HQ of Hope campaign gains momentum to help foster youth

It's not just a building ... we are building lives!

An advertising campaign and a blog from a local author has greatly increased the momentum at Covenant Community Services, Inc. (Covenant)  in Bakersfield, California. Covenant is a California nonprofit with the mission of providing hope and love to abused and neglected children. Their vision is compelling and holistic; “Covenant envisions a future where every foster child lives in emotional,  physical, relational and spiritual wholeness thereby ending the cycle of  abuse and neglect in the community.

In August of 2011, Covenant embarked on a building campaign to purchase a new space for offices, coffee roasting and a coffee-house. The building, known as the Headquarters of Hope (HQ of Hope), was purchased in July of 2011 and has been in remodel since purchase. In December of 2011, Covenant launched a campaign to raise funds and awareness for the build out of the coffee-house and offices. This ambitious project was undertaken by the Covenant team to provide jobs, mentoring and training for former foster youth in Kern County.

In addition to the coffee-house, which will employ 10-15 former foster youth, Covenant has launched two other social enterprises that will be housed at the HQ of Hope. Covenant Media and Covenant Coffee Roasting were launched in 2010 to provide employment and training opportunities for former foster youth. You can learn more about these unique programs and supports at www.covenantcoffee.org and www.covenantmedianow.com.

Precious Murphy enjoying her time at Covenant!

Precious Murphy, a former foster youth employed by Covenant, has served on the Covenant team as an administrative assistant, mentoring coordinator, and an assistant in coffee services. When asked about her involvement with Covenant Precious stated, “being able to see the impact of our services on kids just like me is great. Since I have been there and lived that life, I know how important and meaningful this work is.”

The purpose of Covenant is to restore lives and transform generations. Precious has witnessed the purpose of Covenant fulfilled first hand. Her son, Aiden, is now one year old and lives with his mom in their own apartment. Precious and Aiden are lives that Covenant is helping restore and through that work transforming generations. According to Precious, “Covenant is more than a job. Covenant is a place that has taught me how to be a good mom. Aiden will never be in the abused and neglected category because of what I have learned from the people at Covenant.”

Covenant is meeting their goals to follow mission, vision and purpose. To help Covenant move froward with continued momentum in the New Year, consider following the advice of Richard Beene, CEO of the Bakersfield Californian, in his blog post on December 26, 2011:

Would you write a check for $83 to help save a life? That’s what the folks over at Covenant Community Services are asking as they try to get 1,000 people to write a check for $83 to cover the costs of renovating its offices in an old bank building in Oildale. Covenant, if you don’t know, works with foster children to put them on the path to productive lives. I visited their office at 1700 Chester Ave. and chatted with Randy Martin, the energetic founder who is devoting his life to helping those in need. Covenant also imports top qualify coffee from around the world and when construction is complete, the Chester Avenue office will feature a coffee bar staffed by former foster children. I’m writing them a check, and I hope you will do so as well. Stop by and meet Randy or send your check to 1700 North Chester Ave., Bakersfield, Calif. 93308.

Who is Covenant?

Covenant Community Services, Inc. (Covenant) is a nonprofit 501 (c) (3) social service organization serving foster children, former foster youth  and their families in Kern County and through replication efforts, the United States and the world. Covenant is meeting the needs of “hurting and hopeless” children/youth and families through partnerships with local churches, community-based organizations, individuals and businesses.  Call 661-829-6999 for more information or go to www.covenantcs.net to learn more and find out ways to get involved in changing a child/youth’s future today!

 

Foster-youth mentors can build legacies both great and small

Steve Jobs’ death is a great loss to the technological world. He left a meaningful legacy through Apple, the hugely successful company he founded. However, Jobs’ ability to use his skills to impact the development of technology was not based on his knowledge and talent alone. Jobs benefited from a compassionate individual who helped him see his own value: a mentor.

According to the Hewlett-Packard website, at 12 years old, Steve Jobs thumbed through the phone book for William Hewlett’s number to pick his brain about a school project he was working on. Hewlett spoke with him over the phone, and then chose to cultivate Jobs’ aptitude for creative thinking in technology. Hewlett personally collected the materials Jobs needed for his school project and then later offered him a summer job at Hewlett-Packard.

Hewlett became Jobs’ mentor not because it immediately benefited him or because he knew Jobs would go on to found Apple, but because he saw value and potential in a young man. Who knows how the technology world would look today without Hewlett’s mentorship role in Jobs’ life? Steve Jobs’ legacy is partly William Hewlett’s legacy as well.

Every child deserves the same opportunity as Steve Jobs: to have a caring adult pour into their life and value them — and many times, parents fill this role. However, in Kern County, there are around 3,000 foster children and young adults who have no one to believe in them, no one to help them see their potential, and no one to dream with them about who they can be in life.

A local organization, Covenant Community Services, wants you to fill this space in a child’s life by getting involved in the Jeremiah Mentoring Project.

Covenant is a local Christ-centered nonprofit organization with the mission to “provide hope and love to abused and neglected children.” Through the Jeremiah Mentoring Project, Covenant places caring adults in foster children’s lives.

Randy Martin, CEO of Covenant Community Services, is passionate about the organization’s mentorship program, which is one of 10 programs in the company designed to help Kern County’s foster youth establish stable, productive and whole lives.

“What I get excited about is a life transformation and a life change where foster youth actually believe in themselves, and that’s why our motto is ‘Hope lives here.’ We believe in them. We really think that they can be different. They don’t have to be their past, and their past doesn’t have to be their future. Those are the huge things we stand on,” Martin said.

Mentors introduce foster children to new experiences that help them discover who they are. It is also important that they are in the child’s life for a long period of time. They become stable role models who seek to foster the child’s potential and show them that someone truly cares about them with the love of Jesus.

The impact of a mentor on a foster child’s life can’t be measured or quantified. However, the potential impact mentorship could have on the community by helping to break the cycle of abuse in families is limitless.

“Child abuse and neglect is the giant in the land. What it takes is for people to face the giant to defeat him,” Martin said.

Covenant is extending the opportunity to people in Kern County who can commit their time and energy to face this “giant in the land” and combat the cycle of neglect and abuse in our community.

Jeremiah Mentoring is a practical way for you to be involved in ending the cycle of child abuse in our community by making a difference in one child’s life. Choose to leave a lasting legacy like William Hewlett’s by touching the lives of the foster youth at Covenant who are in need of your talents, guidance, life experiences and genuine love.

If you want to be involved with Covenant’s Jeremiah Project, please call 661-829-6999

Stephanie England of Bakersfield, a graduate of Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, is currently working on her teaching credential and a master’s in English.

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Past Posts on HQ of Hope