner and a movie. It’s a youth group ‘date’, of sorts.

The plan is simple. Meet up with the other group. Go eat dinner. Talk. Laugh. Go to the movie. Throw popcorn. Get reprimanded. Laugh. Get a few phone numbers during the movie. Talk some more. Head back to Rock Island. Don’t put on a seat-belt. Get reprimanded. Put on a seat-belt. Get back to Rock Island. Merry Christmas.

This year, instead of gifts, we want to give the kids an experience. A memory. We want to give them an opportunity to meet new people in a new environment. To strengthen friendships.

Recap

So there is how you can be apart of what’s going on at Cross and Crown and Rock Island these last couple days and weeks before Christmas comes and goes.

Here’s how you can serve:

Sunday night – Help serve food, pass out jackets, coats, mittens and scarves. Shop the gift area with kids and families. Help clean up.
Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday – Help in the prayer room by meeting and praying for families and individuals. Carrying food boxes for women or the elderly.

Here’s what you can bring/give:

Jackets/coats, toboggans, gloves, scarfs and blankets.
Small gifts/toys for children on Sunday night.
Financial gifts towards the Rock Island dinner and movie. (We may be eating at McDonald’s depending on what kind of money we can pull in before next Wednesday)
If interested in helping or contributing in any way please email me at lwhitmire1@gmail.com or just show up!

Luke

Oklahoma Food Stamps Numbers Skyrocket


Posted: Oct 18, 2010 9:57 PM
Oklahoma Food Stamps Numbers Skyrocket
By Jennifer Loren, The Oklahoma Impact Team
http://www.news9.com
click here for original story

OKLAHOMA CITY — In Oklahoma a person must make less than $1,200 per month to qualify for food stamps. Right now there are more than 600,000 Oklahomans who fit that bill. According to Department of Human Services officials the numbers could get worse before they get better.

It’s the middle of the night at Crest grocery store in Oklahoma City, yet shoppers armed with lengthy grocery lists line every single aisle. When the clock strikes midnight, it will be the first of the month. At that moment it’s pay day for those shoppers. Their electronic benefit transfer cards, or EBT cards, are loaded with money. It’s money from Oklahoma’s SNAP program (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program). But you may know it as food stamps.

In Tulsa, the first of the month means long lines at Perry’s Food Mart. It’s a line that over time has grown longer than ever before.

In the past three years, the number of people receiving the benefits has skyrocketed. In 2008, there were 415,000 Oklahomans receiving food stamps. Now there are more than 600,000. That’s more than the entire population of Oklahoma City. It’s also an increase of 46 percent.

Melia Shuman is one of those thousands of food stamp recipients. In 2008 she was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. Two days later she was laid off. Less than a week later the company she worked for no longer existed, leaving her high and dry.

“I didn’t know how I was going to live. I didn’t know how I was going to pay for a living. I didn’t know how I was going to pay utilities. I didn’t know what I was going to do for eating,” said Melia Shuman.

Her only option, she said, was to apply for food stamps. For the past two years Shuman has been receiving the maximum individual food stamp allowance of $200 a month. She said that money alone would not be enough to pay for all of her food needs. To get by, she combines her SNAP money with donated food from local food pantries.

“You have to learn to budget. That’s the only way you can make it through. Cause they give you the bare minimum,” said Shuman.

Eventually she hopes to get off food stamps and onto permanent disability. But, she admits the large amounts of federal government spending makes her worry about the future of these programs.

Gerald Davis is a regional Director for the Oklahoma Department of Human Services, which runs the food stamp program. He said the staff at his Tulsa office has been slammed with new clients.

“DHS has been asked to help and we have responded,” said Davis.

Davis said food stamps are usually the last resort for people in financial trouble. To him that means times are tough in Oklahoma.

“Twenty-nine straight months of increase, record increase, that tells me that yeah, we’re in a crisis,” said Davis.

And this crisis could cost taxpayers a billion dollars this year. In 2008, Oklahoma received $485 million in federal food stamp funding. That paid the average recipient $97 a month. Now the average monthly payment is $130 per person, meaning Oklahoma is on track to receive $945 million in federal food stamp funding this year.

The Department of Human Services will only speculate as to what’s behind the crisis. They have not compiled their data to give an exact reason. They speculate that Oklahoma’s crisis is due to the late arrival of the nation’s economic crisis here. They say it’s all related to jobs.

“So many people have lost jobs or they’ve been reduced in the number of hours they can work,” said Davis.

It appears unemployed Oklahomans are a major factor, but so are the working poor. In 2008, the state’s unemployment rate was 4.2 percent. Add to that 50,000 more Oklahomans and now unemployment is at 7 percent. But 185,000 people enrolled in the food stamps program in that time. That means many of them have jobs and still are poor enough to qualify for food stamps.

Job or no job, poverty is spreading amongst Oklahomans. Sadly, many of the new food stamp recipients are children. Right now, a shocking 30 percent of Oklahoma’s children are being fed through the food stamps program.

Students Against Hunger


The sixth-annual Students Against Hunger Food Drive, which benefits the Regional Food Bank of Oklahoma and its partner agencies, runs September 27 through October 29, 2010. Students Against Hunger is a month-long food and fund drive designed to encourage student participating in feeding the hungry by raising nonperishable food, monetary donations and awareness of the issue of hunger in Oklahoma. The food drive is open to all students in Oklahoma, including those in pre-school through college.

Last year, the food drive set record-breaking numbers by collecting 172,413 pounds of food and $56,479 (net), which will provided 530,050 meals to hungry Oklahomans. Statewide, more than 150 schools in 11 counties participated in the food and fund drive. Bishop McGuinness Catholic High School in Oklahoma City set record breaking numbers for the fourth year in a row by collecting 42,408 pounds of food and $3,080, provided 54,787 meals to those in need.

We are excited to be a partnering agency again this year. Each partnering agency picks up the cans from the schools and takes to the Regional Foodbank. We then receive a portion of the food collected. It is always fun to see to see how excited the students are to present their food at each school!

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