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Salvation Army

Jun 24, 202413 min
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Transcript

Good morning, good morning, good morning, and welcome, welcome, welcome. Media's time now for our community connection right here on K one, the one you trust is being brought to you by Tall Grass Motors, Wesley and Kiddey College, get Real Ministries and Armmore and the Camp Funeral Home. And today we have the Salvation Army. In with this, we have Tanya and Monica. And how are we doing, ladies? Well, doing great? That is I'm standing up right. It's hot, It's very hot. It

is hot. My goodness, Monica, I don't know you very well. We just met a little bit ago. Tell me a little bit about yourself. Well, I'm the regional resource development director for this area. That's just a fancy way of saying I'm I'm the fundraiser for Bartlesville. The Salvation Army has me all over the countryside meeting with the nicest people in the world, and those are the people who help support the work that they do with the

Salvation Army. Well, you're not going to find too many nicer than Tany and Luke. That's right, that's right. I know. Yeah, we're very very happy to have Lieutenant Luke and Lieutenant Tanya here in Bartlesville. They do great work. As a matter of fact, she's going to talk to us this morning about the work they did in responding to the disasters recently. Oh, we've had plenty of them. Yeah, yeah, tell us about it. We had the well May sixth, that's the one the pit Barnstall

and everything. Right, So that week, you know, that next day actually we were out here in Bartlesville on the community and we were able to for that for that week, we were able to serve what was it, twenty six hundred meals wow. Yeah. And the really great part too about that was we were able to over two hundred and forty people. We were able to just give some emotional and spiritual care and actually talk to them and

pray with them, and so that was really that was really great. Well, you know, at a time like this, this is when Salvation Army really rises to the challenge and responds to the need of the human condition. Yeah, compassion, feeling, feeling them with food, and also trying to fill them a little bit with the spirit too. Yeah, And so we try to do, you know, just try to love on them and smile

and just you know, whatever help you can give them whatever. Yeah, and sometimes sometimes they just want to just talk and just to tell what they're feeling, you know. And and we definitely can see that that week of just just the look on their faces was they just needed to talk and it was it was nice to be able to be there for them to do that and to pray and that sometimes that's all you can do when your home has

just been leveled. It's not only the officers that show up. One of the things that we're grateful for are the number of volunteers that show up. People who have been volunteering with the Salvation Army for years and years. They just show up. They do you know, you have to call them. They just seem to know what's going on. They just show up and they and they call you or you know, and they're very They're just very good about coming out and saying, hey, what can we do, do you

need anything? Or blessed with the volunteers and just the people in the community. This is a rather unique community. There are some similar to Martinsville, but I've lived in a lot of places in my life and time, but this one, the hands are there and also the wallets are there too to help. Definitely, definitely they are. Yeah, everybody rolls up their sleeves and says, what do you need? Yeah, here you go. I

love that. Yeah. And of course we have not only the individuals but the companies here in Bartlesville that we are just ready to support when necessary. So we were pleased with the kind of reaction that community that support. Wonderful. We've got a special thing coming up, don't we we do we do. It is the Bartlesville Ladies Connection, Girls Not Out and it's going to be July eleventh at Pater Rosa. Yes. Yeah, this is the one

where all the ladies. It's the community connection where the ladies bring things that the Salvation Army needs. And so we're really thankful for that. Last year I was able to go and they just brought all kinds of food, canned foods and all kinds of stuff of the food pantry. And this year we are asking actually for items for the Red Shield Club, the kids, you

know, because we're wanting to increase our number in the kids. And we've done really good so far of getting that number up a little more this summer with our day camp and we've been having a blast with them and uh so you know, more kids. The more, the more supplies you're gonna need. And we do lots of crafts and games and and trips and uh we we like to give them little treats, you know, popcorn, snow cones and and you know all the things that go with that. Well would be

really helpful. There's always something happened at the citadel, right right, Yes, that's right. I think this year what they need, they've put out kind of a list of things that they need and we might just run over that. If if there's something on this list that you've got, drop it by the core over on Boosy. Oh yes, okay, just bring it by all right, And what are some of the things they need, Well, we're needing snow cone cups. As I said, we'd like to give

them snow cones throughout the day. Sometimes we were needing the popcorn. You know, if if anyone knows of a good place to find a popcorn machine. I was just told that ours is dying own. It's not good corn machine. So and then we have just different craft items baby wipes, glue, big gallons of glue, you know, and borax, baking soda.

Those are for like different you know, experiment stuff. We're doing pull noodles, balloons, sugar, sailine solution, butcher paper, butcher paper large those are nice, yeah, and so yeah, and then everything else you could think of that, you know, sidewalk tracks like that, Yeah, things that goes. Yeah, I can't tell you how many times I never really saw the sidewalk in the sum Yeah, pretty nice. How many kids do

we have in the program this year? Well, we had originally we had like forty, around forty registered, but I think the number has a little bit as some of them have, you know, for whatever reason, you know, summer happens, you know, and not all the kids end up coming. But then we've had summer school too. But those those kids are like half you know, half half there and half there, and and so I think it's probably around we're we're estimating probably around thirty to thirty three somewhere

there. But that's still a good number. And they're there all day yeah, and they're they're all day four oh gosh. So yeah, that's a lot. It's it's fun. And we're going to be having a VBS for our kids there too at the end of July. So we're gearing up for that and yeah, and so we uh, this is really cool. They recently had a tour here. Yes, yes, yeah, that was. That was like one of my favorite tour groups here. I mean they were they were just locked in. They're like, wow, what is all this

stuff? They all winking and Lincoln and all these things, and then people are talking Wow. You know you can just see the awe in their eye. It was pretty Oh yeah, I mean I never I would have I'd never experienced like something as a kid, and I thought it would be you know, that would be great. And so when we were given that opportunity, I thought, yes, they will love this so and they did. They loved hearing their voice. Our buddy, mister Joe, he did it

so wonderful. He lets them hear their voices on the rail on the radio. They recording in a very fast on like chipmunks, and then they all he also slowed it down so they heard a really voice and so they thought that was just great. Well, you know, I Joe and I ken an awful lot. He and I are the same age, but he just acts a heck of a lot younger than I ever will. And because he never really lost that that child spirit you know, and I envy him for

that. But the way he worked with the kids, I said, they're good on you. Yeah, he did really well. We're really appraid those kids were so well behaved. And I got to tell you they they really were here like they've been someplace that really that really made us feel pretty good. Yeah. Yeah, it was a big deal to the kids. Yeah, that's great and it's absolutely super What else we got cooking? And I shouldn't be saying that in this heat? No, No, although it feels

like it when it does feel like you're cooking. Yeah, I've said when you open the door, it feels like you're checking on something in the oven. That's exactly, thats exactly. Yeah, it's good. Yeah. Anything else happening that we need to prize everybody about, well, I think you know, every day at the Salvation Army something's happening. And it's not only

with the kids, but it's with social services. We help people in Bartlesville with you know, covering their utility bills and taking care of the food pantry, and every day pretty hard. Every day, you know, we reach out and help our neighbors and friends, and you know, it's kind of

like the homelessness prevention that we are focused in on. I think July is our utility month, where you know, we encourage people to put that little extra on their utility bill to help with the amount that comes to social services to help with utilities. And all year long, that's kind of what we do. What was it last year, seven and twenty seven people in Bartlesville were helped by the Salvation Army. That's a lot of people. That is

a lot of people of our Yeah. Wow. So four thousand and two meals were served to the hungry, one thousand and three food boxes were provided, three hundred and thirty five people were helped in financial assistance. So every day we're you know, there helping people get through the hardest day of their life. One thing I have to say about the Salvation Army, no matter where I've been, your folks are about the humblest You don't go out there

beating your chest and hey, look at us. We just just go about our business and we help folks, and everybody just kind of keeps it on the down low and and the world goes on, and you know, and I think if more and more of us adopted that philosophy, instead of doing it for the glory and the high light and the headline, we'd an'll probably be living a better life. Yeah, so you guys kind of teach without using words some days. Thank you. That's so nice. Thank you.

Well, that's that's just an observation from an old man. Well, well, you know, I think and I think everybody knows us by the kettle, you know. Yeah, yeah, but we'll we'll probably be back on and talk about, you know, our upcoming plans for the Red Kettle kickoff. We're going to try to bring back the Red Kettle dinner this year. Nice and so I'm excited for that. We are very excited for fun.

Yeah, we're anticipating having fun with that, right. Yeah. And of course, if anybody wants to help you out right now, you know, while we're thinking about it, it's pressure in mind. Can we just go to the website or can we just drop by a check and say, if somebody's got ten thousand dollars in the pocket, just burn a hole in it. I mean that would be great, absolutely, that would be pet.

Your address there one on one North Avenue, so easy to find. Drop it in the mail, drop it by the office, Come by and see us. Yeah, you would love to to see us. Yeah, I'd love to chat chat. Yeah. Well, ladies, it's been wonderful having you both on here. Thank you for having us alrighty, thank you, and you have been watching and listening to us on Community Connection

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