Please donate today! HOME FUND campaign for 2011 ends Saturday

End the year on a high note!

Offer struggling families “a hand up, not a handout” through the Peninsula Daily News’ Peninsula Home Fund.

For 22 years, the Home Fund has helped thousands of families in ­Clallam and Jefferson counties.

Gifts to the Home Fund make a daily difference in lives across the North Olympic Peninsula — thanks to our readers’ generosity.

All contributions are fully IRS tax-deductible.

And Saturday is the last day to make a donation and get a tax deduction for 2011.

To donate online, push the “Click Here to Donate” button at the www.peninsuladailynews.com home page.

Thank you!

As of our last deposit at First Federal on Thursday, $218,506.22 from people and organizations in Jefferson and Clallam counties had been donated to the Home Fund.

While that’s below the record total amount we received last year, $248,367.35, it’s a terrific amount.

Thank you, readers!

Next week, we will tally the remainder of donations.

A final total, and a final list of donors and donations, will be published in our Sunday, Jan. 8, edition and at www.peninsuladaily news.com.

The $248,367.35 raised by the Home Fund in 2010 allowed OlyCAP to help more than 2,600 families, many with children, and hundreds of other individuals in 2011.

These are your neighbors, with nowhere else to turn.

These are local people that OlyCAP (nonprofit Olympic Community Action Programs, the Peninsula’s No. 1 emergency-care agency) wouldn’t have been able to assist otherwise.

The Peninsula Home Fund — which began in 1989 — is carefully rationed every year.

With heavy demand again this year, only a few dollars are left from the 2010 campaign and will go with the new money right away to make sure no one falls through the cracks during the dark, days of winter, the most demanding time of the year.

Home Fund specifics

■   A safety net for local residents when there is nowhere else to turn.

From Port Townsend to Forks, from Quilcene and Brinnon to Sequim and LaPush, the Home Fund provides hot meals for seniors, meeting rent, energy and transportation needs, warm winter coats for kids, home repairs for the low-income, needed eyeglasses and prescription drugs, dental work, safe and drug-free temporary housing . . .

The list goes on and on.

But the Home Fund is not a welfare program.

Assistance, which usually averages less than $100, is also limited to one time in a 12-month period.

The average amount of help this year was about $95 per family.

But even though the dollar figures are small, the impact can be big, in huge, life-changing ways.

Instances of help are designed to get an individual or family through a crisis — and every effort is made to put them back on the path to self-sufficiency.

That’s the “hand up, not a handout” focus of the fund.

In many instances, Peninsula Home Fund case managers at OlyCAP work with individuals or families to develop a plan to become financially stable — and avoid a recurrence of the emergency that prompted aid from the fund.

And, as needed, Peninsula Home Fund contributions are often used in conjunction with money from other agencies, enabling OlyCAP to stretch the value of the contribution.

OlyCAP oversees the Home Fund for the PDN, screening the applicants and distributing the funds.

■   No money is deducted by Peninsula Daily News.

Every penny goes to OlyCAP to help the most vulnerable members of our community, from infants to families to seniors.

Because of the extraordinary demand experienced by OlyCAP in 2011 — and plummeting cutbacks in grants and government support — for the first time in the 22-year history of the Home Fund, OlyCAP will use a portion of the fund in 2012 to pay for the helping hands who see clients.

The amount will be limited to 10 cents of every dollar donated.

The fund is not set up to hand out money passively.

OlyCAP can no longer absorb the costs of managing all the facets of the Home Fund — screening applicants, providing counseling and carefully disbursing the funds — without financial assistance.

It must tap a small portion of the fund this year as tough times compound the challenges it faces to help those in need.

■   Your personal information is kept confidential.

The PDN does not rent, sell, give or otherwise share your address or other information with anyone or make any other use of it.

Applying for a grant

To apply for a Peninsula Home Fund grant, phone OlyCAP at 360-452-4726 (Clallam County) or 360-385-2571 (Jefferson County).

■ OlyCAP’s Port Angeles office is at 228 W. First St., Suite J (Armory Square Mall); 360-452-4726.

■ Its Port Townsend office is at 803 W. Park Ave.; 360-385-2571.

■ The Forks/West End office is at 421 Fifth Ave.; 360-374-6193.

OlyCAP’s website: www.olycap.org; email: action@olycap.org.

If you have any questions about the fund, phone John Brewer, Peninsula Daily News editor and publisher, at 360-417-3500.

Or email him at john.brewer@peninsuladailynews.com.

PDN publishes the donation coupon and information about the fund every Sunday during the fundraising campaign.

While most of the Peninsula Home Fund money is raised every year between Thanksgiving and Dec. 31, the fund itself never closes.

Donations of any amount are always welcome.

They can be sent at any time to Peninsula Home Fund, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362.

Or, through this month, you can click on the Home Fund logo at www.peninsuladailynews.com.

New contributions will go toward the 2012 campaign.

More in News

Agencies partner to rescue Port Townsend man

Rough seas ground sailor on Christmas

Ellen White Face, left, and Dora Ragland enjoy some conversation after finishing a Christmas dinner prepared by Salvation Army Port Angeles staff and volunteers. The Salvation Army anticipated serving 120-150 people at its annual holiday meal on Tuesday. (Paula Hunt/Peninsula Daily News)
Hundreds served at annual Salvation Army dinner

Numbers represent growing need for assistance, captain says

Jefferson separates prosecutor, coroner roles

Funeral director hired on one-year basis

Public concerned about hospital partnership

Commenters question possible Catholic affiliation

Sylvia White of Port Townsend is making a major gift to the nonprofit Northwind Art. (Diane Urbani/Northwind Art)
Port Townsend artist makes major gift to Northwind

Artist Sylvia White, who envisioned an arts center in… Continue reading

Skaters glide across the Winter Ice Village on Front Street in downtown Port Angeles. The Winter Ice Village, operated by the Port Angeles Chamber of Commerce, is open daily from noon to 9 p.m. through Jan. 5. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Fresh ice

Skaters glide across the Winter Ice Village on Front Street in downtown… Continue reading

Paranormal investigator Amanda Paulson sits next to a photo of Hallie Illingworth at Lake Crescent, where Illingworth’s soap-like body was discovered in 1940. Paulson stars in a newly released documentary, “The Lady of the Lake,” that explores the history of Illingworth’s death and the possible paranormal presence that has remained since. (Ryan Grulich)
Documentary explores paranormal aspects disappearance

Director says it’s a ’ Ghost story for Christmas’

Funding for lodge in stopgap measure

Park official ‘touched by outpouring of support’

Wednesday’s e-edition to be printed Thursday

Peninsula Daily News will have an electronic edition on… Continue reading

Joe Nole.
Jefferson County Sheriff Joe Nole resigns

Commissioners to be appoint replacement within 60 days

Residents of various manufactured home parks applaud the Sequim City Council’s decision on Dec. 9 to approve a new overlay that preserves manufactured home parks so that they cannot be redeveloped for other uses. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Sequim preserves overlay for homes

Plots can be sold, but use must be same

A ballot box in the Sequim Village Shopping Center at 651 W. Washington St. now holds two fire suppressant systems to prevent fires inside after incidents in October in Vancouver, Wash., and Portland, Ore. A second device was added by Clallam County staff to boxes countywide to safeguard ballots for all future elections. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Political party officials fine with Clallam’s loss of bellwether

With election certified, reps reflect on goals, security