Archive for the ‘CEO’ Category

CEO Debbie Rich featured on 104.1 The Truth

Wednesday, February 27th, 2013

Debbie talks about our history, our future, and what Girl Scouts are doing now to develop leaders in our community, both girls and adults. Click the link to listen:

DebbieRich_GSofSA_02-23-2013

CirclesofChangeCircles of Change with Dr. Zara Larsen: Where Your Path is Created by Walking on It

Dr. Zara Larsen’s forte is helping organizations accelerate effective performance through speed with discipline. Her passion is upending the status quo for sustainable system change, not just capturing point opportunities or resolving point issues. A former Fortune 150 line executive with 30 years of global change leadership and talent development expertise, Dr. Larsen is licensed in SIMA, the System for Identifying Motivated Abilities. This assessment process allows individuals to gain an appreciation for their innate giftedness and passions, self knowledge that is powerful during career change.

Dr. Larsen takes a very pragmatic, integrated approach to helping clients discern

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chapter – Circle – of their lives.

 

 

Shedding Stereotypes at Girl Scouts Experience the Movement

Monday, September 17th, 2012

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Maria DeCabooter
mdecabooter@girlscoutssoaz.org
520.319.3175

______________________________________________________________________________________

Shedding Stereotypes at Girl Scouts Experience the Movement

Experience the Movement
September 19,2012
Loews Ventana Canyon Resort, Kiva
7000 N. Resort Drive, Tucson, 85750
7:30am: Registration,
8:00am: Complimentary Breakfast and Program

 

TUCSON- There are some things that get better with age, and the Girl Scouts is definitely one of them. The 100 year old organization continues to evolve with the times and to adapt its programming to meet girls’ needs. However, there is one position on which the Girl Scouts will not budge, and that is its determination to uphold its mission of building girls of courage, confidence, and character who make the world a better place. Attendees at Girl Scouts of Southern Arizona’s Experience the Movement will be reminded of this when they gather on Wednesday to learn about the organization’s Year of the Girl Campaign focusing on female leadership in society.

While Girl Scout activities have long been synonymous with cookies, camps, and crafts, in recent years the all-girl organization has focused its energy into encouraging girl leadership. One of the most unique aspects of Girl Scouting is that it provides a forum in which girls are given ample opportunity to explore new roles and find the ones that fit them best. This is extremely important, as research indicates that girls still lack self-esteem when it comes to taking on leadership roles. The Girl Scouts Research Institute notes that four out of five girls believe they don’t have what it takes for leadership positions. Even though girls are excelling in academics, something is going on under the surface that is keeping them from becoming leaders.

Part of the problem is that young women have a difficult time envisioning themselves as business executives or top political officials. Experience the Movement and the Year of the Girl campaign aims to dispel such myths and to put out a call to action for girl advocates in the community. Debbie Rich, Chief Executive Officer of Girl Scouts of Southern Arizona, stresses that “we want to get the community together and show them the role they can play in welcoming, mentoring and supporting girls. I’m hoping attendees will go back to their spheres of influence, whether it’s their business they run or the university that they work at, and spread the word about what girls need to really achieve their leadership success and their dreams. It’s important to have all of our leaders and our community paying attention and helping ToGetHerThere.”

Over two hundred guests from the community are expected at Wednesday’s 7:30am breakfast at Loews Ventana Canyon- Kiva Room. The program will feature a girl panel and the presentation of the Year of the Girl Proclamation from the Mayor’s office.  For more information or to attend, please contact Jessica Galow, Fund Development Manager, at jgalow@girlscoutssoaz.org, 520.319.3147.

About Girl Scouts

Girl Scouts is the world’s preeminent leadership development organization dedicated to helping build girls of courage, confidence, and character who make the world a better place. GSSoAz serves over 14,000 girls in Southern Arizona and includes over 3,000 adult volunteers. Our goals are to provide a wide range of contemporary programs that reflect the unique needs and interests of all girls living in Southern Arizona, to empower girls to reach their full potential, and to give girls a voice in their community and in their own lives. For more information, please contact Maria DeCabooter at (520) 319-3175.

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If you could change something about the movement, what would it be?

Friday, August 17th, 2012

Our amazing CEO posed this question to the staff at our staff planning retreat last week.  I thought the answers were inspiring and that others might enjoy seeing them as well.  Perhaps you might be inspired to be a guest blogger and share what you would change about the Movement if you could.

  • Reach out to non profits who may have laid off employees for volunteers
  • Make it cool
  • Include outlying areas more
  • Expand on amazing customer service
  • Help volunteers feel valued
  • Asking volunteers  and parents to register to support the movement
  • Cultivate a staff culture of service
  • Make Personify more user friendly
  • Hold all members accountable to girls
  • Ask a girl
  • Serve a more diverse population
  • Add a Southwest Tucson Resource Center
  • More accessible leadership experience
  • Cultural differences embraced
  • Serve more in the refugee community
  • Include girls in fund raising efforts
  • More diverse staff
  • Staff learn more about other cultures
  • Staff traveling teams
  • Staff should all learn Spanish
  • All girls served in all initiatives
  • Balance the levels out- task force for older girls
  • Advocacy- we are responsible for all girls in So. AZ
  • Offer trainings to schools on girl issues
  • Be purposeful about inclusion
  • Improve staff/board relations
  • Budget cure
  • Successful SHARE campaign
  • Raise the bar
  • New Building
  • Service  mindset
  • Clear messaging
  • Hispanic growth in membership
  • GS is for everyone (all economic levels)
  • Adult retention
  • Outdoor activities as a means for healthy living
  • Tell our story
  • Be at the table for every conversation in the community that involves girls
  • Estate donations
  • Amazing technology and satellite locations
  • Increase membership in outlying areas
  • Staff volunteer in other organizations
  • Increase advocacy for LGBT youth
  • Asking people to pay for membership and programs instead of assuming they can’t
  • Virtual pathway
  • Personify better
  • Outlying areas
  • Hispanic families
  • Exchange program with the Guias in Mexico
  • Quarterly retreat/gathering
  • Accountability with each other
  • Helping others, but being honest with our own capabilities (don’t stretch too thin)
  • Staff retention
  • Career paths
  • Team building and appreciation
  • Build relationships with businesses in the neighborhood
  • Grow outlying areas
  • Transparency- staff and membership
  • Expand outlying areas
  • Online proficiency for staff and membership
  • Properties as program centers and use to full potential
  • Year round camp offerings
  • Increased support for outlying areas
  • Measure outcomes better- what are girls thinking/feeling?
  • Every parent participate
  • Go places we aren’t
  • More places for outdoor experiences (program centers)
  • More positive media attention on GS
  • More donors for girl travel
  • Grow outside uses of camp
  • Strong volunteers for social justice
  • Utilize non traditional volunteer mores
  • More cross initiative programming
  • Better communication internally and externally
  • Make us cool again
  • GS Mecca
  • Increase Hispanic families and family volunteers
  • Maintain updated troop lists with current info
  • Increased parking
  • See change as  a positive thing

Happy Birthday from GSUSA CEO

Friday, March 9th, 2012

TO:                   Girl Scouts of the USA Council Board Chairs and CEOs

Girl Scouts of the USA National Staff

FROM:            Anna Maria Chávez, National CEO

DATE:            March 9, 2012

SUBJECT:   Girl Scout Week

 

Happy Birthday Girl Scouts!

This is going to be quite a special Girl Scout Week with our 100th birthday on Monday, March 12. Girl Scouts everywhere will be celebrating our centennial from a sunrise ceremony in Savannah, where it all began, to a sunset celebration in San Diego.  Girls in many locations will be joining in the Girl Scout Promise and Law at 19:12 military time and wherever you are, special celebrations are planned.

Here are just a few of the many events around the country:

  • Girl Scouts in Greater New York will be joining a flash mob around the Flatiron Building in Midtown Manhattan.
  • Girl Scouts in Arizona will be lunching with the governor while girls in Sacramento, California, will gather to receive resolutions from both the California Senate and Assembly.
  • In Nebraska, Girl Scouts will celebrate by breaking ground for a new outdoor education center in Lincoln, and by running an online fundraising campaign to raise $100,000 for girls in one day.
  • Girls from Texas Oklahoma Plains will gather for fun at Six Flags Over Texas.
  • And, the Juliette Low Flame of Friendship that has been traveling throughout Eastern Oklahoma will be lighting a 100-hour campfire, tended by girls and adults, to serve as the backdrop for a council-wide webcast on March 12.

As we celebrate the achievements of the Girl Scout Movement over the past 100 years, we will remain focused on our girls and the core values that Juliette Gordon Low instilled in Girl Scouting all those years ago.  During Girl Scout Week and every day, all of you in Girl Scouting bring our Movement to life for millions of girls.  You, along with our girls, truly make the world a better place.

Have a great celebration of 100 wonderful years and keep doing the important work of building girls of courage, confidence and character.

Girl Scouts To Celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day as a Day On, Not a Day Off

Friday, December 16th, 2011

Girl Scouts To Celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day as a Day On, Not a Day Off

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 14, 2011
Girl Scouts of Southern Arizona
Contact: Debbie Rich

Tucson- While many students and families will be spending the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday off, inSouthern Arizona families will be gathering to spend a day giving back to the community.  On January 16, 2012 the community will come together for a day of service to pay tribute to the teachings of Dr. King during a day of action sponsored by the Girl Scouts of Southern Arizona.

On this “Day On, Not a Day Off” Girl Scouts will join youth from all over Southern Arizona , as well as community organizations including the Big Brothers Big Sisters, Ben’s Bells, the Susan G. Komen Foundation, Beads of Courage, Learn and Serve Arizona, and Volunteer Southern Arizona, for a day of remembrance, connection, and community action.  Opportunities for action will include over fifteen service projects including creating pieces for Ben’s Bells wind chimes, card making for troops overseas, painting a mural of change, no-sew blankets, making banners for the Susan  G. Komen Race for the Cure,  and soap making for refugees.

While Girl Scouts have been actively involved in service learning projects, this is their second year hosting A Day On, Not a Day Off. Girl Scout CEO,Debbie Rich, is very proud of the event, which has continued to grow each year, “Dr. King once said, ‘Everybody can be great, because everybody can serve.’ We are thrilled to be going beyond the dream and providing a way to promote unity, help meet community needs, and emphasize the importance of volunteering. I urge the community to join us on this holiday in service to others and help make a difference.”

Monday’s event is open to the general public. Girl Scouts encourage families and adults, young and old, to come out and lend a hand. Rich emphasizes, “This is a way we can teach our children how to help others and build youth of courage, confidence, and character who make the world a better place.” A Day On, Not a Day off will take place atPeterHowellElementary School,401 North Irving Avenue, from 11am to 2pm. The event will kick off at 11am with a swearing-in of local AmeriCorps members and follow with service projects and a Showcase of Service presentation from the 2011 Tucson Youth Leadership Retreat.

For more information on A Day On, Not a Day Off, please contact Kristi Pallack, Girl Scouts’Missionto Market Coordinator, kpallack@girlsscoutssoaz.org, or visit the Girl Scouts’ website: GirlScoutsSoAz.org.

About Girl Scouts

Girl Scouts is the world’s preeminent leadership development organization dedicated to helping build girls of courage, confidence, and character who make the world a better place. GSSA serves over 14,000 girls in Southern Arizonaand includes over 2,000 adult volunteers. Our goals are to provide a wide range of contemporary programs that reflect the unique needs and interests of all girls living in Southern Arizona, to empower girls to reach their full potential, and to give girls a voice in their community and in their own lives. For more information on Girl Scouting in Southern Arizona, please contact Debbie Rich, CEO, at drich@girlscoutssoaz.org or at (520) 319-3168.

GSUSA declares 2012 the Year of the Girl

Tuesday, December 13th, 2011

More video of inspiring women

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011

Former GSUSA CEO Kathy Cloninger addresses a crowd of 10,000 at the 52nd Girl Scout National Convention (in two parts):

$1Billion Dollars for Girls

Thursday, November 17th, 2011

by Davia Temin, First Vice Chair of the Board of Girl Scouts of the USA, and Chair of Fund Development
Originally posted on Forbes.com

How much is a girl worth? Soon we will be able to say, “it starts at a billion dollars, and goes up from there!” This Saturday, November 12th, Girl Scouts of the USA launched our $1 Billion 100th Anniversary Campaign for girls, designed to help every girl in America who wants to be a Girl Scout afford to do so.

Here is an excerpt from my remarks at the formal launch at Girl Scouts’ 100th Anniversary Convention in Houston, following a discussion among thousands of girls and adult volunteers about their dreams for how funding the Girl Scout movement could help the world become a better place.

“Good morning Girl Scouts! So, this is what our 100th Anniversary Campaign is all about: making our — making YOUR — dreams come alive. It is about helping every girl in America who wants to be a Girl Scout afford to join, regardless of her family’s ability to pay a fee. It is about thinking big, and embracing our power to fund the movement. It is about taking the culture of philanthropy for girls and women to a new level in this country, with Girl Scouts leading the way.

t is about building a base of funding upon which to anchor our aspirations, our dreams for what Girl Scouting can be in our next century.

And it is about showing the world just how much a girl is worth!  And that starts at a billion dollars, and goes up from there!

We have been working on, envisioning this breakthrough campaign for the last three years — privately, at Fund Development meetings and National Board Meetings, and with Council Board Chairs and CEOs …and now it is our delight to talk with all of you.

When I first brought up the 100th Anniversary Campaign goal upon being named Vice Chair of the National Board and Fund Development Committee Chair three years ago, some people were saying that we wouldn’t even be able to raise $10 million!

Well, that was just not acceptable!  So we went back to the drawing board, hired some terrific strategic consultants, and came up with a breakthrough stretch strategy to count all funds raised country-wide over the course of the campaign, and therefore raise $1billion in total for Girl Scouting!  Not a bad ramp up, is it? Because, this IS our perfect time to make the case for Girl Scouts, for girls, and to set the standard for investing in girls and funding the movement! Our goal is nothing less than to transform the philanthropic landscape and create a lasting impact for girls — and for the world — through the collective power of the Girl Scout movement!

Our 100th Anniversary Campaign will give us the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to:

  • Raise the much-needed funds to help Girl Scouts reach more and more girls across this country.
  • Build the philanthropic capacity of the movement, at every level.
  • Transform the funding environment for girls and women countrywide, and worldwide.
  • Reconnect with our over 50 million alumnae.

Unlike capital campaigns that aim to raise significant dollars for a specific project, our 100th Anniversary Campaign is a comprehensive campaign. That means it will count all philanthropic revenue across the movement — to Councils and GSUSA alike, over the course of the campaign — towards raising and surpassing our goal of $1 billion for the movement.

This is NOT a traditional campaign.  It is not just an annual funding drive.  It is not just a multi-year capital campaign. It is not just a corporate or foundation campaign, it is all of these things…and more.

During this campaign we will call on everyone — individuals, families, corporations, foundations, governments — everyone — to make girls a philanthropic priority, both with significant, aspirational gifts and grants, and with grassroots participation.

With our “count everything” approach, we will be able to count all funds raised from every source over the period of the campaign, as part of our CAMPAIGN FOR GIRLS.

Our specific goals include:

  1. Expanding leadership opportunities for girls in areas that fill critical talent gaps, including finance, science, technology, and the environment;
  2. Reaching more girls – especially in underserved communities;
  3. Developing volunteers to ensure high-quality program delivery; and
  4. Transforming our spaces and facilities to enhance the leadership learning experience.

 

So, how does this sound to you?

Can we show the world how much girls, and Girl Scouting, are worth?   YES!

Can we raise money to bring our dreams to life?  YES!

Can we lead the transformation of philanthropy for girls? YES!

Can we fund our next century?  YES!

Are you on board?  YES!!

Fabulous…it will be an epic journey! And I look forward to joining you all on it!”

Chief’s Challenge: Reach Out & Read

Monday, November 14th, 2011

Dear Girl Scout Troops:

I have a challenge for you for our 100th Anniversary! I challenge 100 troops to collect 10 NEW books for Reach out and Read! Reach Out Read provides books to Doctors so that they can provide books to families with small children. The troops that agree to take the challenge will have until December 31, 2011 to complete the goal of collecting ten new books for the program. All troops participating will be invited to the CHIEF’S CHALLENGE pizza party on Sunday January 15th at 11:00am at Peter Piper Pizza on Broadway Blvd. in Tucson!

This challenge is now closed –  stay tuned for Chief’s Challenge #2!

 ___________________________________


Reach Out and Read-Southern Arizona

Reach Out and Read Southern Arizona supports Reach Out and Read programs in Cochise, Pima and Santa Cruz Counties and the Tohono O’odham and Yaqui Nations.

Reach Out and Read is an evidence-based program that promotes early literacy and school readiness in pediatric exam rooms by giving new, developmentally and culturally appropriate books to children and advice to parents about the importance of reading aloud. Reach Out and Read Southern Arizona prepares our youngest children to succeed in school by partnering with doctors to prescribe books and encourage families to read together.

Reach Out and Read builds on the unique relationship between parents and medical providers to develop critical early reading skills in children, beginning from birth through five years of age. More than 60 pediatric and family practice clinics in Southern Arizona serve 43,000 children and their families through the Reach Out and Read early literacy intervention. Families served read together more often, and their children enter kindergarten better prepared to succeed, with larger vocabularies, stronger language skills, and a six-month developmental edge over their peers.

Types of books needed:

  • Soft touch board books
  • All board books
  • Picture books (for example):
  • Berenstain Bears
  • Little Critter
  • Dora the Explorer
  • Mia and Miguel
  • Any by Eric Carle
  • Dinosaur books
  • Early Chapter books (for example):
  • Junie B. Jones
  • Nat the Great
  • Magic Tree House

Reading to children will give them a good start on the road to good reading behavior. Books will give them access to a world of possibilities. When volunteer readers are present in waiting rooms, it helps establish reasonable calm and quiet, which is very beneficial in a healthcare setting.

How can you help?

Donating new and used books to El Rio will help volunteer readers and children have access to reading materials. The majority of books distributed at our clinic sites are books geared toward children aged newborn to eight years old.

Reach Out and Read is a specially integrated healthcare/literacy program. It helps families and communities encourage early literacy skills so children enter school prepared for success.

Within El Rio Community Health Center’s clinic sites children aged six months to five years are given a new book at well-child checkups. Parents also get guidance from their child’s doctor on the importance of reading aloud for their child’s brain development and the importance of sharing books. Because they have the necessary tools in hand (books), parents then feel empowered to read aloud more often to their children and thus take an active role in their development.

The GS Movement makes it to the Himalayas

Tuesday, November 1st, 2011

Laura Penny the Executive Director of the Women’s Foundation of Southern Arizona went on a trek through the Himalayas, proudly wearing her Girl Scout t-shirt so that she could share her experience with girls throughout Southern Arizona via her travel photos. This was a great opportunity for girls to see the world!