Podcasts about hope community

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Best podcasts about hope community

Latest podcast episodes about hope community

Hope Community Baptist Church's Podcast
Vision Sunday 2025 | Ps. Dan Perkins | 16th February 2025

Hope Community Baptist Church's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2025 39:33


Lead Pastor Dan shares an overview of what Hope Community is heading to in 2025 and beyond. This kicks off 6 weeks of delving into what God is calling us to in this next season. Stay tuned for more!

Radio Bold News Pod
CATSKILLS NEWS PODCAST NEW HOPE COMMUNITY YEAR END REVIEW

Radio Bold News Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2024 11:14


Catskills News Podcast Host Mike Sakell speaks with New Hope Community Director of Development Janae Myers about the New Hope Foundation, some highlights from 2024 and a look ahead to 2025 and the New Hope Community 50th Anniversary Celebration.

This Thing Called Life
EP 100: Network For Hope Community Breakfast - An Annual Event Celebrating Those Impacted By, And Community Advocates For, Organ, Tissue & Eye Donation

This Thing Called Life

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2024 5:24


Community Heroes is a special extension of This Thing Called Life's podcast. In this series, we talk to community leaders, share important information about organ and tissue donation, and honor those who have been instrumental in saving lives through the gift of donation.  In this episode, we talk with Lincoln Ware from WDBZ the Buzz of Cincinnati talk station.   Resources: https://getoffthelist.org/ https://www.networkforhope.org/ https://www.networkforhope.org/about-us/ https://www.facebook.com/NetworkForHopeOPO https://www.youtube.com/@NetworkforHope. https://aopo.org/

The Jefferson Exchange
Eugene-based HOPE Community Corporation cranks out first manufactured home

The Jefferson Exchange

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2024 15:26


Eugene based HOPE Community Corporation's plan to produce pre-fab houses.

Invisible Women Podcast
The Impact of Reparations: Hope, Community Engagement, and Support w/ First Repair Founder, Robin Rue Simmons

Invisible Women Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2024 31:10


Summary In this conversation, Monica and Melody interview Robin Rue Simmons, the founder of First Repair, about her work in implementing a reparations program in Evanston, Illinois. They discuss the motivation behind her interest in politics and reparations, the discrimination and barriers faced by Black communities in housing and business, and the need for comprehensive reparations that address the legacies of slavery and systemic racism. Robin shares insights on how to initiate a reparations task force in a city, the importance of community involvement, and the impact of reparations on the Evanston community. She emphasizes the need for a federal response to reparations and the role of allies in supporting the movement. Takeaways - Reparations should address the legacies of slavery and systemic racism, including housing and business discrimination and barriers faced by Black communities. - Initiating a reparations task force requires a strong legislative leader, stakeholder engagement, and a case for reparations specific to the locality. - Reparations programs can provide hope, a sense of place, and a voice to Black communities, leading to increased community engagement and support. - Comprehensive reparations should include cash, housing, education, policy reform, and self-determination initiatives. - A federal response to reparations is necessary to achieve full repair, but localities can take action within their purview to address anti-Black practices. - Reparations can contribute to closing the racial wealth gap and create opportunities for Black individuals and families to thrive. Websites mentioned during todays podcast: https://firstrepair.org/ https://www.bigpaybackmovie.com/ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/invisiblewomen/message

HC Conversations
What's Next | Part 1 | Big Vision

HC Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2024


Join us for this powerful sermon on Hope Community's vision and the future of the church. In this sermon, Pastor Phil emphasizes the importance of being transformed by truth, being committed to mission, and fostering unity within the church. Discover how these three key elements can lead to the transformation of 500 lives in the next five years. Get inspired to pursue a deeper relationship with Jesus and cultivate a community that brings hope and healing to those around us. Don't miss this opportunity to be part of something greater and see how God can use us to make a lasting impact.

Land of Hope
Proverbs 8

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2024 32:50


Welcome to Hope Community! We are glad you are here and we hope you enjoy this message from Proverbs 8 from our Senior Pastor Elanor Freiheit.

Land of Hope
Proverbs 6

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2024 35:46


Welcome to Hope Community! Enjoy this message on Proverbs 6 from our Youth Pastor Nick Rosato!

HC Conversations
Not Yet | Part 3 | Plans Change | Hope Community

HC Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2024


Things don't always go according to plan. Life doesn't always go according to plan. But we can trust that no matter what our plans are or how they go, God's plans for us are good.

Land of Hope
Proverbs 4

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2024 29:58


Welcome to Hope Community! We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast! Please, connect with us at www.hopetacoma.org

East Anchorage Book Club with Andrew Gray
Michele Girault: Director of Hope Community Resources & President of Friends of Pets

East Anchorage Book Club with Andrew Gray

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2024 35:04


The executive director of Hope Community Resources is Michele Girault. Hope Community Services is a non-profit organization that provides services and supports to people of all ages and abilities who experience intellectual or developmental disabilities, traumatic brain injury, or other mental health challenges. Michele started working there 40 years ago just after she'd moved to Anchorage – she thought she'd stay a year, but she is here. We will also discuss Friends of Pets, a non-profit founded in 1989 that provides vital animal welfare and protective services for abandoned animals in Anchorage. Michele Girault serves as the president of Friends of Pets.  Link to Hope Community ServicesLink to Friends of Pets

HC Conversations
Not Yet - A Work In Progress | Hope Community | Jan 7, 2024

HC Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2024


How do we navigate the tension between our present and the future? What about the frustration experienced when we aren't seeing the progress we want? Passages from Ecclesiastes and Revelation will help us navigate the tension between present challenges and future hopes while encouraging spiritual growth and transformation through trusting God's eternal plan.

Minnesota Now
Minneapolis will distribute $8 million to help residents with ash tree removal. But there's no relief for homeowners who've already had trees condemned

Minnesota Now

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2023 11:07


This story comes to you from Sahan Journal. MPR News is a partner with Sahan Journal and will be sharing stories between SahanJournal.com and MPRNews.org.By Andrew Hazzard and Cynthia Tu | Sahan JournalA new federal grant will provide Minneapolis with $8 million to pay for ash tree removal on private properties in disadvantaged neighborhoods, a significant relief effort after millions of dollars in removal costs were assessed against homeowners' property taxes. The U.S. Forestry Service grant comes from funding in the Inflation Reduction Act. The city applied for the grant in coordination with the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board, which condemns ash trees on private property in response to the infestation of the invasive emerald ash borer beetle. The Minneapolis Park Board has condemned more than 18,000 ash trees since 2013.  Homeowners with condemned trees either paid directly for their removal, or the city paid and assessed the cost—or added the cost as a fee—onto the homeowner's property taxes. Property tax assessments on tree removals total more than $7.3 million, according to the Park Board. Neighborhoods targeted by the new federal funding, such as north Minneapolis, disproportionately paid for previous tree removal via property tax assessments, leading to increased monthly costs, Park Board data show. “We're really grateful to have these resources,” said Kelly Muellman, environmental manager with the Minneapolis Health Department. But those resources can't be used retroactively, meaning there's no relief in sight for thousands of homeowners who are currently paying off tree removals that were ordered by the city.Minneapolis' ash tree removal policy is aimed at addressing the green beetle that is killing ash trees across the Midwest.Several Minneapolis homeowners told Park Board officials at an October board meeting that they're frustrated by the policy, that the costs are impacting family budgets, and that homeowners who are people of color, senior, and low-income were particularly affected.Perhaps no one is more familiar with tree condemnations than Melissa Newman, a resident of the North Side's McKinley neighborhood. Seven trees on her property have been condemned due to Dutch Elm disease or emerald ash borer since she bought her house 17 years ago. The city's forced removal of affected trees and subsequent property tax assessments are  hardships, said Newman, adding that her monthly costs have increased between $150 to $200 as a result. “I inherited the tree trying to create the American dream of homeownership,” Newman told Sahan Journal.https://sahanjournal.github.io/ej-areas/The funding applies to U.S. Census tracts considered to be environmental justice areas by the federal government, which includes almost the entire North Side, parts of northeast Minneapolis, and a large swath of south Minneapolis, including the Phillips and Cedar-Riverside neighborhoods. The city originally applied for a $29 million grant from the U.S. Forestry Service. The $8 million it received will help hundreds of households, but could go fast. The city and Park Board are also pursuing a $500,000 grant from the state for the same purposes. It's unclear how far that money will stretch, or how many ash trees remain on private property citywide. Minneapolis officials say there are at least 12,000 trees remaining on private property in the environmental justice areas targeted by the grant, but also acknowledge that the Park Board doesn't have good estimates on the true number.The average tree removal in Minneapolis costs around $1,500. The grant also covers stump grinding, which isn't included in the current average cost of tree removal, and replacing trees. Minneapolis city tree program manager Sydney Schaaf said the city is still waiting for detailed instructions on how the grant can be used, but hope it will ease the burden to homeowners and help build back lost canopy. A flawed processHomeowners in the areas targeted by the grant are more likely than homeowners in wealthier neighborhoods to pay for mandated tree removals via property tax assessment. Homeowners in more affluent neighborhoods typically paid out of pocket to hire a contractor of their choice to remove a tree, according to Park Board data.   North Side residents disproportionately paid for tree removal via property tax assessments, Park Board data show. Around $2.8 million have been assessed in north Minneapolis in the last decade.North Minneapolis homeowners experienced a high rate of tree condemnation, too. When Minneapolis ash tree condemnations peaked in 2021, with 6,095 trees marked for removal citywide, roughly 42 percent of condemnations happened in North Side neighborhoods, according to Park Board data. More than half of the roughly 3,000 households citywide who paid for tree removal via property tax assessments in 2021 were in north Minneapolis. Approximately 16 percent of the 2,164 tree condemnations issued from the start of 2023 through October were in North Side neighborhoods, according to Park Board data.Click here.https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/supIX/7/In 2021, the Park Board condemned five trees on Newman's property in north Minneapolis. Her yard is fenced in, but one day there were green marks on her trees and a hanger on her doorknob telling her the ash trees had to go. She had 60 days to either cut the trees down on her own, or allow the Park Board to handle it by sending over the lowest bidding contractor. Two were small enough for a neighbor to remove, but three were removed by the city and assessed against her property taxes. One of those assessed trees straddled the property line, and Newman split the $800 charge with a neighbor. But two other trees were deemed “special” by the Park Board (for reasons Newman said were never satisfactorily explained to her), and the removal involved a crane, driving the combined removal cost to $2,700. All told, after an $80 flat fee the Park Board imposes on all assessed trees and a 3 percent interest charge on the assessment, removing the two trees cost about $3,100. Newman's yard used to be full of trees, and her dog would lie in the shade. But now, the grass dies easily in the summer heat, and Newman has to hack away at the tree stumps left behind. “It's completely open,” she said of her property. The Park Board does not target any particular area of the city for ash tree condemnation, said Philip Potyondy, sustainable forestry coordinator, with the Park Board. It's possible that ash trees are more common in some parts of the city, he said, adding that ash borer also tends to spread exponentially, and may have accelerated in the North Side in 2021 and 2022. “This has impacted people in every part of Minneapolis,” said Potyondy. Emerald ash borer is a persistent beetle, and it will infest and kill ash trees in time. But the infestation can be prevented with insecticide treatments implanted into a tree like an intravenous tube. Potyondy said the city's 12 staff tree inspectors only condemn ash trees that show signs of infestation. Those signs include woodpecker damage and thinning canopy at the top of the trees. They don't confirm the presence of disease through testing, but because the beetle is so pervasive, any ash tree in the region that has not been treated will essentially become infested at some point, Potyondy said. Newman said she would have been happy to spend around $200 every couple of years to treat her trees and prevent emerald ash borer infestation. The branches seemed fine and new leaves blossomed each spring. But the Park Board doesn't inform people that treating trees is an option. In 2010, the Minneapolis City Council passed a resolution advising against using insecticides to treat emerald ash borer, Park Board forestry director Ralph Sievert told the board. “We have been omitting that information when we're communicating with constituents,” Park Board Commissioner Billy Menz said of the treatment option.Community pushback The Park Board altered the assessment process after community pushback led by the Harrison Neighborhood Association and the nonprofit, Hope Community.Mitchel Hansen, outreach director with the North Side's Harrison Neighborhood Association, is leading the charge against private ash tree condemnation. He became interested in the issue after hearing from several neighbors about costly assessments, and feels that the process is flawed and contradicts Park Board equity goals. “I see this as being unfair. I see this as something we can easily solve,” Hansen said. Schaaf and Muellman, the city health department employees, said the Harrison Neighborhood Association's advocacy work inspired the city to apply for the federal grant.Last May, the Park Board temporarily halted the assessment process to make changes.The Park Board now requires tree removal companies to first examine the trees in order to get more competitive bids for removals that will be assessed against a homeowner's property taxes, Potyondy said. Previously, only special trees with difficult removal circumstances would get in-person inspections from companies bidding to remove them. The city also now offers all homeowners the choice of repaying the tree removal debt on their property taxes over five, 10, or 20 years, reducing the monthly cost with longer payment periods. Previously, the assessment was automatically set for a five-year period.There is now also an exemption for seniors and veterans who can demonstrate economic hardship to defer the payments until the property is sold.  The city made 885 assessments worth about $2 million before pausing its assessment process earlier this year. When the pause ended in October, the city began collecting payments from those homeowners, who are ineligible for the new federal funding.Click here to view the maphttps://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/supIX/7/Most condemned ash trees are not assessed against property taxes, according to Potyondy, and the majority of removals are paid by homeowners out of pocket.“This is an absolute priority of mine,” Bangoura said. ‘The ship has sailed for me' Schaaf, Minneapolis' tree program coordinator, said she understands homeowners' frustrations about the assessment process and the fact that the grant money can't help retroactively. “It's hard because a lot of these people that are having to have a tree removed already live in areas that have some of the lowest tree canopy in the city. A lot of them really love trees, and they really don't want to have to remove their tree,” Schaaf said. Amoke Kubat didn't want to get rid of her ash tree. She bought her home in the North Side's Cleveland neighborhood in January 2021. While she was unpacking, she noticed a man in her backyard eyeing her large ash tree. He told her it was infested and tagged it for removal. Suddenly, Kubat had to figure out how to remove it and pay the bill. The Park Board gave her a list of contractors to call. She got estimates, some as high as $10,000. The tree didn't come down until August 2021, and in the meantime, an ash tree in her front yard was condemned as well. The backyard tree was huge, Kubat said, measuring 32 inches in diameter, according to Park Board records. Kubat was assessed more than $6,000 to remove both trees; the process was stressful. Her yard isn't the same anymore. There's nowhere for the squirrels to go and the birds seem confused, she said. Following the policy for all condemned and assessed trees, her contractor was paid only to cut down the trees, leaving large stumps in her yard that sprout small trees, which will be expensive to remove.  “We loved the tree,” Kubat said. Kubat thinks the presence of ash trees should be noted during the inspection process of buying a home. She spoke with neighbors on the North Side and realized the issue was affecting many others. She's glad there's money to help now, but believes the process of identifying and removing affected trees is flawed. “The bottom line is the ship has sailed for me. It's on my bill,” Kubat said. ‘A slap in the face' One day early this past summer, a crew showed up to Willis White's house in the Jordan neighborhood to cut down a massive ash tree in his backyard. White, 54, was confused, and said he didn't know the tree would be removed that day. A data request on White's removal shows that letters about the tree were sent to the house starting in January 2022. White said he and his wife bought the home with their daughter originally, and she officially transferred the property to them last year. The letters to the house were addressed to White's daughter. They'd received a letter about the tree and had been shopping around for a contractor, White said, but hadn't hired anyone yet. He wishes someone from the Park Board would have knocked on the door or called to make sure they knew someone was coming to cut the tree for a hefty fee. According to a records request, White's tree was determined to be special, and the city obtained three removal bids ranging from $10,000 to $7,200. “It's really difficult,” White said of the removal cost and the circumstances. According to White: The removal took a toll on the yard. The contractor had to take down a chain link fence to bring in equipment, and didn't properly repair it. Workers had to shut off power to his house, and lowered an outdoor power cord to the ground, which was left when they finished and had to be rehung by White and his son. The remaining stump is large, and White hasn't looked into how much it will cost to remove. The Park Board cut some 40,000 ash trees in public parks and on streets, but never ground the stump on the boulevard in front of White's house. The stump sprouted dozens of tiny trees this year, creating an overgrown mess. White's tree is the seventh most expensive removal handled by the city since 2013, according to Park Board data. His cost — measured by the diameter of the tree's trunk — was $226 “per trunk inch,” much higher than the median price of $69 per trunk inch in 2022.Click here.https://sahanjournal.github.io/trunk-cost-distribution/Removal prices vary widely. White's 30-inch diameter tree was assessed at $6,800. Kubat's 32-inch tree cost $3,000; the smaller, 20-inch tree also condemned in her yard went for the same $3,000 price. Although Park Board data says White's tree was assessed for $6,800, the bill for his removal was more than $7,500 after fees and interest, according to a records request and a letter sent to White's home.  “There's no rhyme or reason why they price what they do,” said Newman, the McKinley resident who was assessed more than $3,100 for removals. Newman said it's not that she's unwilling to pay, but that there were no alternatives to cutting the offered and no answers given about why her trees were determined to need special removal techniques throughout the process, despite her regularly reaching out to Park Board staff. She doesn't want to see her neighbors get price gouged, and she's mad that no relief is coming to people who are currently paying off assessments. “It's such a slap in the face,” Newman said. Learn more about Sahan Journal's data analysis for this story.

Church Hill Anglican Sermons
12.11.23//Alternatives to Hope_Community and Family//Church Hill//Rob Forsyth

Church Hill Anglican Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2023 27:13


12.11.23//Alternatives to Hope_Community and Family//Church Hill//Rob Forsyth by Church Hill Anglican

Land of Hope
Confident in God's Promises

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2023 32:01


Welcome to Hope Community!We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast!Please, connect with us at www.hopetacoma.org

Land of Hope
How do you react? (ft Pastor Amos)

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2023 19:27


Welcome to Hope Community!We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast!Please, connect with us at www.hopetacoma.org

IDD Health Matters
Ep 11: Ian Cowart of Brandi's Hope Community Services

IDD Health Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2023 27:05


IDD Health Matters hosted by Craig Escudé, MD, FAAFP, FAADM features guests from across the globe who are leading the efforts to improve health, wellness and health equity for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Brandi's Hope Community Services began operations in June 2010 after being a long time dream of owner and CEO, Danny Cowart. Danny and his wife Brenda are the proud parents of our company's name sake, Brandi Erin Cowart. For almost ten years he and his wife Brenda received services/supports for their daughter who was born with Trisomy 18, a rare and fatal chromosomal disorder. They were determined to give her the opportunity to live at home and have a typical life. The Cowarts wanted to share their dreams for Brandi with other individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities. They saw firsthand the great need for these supports as parents and advocates. Mr. Cowart also experienced this need as the CEO of a service provider that offered these types of services statewide. What the Cowarts began to realize was a genuine need for more personalized and individual driven supports. The goal and purpose for beginning Brandi's Hope Community Services is to do just that: support individuals the way they choose to be supported. Choice is a fundamental driving force in the philosophy that all members of Brandi's Hope share. Brandi's Hope: https://www.brandishope.com More Friends for Life Here: https://bit.ly/3m0Pec7

Friends For Life Podcast
IDD Health Matters Ep 11: Ian Cowart of Brandi's Hope Community Services

Friends For Life Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2023 27:05


IDD Health Matters hosted by Craig Escudé, MD, FAAFP, FAADM features guests from across the globe who are leading the efforts to improve health, wellness and health equity for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Brandi's Hope Community Services began operations in June 2010 after being a long time dream of owner and CEO, Danny Cowart. Danny and his wife Brenda are the proud parents of our company's name sake, Brandi Erin Cowart. For almost ten years he and his wife Brenda received services/supports for their daughter who was born with Trisomy 18, a rare and fatal chromosomal disorder. They were determined to give her the opportunity to live at home and have a typical life. The Cowarts wanted to share their dreams for Brandi with other individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities. They saw firsthand the great need for these supports as parents and advocates. Mr. Cowart also experienced this need as the CEO of a service provider that offered these types of services statewide. What the Cowarts began to realize was a genuine need for more personalized and individual driven supports. The goal and purpose for beginning Brandi's Hope Community Services is to do just that: support individuals the way they choose to be supported. Choice is a fundamental driving force in the philosophy that all members of Brandi's Hope share. Brandi's Hope: https://www.brandishope.com More Friends for Life Here: https://bit.ly/3m0Pec7 

Land of Hope
When is Correction Life Giving?

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2023 25:52


Welcome to Hope Community!We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast! How often do we hear correction as "do better?" And yet, that's not the heart of God. Pastor Matina unpacks how we align our interpretation of correction with scripture and the fruit that comes from that. Please, connect with us at www.hopetacoma.org

Land of Hope
What Proverbs Has to Offer

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2023 31:14


Welcome to Hope Community!We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast!Please, connect with us at www.hopetacoma.org

Land of Hope
Direction of Hope

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2023 30:28


Welcome to Hope Community!We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast!Please, connect with us at www.hopetacoma.org

HC Conversations
Father's Day at Hope Community

HC Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2023


Make faith personal and make passing it on intentional

HC Conversations
Father's Day at Hope Community

HC Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2023


Make faith personal and make passing it on intentional

HC Conversations
Mother's Day at Hope Community

HC Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2023


Mother's Day 2023. Made in the image of God, filled with the Spirit of God, called to mission of God.

HC Conversations
Mother's Day at Hope Community

HC Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2023


Mother's Day 2023. Made in the image of God, filled with the Spirit of God, called to mission of God.

Clear Creek Resources - A Podcast of Clear Creek Community Church
178: Anchor Point – Giving Families Hope

Clear Creek Resources - A Podcast of Clear Creek Community Church

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2023 39:43


No one is beyond hope: that is the vision behind AnchorPoint, which provides education and empowerment to parents. On this episode, Rachel Chester talks with Debbie Simmons, founder and CEO of AnchorPoint, and Amanda Ring, Executive Director of Hope Community, about the many ways AnchorPoint comes alongside parents from prenatal care, parent education classes, financial planning, and much more, in their effort to value life and provide tangible hope for all types of families. https://anchorpoint.us

HC Conversations
Easter At Hope Community

HC Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2023


Easter 2023

HC Conversations
Easter At Hope Community

HC Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2023


Easter 2023

Land of Hope
Acts 19:8-10

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2023 44:51


Welcome to Hope Community!We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast!Please, connect with us at www.hopetacoma.org

Land of Hope
Acts 19

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2023 41:07


Welcome to Hope Community!We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast!Please, connect with us at www.hopetacoma.org

Land of Hope
Getting Spiritually Hangry

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2023 25:41


Welcome to Hope Community! We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast! Please, connect with us at ⁠www.hopetacoma.org⁠

Land of Hope
Speak to the Rock

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2023 22:42


Welcome to Hope Community! We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast! Please, connect with us at ⁠www.hopetacoma.org⁠

Land of Hope
Worshipping through Song (ft. Pastor Heather Wait)

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2023 35:10


Welcome to Hope Community! We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast! Please, connect with us at ⁠www.hopetacoma.org⁠

Land of Hope
Thoughts on Hope (ft Pastor Amos)

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2023 23:37


Welcome to Hope Community!We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast!Please, connect with us at www.hopetacoma.org

Land of Hope
Let's Chat with Pastor Amos

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2023 24:01


Welcome to Hope Community! We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast! Please, connect with us at ⁠www.hopetacoma.org⁠

Land of Hope
Permission for Sabbath

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2023 25:13


Welcome to Hope Community!We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast! Join Pastor Matina as she looks deeper into the time that Mary and Martha spent with Jesus and the permission he granted for rest and sabbath. Please, connect with us at www.hopetacoma.org

Land of Hope
Observing Sabbath (ft. Pastor John Han)

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2023 35:19


Welcome to Hope Community!We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast! Please, connect with us at www.hopetacoma.org

Land of Hope
Sabbath - Delight

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2023 28:03


Welcome to Hope Community!We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast! Join Pastor Matina as we continue our conversation about Sabbath and what it means to delight in it. Please, connect with us at www.hopetacoma.org

Land of Hope
Happy New Year!

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2023 30:53


Welcome to Hope Community! We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast! Please, connect with us at ⁠www.hopetacoma.org⁠

Land of Hope
the Christmas Story

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2022 16:38


Welcome to Hope Community! We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast! Please, connect with us at ⁠www.hopetacoma.org⁠

Land of Hope
Advent Season - Love (feat. Pastor Amos)

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2022 20:45


Welcome to Hope Community! We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast! Please, connect with us at ⁠www.hopetacoma.org⁠

Land of Hope
Advent - Joy

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2022 28:19


Welcome to Hope Community! We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast! Please, connect with us at ⁠www.hopetacoma.org⁠

Land of Hope
Advent - Peace (ft. Pastor Matina)

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2022 24:10


Welcome to Hope Community!We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast!Please, connect with us at www.hopetacoma.org

HC Conversations
HC Vision Sunday 2022 | Engage

HC Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2022


The world needs healthy, growing churches. Right now Hope Community is exactly that. How do we make sure it stays that way? How do we experience all that God has for us as people and as a church?

HC Conversations
HC Vision Sunday 2022 | Engage

HC Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2022


The world needs healthy, growing churches. Right now Hope Community is exactly that. How do we make sure it stays that way? How do we experience all that God has for us as people and as a church?

Land of Hope
Advent - Hope

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2022 26:54


Welcome to Hope Community!We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast!Please, connect with us at www.hopetacoma.org

Land of Hope
Thanksgiving & Gratitude

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2022 21:59


Welcome to Hope Community!We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast!Please, connect with us at www.hopetacoma.org

Land of Hope
ft. Pastor Matina

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2022 22:30


Welcome to Hope Community!We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast!Please, connect with us at www.hopetacoma.org

Land of Hope
The Wall

Land of Hope

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2022 38:23


Welcome to Hope Community!We're so glad you are tuning into the podcast!Please, connect with us at www.hopetacoma.org

The Zest
How to Start a Community Garden: Lessons from University Area CDC's Harvest Hope Community Garden

The Zest

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2022 22:45


If you've ever dreamed of starting a community garden, then you'll want to take notes on this episode.Just north of the University of South Florida's Tampa campus is an urban oasis: Harvest Hope Park. The 7-acre park is a sanctuary for residents, with a playground, sports fields, fitness stations, walking trail, tilapia fishing pond and more. It all started eight years ago with the park's first feature: Harvest Hope Community Garden.Sarah Combs is executive director/CEO of the University Area Community Development Corporation, which oversees the garden. Derek Laracuente and Harvest Hope Community Garden volunteer.Dalia recently visited with them to learn how to garden got up  and running, challenges along the way and advice for anyone looking to start and sustain a community garden.