1321 S 11th St
St. Louis, MO 63104
(314) 421-0400
Pedal the Cause is the premier cycling experience in the region, the pinnacle event of the year, and the driving force behind creating a world without cancer. Pedal the Cause is the only St. Louis event that gives 100% of participant donations to Siteman Cancer Center and St. Louis Children’s Hospital to accelerate lifesaving cancer research. Pedal the Cause is set to take place on Sept. 26 & 27, 2015 at the Chesterfield Amphitheater in Chesterfield, Mo.
The Mission Continues is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization empowers veterans who are adjusting to life at home to find purpose through community impact. We deploy veterans on new missions in their communities, so that their actions will inspire future generations to serve. Our operations in cities across the country deploy veteran volunteers alongside non-profit partners and community leaders to solve some of the most challenging issues facing our communities: improving community education resources, eliminating food deserts, mentoring at-risk youth and more. Through this unique model, veterans build new skills and networks that help them successfully reintegrate to life after the military while making long-term, sustainable transformations in communities and inspiring future generations to serve.
The Little Bit Foundation becomes part of school communities by visiting every week, getting to know the administrators, faculty and students in the schools. More than just a vehicle for donating items, we work one-to-one with students to ensure they feel the respect and dignity to which all children are entitled.
Producers of the Holiday Festival of Lights and the Ameren Missouri Thanksgiving Day Parade.
Childhood cancer can be devastating for any family, marked with a heavy emotional toll and financial strain. But with the help of the NCCS, no family has to endure the costs and heartache of pediatric cancer alone.
Employment Connection was founded in 1977 after a study by the Young Lawyers Division of the Bar Association of Metropolitan Saint Louis (BAMSL) discovered that employed ex-offenders were 66% less likely to return to incarceration. Our agency immediately began work to reduce recidivism. In 1980, Employment Connection became a full United Way member agency and expanded its programs beyond ex-offenders to serve U.S. veterans, homeless individuals and families, individuals with behavioral health disorders, and at-risk youth. Today Employment Connection assists over 1,500 individuals who have barriers to self-sufficiency every year.
We are located on the Near South Side of Downtown St. Louis in the McKinley Heights neighborhood.
ST NICK is an acronym for (S)erving (T)he (N)eeds (I)n (C)hrist's (K)ingdom. The St Nick Project is a Christian not-for-profit organization which allows giving to done secretly so individuals may give to others without bringing attention to themselves as the Bible instructs us.
Omega Psi Phi Fraternity & The Upsilon Omega Foundation, Inc. The Upsilon Omega Foundation, Inc., a corporation created by the Upsilon Omega Chapter of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc., exists as an independent not-for-profit corporation chartered by the State of Missouri and granted an exemption under Section 501(c)(3) of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code. The foundation was created on July 22, 1996 to exclusively accommodate the Fraternity's commitment to provide charitable, educational and civic programs and services to those in need in the St. Louis community. In keeping with that stated mission, the foundation will devote its time, effort and resources to the creation, planning and implementation of activities and operations specifically designed to uplift the community; and thus, improve the quality of life for its residents and provide scholarships to college bound students. The men of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity are committed to being part of the solution of the problems faced by the youth of our community. It begins with our members: over 100,000 strong world wide. Our more than 200 active local members are comprised of a past St. Louis Mayor, Government Officials, Civic and Business Leaders, Clergymen, Law Enforcement Officers, Network and Media Personalities, Attorneys and Educators, but most importantly, we are Family Men, dedicated to Four Cardinal Principals: Manhood, Scholarship, Perseverance and Uplift. We invite you to assist us in our efforts by contributing funds to our fundraising programs.
The description of MY WORDS Organization is basically a place where your heard. A place where God welcomes you into the truth of living a long healthy life... the path on which your individuality is discovered so that you can save yourself and others from the evil or wrong doings that the world has to offer.
The Society of St. Vincent de Paul--Archdiocesan Council of St. Louis serves individuals and families in need throughout the Greater St. Louis area. The Society consists of more than 3,400 volunteer members belonging to 142 parish-based conferences (chapters). Volunteers make home visits to those in need to provide person-to-person services, including arranging utility and prescription drug assistance and assisting with housing and transportation needs. The Society also operates six thrift stores. In fiscal year 2014, the Society assisted 264,859 people, provided $6.3 million in direct aid and distributed $6.1 million in in-kind goods to those in need. One of the oldest and most well-respected charities in St. Louis, the Society is a proud member of the United Way of Greater St. Louis. As a Catholic lay organization, an essential part of the Society’s work is to maintain the confidentiality and dignity of those being served, regardless of religion, race, ethnicity or age.
The Mission Continues is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization empowers veterans who are adjusting to life at home to find purpose through community impact. We deploy veterans on new missions in their communities, so that their actions will inspire future generations to serve. Our operations in cities across the country deploy veteran volunteers alongside non-profit partners and community leaders to solve some of the most challenging issues facing our communities: improving community education resources, eliminating food deserts, mentoring at-risk youth and more. Through this unique model, veterans build new skills and networks that help them successfully reintegrate to life after the military while making long-term, sustainable transformations in communities and inspiring future generations to serve.
St Louis Community Re-entry Program for Ex-offenders ORGANIZATION OBJECTIVE STATEMENTS Mission Statement To integrate successful intervention principles and practices resulting in collaborative partnerships that enhance ex-offender self-sufficiency, reduce recidivism, and improve public safety and community health in St. Louis City and County DOBB (dress out box boutique) 1 set of clothing and shoes sent to prisoners upon leaving prison & entering the St. Louis Community Reentry Program for Ex-Offenders Minister Nathaniel Johnson has been in the prison ministry since 1991, first connected with St. Vincent DePaul Society after reentering society himself from prison in 1990, Nathaniel Johnson began volunteering to help other ex-offenders coming home to and unsafe and unknown environment. in 2005 Minister Johnson founded/directed The Freedom House Ministry along with St. Louis Community Reentry Program for Ex-Offenders. Since then he has added support groups, job search, bible study groups, transitional living house, life skills and GED services to this AWESOME program and now St. Louis Community Reentry Program for Ex-Offenders has added the DOBB = dress out box boutique program
A non-profit organization dedicated to keeping babies alive through public education and which provides bereavement support for those who have lost an infant.
One Saint Louis envisions a radically inclusive Saint Louis, in which we are all one, united by mutual support and understanding, free from need or inequality.
In 1933, the Chief Petty Officers organized themselves into an association that would make their issues and concerns known to Coast Guard Headquarters. It was an effort of small groups gathered along district lines. They did not initially receive full endorsement by CGHQ. However, the Association went forward anyway and in December 1933, met at the War Memorial Building in Baltimore, Md. This meeting was described as "the most significant of any previous meeting in the affairs of CPOs and the real corner stone of the organization was laid." However, the actual establishment date was March 25, 1933, at the Coast Guard Depot at Curtis Bay, Md., which allowed Curtis Bay to lay claim to being the first CPOA chapter in the Coast Guard. The framers of the CPO Constitution drew their constitutional ideal from the U.S. Constitution and adopted the motto "Ut Prosimus" meaning "That we may be of Service." There were 29 charter members in March 1933. The CPOA was re-founded in 1969 after being disbanded during World War II. ADM Willard J. Smith officially recognized CPOA on April 7, 1969. CPOA now has 55 chapters nationwide with approximately 8,500 members.