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Category: Philanthropy, Voluntarism, and Public Benefit

HEROES TODAY

 

Chester, PA

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HEROES TODAY

Physical Address:
Chester, PA 19013 
EIN:
26-1075032
Web URL:
www.heroestoday.org
Blog URL:
oneteam-onefightablo...
Leadership:
Mr Frederick James Johnson, Jr, Chief Executive

Legitimacy Information

  • This organization is registered with the IRS.
  • This organization is required to file an IRS Form 990-N.

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Basic Organization Information

HEROES TODAY

Physical Address:
Chester, PA 19013 
EIN:
26-1075032
Web URL:
www.heroestoday.org 
Blog URL:
oneteam-onefightablo... 
NTEE Category:
P Human Services 
P85 Homeless Services/Centers 
P Human Services 
P40 Family Services 
L Housing, Shelter 
L80 Other Housing Support Services 
Year Founded:
2008 
Ruling Year:
2009 
How This Organization Is Funded:
Individual Donations
Founder support

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Mission Statement

To Empower veterans and currently serving soldiers, by providing Excellence in service, with a Commitment to unwavering support.
 
We will accomplish this mission by incorporating programs and conducting continuous outreach to the veteran community. These programs and outreaches consist of veteran advocacy, intensive homeless veteran outreach, veteran employment support, distressed family outreach and other vital supportive services to improve self-sufficiency, sustainability and quality of life within the veteran community.

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Impact Statement

Past year

  • Effectively facilitated annual dinners for homeless veterans.
  • Spear headed the first Iraq/Afghanistan peeer to peer support group in partnership with the Vets4Vets organization from Arizona.  
  • Applied for 501c3 approval
Current year
  • Partner and collaborate with various organizations to offer a career empowerment event for veterans.
  •  Received 501c3 approval
  • Aquire reasonably priced office space.
  • Expand service offered for distressed families program.  

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Revenue and Expenses

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Balance Sheet

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Organizational Statistics

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Chief Executive

Mr Frederick James Johnson, Jr

Term:

Since Jan 2008

Chief Executive Profile:

Prior to founding Heroes Today Mr. Johnson was enlisted in the United States Army (Active Duty) and Army Reserve. He served 16 years honorably and currently maintains the rank of Staff Sergeant.

CEO/Executive Director Statement:

Heroes Today is an organization founded to fill the specific need of not only our currently serving soldier and military veteran but also their families. As a once homeless veteran who suffered from addictions I am in full understanding of the situations and needs of our returning veterans. I am currently positioning the organization to assertively address these needs.


Board Chair

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Board of Directors

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Officers for Fiscal Year

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Highest Paid Employees & Their Compensation

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Program: Distressed Family Program

Budget:
$8,000
Category:
Human Services
Population Served:
Military/Veterans
Military/Veterans

Program Description:

Family is the most important element in the recovery of our veterans. For that reason our distressed family program is broken into three components.
 
1) Wives or Husbands of Iraq/Afghanistan veterans that are within the Allegheny County area that have had to resign from employment in order to care for their injured loved one or have a spouse that is currently hospitalized as a result of injuries sustained in Iraq and do not have a personal vehicle. Heroes Today will perform an assessment of the family. Upon approval Heroes Today will:
  • Purchase a bus pass for the individual to get to and from the hospital.
  • Access if the family member is unemployed and in need of assistance at home. i.e..food, bill pymnt, etc.....
  • Refer the family member to agencies that will help find employment. 
  • Engage our volunteers to interact with these families as a support blanket.
  • Connect the family member with various communty based organizations. 

2) Iraq/Afghanistan veterans who are in a drug/alcohol program and have a wife and children or husband and children that is still trying to maintain the household on their own. Heroes Today will perform an assessment of the family. Upon approval Heroes Today will:  

  • Provide the family with one to two weeks worth of food.
  • Help with a bill payment. (not to exceed $75)
  • Connect the family member with resources that will aide in finding employment.
  • Provide resouces to purchase clothing for the children if needed.
  • Connect the family with various community based organizations that will help them to further accomplish their goals and sustain their way of life.

3) Families of veterans that are transplant receipients that are currently placed in hotels and have been in that hotel for longer than three weeks while they wait with the veteran. Most of these families are from other states. Heroes Today will perform an assessment of the family. Upon approval Heroes Today will:

  •  Provide one to two weeks worth of food for the family so that they are able to focus the monies they have that will go toward the bills of the residence in which they actually live.
  • Provide family with personal care items.
  • Engage our volunteers to interact with these families as a support blanket.

Program Long-Term Success:

Families will become more cohesive and unified toward a better way of life while caring for or waiting for the return of their loved one.

Program Short-Term Success:

Familes will become more confident they are able to seek and get effective help for the unique issues that they face.

Program Success Monitored by:

Accountability of the effectiveness of this program is based on individual counsel notes, surveys of the family and continuous person to person follow up.

Program Success Examples:

Through refferral of a military unit in 2008, Heroes today was able to provide the needed support for an unemployed and distressed family of a Iraq veteran who at that time was deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. By purchasing food for two weeks, clothing for the children, paying one bill and connecting the family to various resources within the community and helping with career leads. This veteran to date has been able to get and sustain employment and maintain the families way of life.

Program: Intensive Homeless Veteran Outreach

Budget:
$2,000
Category:
Human Services
Population Served:
Military/Veterans
Adults

Program Description:

In an effort to get our veterans of the street and into a program at the Department of Veteran Affairs, Heroes Today conducts an outreach to homeless veterans twice per month. This outreach is an intensive outreach because it is conducted after the hours of 8pm. By going to homeless shelters and throughout the streets of various communities in the Pittsburgh area. 
 
Upon making contact with the veteran we offer them information on the benefits they may qualify for through the VA and also a survival pack. The survival pack is a back pack that is filled with various items such as:
Soap
Toothpaste
Tooth Brush
Socks
Hat
Sweat Pants
Chap Stick
Pen/Pencil
Writting Pad
T-shirt
Underwear

Program Long-Term Success:

Enrollment of veterans into the Department of Veteran Affairs system in order for them be admitted into a program that will accomidate their individual needs.  

Program Short-Term Success:

Veterans will be empowered and more informed about what they are eligiable for through Department of Veteran Affairs.

Program Success Monitored by:

Success is monitored through multiple contacts and interviews with these veterans and notes taken during these contacts.

Program Success Examples:

Heroes today has been instrumental in getting seven veterans off the street in 2008 and into a Department of Veteran Affairs program. These veterans have since graduated the programs they were in and are now productive memebers of their communities.

Program: Annual Veteran Appreciation Dinner

Budget:
$500
Category:
Human Services
Population Served:
Military/Veterans
Military/Veterans
Homeless

Program Description:

On May 3 2008 Heroes Today introduced its first Homeless Veteran Dinner which is now an annual event. The objective of this dinner is not only to feed the homeless veteran but to also connect them with resources that they are in need of to get and or keep them off the street. During the dinner veterans are educated on the various services they are eligible for through the Department of Veteran Affairs and organizations within the community that will help them. This dinner is held the first saturday of May each year. 

Program Long-Term Success:

During this dinner veterans will become empowered with resources that will help them to stay clean and sober not only from the department of Veteran Affairs but within their own communities as well.

Program Short-Term Success:

Organizations that are in attendance to support the dinner will be able to immediately identify veterans that are in need of support.

Program Success Monitored by:

Veterans and organizations that attend the dinner are given a survey form. Heroes Today also follows up with veterans regularly.

Program Success Examples:

Below is the testimony of an Iraq veteran and a vietnam veteran that attended our annual dinner on May 3, 2009. Heroes Today was instrumental in reaching out to these veterans. These testimonies and others are on our web site.
 
Testimony of Ms. Stepanie Robinson
My name is Stephanie I am a Veteran from OIF/OEF who came to Pittsburgh homeless and fighting a mental health diagnosis. I met Mr. Johnson from Heroes today at a time in my life when I had given up on the VA system and had completely hit rock bottom, I was also using illegal drugs to self medicate. Mr. Johnson told me of a program that the VA in Pittsburgh offered that would help me get my life back on track so that I could take care of my three children and myself, that was in December of 2008. It is now May 2009 and I have made a complete turn around with the support of the program that I was able to get into I am 4 months clean and have a good handle on my disorder. I can now see clearly and if it had not been for the dedication of Mr. Johnson and his refusal to quit on me I don't know where I would be right now. Thank you Mr. Johnson and Heroes Today for your support and dedication that helped make a change in my life. God Bless You!!!!!
 
Testimony of Mr. Watkin Hall
I like to thank Mr. Fred Johnson for 1st having the courage to follow his vision and 2nd to be selfless enough to have myself and fellow veterans be included in it. The dinner was a true testimony in itself. to have come from where most of us have and have the oppertunity to fellowship with one another in a sober celebration of commonodity and praise was and is a blessing in itself. i really enjoyed it and the food, well, the food was great. Thats all i can say about that!
As for Mr johnsons vision as witness of the miricles of god, "Heroes Today" is right up top with all the other life changing, life turn around true god deliverance miracles thats proof god is still in the miracle business and still willing to help us if we just let him.
 
My prayers and meditations are with you Mr. Johnson as god our father continues to direct you and direct us and place us in the path of other god fearing men that are willing to do his work. thank you for allowing me to be part of your vision.  


Funding Needs

Currently, the organization will need to raise at least $40,000 per year in order to sustain the programs that we have and become more innovative with the process of recovery for our veterans and their families.
 


Volunteer Needs

Volunteer are always needed to help the organization with various programs and projects.


Request for In-Kind Contributions

In-Kind contributions are welcomed.


News

Heroes group helps veterans heal
May 02, 2010
By Tony LaRussa
PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Sunday, May 2, 2010

Bernard Humbles never thought the drinking he did while serving in the Korean War would turn into a problem he couldn't control in the years after his discharge from the Air Force in 1952.

"I drank a little before I joined in 1949," said Humbles, 80, of Sewickley. "But by the time I got out of the service, I was a drunk."
Humbles was one of about 50 people who attended the third annual veterans appreciation dinner sponsored by the local chapter of Heroes Today. Saturday's event was held at St. James AME Church in Larimer.
 
"I was lucky that I was able to get some help and deal with the root causes that made me an alcoholic," Humbles said. "After I got sober, I became a minister and eventually the director of an alcohol treatment program."

 

Assisting veterans who are struggling with addiction, homelessness, unemployment and other issues was the main purpose of yesterday's dinner, said Fred Johnson, the local coordinator of Heroes Today.
"While it's great to be able to get together to share a nice meal, meet some new friends and honor people who have served their country, our main goal is to let veterans know that there are people and programs available to help them," Johnson said.

Psychology professor Roger Brooke, who serves as the director of military psychological services at Duquesne University, believes civilians have a responsibility to help veterans.

"The violence that they have experienced, and the trauma of war that they have endured, has been the consequence of our political decisions as a society," said Brooke, the keynote speaker at the dinner. "We therefore owe it to them to own that violence and honor their sacrifice."

Brooke said one of the biggest problems veterans face, especially those who have seen combat, "is the idea in popular culture that you are a civilian, then a soldier, then a civilian again as if nothing's happened."

Brooke tries to help veterans understand that what they have experienced often means that "they will never be the same again."

"The challenge for many veterans is finding a way to live a life of dignity in the face of a knowledge that will never go away," he said.

David Sandrey, 42, of East Liberty, who served in the Army from 1986-90, said he volunteers with Heroes Today as a way to "stay away from the things that have caused problems in my life."

"I just celebrated my second year of sobriety April 18," Sandrey said. "I've been able to do it by keeping active and being involved in positive things like the dinner we are having tonight. It's helped keep me sober."