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Bay Ridge United Church - 2009

Thanks to our contributions, we gave 10% of our income to benevolence funds to:

 

 

Adopt A Chaplain - We gave various boxes of toiletries, phone cards, Snacks, books, etc. to Chaplain Yolanda Gillen stationed in Afghanistan. ww.adoptachaplain.org

 

 

 

El Porvenir - $500.00 El Porvenir supports self–help, community– initiated water, sanitation and reforestation projects. El Porvenir means "the future". Clean water means a healthier future for Nicaraguan children. www.elporvenir.org

 

 

 

Hermandad -  $1,000.00 - Hermandad serves as a catalyst at the grassroots level in the Dominican Republic, to strengthen local community organizations and accomplish sustainable development in: Water Management, Agriculture, Natural Resource Conservation, Health and Nutrition, Sanitation, Housing and Leadership Training.  www.hermandad.org

 

 

 

Living Waters for the World - $500.00 - is the global mission resource of the Synod of Living Waters (Presbyterian Church USA) and serves as a resource to churches of all denominations, civic organizations and others in mission, enabling them to provide clean water to their partners in need. http://www.youtube.com/user/lwwmission

 

 

 

Norwegian Christian Home - $500.00 – located in Brooklyn, NY. Is recognized for its efforts to care for every resident as a sacred trust. Pastors provide care for the spiritual needs of the residents knowing that faith underlies all, supports all and inspires all. Persons of all faith are welcomed. www.nchhc.org

 

 

 

 

One Great Hour of Sharing - $700.00 - Joining with millions of other Christians through One Great Hour of Sharing. Sharing God’s love with people experiencing need. Gifts support ministries of disaster response, refugee assistance and resettlement, and community development that help people find safe refuge. www.pcusa.org/oghs

 

 

 

Presbyterian- Tu Puedes School, Najayo, Dominican Republic - $1,065.00 – is a school being developed in Najayo just west of San Cristobal.

 

 

 

Reformed Church-Warwick - $250.00 - is a conference, retreat and camp facility nestled on 465 acres just 55 miles from New York City. Churches, large and small, families, non-profit groups and small business groups have enjoyed the hospitality of our country-comfortable and city-close facility since 1959. www.campwarwick.com

 

 

 

Presbyterian-Conference Center - $250.00 - The Presbyterian Center at Holmes, NY is a 550 acre Camp and Conference Center of the three Presbyteries of Hudson River, Long Island & New York City of the Presbyterian Church (USA.) located approximately 55 miles north of New York City. The Center provides programmed events, as well as rental facilities for self-directed conferences and retreats. www.presbyteriancenter.org

 

 

 

 

Water for People - $50.00 - helps people in developing countries improve their quality of life by supporting the development of locally sustainable drinking water resources, sanitation facilities and health and hygiene education programs. www.waterforpeople.org

 

 

 

 

 

Presbyterian Christmas Joy - $50.00 - 50 percent of the receipts to the Christmas Joy Offering are distributed to the Board of Pensions for assistance programs that provide support to retired and active church workers and their spouses and families. The other fifty percent supports Presbyterian-related racial ethnic education through  the General Assembly Council. (http://www.pcusa.org/cjoffering/)

 

 

 

Peace/Social Justice - $100 - Peacemaking is the human response to the divine gift of peace giving. In an increasingly violent and unjust world, we as Christians are called to understand and address the root causes of violence and injustice. Our Mission is to work for peace and reconciliation, together with Christ and our ecumenical partners reflecting the love God has shown us through Jesus Christ. www.pcusa.org/peacemaking

 

 

 

Project Timothy - $75.00- allows young people to explore and experience hands-on ministry. Teams of roughly seven students and one adult leader travel to sites across North America and around the world to learn more about themselves, teamwork, their faith, and their place in the church. http://www.rca.org/Page.aspx?pid=2640

 

 

 

 

The Reformed Church Home - $250.00 is a mission-driven, non-profit Assisted Living, Skilled Nursing, and Sub-Acute Rehab Community in Old Bridge, NJ offering personalized care to all our residents. Established and supported by the Reformed Church in America. http://www.reformedchurchhome.com/home.nxg

 

 

 

 

Souper Bowl and Zion Soup Kitchen - $275.00 Utilizes Super Bowl weekend to mobilize youth to fight hunger and poverty in their local communities.

 

 

 

Fourth Avenue Presbyterian Church Food Pantry - We gave 225 pounds of canned goods to 4th Avenue for their community food pantry. http://www.fourthavenuepresbyterian.org/ 

 

 

 

 

Pentecost - $75.00 – goes to youth programs and provides leadership development opportunities for Presbyterian and Reformed youth and young adults and supports children-at-risk programs at the national level. www.pcusa.org/pentecost

 

 

 

 

Bay Ridge United Church Scholarship Fund  - $1500.00 was given to a member to assist in their education. http://churches.rca.org/bayridge/

 

The Breakfast Club - $100.00 - Race and ethnic relations continue to be a major cause of division and concern in our country. This tension provides the church with a unique opportunity to model reconciliation among races and ethnicities. Monthly discussions for a year between cross-racial pairs that focus on race, faith, and personal life journeys.

Reformed Church of America Justice Network - $50.00 -  "If you want peace, work for justice," said Pope Paul VI. "Seek justice," said the prophet Micah. Like evangelism, discipleship, and mercy, justice is central to the gospel. Contributions to this network will enable us to continue to stand with our partners against violence, oppression, and injustice in places like Sudan, South Africa, the Middle East and Central Europe.

Presbyterian Senior Services - $250.00 - provides support services for older adults in NYC  with a special focus on the needs of the poor and minority frail persons and to advocate for societal change that will result in positive attitudes and action towards the elderly. http://www.pssusa.org/

 

 

 

 

 

 

How Our Church Got Involved in Solving the World’s Water Problem?

Robert E. Adamski, P.E., F.ASCE, BCEE, V.P., Gannett Fleming, Inc.

Elder, Bay Ridge United Church (PCUSA, RCA) Brooklyn, New York

 

Me & My Wife, Janet with the "Self Development" Truck

 

 

How does a church in Brooklyn, New York get connected to a mission school in Najayo near San Cristobal

in the Dominican Republic through Trenton, New Jersey & Louisville, Kentucky?

 

This article will tell how one Presbyterian Church, USA (PCUSA)/ Reformed Church in America (RCA) accomplished it.   

 

The connection began in 1997 when a men’s church softball league was looking for a way to continue the softball fellowship through the off season. Bay Ridge United Church (BRUC) began a monthly men’s prayer breakfast. For the program they decided to study missions that they might support.

Among others, a speaker from Hermandad was suggested. Hermandad is a non-governmental organization (NGO) that works in the Dominican Republic helping impoverished people. Their president lives in Long Beach, New York and his wife worked with one of the church members. He was invited to speak and told of the water and other projects that Hermandad was helping to build.

As a follow-up to his presentation I was invited to the Dominican Republic to see their projects. Since I was also invited to  speak at the Water Environment Federation-AIDIS breakfast in Orlando, the trip was going to provide information for that talk. Just before the trip in September, 1998 Hurricane George struck the Dominican Republic. Rather than canceling the trip, I was encouraged to go and see the storm’s effects.

 

Water Delivery to School

 

 

While the fragile infrastructure of the island was damaged, I was able to see the marginal sources of water and projects and learned that in developing countries over 1.1 billion people worldwide do not have access to safe drinking water. In addition nearly 2.4 billion do not have adequate sanitation facilities. As a result nearly 6,000 people (mostly children) die each day from water-related diseases. It was also discovered that many of the projects to deal with this cost about $5 per person served. At the same time the research I was doing for the talk revealed that the United State’s Safe Drinking Water Act was not passed to reduce death from dying, but to reduce exposure to cancer. Some of the projects required by the Act’s regulations (like the NYC Croton Water Filter Plant) would cost about $2,000 ($1.4 billion for 700,000 people) per person served.

In the Dominican Republic I saw simple water systems. Some of them were spring fed, gravity systems with aqueducts (2" PVC pipe) and a storage tank supplying a tap stand at each home. They were built by the people themselves. Any damage from the storm was repaired and the systems were placed back into operation while the large municipal systems were not in operation.

After returning from the trip, I established networks to assist Hermandad. One of the networks was the result of a networking session that I held in Washington, D.C. on Earth Day 20001 that involved many of the NGOs doing the "$5 per person projects." One of the outputs was to share information and so I established a "$5 Per Person" email list. Another connection I made was with a Dominican engineer with the Association of Dominican Engineers in New York City. She turned out to be the cousin of the Minister of Water in the Dominican Republic and a meeting with him was arranged. At the meeting, Hermandad’s need for assistance in drilling a well was explained and arrangements were made the next day to help. Hermandad and the Association of Dominican Engineers were later connected and held a joint fund-raising dinner in New York City.

One of the unsuccessful (at first) networking activities involved Water For People. Having learned of their work and its similarity to the model used by Hermandad, I called and asked if funds were available for the Dominican Republic. Their reply was, "Water For People wasn’t doing the DR" and was only working in four countries. This lead to my getting involved in Water For People, becoming a Board member and eventually enlisting in their World Water Corps.

Fundraising for Hermandad continued and a workshop on the Presbyterian Self Development of People fund was attended. A possible grant for Hermandad was identified and a Cuban woman married to a Jewish man who was sending their daughters to a Lutheran school was found who was looking for volunteer work. She prepared and submitted a grant in 2001 for a truck for the farmers in the cooperative outside of Ocoa who had built one of the water systems. They were using the used water for irrigation and growing chinola (passion fruit.) The truck would enable them to eliminate the "middleman" and take their produce directly to market. To facilitate the processing of the grant, I visited Presbyterian Church USA’s headquarters on a trip to Louisville in January 2002. This meeting helped set up a trip for the Louisville program manager to meet the farmers and gain approval of the grant.

Also in 2001 our Church received a letter from the Westminster Presbyterian Church in Trenton, New Jersey asking for a $1,000 donation for a school being built in Najayo near San Cristobal, Dominican Republic by Tu Puedes. Since BRUC was familiar with the area they pledged $1,000 out of their benevolence budget. They found out later that the letter they received was one of 150 that were sent to Presbyterian churches but they were the only one who responded.

After the grant for the truck was approved another trip to the Dominican Republic to see the truck and the school was taken in 2002. The truck was seen and the community hosted a lunch to show their appreciation. On the way to the school a Hermandad project funded by a Long Island Rotary club was visited. The club turned out to be in Locust Valley, New York which is where my office is.

The $1.000 check was delivered in 2004 to the school just as they ran out of money. While at the school, the construction was inspected and it was found that the school had no water. Water was purchased from vendors who delivered it to the school by truck. Hermandad was approached about getting water to the school. They needed money for a feasibility study and BRUC provided $1,000.

The Locust Valley Rotary Club was approached and agreed to fund the water project but changed their mind and went for a bigger project. Fortunately a grant from Fund for the Poor, Inc. was found by Hermandad and a water system from a shared spring to the school was built in 2005. Since the spring was shared the local committee from Najayo agreed to have the water go to the school and not take it for the village.

In 2007, Water For People was planning to add five countries to their program. I volunteered to take a World Water Corps team to the Dominican Republic to do a scoping study and make a recommendation on adding the DR or not. Among other locations, the Tu Puedes School was visited during this trip and it was found that the some of the village residents reneged on the agreement, broke into the pipes and were stealing water. As a result the school’s system had to be removed and they once again have to buy water from the vendor. They are looking for a new water system. As a result of the trip, the Water For People board added the Dominican Republic as one of the five new countries and now "will be doing the DR."

In summary, it doesn’t take large sums of money to help..... You need to be open to the "callings" and possibilities. Visit and connect with the opportunities presented. Use your networks to connect and share your experiences.

 

Church Resources available include:

 

Water Resources Available are:

 

 

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