Posted by Marie on Apr 25, 2013 in Latest News | 0 comments
Transition Town Media & Timebank Media are having a screening of the wonderful film Occupy Love. Filmed all over the world, from Egypt to the Occupy encampments in NYC to the Albertan Tar Sands, the film holds in one container both the despair that we collectively feel about the destruction of our planet as well as the longing and great promise we feel to contribute to a better future, one that holds the respect for our planet and each other as self-evident and primary.
Transition Town Media and Timebank Media presents Occupy Love, April 30th, at the Media Community Center, 4th and Jackson Streets, Media. 7 – 9 pm. $10.00 suggested donation at the door. All proceeds are being used as a fund-raiser for both TTM/TBM and the film’s creators in order to allow them to release the film more broadly.
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Posted by Marie on Mar 2, 2013 in Latest News | 0 comments
Mark your calendars! We are gathering the tribe in March…the timebank tribe. On March 26th, from 6 – 9 pm, we will eat a pot-luck together and then some people, completely voluntary (!), will share stories about timebanking in our community. How has it helped them? How have they gotten their needs met? How have they discovered latent gifts and talents? If you have a story to share, please bring it and encourage others to join in on the fun. Coordinators will be on hand to answer questions, help you log-in to your account if you are new, help you find some offers to post and some requests to post. We all have unmet needs, but sometimes it takes just a little bit of discussion to tease it to the surface. So, if you are one of those people who says, “Well, I have things to offer, but I don’t really need anything,” we’ll help you find some creative ways to participate.
Please consider joining us. And bring a friend. There is always space for more!
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Posted by admin on Jan 24, 2013 in Latest News | 0 comments
by Edgar S. Cahn, CEO TimeBanks USA, Distinguished Professor of Law, UDC David A. Clarke School of Law
In his Inaugural Address, President Obama make some commitments that seem to defy fiscal reality:
“A little girl born into the bleakest poverty knows that she has the same chance to succeed as anyone else.”
“We reject the belief that America must choose between caring for the generation that built this country and investing in the generation that will build its future.”
“We must make the hard choices to reduce the cost of health care and the size of our deficit.”
The problem: there are not enough funds, public, private philanthropic to pay the cost, at market prices, for all the educational services and all the health care services needed to make good on those promises.
For a quarter century, the TimeBanking community has been demonstrating how to make the impossible possible. There is vast untapped capacity in community. We have proven that:
Healthy seniors and their families can provide reliable, informal care that reduces medical costs.
Fifth graders can tutor third graders who otherwise fail to attain essential reading levels.
Teenagers can tutor elementary school children using evidence-based cross-age peer tutoring.
How could this get paid for? How can we record, recognize and reward labor from a work force that is not recognized or valued by the GDP? For decades, the TimeBank community in the United States and thirty four other countries has been learning how to do it, teaching us all that every one of us has something special to give.
The function of a medium of exchange is to put supply and demand, capacity and need together. What money does not value, TimeBanking does. TimeBanking provides a tax-exempt, local medium of exchange that uses Time as a currency. One hour helping another (regardless of mainstream market value) equal one Time Credit. TimeBanking has proven capable of harnessing vast untapped capacity that the market does not value to address vast unmet needs.
Ask the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation which just made a major award to Neighborhood Health Centers of Lehigh Valley to utilize its TimeBank program as a resource to help build a super utilizer intervention program to reduce health care costs. For ten years, home visits by Lehigh Valley TimeBank members functioning as health coaches and providing informal support have helped folks with chronic problems stay healthy and at home.
Ask Mayor Bloomberg’s Department for the Aging which has established TimeBank programs for seniors in all five boroughs to provide the kind of informal support needed to promote health and prevent unnecessary utilization of the emergency room care by elders.
Ask the Visiting Nurse Service of New York (with a 3,000 member TimeBank) that reports that 79% of TimeBank members felt that their membership gives them support they need to be able to stay in their homes and community as they get older and 100% reported they have benefited from becoming a TimeBank member.
Ask the National Education Association or do a Google search to see if Cross-Age Peer Tutoring rates the status of an evidence-based instructional and remedial strategy.
Ask the Washington State Office of Public Instruction for its authoritative manual on Cross-Age Peer Tutoring.
Ask the National Science Foundation why it granted nearly $1million dollars to Pennsylvania State University Center for Human-Computer Interaction to develop mobile apps for TimeBanking so every Smartphone user can be a time banker.
It’s time America discovered its vast hidden wealth: people not in the work force – seniors, teenagers, children, the disabled – whose energy and capacity has been tapped by TimeBanking for over a quarter century to strengthen fragile families, rebuild community, enhance health, promote trust, restore hope.
President Obama, if you want to do the impossible, it’s time to bet on each other and on our collective capacity. TimeBanking supplies a medium of exchange that translates “Created Equal” into a currency that embodies that equality. If we take it to scale, we can make good on delivering those “inalienable rights” to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness promised to every one of us by the Founding Fathers.
TimeBanks USA
5500 39th St. NW
Washington, D.C. 20015
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Posted by Marie on Dec 17, 2012 in Latest News | 0 comments
We get asked one question, over and over again. “Do you have to live in Media?” “But I don’t live in Media, can I join?” From the beginning, the timebank volunteers decided that we would let people decide, no matter where they lived, if they would derive benefit from being a member. We do this instead of deciding an arbitrary boundary. Indeed, how would YOU define “Media”? Is it just the Borough? Certainly not… Well, a 5 mile radius? A 10 mile radius? All of the boundaries we established seemed so cumbersome and added an unnecessary burden on the administration of the timebank. Why not just let anyone join who cares to. This has given us a rather wide “range” of members, some as far away as Kennett Square and West Philadelphia. We even have members in Boston and Milwaukee who work remotely for timedollars, and are sometimes in Media to redeem them. Some people just want to support us, and joining is one way to do that.
Wherever people live, our timebank is helping people connect with one another through meaningful work in their community, and this can be nothing but a benefit to everyone involved.

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Posted by Marie on Nov 29, 2012 in Latest News | 0 comments
The Timebank Media volunteers have been meeting for a month now. We want to approach the growth and vitality of the timebank in two ways: supporting our current membership in better than we have been, and starting new initiatives that will strengthen our community and help others find timebanking along the way.
Supporting our membership means that our members need to be heard, so we created a survey to ask some questions about your experience, expectations, and wishes. We hope you will take the time to answers these questions. It helps us help you. Also, of course, you get a timedollar for your effort.
Look for new social opportunities in the new year, as well as more interesting ways to earn and spend timedollars. We are an all-volunteer organization, and if you feel that you would like to commit some time to our organization, every voice is valued, and every hand is needed.
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