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Winston-Salem Foundation and ECHO Announce Award Recipients

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By Staff

The Winston-Salem Foundation hosted its annual Community Luncheon on May 6 at Benton Convention Center, with a record-breaking crowd of 1,100 community members in attendance. The Foundation announced the recipients of the 2015 Winston-Salem Foundation Award and the 2015 ECHO Awards.

award winner Woody Clinard
award winner Woody Clinard

The Winston-Salem Foundation award was established in 1996 and is given to individuals who demonstrate the Foundation’s values of generosity, excellence, inclusion, and integrity along with visionary leadership in a community activity or on behalf of a community organization, particularly in the recent past. Woody Clinard won the award.  and was described as a tremendous example of a person who finds seeds of opportunity in our community and who works collaboratively with others to feed and nurture them. He is often found in the community tutoring children, getting projects started, attending teacher workshops, supporting fundraisers, and mentoring youth and adults alike.

Principal, Rusty Hall, who nominated Woody summed up Woody’s nomination best by saying, “I have found a champion for education, and an agent for change – for real change. I have found a new role model to emulate in all that I do.”

With this recognition came a $10,000 Foundation grant which Woody designated to ten organizations, including Bread for the World, El Buen Pastor Latino Community Services, CHANGE, Children of Vietnam, Forsyth Education Partnership, The Hispanic League, Interfaith Winston-Salem, Planned Parenthood of the Triad, the Augustine Project at Read WS, and the World Relief for Anti-Human Trafficking program.

The Foundation and ECHO Network jointly presented the 2015 ECHO Awards to four recipients who are creatively building social capital. Each recipient is uniquely connecting people and building trust among people in order to make the community stronger, and each winner received $1,000 to grant to a nonprofit organization of their choice.

 

The 2015 Echo Award Recipients were:

Books For Dudes is Forsyth County Public Library’s book club for men. Members are encouraged to share their own literary finds, thoughts on current events, and personal stories. They range from recent high school graduates to retirees and from the unemployed to businessmen – resulting in close, trusting relationships and bridging social capital among this diverse group of community members.

echo award winner jake denton
echo award winner jake denton

Jake Denton is “a one-person social capital machine,” who lives out his values and builds trust among many. Jake’s involvement with Habitat for Humanity of Forsyth County has ranged from being a volunteer/neighborhood organizer to currently serving as an AmeriCoprs National service member. He has built trusting relationships with his neighbors and with Habitat homeowners and volunteers from diverse race, age, class, and social circumstance. Jake demonstrates an innate ability to connect with others in an open and genuine way that has erased stereotypes while creating greater understanding in our community.

Terry Hicks is a choral music teacher by trade, but his social capital-building impact ripples through generations. For over 25 years he has encouraged students at R.J. Reynolds High School to create lasting bonds across race, class, neighborhood, religion, stereotypes, and even high school cliques, in the pursuit of making beautiful music together. Terry’s community outreach extends beyond the classroom walls through community performances. His nomination was echoed by dozens of former students, parents, teacher colleagues, and community members whose lives he has touched and whose minds he has opened.

WinstonNet provides invaluable local leadership on a broad range of issues related to technology in our community, including its work to close the “digital-divide” by ensuring that all Forsyth County residents have affordable and convenient Internet access and training opportunities in free computer labs. It has also created strong connections between local universities, community colleges, the school system, governmental agencies, and nonprofits.

 

The keynote speaker was John McKnight, co-director of the Asset-Based Community Development Institute and Professor Emeritus of Education and Social Policy at the Northwestern University Institute for Public Policy Research in Evanston, IL. His remarks focused on how the Winston-Salem community can make its neighborhoods stronger through asset-based, as opposed to deficit-based, approaches, and he also stressed the importance of returning to a village-based approach as we seek to positively impact the crucial development of our youth.

 You can watch John McKnight’s entire presentation HERE.

For more information about the awards and the luncheon, visit the Winston-Salem Foundation community luncheon website HERE.

echo winner books for dudes
echo winner books for dudes
echo winner terry hicks
echo winner terry hicks
echo winner winston net
echo winner winston net

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Community

Sawtooth Offers Summer Art Camp for Rising 9th through 12th Grade Students

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The following was provided for your information by the Sawtooth School for Visual Art

The Sawtooth School for Visual Art’s Summer Arts Immersion program is one of the finest visual art experiences in North Carolina. Bringing talented rising 9th-12th grade arts students together with professional artists and educators, they offer exceptionally creative and high quality art studio classes tailored for students with a passion for visual arts. Small class sizes combined with tailored instruction offers students the ability to explore an art for appropriate for the novice or for those with some experience.

The program runs June 19th through July 21st, with no classes the week of July 4th, from 9:00 AM–12:00 PM and/or 1:00–4:00 PM as one week half-day studios. Students may sign up for multiple classes to receive a multiple class discount.

Studio Offerings:
Drawing
Painting
Digital Photography
Digital Arts
Metals/Enameling
Glass
Wood
Ceramics
Animation
Comic/Manga/Graphic Novel
Sculpture
Printmaking
Fiber Art

Check out full listing of classes and register here.

Studio sizes are limited and will fill quickly so register early to increase your chances to be in the classes of your choice.

Need based scholarships are available. Additionally, sign up for two or more classes and receive a $10 discount per class when you call 336-723-7395 to register and use promo code SAI2017.

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Youth Grantmakers in Action Award Grants to Youth-Led Projects

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Youth Grantmakers in Action (YGA) recently announced eight grants totaling $2,460 at their annual grant celebration event. These grants will support projects to help the youth of Forsyth County come together to make a difference in our community.

2017 Grant Recipients

  • East Forsyth Key Club: $100 to host a spaghetti dinner to raise funds to purchase sports equipment and food for a summer program
  • Fine Arts: $300 for a fundraiser that showcases the talents of local youth
  • Grace Church Youth Worship/Ministry Group: $350 to provide nutritional information to youth and encourage better eating habits
  • Reagan Black Achievers: $260 to host a leadership event for 60 elementary school students
  • Reagan High School Young Black Male Achievers: $500 to provide a scholarship to a senior Young Black Male Achievers member
  • THETA Program and Scholarship Fund: $350 for a high school theatre awards gala created to raise scholarship funds for a theatre summer enrichment program
  • Top Teens of America: $100 for a community walk to raise awareness about St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital
  • Winston-Salem Youth Advisory Council: $500 to assemble care packages for military youth

YGA is a diverse group of youth ages 15-18 from all over Forsyth County who meet to gain leadership experience, represent the youth of the community, and grant money to youth-led community projects that will have a positive impact on the community.

A program of The Winston-Salem Foundation, YGA was formed in 2005 from the vision of Dr. Nathaniel Irvin and the financial support of Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust. Since its first round of grants was made in 2006, YGA has granted over $21,000 to youth-led community projects.

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Police Chief Barry Rountree Announces Retirement Plans

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Police Chief Barry Rountree Announces Retirement Plans

The following was provided for your information by the Winston-Salem Police Department and the City of Winston-Salem

Barry D. Rountree, Winston-Salem’s chief of police since 2013, announced that he will retire Sept. 1, having served the citizens of Winston-Salem for 29 and a half years.

“I have had a very rewarding career,” Rountree said. “I have been able to serve in nearly every sworn position in the department, and now it is time to turn the reins over to the next generation of leadership.”

chief rountree – file

Rountree started his career as a police officer on Jan. 25, 1988. He was promoted to senior police officer (today’s rank of corporal) in 1992, sergeant in 1996, lieutenant in 2000, captain in 2004 and assistant police chief in 2007. Over these years he served in the Field Services Bureau, the Investigative Services Bureau, the Support Services Bureau, and the Professional Standards Division.

Rountree said he has been blessed to have served without any serious injuries. “Many have not been as fortunate as I and suffered serious injuries,” he said, “and during my career with the police department I have seen eight coworkers lose their lives while serving. They are a constant reminder to all police officers of the risks they take to ensure the public safety.”

Rountree is a North Carolina state-certified Basic Law Enforcement Training general instructor and holds an Advanced Law Enforcement Certificate from the North Carolina Criminal Justice Education and Standards Training Commission. Rountree has a bachelor’s degree in business administration from Winston-Salem State University and a master’s in public affairs from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Rountree also is a graduate of the Administrative Officers Management Program at North Carolina State University and the Municipal Administration program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Rountree said he is most proud of trying to make the Winston-Salem Police Department better for employees, and for improving service delivery to the citizens. “We have worked diligently to improve community relations and promote WSPD’s ‘brand,’ ” he said.

wspd chief rountree

City Manager Lee Garrity said that Rountree had done a remarkable job of leading the police department. “With a steady hand and a firm belief in serving all, Chief Rountree has enhanced public safety while avoiding the community-trust challenges that other communities have faced,” he said.

Garrity said he will begin the process to select the next chief by consulting with the mayor, members of the City Council, police employees and community leaders.

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