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By Carmelo Turdo |
The Wings of Hope Young Ambassadors held their annual Vote Event this week to decide which humanitarian service programs to support with the proceeds from their 2021 fundraising campaign. During the meeting, the membership chose these two worthy recipients:
Patrulla Aerea Civil Colombiana Maternal Health Care Program
Global Humanitarian Network Funds
This year's event was hosted by Wings of Hope Young Ambassadors Liaison Majd Jmeian and the Young Ambassadors Executive Council. Prior to choosing the funding recipients, the Executive Council provided briefings on the major business areas, including mission effectiveness, budget, membership, chapter development, communications, networking and social media outreach. Funding for humanitarian aviation programs has grown significantly since the organization's founding in 2016, and this year's offering will have a greater impact across the spectrum of needs through the network funding concept.
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Young Ambassadors President Brad Rafferty welcomes members |
The mission of the Wings of Hope Young Ambassadors is "to engage, empower and inspire young professionals aged 21-45 to create cross-cultural connections to help address global problems while building awareness of Wings of Hope." Members have opportunities to interact with their peers in other nations and cultures, engage with field directors of international service organizations and directly change and save lives through the power of aviation by awarding the funds raised here in the U.S.
About the Funding Recipients
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Young Ambassadors Liaison Majd Jmeian with service location map |
Patrulla Aerea Civil Colombiana is a private, non-profit organization that flies medical teams to care for people in otherwise inaccessible areas of Colombia. PAC, otherwise known as the Colombia Civil Air Patrol, is the largest volunteer health group in the country. Funding from the Wings of Hope Young Ambassadors will be applied to maternal health programs in El Charco that provide prenatal screening for high-risk pregnancies, monthly ultrasounds, self-care education support and specialized surgical procedures. Thousands of underserved Colombians will receive much needed medical care this year with funding from the Wings of Hope Young Ambassadors.
Global Humanitarian Network Funds (GHN)
Wings of Hope partners with humanitarian non-profit organizations in other countries that have the need and ability to support an aviation program. This year the Wings of Hope Young Ambassadors are employing a recently developed funding concept, the Global Humanitarian Network Funds, to leverage the effectiveness of available resources. Under this plan, funds are allotted to multiple organizations according to their specific aviation program needs.
"The
Global Humanitarian Network fund is a means to provide consistent, baseline
funding to all global partners to ensure equity in the funding process and to
mitigate emergent requests for funding of large expenses that may otherwise
arise from inconsistent support," Brad Rafferty, Young Ambassadors President, explained. "It goes toward funding the basic resources
required for sites to perform and maintain their operations, which could be
anything from subsidizing an engine overhaul to paying for fuel costs."
Young Ambassadors Liaison, Majd Jmeian, added: "The GHN funds will be divided into categories based on our partners' needs in 2022, including fuel, medevac flights and medical supplies; parts such as engines, avionics and radios; aircraft annual inspections; and new aircraft.
"This helps each of the bases to exchange best practices and support each other towards sustainable programming," Jmeian continued. "Wings of Hope provides aviation support to each of these bases - by supplying airplane parts, fuel stipends, sourcing aircraft, providing pilots and strategic planning. Since the Young Ambassadors voted to support the GHN, these funds will be used to ensure that they are able to utilize the incredibly vital resource of aviation to serve people in their communities and ensure access to lifesaving care."
The Young Ambassadors participate in local service projects along with their fundraising and professional development activities. One annual event is meal packing for the Kids Against Hunger shipment to Haiti. Wings of Hope Avionics Technician Steve Tomkin coordinates the local packing and storage of the meals. Due to the recent natural disasters and security concerns in the region, the meals will be shipped by Convoy of Hope to Haitian schools as soon as practical. Another meal packing event is planned for the fall.
Following the vote, several Young Ambassadors were recognized by Brad Rafferty and Majd Jmeian with 2021 Service Awards:
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Axa Guerra, VP of Networking |
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Loni Rodgers, Chair of New Chapter Development |
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Brian McCamley, VP Membership |
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Brad Rafferty, President |
Nobel
Peace Prize-nominated Wings of Hope has the vision of "Changing and saving
lives through the power of aviation." Wings of Hope has a rich history of
using aircraft to provide humanitarian aid to communities in remote places
where it is most needed. In 1959, various Catholic ministries started providing
humanitarian air services in the Turkana region of Kenya. Not unlike Charles
Lindbergh's preparations for the first solo flight across the Atlantic Ocean,
Bishop Joseph Houlihan of Eldoret, Kenya approached St. Louis businessmen Bill
Edwards, Joe Fabick, Paul Rodgers and George Haddaway about his need for a new
aircraft. They then provided the seed money for the first Cessna U206 used by
the newly-minted United Missionary Air Training and Transport. As news of this
first successful aircraft service spread, more aircraft were needed. Wings of
Hope incorporated in 1967, and has since provided humanitarian and development
services around the world through an inter-faith approach to serving the needs
of all mankind. Today, Wings of Hope continues to emphasize aviation as the
means to achieve their mission and partners with local organizations in the
countries served. A complete list of areas served can be found on the GlobalPrograms web page.
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