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08-31-2023 Questions and Answers

08-31-2023 Questions and Answers 1200 628 Jill Pioter

Q: Why does SVdP require meeting twice in a month?

A: The Society wants Conferences to meet weekly (52 meetings per year); however, the international Rule allows for every other week (26 meetings per year). In the United States, we allow for twice each month (24 meetings per year) while still promoting that weekly meetings are the ideal. It’s important to meet frequently because:

  1. This provides for shorter meetings. The farther apart the meetings, the more you have to cover. In Part III of the Rule, Statute 7, there is a lot that needs to be discussed during a meeting.
  2. All decisions must be made by the Conference as a whole. You should not let decisions be made by a few people, which is what happens when there is a long time between meetings. The Society does not support decisions being made only by the President or his/her slate of officers.
  3. Our primary goal is the spiritual growth of members. At meetings, we learn about our faith as it applies to our ministry.
  4. The meeting is also about fellowship and friendship between the members. If Conference only meets monthly and members each miss one or two meetings due to vacation, conflict in schedule, or illness, the possibilities for growing in friendship with your fellow Vincentians is reduced significantly.
  5. From a services standpoint, sometimes the whole Conference needs to discuss a request for help and make a decision. If the next meeting is a month away, then the decision to help or not help is unduly delayed or left up to a few. See 2 above.

Q: Many Conferences in our Council now use ServWare for case management. If all case records are stored in ServWare and the recommendation is to destroy case history after three years, are we required to do that?

A: Yes, record retention is defined not only to save storage space but to eliminate data that no longer has relevance.

Spanish Translation

P: ¿Por qué SVdP requiere reunirse dos veces al mes?

R: La Sociedad quiere que las Conferencias se reúnan semanalmente (52 reuniones por año); sin embargo, la Regla Internacional permite cada dos semanas (26 reuniones por año).  En los Estados Unidos, permitimos dos veces al mes (24 reuniones por año) sin dejar de promover que las reuniones semanales, que son lo ideal.  La importancia de que la frecuencia sea semanal o bimensual:

  1. Esto prevé reuniones más cortas.  Cuanto más separadas estén las reuniones, más tendrá que cubrir.  Eche un vistazo a la Parte III de la Regla, Estatuto 7.  Hay mucho que se debe discutir durante una reunión.
  2. Todas las decisiones deben ser decididas por la Conferencia en su conjunto.  No debe dejar que las decisiones sean tomadas por unas pocas personas, que es lo que sucede cuando hay mucho tiempo entre reuniones.  La Sociedad no apoya que las decisiones sean tomadas solo por el Presidente o su lista de funcionarios.
  3. Nuestro objetivo principal es el crecimiento espiritual de los miembros.  Es en la reunión que aprendemos acerca de nuestra fe tal como se aplica a nuestro ministerio.  Esto sólo se lleva a cabo en nuestras reuniones.
  4. La reunión también trata sobre el compañerismo y la amistad entre los miembros.  Si nuestra Conferencia solo se reúne mensualmente y si faltan a una o dos reuniones debido a vacaciones, conflictos de horario y enfermedades, y si esto también es cierto para otros miembros de la Conferencia, las posibilidades de crecer en amistad con sus compañeros Vicentinos se reducen significativamente.
  5. Desde el punto de vista de los servicios, a veces tenemos que presentar una solicitud de ayuda a toda la Conferencia para debatir y tomar una decisión.  Si falta un mes para la próxima reunión, entonces la decisión de servir o no servir se retrasa indebidamente o se deja en manos de unos pocos.  Véase el apartado 2 arriba.

P: Muchas Conferencias de nuestro Consejo utilizan ahora ServWare para la gestión de casos. Si todos los registros de casos se almacenan en ServWare y la recomendación es destruir el historial de casos después de 3 años, ¿estamos obligados a hacerlo?

R: Sí, la retención de registros se define no solo para ahorrar espacio de almacenamiento, sino también para eliminar los datos que ya no tienen relevancia.

08-24-2023 Questions and Answers

08-24-2023 Questions and Answers 1200 628 Jill Pioter

Q: Does the IRS care if a Conference violates the SVdP Rule and gives to another non-SVdP charity that agrees to spend the money wisely?

A: The IRS indeed cares if a nonprofit violates its own mission, organizational documents, and rules. The Society cares if an SVdP entity violates its Rule. The IRS is not aware of all of SVdP’s prohibitions, but you are. As a holder of an IRS tax-exemption and a member of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul, you must honor both. We have tax-exempt status to use funds to fulfill our mission which is stated in our letter of exemption. We are not a pass-through organization. If our donors want to support another organization, they would give the funds to that organization.

Q: Should the minutes of a Conference meeting include specific details of a Home Visit, or is it enough to note what action was decided upon to help a person/family? 

A:  Conference minutes are the written record of decisions made by the Conference. The details of the Home Visit are not necessary in the minutes; they may be in a separate case record. However, if there is something about the visit that results in a Conference decision, some details might be noted in the minutes.

Spanish Translation

P: ¿Le importa al IRS si una Conferencia viola la Regla SVdP y da a otra organización benéfica que no es SVdP que acepta gastar el dinero sabiamente?

R: El IRS realmente se preocupa si una organización sin fines de lucro viola su propia misión, documentos organizacionales y reglas.  La Sociedad se preocupa si una entidad SVdP viola su Regla.  El IRS no está al tanto de todas las prohibiciones de SVdP, pero usted sí.  Como titular de una exención de impuestos del IRS y miembro de la Sociedad de San Vicente de Paúl, debe honrar a ambos.  Tenemos un estado exento de impuestos para usar fondos para cumplir con nuestra misión que se establece en nuestra carta de exención.  No somos una organización de paso.  Si nuestros donantes quieren apoyar a otra organización, ellos habrían dado los fondos a esa organización.

P: ¿Deberían las actas de una reunión de Conferencia incluir detalles específicos de una Visita Domiciliaria o es suficiente anotar qué acción se decidió para servir a una persona / familia?

R:  Las actas de la Conferencia son el registro escrito de las decisiones tomadas por la Conferencia. Los detalles de la Visita Domiciliaria no son necesarios en las actas; Pueden estar en un registro de caso separado.  Sin embargo, si hay algo acerca de la visita que resulta en una decisión de la Conferencia, algunos detalles podrían anotarse en las actas.

08-17-2023 Questions and Answers

08-17-2023 Questions and Answers 1200 628 Jill Pioter

Q: What can we include in our volunteer hours? Is working at a funeral, serving food, choir, sacristan, driving an elderly neighbor to an appointment, or babysitting for a family in need or the members’ grandchildren also allowed to be included in volunteer hours?

A: Any member activities that are directly associated with SVdP Conference life can be considered volunteer hours. If individuals volunteer outside of their Conference duties, it should not be counted in the annual report data. If working at a funeral, serving food, choir, sacristan, etc., are activities of the Conference life then they can be counted. If these are individual choices in support of the parish but not Conference works, these volunteer hours cannot be counted.

Q: Is there a national policy about sharing documents in a criminal case with a pastor? We have shared the information with him, but he now wants copies of the documents which we have given to the local law enforcement authorities. The parish itself is not involved in the case.

A: This issue should be discussed with an attorney. A lot depends on the nature of the case. Depending on the nature of the information, it may impact an investigation. Both the pastor and the attorney should know and understand that confidentiality is highly emphasized within the Society. The Society operates at the pastor’s permission and relies on him for matters of faith and morals. If the case involves these issues or parish property/resources, the pastor has a right to be informed.

Spanish Translation

P: ¿Qué podemos incluir en nuestras horas de voluntariado? ¿Trabajar en un funeral, servir comida, participar en el coro, ser sacristán, llevar a un prójimo de la tercera edad a una cita, cuidar niños para una familia necesitada o cuidar los nietos de los miembros puede también ser incluido en las horas de voluntariado?

R: Cualquier actividad de los miembros que esté directamente asociada con la vida de la Conferencia de SVdP puede considerarse horas de voluntariado. Si las personas se ofrecen como voluntarios fuera de sus deberes de la Conferencia, no deben contarse en los datos del informe anual. Si trabajar en un funeral, servir comida, participar en el coro, o ser sacristán, etc., son actividades de la vida de la Conferencia, entonces se pueden contar. Si estas son opciones individuales en apoyo de la parroquia, pero no de los trabajos de la Conferencia, estas horas de voluntariado no se pueden contar.

P: ¿Existe una política nacional sobre compartir documentos en un caso criminal con el Padre?  Hemos compartido la información con él, pero ahora quiere copias de los documentos que hemos entregado a las autoridades policiales locales. La parroquia en sí no está involucrada en el caso.

A: Este tema debe ser discutido con un abogado. Mucho depende de la naturaleza del caso.  Dependiendo de la naturaleza de la información, puede afectar una investigación.  Tanto el Padre como el abogado deben saber y entender que la confidencialidad es altamente enfatizada dentro de la Sociedad. La Sociedad opera con el permiso del Padre y depende de él para asuntos de fe y moral. Si el caso involucra estos asuntos o la propiedad / recursos de la parroquia, el Padre tiene derecho a ser informado.

08-10-2023 Questions and Answers

08-10-2023 Questions and Answers 1200 628 Jill Pioter

Q: Are Conferences permitted to own land and buildings separate from their Council?

A: If a Conference is separately incorporated and has its own tax-exemption, it may own property. If the Conference is using the EIN and tax-exemption of a District or Diocesan Council, it is part of that legal entity, and ownership of property is defined by the owner of the EIN.

Q: Members delivering furniture to a neighbor in need using their personal vehicle accidentally backed into a mailbox — damaging the mailbox and the vehicle. Should the Conference pay for the mailbox and the vehicle repairs?

A: Please consult your Council/Conference insurance policy for coverage. It may require that when a Vincentian has an accident with their own vehicle, it is the Vincentian’s auto insurance that comes into play first. The Council or Conference may then have liability insurance to cover this case. The Conference can separately make a decision to pay or not pay for related damages for either party outside of its insurance coverage. If our work damages the property of a neighbor in need, there is a moral obligation, regardless of coverage, to make it right.

Spanish Translation

P: ¿Se permite a las Conferencias poseer terrenos y edificios separados de su Consejo?

R: Si una Conferencia se incorpora por separado y tiene su propia exención de impuestos, puede poseer propiedades.  Si la Conferencia está utilizando el EIN y la exención de impuestos de un Distrito o Consejo Diocesano, es parte de esa entidad legal y la propiedad de la propiedad es definida por el propietario del EIN.

P: Los miembros que entregan muebles a un prójimo en necesidad usando su vehículo personal accidentalmente retrocedieron en un buzón, dañando el buzón y el vehículo. ¿Debería la Conferencia pagar el buzón y las reparaciones del vehículo?

R: Consulte las pólizas del seguro del Consejo/Conferencia sobre la cobertura. Puede requerir que cuando un Vicentino tiene un accidente con su propio vehículo, es el seguro de automóvil del Vicentino el que entra en juego primero.  El Consejo o la Conferencia pueden entonces tener un seguro de responsabilidad civil para cubrir este caso. La Conferencia puede tomar por separado la decisión de pagar o no pagar los daños conexos para cualquiera de las partes fuera de cobertura del seguro. Si nuestro trabajo daña la propiedad de un prójimo en necesidad, existe una obligación moral de corregirlo, independientemente de la cobertura.

08-03-2023 Questions and Answers

08-03-2023 Questions and Answers 1200 628 Jill Pioter

Q: In the interest of having more of our members assume an officer position, our Conference would like to change the term of office to be one year with re-election possible for more than one year, but not more than six. I cannot find any provision in The Rule for changing the term of Conference office. Can we do this with a simple vote to change the term of office?

A: The answer is No; the president is only elected for a three-year term. It is in the international Rule of the Society and cannot be changed. All other officers are appointed by and serve at the elected president’s pleasure. See the Rule Part III, Statute 12:  Servant Leadership Positions.

Q: Our Archdiocesan Council has its own EIN that includes nearly all the Conferences, but my Conference has a separate EIN, and we are a separate 501 (c)(3). We received notice to provide the ADCC with an audit, but I don’t believe that we would be a part of their audit. We are definitely part of the Archdiocesan Council but are we part of their audit? 

A: The audit typically includes all entities using the Council’s EIN. If your Conference has its own EIN, then your Conference should conduct a separate audit at the Archdiocesan Council’s request. Part III of The Rule, Statute 27 states: When deemed appropriate Council Presidents should require audits or audit reviews of the Conferences (at minimum, an internal review), or of Councils, and Special Works under the auspices of their Council. In addition, Conferences are required to perform an audit every year. A copy of this audit should be passed on to the upper Council.

Spanish Translation

P: Con el interés de que más de nuestros miembros asuman un puesto de oficiales, nuestra Conferencia desearía cambiar el mandato para que sea de un año con la posibilidad de reelección por un año más, pero no más de seis.  No encuentro ninguna disposición en la Regla que permita cambiar la duración del término de los Oficiales de la Conferencia. ¿Podemos hacerlo con una simple votación para cambiar el mandato?

A: La respuesta es No; El Presidente solo es elegido por un período de 3 años. Está en la Regla Internacional de la Sociedad y no se puede cambiar. Todos los demás funcionarios son nombrados y sirven a gusto del Presidente electo. Véase la Regla Parte III, Estatuto 12: Posiciones de Liderazgo de servicio.

P: Nuestro Consejo Arquidiocesano tiene su propio EIN que incluye casi todas las Conferencias, pero mi Conferencia tiene un EIN separado, y somos un 501 (c) (3) separado.  Recibimos un aviso para proporcionar al Consejo Arquidiocesano una auditoría, pero no creo que fuéramos parte de su auditoría.  Definitivamente somos parte del Consejo Arquidiocesano, pero ¿somos parte de su auditoría?

A: La auditoría suele incluir a todas las entidades que utilizan el EIN del Consejo. Si su conferencia tiene su propio EIN, entonces su Conferencia debe realizar una auditoría separada a solicitud del Consejo Arquidiocesano.  La Parte III del Regla, Estatuto 27 establece: Cuando se considere apropiado, los Presidentes de los Consejos deben exigir auditorías o revisiones de auditoría de las Conferencias (como mínimo, una revisión interna), o de los Consejos, y Trabajos Especiales bajo los auspicios de su Consejo.  Además, las Conferencias deben realizar una auditoría cada año.  Una copia de esta auditoría debe ser entregada al Consejo superior.

07-27-2023 Questions and Answers

07-27-2023 Questions and Answers 1200 628 Jill Pioter

Q: I have always been told that $.30/mile was acceptable. Has the Society increased the reimbursement for mileage due to the fuel price increases? This is not for Home Visits or serving the poor, it is for travel expenses in growing new Conferences or traveling to national meetings.

A: The rates are determined by the IRS, not the Society. The IRS has determined that $0.14 per mile driven as a volunteer is an appropriate rate for reimbursement. This rate for charity has remained the same since 1998.

The 2023 business mileage reimbursement rate is 65.5 cents per mile, which applies only to employees of the nonprofit.

Spanish Translation

P: Siempre me han dicho que $ .30 / milla es aceptable. ¿Ha aumentado la Sociedad el reembolso por kilometraje debido a los aumentos del precio del combustible? Esto no es para las Visitas Domiciliarias o para servir a las personas en necesidad, es para gastos de viaje en para nuevas Conferencias o viajes a reuniones nacionales.

A: Las tasas son determinadas por el IRS, no por la Sociedad. El IRS ha determinado que $0.14 por milla recorrida como voluntario es una tasa apropiada para el reembolso. Esta tasa para las organizaciones de caridad se ha mantenido igual desde 1998.

La tasa de reembolso de millas comerciales de 2023 es de 65.5 centavos por milla, que se aplica solo a los empleados de la organización sin fines de lucro.

Am I A Vincentian?

Am I A Vincentian? 1200 628 Jill Pioter

In June 2008, I attended the Western Region Meeting in Boise, Idaho.  I was not alone.  There were 225 other Vincentians along with me.  During the time I spent there, I met with many Vincentians and discussed a wide variety of topics.  I also put on a workshop and facilitated two open forums where anything and everything could be discussed.  One theme came up over and over again in those discussions.  This is also a theme which is continually asked today as well.  How do you get the Conferences and the members to adhere to or comply with the Rule?

This is a tough question.  And it requires a tough answer.  People, in general, have mixed feelings when it comes to rules and regulations.  They usually will admit to the value of them.  They usually will admit to the need for them.  And they normally agree that compliance is necessary; that is, until they want to do something that does not really correspond to the rules.  Then it becomes harsh and too restrictive.  They did not join the Society to follow the rules.  They joined the Society to do some good and do not want to be bogged down with meaningless do’s and don’ts.  We hear this stuff all the time!  I can go into a long,  drawn-out dissertation on why rules and regulations are important, but that will get us nowhere.  I can take a military point of view and say that if one soldier steps out of line the war will be lost.  Nobody is going to buy that.  I can talk about unity of thought and action, but that cup only holds a limited amount of water.

It truly boils down to one thing.  Ask yourself one question:  Am I a Vincentian?  To be a Vincentian you have to make a commitment.  Here is where the rub comes in.  Commitment!  Being a Vincentian calls for a number of things to be accepted and come into play.  Being a Vincentian means accepting who we are, what we are about, what we do, and how we do it.  Being a Vincentian means more than helping people in need.  It means growing in holiness, striving to grow closer to God.  It means growing closer to our fellow Vincentians.  It means serving God through serving those in need.  It means a blend of all of the above.

A number of years ago, when searching for the answer to a question, I was referred to John Simmons, former National President of the Society, the guru.  If you wanted to know anything about the Society he was the man to go to.  John said that if you call yourself a Vincentian, you want to meet as often as possible with your fellow Vincentians, you want to learn about the Society, you want to understand what this is all about, and you want to help it grow.  It is that simple.

If I want to do my own thing, follow my own rules or no rules at all, I can start my own special work or organization.  Then all I have to do is get other people who want to join me to follow my rules.  I am a Vincentian.  I am committed to who we are, what we do and the way we do it.  Complying with the Rule not only makes sense, it is something I want to do.

Mike Syslo

Chair, National Governance Committee

07-13-2023 Questions and Answers

07-13-2023 Questions and Answers 1200 628 Jill Pioter

Q: I have a question about volunteer of the year awards. Our rules talk about members living with simplicity and not looking for personal accolades or glory. How would volunteer of the year fit into that?

A: The Conference has to decide that an award would be appropriate. If deemed appropriate to do so, Conference members have to contribute or donate to purchase the award. It is still a Conference expense, however funds given to help the poor may not be used for this expense. In addition, not all awards and recognitions need to be purchased.

A traditional award given by Conferences and Councils is the “Top Hat Award.” Criteria for this award are determined by the local Council (or Conference), and the award itself may be as simple as designing and printing your own certificates.

Q: One of our members has suggested that for Home Visits we partner with graduate students in social work from a nearby university. So many of the neighbors we meet need multiple layers of assistance from different agencies. Is this allowed? The students would gain experience but would not be paid, and they would not be Vincentians. This seems out of keeping with our Vincentian spirit and with rules of confidentiality. 

A: Social workers are governed by a whole set of rules that (may not apply equally) for Vincentians. Therefore, in good SVdP governance guidance, this would not be a good partnership for Home Visits. It might be good for seeking advice as to resources available to help those who come to us.

Spanish Translation

P: Tengo una pregunta sobre los reconocimientos al voluntario del año. Nuestras reglas hablan de miembros que viven con simplicidad y no buscan elogios personales o gloria. ¿Cómo encajaría el voluntario del año en eso?

R: La Conferencia tiene que decidir que un reconocimiento sería apropiado.  Si se considera apropiado hacerlo, los miembros de la Conferencia deben contribuir o donar dinero para obtener el regalo.  Sigue siendo un gasto de la Conferencia, sin embargo, los fondos dados para servir a las personas en necesidad no pueden ser utilizados para este gasto. Además, no todos los premios y reconocimientos necesitan ser comprados.

Un premio tradicional otorgado por Conferencias y Consejos es el “Premio Sombrero de Copa”. Los criterios para este reconocimiento son determinados por el Consejo local (o Conferencia), y el reconocimiento en sí puede ser tan simple como diseñar e imprimir ustedes mismos sus certificados.

P: Uno de nuestros miembros ha sugerido que para las Visitas Domiciliarias nos asociemos con estudiantes graduados en trabajo social de una Universidad cercana. Muchos de nuestros prójimos que conocemos necesitan múltiples formas de asistencia de diferentes agencias. ¿Está permitido? Los estudiantes ganarían experiencia, pero no se les pagaría, y no serían Vicentinos. Esto parece no estar de acuerdo con nuestro espíritu Vicentino y con las reglas de confidencialidad.

R: Los trabajadores sociales se rigen por todo un conjunto de reglas que pueden no aplicarse por igual para los Vicentinos.  Por lo tanto, para el buen gobierno de SVdP, esta no sería una buena asociación para las Visitas Domiciliarias.  Podría ser bueno el buscar asesoramiento en cuanto a los recursos disponibles para servir a aquellos que vienen a nosotros.

Retaining Your Members (Part 2)

Retaining Your Members (Part 2) 2560 1802 Jill Pioter
  • Involve your regular donors. Regular donors are equal partners in the Society. We are a union of willing hands (Active Members), caring hearts and helping hands (Associate Members) and generous almsgivers (regular donors). Each is separate but equal.Many people are afraid to participate, afraid to meet the poor. They choose to discharge their responsibility to help the poor by writing you a check. While you may need their check to help the poor, your objective should be to tactfully get them involved in person-to-person contact with those in need. Let them find out it’s not stressful when working with another, experienced parishioner. Help them find how it gives them a warm and fuzzy feeling.

    Get them into Home Visits the easy way – with the Back to School program, Thanksgiving or Christmas food box distributions that some Conferences put together.

    Include regular donors in as many activities as you can, especially Masses on feast days of St. Vincent and Blessed Frederic, food and clothing drives, etc. Send all major communications and newsletters to them. This can sometimes convert them to Associate and then Active Full Membership.

  • Provide Recognition. In the business workplace, when someone asks the question, “what do you want from your boss in your job,” the two top answers are always security and recognition.
    • Recognize long-time members (at 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 year and other anniversaries), those who continue to be active past the age of 80, and all retiring members.
    • Recognize your pastor, priests, deacons, and nuns who provide help and support for your programs and/or your Conference. We sometimes forget who pays the electric bill for our pantry.
    • Conduct a “graduation ceremony” when a member completes the Ozanam Orientation. Recognize them in front of the entire Conference at your next meeting.
    • Use a star or other special character on your Conference membership list to indicate members who have completed the Ozanam Orientation.
    • Prepare and publish a list of Conference officers over past years. List all Vincentians who made the Quarter Century Club.
    • Put up a plaque in your pantry with the names of Vincentians who passed to their eternal reward while serving the poor. Add a new name plate each time a member dies, conducting a short prayer service.
  • Recognize the Need for Recovery and Recuperation. Occasionally a member may become dissatisfied or bored with their present assignment. Others may get tired (especially your oldest members), and a few may experience burnout. Remember that a person’s family and job come first, according to the Society’s own Rule.
    Recognize these folks and thank them for the work they have accomplished, and show them how their involvement has helped the people the Conference served and our Society. Ask them for input on the manner in which you conduct your meetings and make assignments. They may have a different perspective, and help you to improve Conference operations. After positively dealing with the situation they find themselves in, discuss other positions which may be more attractive to them.
    Everyone in your Conference will get tired of the “same old thing,” so keep trying new projects and changing (improving) old programs. The attitude, “but we’ve always done it that way” will only insure that your Conference remains a handful of old men and women, as you drive away new and younger people and burn out older ones.
    A perception that an organization is dying is the number one reason why people leave or fail to join an organization. The vibrant Conference will keep existing members and attract new members.
  • Work on (and Pray over) Personality Conflicts. Personality conflicts are inevitable in any group of humans. Yet, if these are not managed, they will cause you to lose at least one of the two protagonists. The President and Spiritual Advisor should try to help resolve any issues between the warring partners. It may be necessary to separate these people until, over time, they get to better know (and respect) each other in new ways. Change Home Visit teams, schedule the Hatfields in at times when the McCoys aren’t there. Time heals all wounds; give it a chance. And pray that the Peace of Christ descends on both of them.
  • Equip Your people to Do Their Job.
    • Information. Your Conference does more than pass out food and money; you provide information which is often essential for neighbors to get back on their feet. Your members must have that information to do their job.
    • Publish a year’s calendar so Active Members, Associate Members, and regular donors, as well as your clergy, Parish Council, and other church ministries, know what the Conference is planning and when. This helps prevent conflicts, helps people reserve dates when you need their participation, and helps communicate the breadth of your Conference work.
    • Adopt and communicate Conference policies and guidelines. Home Visit teams especially must know what latitude they have when working with a family in trouble. Nothing is more frustrating than having the responsibility for a case without the authority required to act. Home Visit teams should know one of three conditions exist when they visit:
      1. That they cannot help a family financially with rent due to lack of funds, and must help in other ways — referrals, information, counseling, extra food, etc.;
      2. That they cannot help a family with rent without the approval of the Conference which meets sometime down the road;
      3. That they can help a family with rent up to “X” dollars without further approval — beyond that amount, Conference approval is required.
    • Necessary referral forms and vouchers (for clothing, gasoline, groceries, furniture) should be available and members instructed on how to properly complete them. The Conference pays its bills faithfully and promptly so vouchers given to guests are honored by thrift stores and other vendors.
  • Recognize the Value of Fellowship and Friendship. Don’t forget to schedule social events. The Society’s second objective requires a friendship relationship among members. People are social beings, and personal relationships help cement one’s commitment to the common work. Sometimes this can be combined with retraining (below).
  • Retraining. Retraining should occur periodically. We all need to be reminded of basic job duties, of things that have become more important in recent years, and of how to handle new forms, procedures, and program changes. Older members not kept up to date can feel “lost” and out of touch. Get all your folks together for refresher training at least every six months. A good way of handling this is to schedule a social activity and combine the two. A summer barbecue can involve socializing and eating, followed by a 90-minute refresher course, or vice versa.
  • Never Forget Spirituality. People joined the Society of St. Vincent de Paul — not the American Cancer Society, or the United Way, or the Red Cross. What separates the Society from these very worthwhile organizations is the fact that we are a faith-based organization; we bring spiritual values to the people we serve.
    Burnout is common after a relatively short time in most other volunteer agencies because the members don’t have a belief system to sustain them. We can always fall back on our faith. That is the reason we have members well into their 80s and even 90s who have been serving in the dining rooms, stores, and other special works for more than 50 years.

Whether old or new, your members have a “thirst” for spirituality. They need to be reminded of the spiritual aspects of their work. If you only talk about the “numbers” — boxes delivered, money raised, families visited, hours worked — you will find members losing focus.

Even in the very best Conferences, teams experience discouraging cases. They “get taken” by fraudulent couples. And, after a series of thankless guests, greedy applicants, lazy individuals and indifferent bureaucrats, those without a spiritual foundation will be “lost” to despair and discouragement.

Our spirituality is our anchor. Keep it present at all times. First things first. Never become a Conference of just “numbers.”

07-06-23 Questions and Answers

07-06-23 Questions and Answers 1200 628 Jill Pioter
Q: Is there is a policy or recommendation or guideline that “home” Conferences/Councils are supposed to pay costs of participation of their representatives in national-level meetings? 

A: The Rule, Part III, Statute 28 states: Vincentians entrusted to undertake previously and duly authorized offices, missions, or tasks for the Society are entitled to the refund of the expenses incurred. This is more than just an entitlement. Within the Spirit of Society, all the works of the Society are works of the group and not the individual. If a member does not get reimbursed for expenses, the work becomes an individual effort, and this often causes confusion when members then do what they want rather than what is agreed to by the Conference or Council. This does not directly address National and Regional meetings; however, in Part II of the RULE, International Statute 7.4: “Any matter that is not specifically governed by any Parts of the Rule and Statutes shall be governed by Tradition and, in the final instance, by the decision issued by the Board of the Council General.” That said, page 136 of the 2002 version of the Manual states: “In accord with the long-established practice, the individual Councils and Isolated Conferences are expected to assume financial responsibility for their delegates and committee members to attend meetings as necessary.”

Q: As far as I know, we have Active and Associate Members as the only two types. But on the National Members Database, the choices are Active, Associate, Contributing, and Volunteer. Are there really four categories of members?

A: Active and Associate Members are clearly defined and are included in Annual Report statistics. Contributing Members do exist and should be recognized in the database if they are significant donors. They are no longer listed in the Annual Report because many Conferences decided to include all parishioners in the count, which overinflated the numbers. Volunteers are not regularly associated with the Conference and help only on occasion. This category works well for Conferences that operate special works or stores where you may have people helping out with community service hours.

Spanish Translation

P: ¿Existe una póliza, recomendación o directriz según la cual se supone que las Conferencias/Consejos “de origen” deben pagar los costos de participación de sus representantes en las reuniones a nivel nacional?

R: La Regla, Parte III, Estatuto 28 establece: Los Vicentinos encargados de llevar a cabo cargos, misiones o tareas previamente y debidamente autorizadas para la Sociedad tienen derecho al reembolso de los gastos incurridos. Esto es más que un derecho. Dentro del Espíritu de la Sociedad, todos los trabajos de la Sociedad son trabajos del grupo y no del individuo. Si un miembro no recibe un reembolso de sus gastos, el trabajo se convierte en un esfuerzo individual, y esto a menudo causa confusión cuando los miembros hacen lo que quieren en lugar de lo acordado por la Conferencia o el Consejo. Esto no se refiere directamente a las reuniones Nacionales y Regionales; sin embargo, en la Parte II de la REGLA, Estatuto Internacional 7.4: “Cualquier asunto que no se rija específicamente por ninguna Parte de la Regla y los Estatutos se regirá por la Tradición y, en última instancia, por la decisión emitida por la Mesa Directiva del Consejo General”. Dicho esto, en la página 36 de la versión de 2002 del Manual, se dice: “De acuerdo con la práctica establecida desde hace mucho tiempo, se espera que los Consejos individuales y las Conferencias Aisladas asuman la responsabilidad financiera de que sus delegados y miembros de los comités asistan a las reuniones cuando sea necesario”.

P: Hasta donde yo sé, tenemos Miembros Activos y Asociados como los únicos 2 categorías. Pero en la Base de Datos Nacional para los Miembros las opciones son Activo, Asociado, Contribuyente y Voluntario. ¿Hay realmente 4 categorías de miembros?

R: Los Miembros Activos y Asociados están claramente definidos y están incluidos en las estadísticas del Informe Anual. Los Miembros contribuyentes existen y deben ser reconocidos en la base de datos si son donantes significativos. Ya no figuran en el Informe Anual porque muchas Conferencias decidieron incluir a todos los feligreses de su parroquia en el conteo, lo que infló demasiado los números. Los voluntarios no están asociados regularmente con la Conferencia y ayudan sólo en ocasiones. Esta categoría funciona bien para Conferencias que operan Trabajos Especiales o tiendas donde puede haber personas que hacen horas de servicio comunitario ayudando.

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