↓
 
  • Events
  • About
    • Overview & History
    • Our Mission
    • Reports & Newsletters
    • 990-PF
    • Contact Us
  • Grants
    • Initial Grant Application
    • Environment
  • Scholarships Overview
    • Scholarship Application
    • Scholarship Q&A
    • Where Are They Now? Take a Look at Where Some of our Scholarship Recipients are Today!
    • One University, Three Campuses
    • Testimonials
    • Financial Aid Resources & Suggestions
  • Initiatives
    • Recycling
      • How to Recycle Plastic, Cardboard, Metal, Paper, Glass, and Everything Else Correctly
    • Remedy Project
  • Nonprofit Capacity Building
    • Nonprofit Spotlights
    • Capacity Building Participation
    • Collaborative Efforts
    • #raiseUPshiawassee & GivingTuesday
  • Fellows
    • Details and Application
    • Testimonials

Cook Family Foundation

Serving as a resource for the community and a catalyst for positive community change

<< 1 2 … 16 17 18 19 20 … 37 38 >>

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Thank You for your part in helping to Raise UP Shiawassee!

Cook Family Foundation Posted on December 5, 2018 by Yvette CollardDecember 6, 2018

It has been said before, but it bears repeating–we are stronger when we come together to improve our community.  On November 27, #GivingTuesday, Shiawassee County residents had an opportunity to help support 17 community organizations.  This collaborative effort, working under the hashtag #raiseUPshiawassee, provided a connection to each nonprofit so folks could make a donation or find volunteer opportunities.  

Over $52,000 was raised in donations to local non-profits.  The Cook Family Foundation is providing another $16,000 in match and challenge grants.  The total of $68,000 was more than triple the amount raised in 2017.  But this year, our second, we gained so much more than money:

  • Nonprofit organizations built strong connections with each other by working collaboratively;
  • Nonprofit organizations reinvigorated connections with the community and built stronger awareness of their importance to civic health and quality of life;
  • Community support groups like the Cook Family Foundation, Shiawassee Community Foundation, and Genesee United Way became stronger partners to local groups;
  • Nonprofit organizations learned how to use new online tools to raise funds and awareness;
  • Many organizations found new volunteers to help out with beneficial work;
  • Several groups collected valuable donations and did charitable work on Giving Tuesday itself;
  • We all had the pride and satisfaction of working together to celebrate generosity and raise up Shiawassee County.


How did this collaborative effort come about?  Inspired at the Giving Tuesday Summit in Dallas in May, co-chairs Lorraine Austin and Yvette Collard came back ready to put ideas about “New Power” and shared responsibility to work!  The kickoff to a whole new way of looking at GT began in June as 17 local nonprofits committed to work together. Rather than encouraging the group of nonprofits to each work to get a piece of the Giving Tuesday pie, the idea was to work together to create a Giving Tuesday buffet. The goal was to make Giving Tuesday not just about getting donations, but about engagement and community awareness.  The label “Raise UP Shiawassee” was decided upon and embraced by all participants.

Each step of the decision process was done collaboratively and by consensus, with input from ALL– from choosing a name, to logo development, to the focus on impACT activities vs. donations.  Raise UP Shiawassee organizations rolled up their collective sleeves and began to work on the idea of an event to not only bring folks together, but to do so in such a way as to bring them together with nonprofits. The goal was to help people really make a connection, and the Find Your Nonprofit Soulmate event idea was born (or borrowed, rather, from ideas tossed around at the GT Summit)!

Volunteers are needed as much as money, and each of the 17 organizations defined some specific volunteer opportunities for the event we held two weeks prior to Giving Tuesday. The Find Your Nonprofit Soulmate Event was a sort of speed dating opportunity to match potential volunteers with the nonprofits who need them.  You may have seen it online, as the wonderful folks of givingtuesday.org  let us take over their InstaGram page to feature this unique event. Folks were able to meet with someone in person, learn more about their organization, and find specific volunteer opportunities.  They could even sign up for or look at these opportunities online  to volunteer via the top-notch database the United Way developed, Shiawassee Serves.

Then, on November 27, Giving Tuesday itself, there were a number of places to volunteer, take a giving action, or learn more about each organization.  All area residents had to do was to look for the Raise UP Shiawassee sign in front of a nonprofit, or visit the orgs’ website or Facebook page for details–each of which were active on Facebook and other social media.  One could actually find all the activities under a search for the hashtag #raiseUPshiawassee, such as:  Lincoln Alternative High School students delivering poinsettias to long-term care,  hospice or cancer treatment patients; local businesses like Foster or Blossom Boutique donating a portion of the day’s sales to one of the nonprofits as well as collecting donations; a relay treadmill “Girls on the Run Is So Much Fun” run with sponsored miles raising monies; tours of local shelters; “Big Wheels Delivering Meals” via the local Council on Aging; and MORE!

All of the organizations involved made it easy to give online, although checks and cash were also accepted. The Cook Family Foundation offered a challenge grant of $500 to each nonprofit to start them off as each were featured in their own “social media blitz” in the November days leading up to Giving Tuesday, as well as offering another grant matching the first $500 of online gifts on Giving Tuesday.  Several of the organizations secured other pledges to match donations. So, even a small gift was able to make a big impact when matched and in combination with others.

Other great contributors to this community collaborative were, State Representative Ben Frederick (who did a video for us),  The Shiawassee Community Foundation (who sponsored the video and did several advertisements), the Genesee (Shiawassee) United Way (who sponsored the Find Your Nonprofit Soulmate Event), local radio stations:  103.1 WOAP-–The Big O (who remotely covered our event) and 92.5-The Castle and 103.9-The Fox (who featured the Raise UP Shiawassee campaign on their In Focus Program), Schutt Photography, Amber L. Fuller (#raiseUPshiawassee logo design); The Argus-Press, Independent News Group and Meridian Weekly (who gave us great press coverage), and the Shiawassee Regional Chamber of Commerce (who donated the unique space for the Soulmate event).  The true stars of the community campaign, however, are the 17 local nonprofits (list here) who day after day, month after month, year after year continue to strive to #raiseUPshiawassee to a stronger community for ALL.

 

 

Share this:

  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
Posted in Featured Story

Coming together to #RaiseUpShiawassee

Cook Family Foundation Posted on November 7, 2018 by Tom CookNovember 27, 2018

We are stronger when we come together to improve our community.  This November 27, on #GivingTuesday, Shiawassee County residents have an opportunity to help support 17 community organizations.  This collaborative effort, working under the hashtag #RaiseUpShiawassee, provides a connection to each nonprofit  so a citizen can make a donation or find volunteer opportunities.  To find a list of these community nonprofits, along with links, go to our #GivingTuesday web page.

All of the organizations involved have made it easy to give online, although checks and cash are also accepted. The Cook Family Foundation is offering a challenge grant of $500 to each nonprofit, and several of the organizations have secured other pledges to match donations.  So, your small gift may become bigger when matched and in combination with others.

Volunteers are needed as much as money, and each of the 17 organizations has defined some specific volunteer opportunities for Giving Tuesday.  You can find them online, or at community event on November 13.  On that day all of the nonprofits will be at The Armory on Water Street in downtown Owosso.  You can meet with someone in person, learn more about the organization, and find specific volunteer opportunities.  Also, you can look online at the United Way’s Shiawassee Serves website and sign up to volunteer.

Also, on November 27, Giving Tuesday itself, there will be a number of places to volunteer, take a giving action, or learn more about each organization.  Look for the Raise Up Shiawassee sign in front of a nonprofit, or visit their website or Facebook page for details.  Each of the nonprofits will be active on Facebook and other social media.  You can visit our Facebook page, find us on Twitter @ShiaNPCB, or search for the hashtag #RaiseUpShiawassee to find specific ways you can help out.

Thank you to Representative Ben Frederick and to our partners in this effort: The Shiawassee Community Foundation, Genesee (Shiawassee) United Way, the Shiawassee Regional Chamber of Commerce, the 17 local nonprofits who are part of #raiseUPshiawassee and you, the donors and contributors to a stronger community.

Share this:

  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
Posted in Featured Story

Serving Students, Serving the Community

Cook Family Foundation Posted on October 19, 2018 by Tom CookOctober 19, 2018

Recently, the University of Michigan produced this report on the work of the Cook Family Foundation to support students from Shiawassee County to attend UofM.  In one important case, serving a student also served our community.  Here is the story:

https://www.cookfamilyfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Cook-Scholars-5x4-Short.mp4

 

After nearly 40 years of giving support and scholarships, the Cook family has made it possible for hundreds of students from rural Shiawassee County to attend the University of Michigan and other state colleges.  It’s an accomplishment many of the teens-turned-Cook-Scholars doubted would ever come or never saw for themselves.

“People grow up in outstate Michigan. They’re first-generation college students. … They have no idea what their opportunities in life might turn out to be. It’s our job to help them reach that potential,” said Bruce Cook, U-M alumnus and president of The Cook Family Foundation. He is the son of Donald Cook, also a U-M graduate and founder of the foundation.

The Cook Family Foundation provides that help by identifying promising high school students, exposing them to college options, walking them through the application and decision process, and awarding scholarships and assistance in accessing financial aid.

Because several Cook family members are U-M grads, they urge students to strongly consider their alma mater. Many go on to attend U-M. Others don’t. But they all are brought to U-M’s campus each year—usually a batch of 20-25 high school seniors—for an overnight visit. They get an up-close look and an explanation of what they’ll find at U-M.

Besides the scholars program, the foundation is behind several projects meant to improve economic conditions and lives of residents of the mid-Michigan community. Shiawassee’s economy is fed by a mix of farming and industry, and is becoming more diversified. The county is on an economic upswing after many years of struggles and lack of opportunities. Still, less than 17 percent of Shiawassee County residents hold a bachelor’s degree. That also is changing.

Justin Horvath was a Cook Scholar in the 1990s. He chose U-M. He earned a degree in economics and went on to obtain two master’s degrees. He also chose to put his education to use in his hometown and to support it as the Cooks do. He is president and CEO of the Shiawassee Economic Development Partnership.

“Not that I couldn’t be successful in a career somewhere else, but knowing that you can help your hometown, your home community, the people you know, the people you love, to help support them, to grow the local economy and give them a better place, a better quality of life is really, really important to me,” Horvath said. He returned to Shiawassee in 2003 after graduating from the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, where he had also interned.

He is grateful to Bruce Cook and for his experience as a Cook Scholar and to be back contributing to the betterment of Shiawassee County. He said he wants other Cook Scholars to consider doing the same. “We have so much to offer…my hope and my focus is they consider coming back home when they graduate,” Horvath said.

Share this:

  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
Posted in Featured Story

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Vision

We envision a diverse, healthy, and thriving community where all children have access to the best education, the natural environment is protected and enjoyed, and all people have the opportunity and support to build joyful, meaningful lives.

Objective

Through strategic, proactive use of funds and grants, strengthen institutions, extend their mission and enable their growth.

Follow the Cook Family Foundation

Facebook Cook Family Foundation Page
Twitter @GoBlueGoBruce
Facebook Go Blue! Go Bruce Cook!
RSS Feed RSS Feed
©2025 - Cook Family Foundation
↑
 

Loading Comments...