Volunteers make an enormous impact on the
health and well-being of communities. Consider all of the ways that volunteers
make a difference in day-to-day life:
- Volunteers help to keep our neighborhoods, streets, parks, rivers, green spaces, and water clean and safe for everyone.
- Volunteers deliver critical services—from serving as volunteer firefighters or participating in search and rescue, to delivering meals to home-bound seniors or homeless youth, to manning the phone lines at domestic violence and sexual assault centers.
- Volunteers tutor, teach, mentor, coach, and support young people with everything from reading to dealing with personal crises to football and soccer tourneys.
- Volunteers walk dogs, pet cats, clean cages, help with adoptions and feedings, and contribute veterinary expertise to organizations like animal shelters and wildlife rehabilitation centers.
- Volunteers educate the public on health and safety; doctors and nurses donate time and medical knowledge to free clinics and natural/civil disaster areas globally.
- Volunteers take tickets at performing arts events, lead tours at museums and historical societies, and ensure that arts and cultural festivals—from small-scale gatherings to massive multi-stage concerts—run smoothly.
- Volunteers build houses and schools, dig wells, and repair public services around the world.
Statistically
speaking…
What
if…
Another way to measure the impact of
volunteers is to take a look at statistics like hours served and the economic
value of volunteer time.
The
Value of Volunteer Time, which is updated annually, is made available
by Independent Sector. The current Independent Sector rate is $24.41 per
hour (2016). According to the
Corporation for National and Community Service, about 63 million Americans gave
8 billion hours of volunteer service worth $194 billion in 2015.
Volunteers are
critical partners of and participants throughout the world. Whether actively giving
their time through formal organizations, or taking part in what is sometimes
called "informal volunteering" where citizens voluntarily participate
in community activities or provide personal care for family, friends,
neighbors, or even strangers as part of accepted cultural norms of giving and
reciprocity.
Volunteers
have 27% higher odds of finding a job after being out of work than
non-volunteers, possibly due to developing new skills and expanding personal
networks. Volunteers are almost twice as likely to donate to charity
as non-volunteers. Nearly 80% of volunteers donated to charity,
compared to 40 percent of non-volunteers. Overall, half of all
Americans donated at least $25 to charity in 2015. Generation X had
the highest volunteer rate of all age groups at 30%, but the Silent
Generation (75 and older) had the highest median hours among volunteer at 100. 1
in 5 Millennials volunteered in 2015. Over the past 14 years, Americans
volunteered 104.9 billion hours, estimated to be worth $2.1 trillion.
(CNCS)
Finally, here's a
remarkable way of looking at the impact of volunteers. Consider if one day,
all volunteers failed to show up? What would our cities, towns, state
parks, hospitals, schools, places of worship, and libraries look like? What
basic needs would go unmet? What opportunities to grow as a society would be
lost? The fact is you likely cross paths with a volunteer at least once if not
several times a day, no matter where you are in the world.
The Volunteer Center
of Cedar Valley works to promote and support effective volunteerism and to
serve as the resource and coordination center for volunteers and community
partnerships. To secure volunteer opportunities call (319) 272-2087,
email information@vccv.org or visit www.vccv.org.
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