Testimonials

 

“Your vision of the future inspires us all to be better and to do better to change our world.” - Frances Hesselbein, Former CEO of Girl Scouts of America and President of Leader to Leader Institute

 

"We support BPSOS’s efforts to develop leaders who are dedicated to helping their communities at home and the disadvantaged in Vietnam." - East Meets West Foundation

 

“From disaster relief efforts in the Gulf Coast to leadership development at the national level, BPSOS is making a positive and long-lasting impact on our community." - Kim Delevett, Southwest Airlines

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Community Development and Organizing

One of our primary focuses since 1998 has been community organizing and capacity building.

NEST Model

For that purpose we developed Neighborhood Empowerment and Support through Teamwork(NEST) which has become a proven model for effective community organizing and capacity building.

Developed in 1998 to help Vietnamese refugees and immigrants cope with the consequences of the 1996 welfare reforms, this three-staged model has been used to develop our international network, at some point reaching a total of 17 office locations across the United States and four in Asia. 

  • In the first stage, we assess community needs and resources, set up self-help groups and build basic core competencies for these groups to provide mutual assistance. 
  • In the second stage, we bring new services to the local community to address identified needs, develop joint initiatives with the self-help groups, and train them to take over certain project activities. 
  • In the third stage, we facilitate the formation of new partnerships between mainstream agencies and the self-help groups; we also start to replicate the model for a new target population.

Through NEST, we have assisted over 50 faith-based and community organizations (FBCOs) and mutual assistance associations (MAAs) across the nation, have awarded sub-grants and secured grants totaling close to $3 million for a dozen of them to serve a total of 5,000 Vietnamese refugees and immigrants.

Typical examples include:

 

  • Vietnamese American Television in Maryland (participation period: 1999-2001): Among the first participants in NEST, this non-profit media organization has achieved sustainability and currently produces a daily half-hour television programming on Direct TV. See Marketwise article.
  • Asian American Service Center in Philadelphia (2003-2005): This faith-based organization (affiliated with a Catholic church) has successfully secured over $100,000 in federal funding to establish emergency services and family enrichment services for Southeast Asians. 
  • Charity Group of Good Affinity in Northern Virginia (2005-2008): This faith-based organization (affiliated with a Buddhist temple) has successfully established and sustained a job preparation and placement service in partnership with the SkillSource Centers operated by the Northern Virginia Workforce Investment Board. More recently, this non-profit established services for seniors and youth. In addition to funds raised for this non-profit, BPSOS has provided 10-months training for one of its key staff in services for seniors and torture survivors.

 

NEST’s successes have been widely reported in the mainstream media. In 2000, Dr. Nguyen Dinh Thang, BPSOS Executive Director, was selected by The Washingtonian magazine as “Washingtonian of the Year” for this community organizing and capacity building initiative.

Continually fine-tuned based on newly identified best practices, NEST is being replicated to multiple areas.

In 2009, BPSOS conducted a series of non-profit management seminars in Orange County, hosted by Nguoi Viet Daily, and Houston, Texas, hosted by Saigon Houston Radio.

From 2010-2011, BPSOS launched Campaign 30-35, a one-year national community mobilization campaign to rally influencers in different communities across the US to engage in long-term strategic capacity building efforts.

Summit 2011 (Nguyen Nguyen)

Over 250 delegates from 20 states gathered in Washington, DC on July 2 at the historic Leadership Summit. 

The campaign received widespread community support across the country and even internationally, and cultivated in the first ever National Summit of Vietnamese American Leaders, which sparked a nationwide movement to advance the Vietnamese American community in all three sectors: public, business and social.