Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Willows Senior Center, Willow Glen, San Jose, Ca

Willows Senior Center

2175 Lincoln Avenue, San Jose, CA 95125

(408) 448-6400 ‎

Among many great opportunities and Senior activitites in beautiful Willow Glen, San Jose Ca. Senior Center they also have SeniorNet. Check out the video.







SeniorNet provides computer & internet education for older adults and seniors. It is a non-profit organization founded in 1986 and now has learning centers across the world.

Southside Senior Center, San Jose, Ca


408-629-3435

FAX: 408-629-3442

5585 Cottle Road, San Jose, CA 95123

Southside Senior Center caters to all seniors (50 and older) in the San Jose area. They provide a multitude of activities resulting in something for everyone. For example, card games, dancing, drama, ceramics, computer classes and computer availability, sewing, a variety of exercise classes, ping pong, horseshoes, etc., etc. Some activities have a fee while most are free or almost free. View the March monthly brochure for a list of all activities and their day and time. Here is their website.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Japan Earthquake and Tsunami, How to Help
























By Lili Ladaga lili Ladaga Fri Mar 11, 11:48 am ET

Japan was hit by one of the largest earthquakes ever recorded on March 11. The magnitude-9.0 quake spawned a deadly tsunami that slammed into the small island nation, leaving a huge swath of devastation in its wake. Thousands of people are dead and many more are still missing or injured; almost half a million people are homeless.

Japan has often donated when other countries have experienced disasters, such as when Hurricane Katrina impacted the United States. Below are organizations that are working on relief and recovery in the region.

AMERICAN RED CROSS: The American Red Cross is currently supporting and advising the Japanese Red Cross, which continues to assist the government in its response.  You can help people affected by disasters, like floods, fires, tornadoes and hurricanes, as well as countless other crises at home and around the world by making a donation to support American Red Cross Disaster Relief. Donate here.

GLOBALGIVING: Established a fund to disburse donations to organizations providing relief and emergency services to victims of the earthquake and tsunami. We are working with International Medical Corps, Save the Children, and other organizations on the ground to provide support. Our partners on the ground are working hard to provide immediate relief. Donate here.

SAVE THE CHILDREN:  Save the Children, which has worked in Japan since 1986, has an immediate goal of $5 million to launch longer-term recovery for children affected by Japan's March 11 earthquake and tsunami. Save the Children has opened the first child-friendly space in Japan, protective environments where children can gather to play and share their experiences under the supervision of trained, caring adults. Donate here.

SALVATION ARMY: The Salvation Army has been in Japan since 1895 and is currently providing emergency assistance to those in need. Donate here.

AMERICARES: AmeriCares and its relief workers in Japan are working to deliver medicines and supplies to hospitals, shelters and health responders to treat and care for survivors.  The AmeriCares team began mobilizing within hours of the first reports of the dual disasters, dispatching an emergency response manager to Tokyo to direct the efforts of our relief workers in Sendai, the largest city closest to the impact zone. Our team is in direct contact with local officials, evacuation shelters and hospitals treating the injured in Miyagi, Fukushima and Iwate to determine health needs. Donate here.

INTERNATIONAL MEDICAL CORPS: A team of doctors flew to Sendai, where they will be delivering supplies, assessing needs, and identifying communities that have not yet been reached. We continue to coordinate with local health authorities and partners on critical gaps, providing technical expertise and assisting with logistics. Donate here.

SHELTERBOX: ShelterBox responds instantly to natural and man-made disasters by delivering boxes of aid to those who are most in need. The box includes a tent for a family of 10, cooker, blankets, water purification, tool kit and other items survivors need to rebuild their lives in the days, weeks and months following a disaster. Donate here.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

The Indian Health Center of Santa Clara Valley

Welcome To The Indian Health Center of Santa Clara Valley

The Indian Health Center of Santa Clara Valley is a 501(c)3, nonprofit, community health clinic, located in San Jose, California. We serve people from all walks of life, regardless of race, creed, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation or disability and take pride in serving our diverse patients and clients.  Besides having a highly talented medical and dental department, the Indian Health Center also has an outstanding counseling department, community wellness center and two WIC (Women Infants and Children) offices, one in San Jose and the other in Mountain View.

Cost of services at the Indian Health Center is determined by the patient's eligibility for various programs.  To determine your eligibility, set up an appointment with our Eligibility Coordinator, Norma Avila by email or call her at (408) 445-3400 x233.

Indian Health Center
1333 Meridian Avenue
San Jose, CA 95125
p. (408) 445-3400
f. (408) 269-9273

Visit the Indian Health Center!
Our main Medical clinic is open Monday and Friday from 8am to 5pm, Tuesday thru Thursday from 8am to 7pm, and Saturday from 8am - 12pm

American Indian Education Resource Center, Inc., San Jose Ca

American Indian Education Resource Center, Inc.
Rene Samayoa
749 Story Road, Suite 300
San Jose, CA  95122
408-299-0590
Fax: 408-299-0591
E-mail: sjaiec@sbcglobal.net

American Indian Education Centers in California are authorized by California Education Code, Article 6, sections 33380-33383. Center staff assist schools with professional development, counseling, tutorial services, or parent education. They also provide supplemental and extended day instructional programs to meet the needs of American Indian students.

Free Vegetables Every 3rd Friday of the Month

12 noon till 1PM

Monday, March 21, 2011

Vet Center, Veteran Center, San Jose Ca




San Jose Vet Center
278 N. 2nd st
San Jose, CA 95112
Phone: 408 993-0729
Fax: 408 993-0829










About the San Jose Vet Center, Readjustment Counseling Services:
The Vet-Center program provides a broad range of counseling, outreach, and referral services to eligible veterans in order to help them make a satisfactory post-war readjustment to civilian life.  These services are provided in both English and Spanish.
Readjustment counseling services include: individual, group, and marital/family counseling; medical referrals; PTSD evaluations; alcohol & drug treatment referrals; information & referral to community resources; sexual trauma counseling; bereavement counseling; employment counseling, guidance, and referral; benefits assistance.Vet Center staff respect the privacy of all veterans.  We hold in the strictest confidence all information disclosed in the counseling process.  No information will be released to any person or agency without written consent from the client, except in circumstances averting a crises. 

Bill Wilson Center, Youth Development, San Jose Ca



Bill Wilson Center
3490 The Alameda
Santa Clara, CA 95050
(408) 243-0222

Bill Wilson Center's mission is to support and strengthen the community by serving youth and families through counseling, housing, education, and advocacy.

With an emphasis on youth development, Bill Wilson Center programs focus on building self-confidence and developing personal assets. With these tools, we believe youth can permanently change the direction of their lives.

A key component of Bill Wilson Center's philosophy encompasses a strength based approach to youth development. Our staff and volunteers identify the strengths in each youth and build on those strengths as youth are empowered to make positive changes in their lives.

While the agency is focused on youth, creating a healthy, safe community requires that people in all age groups receive the support they need. For this reason, Bill Wilson Center also offers services for adults and families.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Narika, Domestic Violence Organization, San Jose Ca



Asian Women's Home


Domestic Violence Organization

Crisis: 408-975-2739
Phone: 408-975-2730

Narika Helps Women Who:

  • Are abused by their husband or partner

  • Are abused by their in-laws and/or family members

  • Are being harrassed or stalked by an ex-husband/boyfriend/partner

  • Experienced violent and abusive homes

  • Are forced or pressured into arranged marriages

  • Are abondoned, divorced, or widowed

  • Have children who have witnessed maternal abuse

  • Are pressured and threatened by dowry demands

  • Are victims of rape

  • Are in abusive same-sex relationships

  • Are subjected to sexual harrassment or unwanted sexual advances in workplaces, homes, schools, colleges and other social settings

  • Are dealing with cultural identity issues, inter-generational conflict, and sexual identity issues

Maitri, Domestic Violence Organization, San Jose Ca



Maitri Toll Free Hotline: 1.888.8.MAITRI
National Domestic Violence Toll Free Hotline: 1.800.799.SAFE

 

 234 East Gish Road, Suite #200, San Jose, CA 95112

Toll Free Hotline: 1-888-8MAITRI
1-888-862-4874
Local Hotline: 1-408-436-8398

Live Hotline Hours:
9am - 1pm (PST)
Maitri's mission is three-fold:


  • To help integrate clients into the mainstream of American society, so that they feel comfortable and become full participants in it. Maitri recognizes that the very social and cultural separation or isolation that it's clients experience contributes largely to their problems, and is a hindrance to their solutions.

  • To focus efforts on supplementing and complementing existing services, not on duplicating them. To this end, Maitri has developed close working relationships with mainstream agencies and organizations, as well as organizations working with similar ethnic groups.

  • To work towards fostering self-reliance and self-confidence in its clients. We believe that a large number of difficulties experienced by Maitri's clients arise out of a real or perceived situation of dependency. This philosophy is encapsulated in Maitri's motto of "Helping Women to Help Themselves" and Maitris mission statement:
     
    Maitri believes that the best human relationships are characterized by mutual respect, open communication, and individual empowerment. To that end, Maitri's activities are designed to help South Asian women make an informed choice of the lives they lead.

Casa de Clara, San Jose Catholic Worker Shelter, San Jose Ca



318 North 6th Street
San Jose, CA 95112
408-297-8330

Volunteers needed:

Our community provides emergency shelter to homeless women and children. We
have been engaged in this ministry for over 30 years. Sadly we are among those
CW houses that has experienced a loss of full-time, long-term community members
in recent years, imperiling our mission of service to a few of the 7000 people
homeless in our area.

Our greatest need is for those who wish to make this a way of life for
several years or more. It is only with such folks that a community can thrive.
We also accept short-term (6 ths -1 yr) members & some students over the
summer,

Most of our scheduled work is in the mornings & evenings and on weekend
days. It may be possible for community members to maintain a part-time job or
take a class during the weekday.

Prior community living, volunteer experience, and understanding of the needs
of homeless women are helpful. Needed skills include cooking, cleaning, house
maintenance, gardening, newsletter production and community out-reach. A
commitment to non-violence, simple living and a faith-based lifestyle are
required. Please have an open-mind & heart , a sense of humor, & lots of
flexibility.

Please email us at: sanjosecatholicworker@yahoo.com

Friday, March 18, 2011

Japan Meets the Monster

Smoke rises in the distance behind destroyed houses in Kesennuma City in Miyagi Prefecture in northeastern Japan"

If you were a citizen of Northern Japan today; if your house had just been sucked into the sea–how would you be dealing with it? Your clothes and family pictures are floating on the waves. Everything you have worked for is missing: food, shelter, job, car and perhaps some of your people best loved and now gone.

Where would you go? You have so much to grieve for. What will you eat? Your entire fortune is what you are carrying on you. How do you begin to reconstruct a life that, in moments, has been so thoroughly crushed?

http://rowescorner.com/2011/03/17/japan-meets-the-monster/

I Wish There Was A PAW TEAM in San Jose Ca



PAW Team is a volunteer-based organization. Services are provided by volunteer veterinarians, vet techs, and others from the Portland community interested in helping people on the streets and their companion/service animals.



In our early years, PAW Team typically saw from 20-40 pets at each quarterly clinic. Each year that number increased bit by bit, until we were caring for an average of 70 animals at each quarterly clinic in 2009, with a few exceptionally heavy clinics where we treated up to 100 pets. When we began our monthly clinics in 2010, we expected to maintain or even decrease our average of 70 or so pets per clinic, since we would be increasing the number of clinics in each year. However, at our monthly clinics in 2010, we treated an average of 142 pets, with no signs of slowing down. We now have to turn away clients due to lack of funds. There is clearly a tremendous need for these services in our community.

Mexican American Community Services Agency, Inc., MACSA



For over 46 years, MACSA has been recognized as a leader in serving the Latino community. MACSA's mission, culture and core values have guided the organization's culturally proficient service delivery and program development. MACSA's core values are based on mutual respect and cultural appreciation.

 Mexican American Community Services Agency, Inc., MACSA traces its origins to 1964 when a group of community activists joined together to identify ways to help the emerging Latino community respond to injustices such as discrimination, racism, poverty, police brutality, educational inequity, and inadequate access to public services.

MACSA's first director, the late Lino Lopez described the social landscape of Santa Clara County in the 1960's this way, "To the average person the impression is that if people live freely in all sections of the community, then they must live free of segregation and discrimination. This first impression is immediately erased when one looks behind the façade that is customarily erected by the community power structure constructed to give such an appearance... Behind the banks and the supermarkets and behind the landscaped arterial ways there are slums, there are hovels, there are hungry people; the discards of society." Those most affected, according to Mr. Lopez, were Mexican Americans.

Since that time MACSA has remained steadfast and committed to improving the quality of life for youth, families and seniors. MACSA offers programs throughout Santa Clara County, in particular in East and Central San Jose, Morgan Hill and Gilroy. MACSA's commitment to progressive community change is demonstrated through the numerous youth development programs offered at youth centers, schools, library and community sites. MACSA has earned local, state and national acclaim for its "cutting edge" youth programs.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Our Lady of Guadeloupe Church, Food Pantry, San Jose Ca


Our Lady of Guadalupe Parish 
2020 E San Antonio St
San Jose, CA 95116
Phone: (408) 258-7057 Fax: (408) 258-8249
A Parish of The Roman Catholic Diocese of San Jose CA


Food Pantry for Low-income, homeless and unemployed residents in 95116, 95132 and 95135

zip codes and Parish residents. 

FOOD BAGS:  Wed. 9:00 am - 11:00 AM - Thurs., 3:00pm - 5:00pm

 

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

INNVISION - Commercial Street Inn Shelter, San Jose Ca


Commercial Street Inn Shelter


260 Commercial Street, San Jose, CA 95112
408-271-1630

At this location
55 beds for women & children, including after school tutorial programs.

  • Emergency Shelter for women & children only

  • Transitional Housing

  • Georgia Travis Center (GTC) MultiService Drop-In
    across the street

INNVISION - Julian Street Inn Shelter, San Jose Ca


Julian Street Inn Shelter


546 W. Julian Street, San Jose, CA 95110
408-271-0820

At this location
70 beds and rehabilitation services for men & women diagnosed with mental illness.

Loaves & Fishes - St. Patrick's, Soup Kitchen, San Jose Ca


St. Patrick's


389 E. Santa Clara Street (corner of 9th St.)
San Jose, Ca 95113
408 293-4505

SOUP KITCHEN MEALS SERVED:


Mon., Thurs.: 4:00 pm
Sat.: 4:30 pm

INNVISION-GEORGIA TRAVIS CENTER Shelter, San Jose Ca


Georgia Travis Center


297 Commercial Street, San Jose, CA 95112
408-453-3124

Breakfast: 9:00am - Lunch: 12:00pm

INNVISION WEBSITE>

At this location
The primary gateway to emergency assistance for homeless women and children in Silicon Valley.

  • MultiService Drop-In Center
    Open Weekdays 8:30 am - 4:30 pm
    Breakfast, Lunch, Snack – Monday - Friday.

  • Family Place Program

  • Donation Depot

  • Drop-Off Location

  • Produce Market

  • One-Stop Homelessness Prevention Center

Domestic Violence Video







Just saw this very powerful video on YouTube. I thought you might want to check it out.

Council on Aging Silicon Valley



Council on Aging Silicon Valley
2115 The Alameda
San Jose, CA 95126

visit website>

The Goal of the Council on Aging Silicon Valley (COASV) is to provide leadership in addressing issues that relate to older Californians: to develop community-based systems of care that provide services which support independence within California’s interdependent societies, and which protect the quality of life for older persons and persons with functional impairments; and to promote citizen involvement in the planning and delivery of services
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