Helping Students in
Need
My father’s
gift fifty years ago changed my life forever.
I entered
military college in 1962 at the age of 16.
Despite having excelled in high school, I had a very difficult time making
the transition to university academics.
I didn’t have a lot of money so it was very difficult to keep up
socially with my friends.
In
November, during my first leave off campus, I telephoned my father from a
telephone booth in Dorval and told him that I wasn’t going back. He told me to stay where I was and he drove
from Cornwall to talk to me. During our
conversation, he handed me a hundred dollars and told me to go back. My family was barely middle class in those
days and we lived from pay cheque to pay cheque. A hundred dollars was a lot of money then and
I don’t know how he managed to scrape it together.
In any
event, I went back, graduated from the Royal Military College in 1967, had a
great career in the military and the public service, and raised a wonderful
family. But I never forgot that hundred
dollars.
About seven
years ago, some friends and I started a practice of asking a local high school
to find three hard-working students who were in financial need and we would
give them each a $75 gift certificate from the local shopping centre to help
them with their Christmas shopping. More
often than not, they used the money to buy Christmas gifts for family members.
Three years
ago, I decided to create a permanent program to help high-school students in
need. The goal was to help them graduate
high school. I called it the Help Our
Students (HOST) Program. Students who met the criteria - hard-working and in financial
difficulty - are given $100 each month of the school year, for a total of
$1,000. They can spend the money
however they choose. Based on experience
so far, recipients have primarily used the money to buy food for themselves and
their family, to buy school supplies and to help with family expenses.
Confidentiality
is an important element: only the school officials who need to know are told
the recipients’ name. The only
requirement imposed on the recipients is to write me a short letter at
Christmas time and at the end of the school year to tell me what impact the HOST
Program has had on their lives.
In the
beginning, I solicited money from family, close friends and a few local
businesses. In the first year, we
provided financial support to three students – one from Cairine Wilson
Secondary School and two from St. Matthew High School.
As
donations increased - from Parent Councils, organizations, individuals and
school fundraising activities - we were able to support six students in the
second year. Lester B. Pearson and St.
Peter joined as participating high schools.
This year, the HOST Program has added Gloucester and Mother Teresa High
Schools and we will give out $12,000 to deserving students.
Donations
are made through the participating high schools; they forward the funds to
their school board for a tax receipt.
The funds are returned to the HOST Program back through the school. Donations can be earmarked for a specific
school or without restriction. As the
Founder, I cover all administrative costs so that all donations go directly to
the deserving students.
Three times
each school year, I send each donor a Report to Donors newsletter that
includes a financial statement and excerpts from the recipients’ letters to
me. Their stories are both
heart-breaking and uplifting. Despite
their difficult situations, they all have a positive attitude.
The
long-term plan is to support at least one student in each of the fifty youth
high schools in the city of Ottawa. If
you want to help, please visit my web site at www.host-program.org. You may change someone’s life forever.
Published by the Ottawa Citizen –
December 2012