Sunday, October 28, 2012

Waiting on the fun

So far, I feel like we have been working on a lot of planning. How many bags, how much, when, where, etc. I just want to get the bags and start selling them asap. If by some miracle we can get them before this weekend that would give us a great start. I just want to mention, I am so impressed by Ignacio's ability to work proactively on this project! His wonderful and extensive spreadsheet and his ability to be on task with Stuart are all very impressive and appreciated.

Here is the e-mail that I sent to Cassie from Bouldin Creek:

Cassie,

My name is Christy Camp and I am a graduate student from the School of Social Work at UT. I am currently part of a class called Global Project Development run by Professor Dorie Gilbert. Our class has partnered with the McCombs School of Business MBA program and Trashy Bags, a nonprofit based out of Ghana. Trashy Bags recycles water sachets (West Africa's form of a water bottle) and creates recyclable shopping bags in various sizes. Trashy Bags employs women with HIV/AIDS that otherwise would not be able to get work and support their families in Ghana. Currently, we are trying to raise $5,000 to open a new factory so Trashy Bags can start producing more bags to sell to stores like Whole Foods. As part of our fundraising, we need to sell more bags! I was wondering if we could possibly set up a table in front of Bouldin to sell our bags. I have attached pictures and the Trashy Bag website link. 


Inline image 1


If you have any questions you may reach Dr. Dorie Gilbert at the following e-mail address:
dgm@mail.utexas.edu

Best,
Christy Camp
817-988-1543
________________________

I got an e-mail from Cassie from Bouldin Creek that read:

Hi Christy,
 

We would love to have you participate in the Bouldin Brunch Bizarre. I love the idea and what you are raising money for. Here's a little bit of information on the event. 

Set up is free to you! Every penny earned is yours to keep. Vendors are responsible for own table and seating. Optional tent/canopy is recommended, but not required.  We ask that Vendors arrive at 7am on schedule date for set up. Selling hours are from the hours of 8am-2pm. Vendors will receive bottomless drip coffee and iced teas and will receive a ticket for one free espresso drink. 

Christy, the next available date I have for vending is Saturday November 3rd. Will this date work for you? If so, Please let me know as soon as possible and I will email the Vendor Contract to you. 

Talk soon, 
Cassie Ransdell  
____________________________________

I have not been able to reply because I am unsure about when we will get our bags in. Hopefully we will know soon!

In other news, my art friend Tim Opsahl has a website with some of his work:
Click Here for his portfolio. Tim has agreed to make our logo for our World AIDS Day event.

I look forward to seeing everyone tomorrow!

ps - I am yet to here back from Barton Springs Farmer's Market.




Monday, October 22, 2012

Getting the word out on Trashy Bags

This past week I have been trying to get in contact with different sites where we can sell the Trashy Bags we plan on ordering. Once we have our 100 trashy bags, we certainly need to be able to make money off of them! So, I have been scouring Austin for potential sites where we can become vendors.

#1 - The Austin Farmer's Market - Website Link
Unfortunately, this Farmer's Market (the premier market in town with over three sites) is highly exclusive and prefers only locally made products. I spoke to Suzanne Santos, the Director of Community Relations, about possibly having Trashy Bags as a vendor and she outright told me we would not qualify. I have the application if anyone would like to take a peek, but it's also on the website.

#2 - Bouldin Creek Brunch Market - Website Link
I have e-mailed Cathy, the woman in charge of setting up the vendors at Bouldin Creek. If you have not ever been to Bouldin Creek, it's a fabulous vegetarian/vegan restaurant on South 1st Street that is absolutely PACKED on the weekends. On the weekends from 7am to 3pm there are vendors in the front lawn selling different homemade items. I briefly spoke to restaurant staff (there is no manager) and they thought that Trash Bags could get a spot on the lawn! I have e-mailed Cathy all our information as well as links to the Trashy Bags website and Dr. Gilbert's e-mail if she has any further questions. This looks like it could become a reality, so finger's crossed!

#3 - Barton Springs Farmer's market - Website Link
This market is more friendly and accepting to vendor's who sell arts and crafts, homemade widgets, etc. I called the individual in charge of accepting new "sellers" and was able to leave a message. I have not yet heard a reply. I went ahead and filled out our application and faxed it in on Friday, so hopefully early this week we will hear something.

#4 - 23rd Street Artist's Market (located on the drag) - Website Link
This outdoor market, which I'm sure all of you are familiar with, is generally reserved for artists and handicrafts. I thought it would be worth it to try and see if we could get Trashy Bags included, though. It always looks so busy! The website has no application and there is no phone number that I could find. If anyone else wants to try and find a way to contact them, that would be great. I had no luck.

#5 - Austin Cooperatives - Website Link
This idea requires a lot of work. I found the directory of Austin Co-ops and I thought that we could contact some and just tell the story of Trashy Bags and see if they would like to purchase some bags. There are many different types of Co-ops, and some grow their own food, some are for vegans only... it really varies. The thing is, everything they do, they do together! They go on large grocery shopping trips and buy things for multiple people  at one time - they could really use Trashy Bags! Also, people in Co-ops are oftentimes interested in initiatives like Trashy Bags.

These are hopefully a few helpful ideas that we can discuss during our teleconference with Trashy Bags.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Ok, I have been reading through everyone's blogs, comments, and the conversation on the wiki page. It definitely sounds like we need to start get the ball rolling on some of these awesome ideas. I hope that in class Monday we can throw out our ideas and get a class consensus on what we are actually going to do. It's time to solidify a schedule like Ana had mentioned.

So, I want to share some thoughts:
GRAD SCHOOL IS HARD! You guys, I get overwhelmed on a daily basis and this particular class makes me especially nervous. I had the opportunity to take classes similar to this one during my undergrad. I really love community involvement, fundraising, and working amongst student groups. Honestly. However, this semester I feel almost too caught up in my frighteningly difficult graduate classes to really give our projects my all. I obviously don't want to flake out and not engage with our class. I know we are all busy and very involved in different stuff on and off campus. I just know that I personally need accountability. Meaning - I need to be corresponding on a weekly basis, discussing projects in person out of class, texting/calling. Let me know your thoughts.


Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Project Creation Time Commences


As a small group project, I think that I would like to set up a booth at AIDS Walk Austin (Sunday October 21st). We could sell and promote Trashy Bags as well as educate people on the organization.  This would be such a great opportunity to spread the word on Trashy Bags and raise some funds for other potential events. Maybe if we all came up with a small event for Trashy Bags, we could each be a leader on the small event and then work collaboratively on a large event (something like World AIDS Day). I was heavily involved in LifeWalk 2011 (the Dallas version of AIDS Walk Austin). I also lead the entire event planning for World AIDS Day 2011 at the University of North Texas in collaboration with AIDS Arms, Inc. of Dallas. So, World AIDS Day is no stranger to me.

As far as an individual project goes, I have been racking my brain trying to figure out something that I could do. I only moved to Austin at the end of May and I haven’t had the chance to do some serious social networking with many organizations. I did projects like this throughout my entire undergraduate career, and I don’t want to duplicate an experience. I am going to try and talk to Nancy Ellis of Caritas and see how my position in the organization could open up any doors for me.

My goal this semester is to expand my social network in Austin and get comfortable in my new environment. I feel frustrated because I don’t have that strong network here like I did in Dallas. I am a relatively sociable person and all the projects I have considered so far involve getting engaged with people and initiating discussion. I love setting up booths and doing educational activities! I hope that we have a few activities that involve doing a lot of one-on-one talking and educating.

We should make a list of group assets in class one day… just to discuss our personal strengths and confronting some weaknesses. I think that would help us not only utilize those strengths but become more aware of areas that need growth.

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Concepts of Community and Identity


Who am I?

Beverly Tatum briefly mentioned Audre Lorde in, Complexity of Identity: “Who am I?” during her discussion of the concept of subordinate and dominant allies. Audre Lorde happens to be a personal hero of mine. She once said, “It is not our differences that divide us. It is our inability to recognize, accept, and celebrate those differences.” To begin any discussion on who I am, I have to communicate who I know I am not. I am not a racial or ethnic minority. I will never know what it is like to be a minority. However, I may have brief experiences in which I am the minority (for instance, this class!). Regardless, I am a White, educated, upper-middle class, US-born female. I do not feel shameful or abashed for being White. When describing myself, I’m not afraid to add “White” as a descriptor. I am a typical America mutt - consisting of Czech, Mexican, Scottish, and British. I’m a lot of things, but I guess if you are looking at my skin… I am White. I think that people who are White sometimes are afraid to advertise their Race because showing ‘white pride’ tends to have some negative connotations. Oftentimes, people from the US feel comfortable recognizing the region that they are from (the South, East Coast, West Coast, Midwest, etc). There is more comfort and social agreeableness to saying something like, “I am a southern girl” than “I am a white female”. I think that it’s important to embrace however you may define yourself, if you don’t, you could be denying yourself a true identity. That sounds incredibly cheesy, but true. Like Audre said, differences should not be uncomfortable, they should be revered.

Poverty at Home

While I was applying for Teach for America, I spent hours on the computer researching the different cities I could be placed in.  There are 45 cities that Teach For America sends corps members to, all of which house infamously tough communities. Why are groups like Americorps and Teach for America in so many US cities? Because America has a problem with poverty. When I think of poverty-stricken communities in the US, I think about president Johnson’s war on poverty that started in Appalaica. Central Appalachia has up to three times the national poverty rate, an epidemic of prescription drug abuse, the shortest life span in the nation, cancer and chronic depression. A few years ago 20/20 did a segment on the children on Appalachia and they called it “Inside a Hidden America: Children of the Mountains”. I think that there is something to be said with this title. The same problems the children are facing in Appalachia and the same problems the kids are facing in your city. Poverty does not decidedly go into hiding, the privileged just don’t want to see it. In my opinion the US is in denial about it’s own deficiencies. It reminds me of the AIDS pandemic. Under Reagan, all of America’s energies and expertise were used to go abroad rather than treat the epidemic in the US. I feel like the Reagan administration failed to address the issue in the US because a disease that killed people was too “foreign” to reside in the US. I think Americans would like to think they live in a safe haven, far from the pains of poverty or disease. Addressing poverty means addressing our inability to deal our own issues on our land.

Learning the Language: deficit-based/needs-based

We are taught in social work to call the low SES (socio-economic status) communities. People who are unaware of this terminology may call these communities “underprivileged”, “poor”, “at-risk” or “dangerous”. The reading put out by the Points of Light Foundation prefers the terminology “tough”. Negative language and terminology just further disenfranchises people. By pointing out a community’s deficiencies and problems, there is a wall put up that further segment these communities. This only highlights problems and deficiencies, not capacities or strengths. Deficit-based needs mapping for a community neglects the internal capacities of the individuals, unofficial associations (cultural groups) and formal associations (nonprofits, churches, businesses).  When we point out all of a community’s deficiencies and problems – people in communities become consumers of services. This needs-based way of analyzing a community can only guarantee survival, but not enact serious change or community development. When we use an asset-based model of mapping out a community, we locate all the available local assets and begin connecting them in ways that multiply their power and effectiveness and harness local institutions that can assist in development purposes. This path leads towards development of policies and activities based on capabilities, skills, and assets of the people in their neighborhoods.

Tory Reed

Tory Reed is a documentary photographer featured in our Community-based arts book. Before she became a documentary photographer, she was just a photojournalist with the associated press. She realized that photojournalism didn’t have the heart she did, and she left to document a reforestation project abroad. This event led her to her new passion: community development! I think I felt tied to Tory’s story because she was someone who found herself unfulfilled with what she was doing and decided to embark on a change. During her journey for internal change, she ultimately helped change an entire community in Denver, Colorado. She was an artist turned activist by wielding her knowledge in art for the good of a community, sparking dialogue and organizing an impact! All of the stories have a similar underlying basis, but to read about the power and will of one woman with a simple vision of reuniting a community deeply resonated with me. 

Here is a video on Venezuela's "Community Councils". Venezuela became Democratic only 10 years before people in rural areas began participating in community building projects. If anyone has the time to watch this entire documentary, Beyond Elections, I highly suggest it. The entire movie is on YouTube posted in segments.


Also, below I have posted a music video I find really inspiring - I call it my social work anthem. Enjoy!



Sunday, September 16, 2012

Getting to know each other


Hello, classmates!

My name is Christy Camp and I am a graduate student at the School of Social Work at UT. I have a CAL (Community and Administrative Leadership) focus here at the School of Social Work and I am pursuing a portfolio from the LBJ School of Public Affairs in Nonprofit Management. I got an undergraduate degree in Social Work with a double minor in Psychology and Substance Abuse & Addiction from the University of North Texas in May 2012. Currently, I serve as a Refugee Advocate at Caritas of Austin. I am being mentored by a case manager from Nairobi and we work specifically with people from Nairobi, the capital of Kenya. My passions lie in advocating for the LGBT community, people living with HIV/AIDS, and sex workers. I decided I wanted to be a social worker because I was essentially raised by clinical social workers as an adolescent. Social workers changed my life and fostered in me a deep love for people. So, now I plan to give back to the profession that gave me so much. I come from an upper-middle class suburb of Dallas called Flower Mound.  

I choose to devote my professional career to community development/community leadership because it empowers the underrepresented, the vulnerable, and the disenfranchised by giving a voice to those who may not otherwise have one. I believe assisting in strengthening a community's capacities to meet their own needs helps solve social problems. (Whether that be globally or domestically)

I look forward to learning from my classmates, who have such a diverse and different story from mine.

I am a huge fan of photos, so here are some pictures I would like to share:


 My dog, Ramona:

Junie my cat: