SUPPORTERS - Agencies

ARRR is a network of people who recognize the obligation of service to our brothers and sisters that are faced with catastrophe in their communities. With years of experience providing food and clean drinking water for thousands of people at cooperative festivals, we are uniquely prepared to share our skills, time, and assets with those in serious need.
While our main focus is on physical needs such as clean water and food, we also try to provide for the emotional and spiritual care of a community. We encourage our volunteers to lend an ear along with a hand, we encourage cooperation with the appropriate agencies for psychological assistance, and we reach out to local religious communities to foster cooperation in meeting the needs of survivors of natural disasters.

Collective Conscious is a cooperative group of artists who recognize
music's ability to hearts and minds, and art's power as an agent of
social change. Inspired by Conscious Alliance’s dedication to helping
people through music and art, we are honored to contribute to their
mission in the best ways we know how.
As artist-activists, we hold raffles at select concerts, giving fans
the chance to win donated works of visual or wearable beauty. All
proceeds from each raffle go directly to Conscious Alliance's
humanitarian efforts. The centerpiece of each raffle is a large
format, one-of-a-kind collaborative painting completed by relaying the
canvas from artist to artist through the mail. Plenty of other work
is donated as well – including other paintings, prints, jewelry, wire
wraps, hats, belts, and more. Raffle tickets are $5 and may be
purchased either at participating concerts or through Paypal (payments
can be addressed to collectiveconsciousgroup@gmail.com).
For more information on raffles, donations, or how to get involved,
please contact Aly Sanguily or Todd Shepherd at
collectiveconsciousgroup@gmail.com.
.

The Denver Indian Center, Inc. was established as a non-profit Colorado corporation October 11, 1983.
The Denver Indian Center, Inc. serves a diverse group of tribes, the majority of which represent the Southwest and the Northern and Southern Plains. Most come seeking economic stability, education and security for their families. The Center continues to be a highly sought after location for the community to gather for powwows and various other activities held at the facility throughout the year.
Mission: To empower our youth, families and community through self-determination, cultural identity and education.

Feeding America is the nation's leading domestic hunger-relief charity
Each year, the Feeding America network provides food assistance to more than 25 million low-income people facing hunger in the United States, including more than 9 million children and nearly 3 million seniors.
Our network of more than 200 food banks serves all 50 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. The Feeding America network secures and distributes more than 2 billion pounds of donated food and grocery products annually.
The Feeding America network supports approximately 63,000 local charitable agencies that distribute food directly to Americans in need. Those agencies operate more than 70,000 programs including food pantries, soup kitchens, emergency shelters, after-school programs, Kids Cafes, Community Kitchens and BackPack Programs.
Learn more about your local Feeding America network member food bank.
Metro
CareRing
Metro CareRing
is a non-profit emergency food pantry providing
individuals and families with food, bus tokens, and toiletries
and funds for utility assistance, work tools, and identification
documentation. Utilizing over 150 volunteers and six paid staff,
Metro CareRing serves approximately 30,000 people each year -
including 15,000 children. Metro CareRing strives to create a "ring
of care" around the people in the community needing emergency
assistance.

Warren Wilson College is nestled in the lush Swannanoa river valley of the Blue Ridge Mountains near Asheville, NC. Founded in 1894 upon a philosophy of sustainability, it continues to be a setting that inspires community, creativity, learning, and a sense of harmony with the environment. The 1,100 acre campus includes a working farm, herb & vegetable garden, theater, technology center, hundreds of acres of forestland, mountain biking and hiking trails, athletic center, visual arts gallery, recycling center, Alpine Tower, green buildings, Environmental Leadership Center, a river, chapel, career resource center, meditation hut, community bicycle shop and more.
An accredited, four-year, private liberal arts college, where education is driven by a threefold "Triad" principle: Academics for the mind, Work for the hands, Service-Learning from the heart. With over 850 students coming from all over the world, class sizes are 14:1, professors know students by name and our curriculum offers unique programs of distinction. Warren Wilson College also has the distinction of being 1 of only 7 Work Colleges in the U.S. All students work on campus 15 hours a week on 1 of 100 different work crews, learning to take ownership in the community, building a wide range of significant skills, reinforcing academic learning, and earning work compensation credit towards the cost of attendance. Students also complete at least 100 hours of service-learning before graduation working on projects in the local community, across the country, or even abroad as part of our World Wide Program.
Here, the concepts of "awareness," "responsibility," and "sustainability" are more than just words. For those who seek a deeper college experience, Warren Wilson provides an outstanding curriculum grounded in sciences and humanities, interwoven with cross-cultural experiences around the globe, immersion in service-based philosophy, and unlimited opportunities for research and internships. It's a campus where people who want to make a difference can begin meaning it. In other words, at Warren Wilson College you'll learn by doing. You'll learn through caring. And you'll learn while following a personal passion. This is learning that lasts.
We
strongly believe in “giving back” to our community so we formed
a non-profit organization. Yellow Bird Inc. which was formed
for the following purposes:
*
To create greater respect for identity
* Respect for the land and environment
* To heal from historical trauma
* To become healthier human beings
* and to develop leadership skills that can help the youth overcome
adversity and reach their future goals.
These goals are accomplished by providing
the following programming:
Traditional Horse Culture
Fort Robinson Outbreak Spiritual Run
Leadership Workshops
Little Big Horn Run