|
|
|
The Foster Grandparent Program celebrated its inaugural
year in 1965 nationally as a cooperative effort between
the Office of Economic Opportunity and the Department
of Health Education and Welfare in Washington, D.C. The
program was developed by Sergeant Shriver as a
component of President Lyndon Johnson's War On Poverty
and was intended to enable limited income senior citizens
to volunteer with children who demonstrate exceptional
need.
|
|
Since its inception locally in 1972, the Foster Grandparent
Program of Central Florida has strived to fulfill this
mission, to recruit and train limited-income seniors, ages
60 or older, to provide twenty hours per week of one-on-
one attention to special needs children. Today, 250 Foster
Grandparents volunteer with children at 85 locations in
Orange, Seminole, and Osceola Counties.
|
|
Sponsored locally by Florida Senior Programs, Inc. and
funded by the Corporation for National and Community
Service, the Heart of Florida United Way, Orange County,
and other community contributors, the Foster
Grandparent Program of Central Florida provides a small
non-taxable stipend ($2.65/hour) to seniors, ages 60 or
older, who volunteer with special-needs children twenty
hours each week in schools, hospitals, drug treatment
centers, correctional institutions, Head Start centers,
after-school programs, and residential facilities. The
stipend empowers seniors to participate in the program
without incurring significant personal costs. In addition
to the stipend, participating volunteers receive
transportation assistance, meals while on duty, and
supplemental accident and liability coverage while they
are serving. All Foster Grandparents, in addition, receive
forty hours of pre-service orientation and additional
monthly training.
|
|