Archive for the ‘02. Poverty: Skills and Mobilizing’ Category

501c3 Allows NonProfit to apply for Grants

Friday, June 27th, 2008

We have lots of nonprofit organizations in Wibaux but not one except the Wibaux Nursing Home Foundation has even applied for the IRS approved 501c3 status. MT Community Foundation grant funds were channeled through a non-profit out of town. One of the Horizons action plans is to get a 501c3 for Wibaux. The group has narrowed down the name to Wibaux CAN - Community Action Now, which allows flexibility for many projects from housing, beautification, historic, poverty, drug abuse and youth activity grants. This committee is spearheaded by people in the know including the Clerk and Recorder, Town Clerk and the County Attorney assistant. Work is progressing on the by-laws and officers will be elected in July. We hope to submit to the IRS in the fall. The results will benefit the community and address poverty by allowing us to apply for grants as most require 501c3 status.

Clean Up

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

by Ginny Archdale

Sometimes it’s easy to be discouraged about the run-down buildings and yards that aren’t being mowed around town. You know – the glass is half empty attitude.

But then I look around and am amazed at all the hard work and pride that goes into the majority of properties in town. We have some very pretty yards. Right now, most lawns are green and freshly mowed. Wild plum trees, chokecherry trees, apple trees, current bushes, tulips and lilacs are starting to bloom. It’s really pretty out.

The black-headed grosbeaks that nest in my yard each summer just returned. Those pretty red-headed house finches are singing away from the tree tops, and robins follow me around the garden looking for worms. We have terrific bird habitat in Wibaux.
The glass really is more than half full.

WibuaxCAN Grant Applications

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

It was an empowering and humbling experience. Several people from the WibauxCAN Committee (Community Action Now), met to review the subcommitee’s grant award suggestions. Over $16,000 of requests for just $2000 worth of grant money. The committee had obviously hit upon a need.

The grants were for property beautification: clean-up and fix-up. Making Wibaux an attractive place to live, one that speaks of the pride that residents have in their town was one of of the most important goals expressed by the people involved in the Study Circles.

WibauxCAN, in reaction to the Study Circle’s #1 subject, community beautification, conducted the grant funding cycle.

The single round of grants were for a total of $2000. But because of the overwhelming number of applications for money, the committee elected to nearly double the money available.

Empowering: we could help; help the individuals and help the community. Humbling. there wasn’t enough money–even with doubling the available funds. Choices would have to be made.

Winners? The community. Those funded. And those not funded. Their needs were defined, the cost estimated. They were ready for what WibauxCAN hopes will be round two.

Wibaux Clinic

Friday, May 16th, 2008

Wibaux Clinic
By Renae Rasmussen -Today I got my blood drawn at the Wibaux Clinic. No, not the Wibaux Clinic that’s been in operation on main street for years, the old, run down, Wibaux Clinic with the floor that had borken boards, but the new Wibaux Clinic. This clinic is just east of the nursing home.

It has three exam rooms with sinks, running water, exam tables, an office for the doctor(s), a nurses station where they can take blood, perhaps even do some labwork. (That’s where I got my blood drawn).

Know what’s great? In the not too distant future, it will be open five days a week! Five!

Kudoos must go to the community who has wanted better medical service, the Horizon’s Study Circles who kept the idea in the forefront, but most of all to the county comissioners who took the leap and decided that if Wibaux was to have better health care, Wibaux needed to have control of the health care.

I’m not letting my husband go out of town to get blood drawn again.