United Way rolls out $500,000 fund-raising campaign

9 years ago

By Anthony Brino
Staff Writer

The United Way of Central Aroostook is looking ahead more than a year, hoping to garner enough support to continue nurturing the “building blocks of a good life,” said executive director Claudia Stevens.

 

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Contributed photo

UNITED WAY OF AROOSTOOK kicked off its 2015-16 Capital Campaign recently with a mobile office outreach to all parts of the county. Meeting inside an RV on loan from a Presque Isle dealership on Sept. 29 at the Houlton Shopping Center parking lot were staff, board members and supporters of the United Way, clockwise from lower left, Virginia McCain of Paradis Shop ‘n Save, Natasha McCarthy and Bonnie Foster, both of Katahdin Trust Company, Gary McCluskey of McCluskey RV Center, board member James Mattila of The County Federal Credit Union and Elaine Sipe of the United Way staff.

 

On Sept. 29, the United Way of Aroostook kicked off its 2016 fund drive, travelling in an RV lent by McCluskey’s RV Center and meeting with community members and business owners and employees at S.W. Collins Home Design Center in Caribou and Marden’s stores in Houlton and Presque Isle. |

The goal is to raise $500,000 between now and June of 2016, Stevens said. The majority of UWA donations are raised through workplace pledge drives, with companies often offering matching funds and in-kind services to help reach the goal.

The United Way focuses on helping communities with education, income and health, for both young children and seniors.

“If people can have those things in their life, they can have a good and productive life,” Stevens said.

Among the projects supported by the United Way, Stevens mentioned the Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library, a nonprofit that mails a book to children once a month from the time they’re born until their fifth birthday.

“Getting parents to read to their children and promoting bonding time is important, and helps young children learn colors, numbers and basic reading before they start school,” Stevens said. “The research shows if they start that education earlier, the better off they’re going to be.”

Other projects United Way is supporting include the services of the Aroostook County Action Program, the Central Aroostook Association, St. John Valley Associates, the Grace Interfaith Food Table, the Hope & Justice Project domestic abuse resources, the Meals on Wheels seniors’ food services, Catholic Charities Home Supply and Food Bank, and free tax-preparation and financial coaching.