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Community foundation offers a helping hand to Islanders in need

Up to $1,000 per grant is available.
Photo by Lukas from Pexels
Photo by Lukas from Pexels

We on the communications committee of Bowen’s Community Foundation have got a bit of a quandary. 

How can we write a story about our Helping Hand Fund? 

To maintain and respect the privacy of our recipients, we can’t use their names and we can’t describe the specifics of their grants. But we do want to write about the Helping Hand because it is one of our most important funds.

It provides assistance for vulnerable individuals and families on Bowen “who are suffering as a result of unemployment, serious injury or illness, or severe personal financial hardship.”

The maximum grant is $1,000 and confidentiality is critical. The individual names of grant recipients are never made public. 

The fund began in 2012, the brainchild of the Little Red Church’s Shelagh MacKinnon and Joyce Ganong, former chair of the Foundation. 

“We had this idea of providing financial assistance to those in need,” said Shelagh. “Although we have provincial medical coverage, there are extra expenses borne by the patient and their families, especially for cancer therapies.

“It is not a loan, but a grant, a gift,” said Shelagh. “[It’s] a way of saying ‘you are not alone and the caring of island residents is with you.’

“We are glad to be there to support families going through hard times due to all the vagaries of life in the 21st century: family break-up, financial distress, or simply trying to cope in very difficult circumstances.”

Soren Hammerberg, another former chair of the foundation, took Shelagh and Joyce’s idea and created a structure for the Helping Hand Fund.

“This fund has become the social conscience of the foundation,” he said, “speaking to who we are as islanders, assisting neighbours who need a helping hand.” 

Since 2013 the foundation has committed to providing an annual amount of $10,000 for this initiative.

The tenets of the Helping Hand were set out about five years ago and today a committee of locally engaged islanders meets monthly to identify vulnerable individuals in need.

The committee draws on referrals from the RCMP, the oncology department at Lions Gate Hospital, the Caring Circle, and community members who work on the island. 

Both Paulo Arreaga of the RCMP and Colleen O’Neil of Caring Circle have been asked to come to meetings to speak to the kinds of assistance that are most needed on Bowen.

 A director of the Community Foundation’s board always sits on the Helping Hand committee – a position currently held by Larry Lunn – so that the foundation may oversee the fund. 

A special thanks to islanders Gary Ander, Amanda Oekeloen and Spencer Grundy, who have served on this committee since its inception.

Since 2013, the Helping Hand Fund has given an average of 10 grants per year to Bowen Island individuals and families in need. Since 2016 the Knick Knack Nook has generously provided $5,000 annually to support the fund, a key part of their mandate to provide Bowen Islanders with some measure of social sustainability.

Well, perhaps we can give you a small peek into the kinds of grants that we have given over the past five years without compromising anyone’s privacy. 

We’ve provided transportation money for sick children and adults, to ease the burden of expensive hospital commutes. 

We’ve made it so that parents can stay in the city with their children while undergoing treatment. 

We’ve contributed for food vouchers, for those who have fallen between the cracks. 

 “It is a hand up, not a hand out,” says Shelagh. “The committee is grateful for this opportunity to be of service.

As we wind down the 2018 calendar year, we at the Community Foundation hope to create an endowment for the Helping Hand, ensuring that we have sufficient capital to allow us to continue to make these grants in perpetuity. 

If you are able to contribute, please consider going to bowenfoundation.com, clicking the button on the front page that says “Donate Now,” and selecting the Helping Hand Fund from the list of available funds.

Any amount of money would be very much appreciated – a commitment of conscience, as Soren Hammerberg put it, to assisting those of our neighbours who are in need of a helping hand.