Calgary Herald

Consider supporting your local food bank after the frost, with food items and funds, and even a few volunteer hours to help sort and deliver donations.

Needs of others don’t cease after the holidays, write Craig and Marc Kielburger.

- Craig and Marc Kielburger are the co-founders of the WE movement, which includes WE Charity, ME to WE Social Enterprise and WE Day. For more dispatches from WE, check out WE Stories at we.org.

Craig and Marc Kielburger,

Another holiday season of giving is gone. You’ve made your annual donation, and delivered cans to the local food bank. You’ve got your good karma sorted out for the year — right?

One-third of charitable donations in Canada are made in December. But the needs of others don’t cease when we put away the ornaments. Did you know, come January, millions of Canadians and Americans lose their jobs, putting pressure on shelters? Did you know there are more orphaned kittens in the spring and more hungry schoolchil­dren in the summer? As you make New Year’s resolution­s, consider how the needs in your community peak throughout the year.

There is more than one season of need. There should be multiple seasons of giving.

January is National Mentoring Month. Why not begin the year by becoming a role model? In addition to its one-on-one mentoring, Big Brothers Big Sisters also runs group programs. With Go Girls! and Game On!, volunteers lead groups of 12- to 14-year-olds in fitness activities, and teach healthy eating habits and communicat­ion skills. The eight- to 10-week program is tied to the school year, so every January (and again in September) Big Brothers Big Sisters is on the hunt for volunteers for just two hours per week.

January is also the month of buyer’s remorse — even for furry friends given as presents but returned to animal shelters. Humane societies and other caregivers need funds, pet food and volunteers to walk dogs on cold winter days. Spring brings “kitten season.” Shelters are inundated with thousands of newborn felines needing food and veterinary care.

As spring warms to summer, some kids can’t wait to escape the classroom. For others, the end of the school year also means the end of school breakfast and lunch programs. Families who rely on the programs turn to food banks to ensure their children have enough to eat. Consider supporting your local food bank after the frost, with food items and funds, and even a few volunteer hours to help sort and deliver donations.

Survivors of domestic abuse will often wait until school’s out to leave their partners, to give their children some stability before their lives are turned upside down, according to Women’s Shelters Canada. Come June, short-term women’s shelters especially need financial support and donated items like diapers and women’s sanitary products. You can find and support local shelters through Sheltersaf­e.ca.

If you want to help vulnerable young people have a better summer, YMCA is always on the hunt for counsellor­s and support staff to help run its camps for low-income children and youth. Coach a YMCA children’s basketball or soccer class, or teach swimming if you have your certificat­ion. Basically, you can relive the summer camps of your own youth.

These are broad national trends. Every community, and every community organizati­on, will have its own unique needs and timetables. Resources like your local United Way and community centres can help connect you with the causes in your neighbourh­ood that need your support throughout the year.

’Tis the season of giving — all year long.

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