Senior volunteers Volunteers 45 percent of people aged 60 to 65 volunteer an average of 4.4 hours a week, says Independent Sector 8 • PhilanthK^yJoiinial of North Carolina Upsiifli June 1994 Bibliophiles check out the offerings at the Wake County Library's book sale. File photo Critical Friends Wake libraries shelve volunteers Wake County's Friends of the Library criticized the iibrary director for the iibrary’s hold ings. As a result, the volunteer group has been asked not to handle the library system’s annual book sale. By David E. Brown Raleigh the concerned volunteers I it’s simple: Friends don’t let I friends drive away from the library unfulfilled. The county administrators who run the libraries simply don’t agree there’d be any reason tor that to hap pen. But what happens when the people in charge of a taxpayer-fund ed public service and the people who give their time to raise money and funnel the public’s support and criti cism can’t see eye to eye? In Wake Connty, the volunteer group that supports the public library system found itself in hot water after it criticized the way the library director was handling the system’s book collection. How the dispute has played out offers a les son for all organizations that depend on volunteers, who inevitably are beholden to some higher entity, whether pnblic or private. Local governments like to stretch dollars to the limit. Nearly eveiy ser vice they staff, they supplement in some way with small-scale philan thropists - people who find the time to lend a free hand. Wake County Manager Richard Stevens rattles off the names of half a dozen without taking a breath: PTA, extension homemakers, parks advisoiy boards. Keep America Beautiful, folks who help troubled children. And the Friends of the Library. In the increasingly cosmopoUtan, education-minded state capital, Stevens, Library Director Tom Moore and some county commissioners are at odds with the leadership of the rou^y 200 Friends over the volun teers’ repeated criticism of the Uhrary system’s collection. The primary complaint, which the Friends say they are passing along from thousands of library users, is that the book collection buildup that started under Moore in the early 1980s has left the 18 library branches long on pulpy popular novels and short on non-fiction beef. The Friends also are npset that the system let its local history collec tion decline. County officials have made some positive responses. They attempted to obtain specifics fi’om every signer of a petition critical of the system. They have started an effort to Look for FRIENDS, page 9 Booster shots Volunteers help fund hi^ school athletics They operate on a much smaller scale than then university coun terparts, but high school boost er clubs perform a task that’s just as important - raising dol lars to support their school teams. By 'Tim Stevens Newton * f ever underestimate what /W can be done by a small / V group of people with love in their hearts, ears to the telephone and feet in action. Wayne and Peggy Smith have helped pump more than a quarter of a million dollars into the athletic pro gram at Newton-Conover High School during the past 20 years or so. The Newton-Conover Athletic Boosters Club raised more than $10,000 in less than a week to buy a car for football coach Don Patrick. By comparison, it took the school two years to raise $86,000 for a new press box for the football field and about five years to raise $225,000 for a new field house. Few athletic booster clubs in North Carolina can handle projects that big, but '5 FIELDING DREAMS SPECIAL REPOKT boosters clubs gradually have become a necessity for many high schools. Twenty years ago, most school athletic programs could survive on the revenues generated by gate receipts at football and basketball games. But in those days, schools usually offered five or six sports for boys and one or two for girls. The North Carolina High School Athletic Association now has state championships in 21 sports, and it is not unusual for a school to field more than 30 varsity and junior varsity teams. High school athletics don’t receive any state funds. Most local systems provide support funds for coaching supplements, insnrance, transportation and the like. “I’d guess that booster clubs at many schools provide a minimum of 50 percent of the operating expenses,” says Gary Powers, athietics direc tor at Millbrook High in Raleigh. “At some schools, the boosters probably give closer to 70 percent.” High school athletic boost er clubs, unlike college athlet ic clubs, generally have tremendous turnover. Parents usually are involved as long as their children are participating. There are few Selling refreshments at soccer games is one way members of the Millbrook High School Booster Club raise money for athletics. Here club members Sue and Jimmy Helfert serve middle school students people like the Smiths, who have been members of the Newton- Conover group for more than 20 years. The Smiths have missed fewer than half-a-dozen Newton-Conover football games since they graduated in 1947. Wayne was a charter mem ber of the school’s athletic boosters and Peggy has been the treasurer for Stuart Small (left) and Betsy Draper. File photo more than 15 years. “We just enjoy it,” says Peggy Smith. “This is what we do. Some people get involved in other kinds of clubs, but this is what we do.” The Smiths are totally involved. Wayne brings the cheerleaders into the stadium in his pickup at every home game, and Peggy staffs the souvenir booth that is open before and after — hut not dnring — home foothalt games. They also unofficially adopt a player or two each year to become sort of honorary grandchildren. The work the Smiths do helps the Newton-Conover program, bnt the focus of their group and most high Look for BOOSTER, page 9 New resource on volunteer issues The Nonprofit Risk Management Center in Washington, DC has pro duced a new booklet on legal issues that arise in vol unteer programs, "Managing Volunteers Within the Law." For information, call (202)785-3891. Student organizes pro gram to feed homeless Glenn Hutchinson, o senior at UNC-Charlotte, started picking up leftovers from the university cafeteria to take to area homeless shelters a few years ago. Now Hutchinson and several other students collect food three times a week, and Hutchinson is working to turn the program inta a nonprofit organization before he graduates. Volunteers needed at arts program Heritage Arts in Raleigh is seeking volunteers to help with "Reunion in the Grove," a fes tival honoring the ancestors of people of African ancestry. The festival is Saturday, June 4, 12 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Moore Square Park. Call Maxine Alexander at (919) 831-0681. Heritage Arts Volunteers needed for statewide confer ence The Philanthropy Journal of North Carolina is looking for a few volunteers to help with registration and to facilitate its statewide conference on stewardship this fall. Call (919) 829-8991. Volunteers make fundraising effort Hundreds of volunteers con tacted each family with a child at Ravenscroft School in Raleigh as part of the school's $5.15 million fundraising campaign. More than 770 parents, faculty, alumni, grandparents, foun dations and corporations contributed to the campaign.