Posted on Apr 17, 2015
National Volunteer Appreciation Week: Are You a Volunteer?
28.1K
198
81
19
19
0
Yes, we all serve(d) in an all-volunteer military and, for that, your service is very much appreciated (by most of the country, at least)! However, you are compensated for your time in uniform, so it’s more like a quasi-volunteer. You “volunteered” to protect and defend the Constitution, you “volunteered” to be deployed to remote locations, you “volunteered” to give your life - and some of you did just that. Thank you to all of our past and current military “volunteers!”
For brevity, we won’t get into “volun-told.” Someone else can handle that Command Post article!
The volunteering I want to talk about is the description most of us think of when considering that word - freely offering to do something. Guess what? Volunteering is very abundant in the United States! One in four Americans volunteer in some capacity through organizations. Whether it’s serving meals at a mobile kitchen for the homeless, helping at a local animal shelter, or judging the local spelling bee, there are a variety of ways for people to serve our communities.
In case you weren’t aware (and I’m guessing that most of you weren’t aware!), April is National Volunteer Appreciation Month. As a leader in a national nonprofit organization, I fully recognize that volunteers are essential to the work of my organization and hundreds of thousands of other organizations that seek to serve our communities.
Just in the military and veteran space, there are over 40,000 nonprofits with the term “military” or “veteran” somewhere in their mission or vision statement. That’s a lot of organizations that need volunteers! You can look at the picture on this post from volunteeringamerica.gov to see the different types of organizations that our volunteers serve at.
So how actively does our military/veteran population serve as volunteers? Veterans serve at about a 1% higher rate than the rest of the population. More veterans serve in Utah than any state in the Union. Conversely, fewer veterans serve in Louisiana, but that’s consistent with Louisiana’s overall volunteer rate.
All of this leads to a question for our RallyPoint community: where do you volunteer? More importantly, why do you volunteer there? More often than not, we serve for an organization that has impacted us in some capacity. Some of you serve at your nearby Fisher House Foundation because they were there for you when you - or a family member - were injured. Some of you volunteer at veteran hiring fairs to help your comrades get the jobs they need and translate their résumés into civilian language. Some of you feel like you’ve given enough to the military and shy away from any volunteer activities associated with those in uniform, and choose other paths instead.
Regardless of where you serve - thank you for serving! Selfless service is not only an admirable trait while in uniform; it’s appreciated when you take off your uniform as well.
Post your comments below…it would be great to hear how our military population serves their country AND their community!
Finally, if you want an excellent resource, check out Volunteering and Civic Life in America: http://www.volunteeringinamerica.gov.
For brevity, we won’t get into “volun-told.” Someone else can handle that Command Post article!
The volunteering I want to talk about is the description most of us think of when considering that word - freely offering to do something. Guess what? Volunteering is very abundant in the United States! One in four Americans volunteer in some capacity through organizations. Whether it’s serving meals at a mobile kitchen for the homeless, helping at a local animal shelter, or judging the local spelling bee, there are a variety of ways for people to serve our communities.
In case you weren’t aware (and I’m guessing that most of you weren’t aware!), April is National Volunteer Appreciation Month. As a leader in a national nonprofit organization, I fully recognize that volunteers are essential to the work of my organization and hundreds of thousands of other organizations that seek to serve our communities.
Just in the military and veteran space, there are over 40,000 nonprofits with the term “military” or “veteran” somewhere in their mission or vision statement. That’s a lot of organizations that need volunteers! You can look at the picture on this post from volunteeringamerica.gov to see the different types of organizations that our volunteers serve at.
So how actively does our military/veteran population serve as volunteers? Veterans serve at about a 1% higher rate than the rest of the population. More veterans serve in Utah than any state in the Union. Conversely, fewer veterans serve in Louisiana, but that’s consistent with Louisiana’s overall volunteer rate.
All of this leads to a question for our RallyPoint community: where do you volunteer? More importantly, why do you volunteer there? More often than not, we serve for an organization that has impacted us in some capacity. Some of you serve at your nearby Fisher House Foundation because they were there for you when you - or a family member - were injured. Some of you volunteer at veteran hiring fairs to help your comrades get the jobs they need and translate their résumés into civilian language. Some of you feel like you’ve given enough to the military and shy away from any volunteer activities associated with those in uniform, and choose other paths instead.
Regardless of where you serve - thank you for serving! Selfless service is not only an admirable trait while in uniform; it’s appreciated when you take off your uniform as well.
Post your comments below…it would be great to hear how our military population serves their country AND their community!
Finally, if you want an excellent resource, check out Volunteering and Civic Life in America: http://www.volunteeringinamerica.gov.
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 37
Now that I am a Gray Area Retiree and I have all that free time back from being a Brigade Staff Officer, I volunteer with ESGR, my State Defense Force and on a local board. My military duties kept me too busy for my community. Now I am giving back.
(4)
(0)
LTC Jason Strickland
LTC Gavin Heater, aka "Gray Area Retiree," great to hear that you're giving back! ESGR is a terrific organization to serve with. Thanks for what you did - and what you now do!
(1)
(0)
SGT Rick Ash
Local VFW does a lot of volunteer work and I never miss a job. We do home repairs for mainly widows that can't afford it on their own. And I work at the Food Pantry doing intake 1 day a week then third Friday we get 500-1000 drive through poverty level families. 99% are grateful, the other 1% acts likr they are doing US a favor? And at church we do a lot of wood cutting within a 100 mile radius on Saturdays, my wife goes along. ALL of those families are grateful, especially the head of household. Who wants to see their family freezing in their own home. Here in KY a lot of families still heat with coal. Shshh, don't tell Obama.
(1)
(0)
LTC Jason Strickland, my wife and I help the homeless through the Room in the Inn program that is sponsored by our church along with many other area churches of all denominations.
(3)
(0)
Yes and for various programs. It helps to provide focus and a grounded perspective of life and the challenges we face.
(3)
(0)
I'm one of those quasi-volunteers in my mind. My son wanted to play soccer, but one look at the coaches we decided that I'd be his coach.
I've been coaching little league soccer for 4 seasons with my son being on the team. Putting in about 10 hours a week for practice, tactics and games.
I've been coaching little league soccer for 4 seasons with my son being on the team. Putting in about 10 hours a week for practice, tactics and games.
(3)
(0)
LTC Jason Strickland
CPT (Join to see), you gotta step up sometimes - or annually in your case! It's great to hear your perspective - which is consistent with so many others that decided to serve in different ways.
(0)
(0)
Over the years I've volunteered at variety of organizations. A volunteer fire department back home, Civil Air Patrol, and Alaskan Aids Assistance Association are just a few. I'm currently volunteering as the sound engineer for the production team at the Portland Gay Men's Chorus, I gotta say it's probably the coolest volunteer gig I've had.
(3)
(0)
Flint Hills Resources here in Fairbanks Alaska just provided Golden Heart Hero's (volunteers in the community) a luncheon together at the Westmark to celebrate our community of care. It was very pleasing to see over 200 recipients including myself.
(3)
(0)
LTC Jason Strickland
SSgt Rilene Ann, congratulations! Great to hear stories of our volunteers - even 200 of them in Alaska - being recognized!
(1)
(0)
Nothing fancy here, LTC Jason Strickland, just responding as needed with the a local volunteer fire department.
(2)
(0)
Being a cancer survivor I find it vvery rewarding to drive cancer patients to treatments. I also love visiting veterans at te local Veterans Nursing Home. It makes me feel better than anything I've evever done before.
(2)
(0)
Read This Next


Volunteering
Command Post
