Previous entry: The National Networker Show: Chris Pareja

Next entry: The National Networker Show: Rick Weaver

The National Networker Show: Cheryl Honey

posted by Adam J. Kovitz on Feb 21, 2008 | Comments (1) | Permalink | Trackback URL

Cheryl Honey

Cheryl Honey is a Certified Prevention Specialist and a pioneer of Community Weaving practices. She designed a community empowerment approach that taps grassroots resources and mobilizes the strengths and assets of caring people committed to creating a more civil society. She is a dynamic speaker and facilitator who captivates an audience with her community building expertise. Her knowledge, experience, humor, and interactive presentations spark a call to action to save our children’s future.
Cheryl founded the Family Support Network (FSN) in February, 1992. Over a period of ten years, she built the FSN into a nationally recognized “bottom-up” community mobilization strategy to weave a community web of support for all families and children across America. This exciting network was implemented in other communities around the country including Washington, Idaho and Colorado. The FSN received a grant from the Institute for Civil Society for a pilot project to replicate FSN’s through systems in 1997 and establish an FSN Institute in the Puget Sound. The Lifetime Channel featured a story about the Family Support Network in a segment for New Attitudes which aired January, 1999. Today she is the President of Excel Strategies, a Washington based corporation and consults around the country on how to create a more civil society through volunteerism.

Cheryl has trained and certified over 800 Community Weavers and Family Advocates and facilitated over 100 trainings, for volunteers and staff. She’s had the privilege of presenting workshops at various conferences around the country and Canada, including the Family Resource Coalition’s National Conference in Chicago; Building on Family Strengths in Portland, OR; Neighborhoods USA in Sacramento; and, the Marketplace for New Ideas in Houston. Canada recognized her innovative approach to community development at the Designing Community Health Conference in Alberta B.C in November, 1997. Cheryl is the recipient of the prestigious Giraffe Award for sticking her neck out to provide a solution to empower families and strengthen communities. In October, 2002 she was selected as an Ambassador for Peace by the Interreligious and International Federation for World Peace and in July, 2003 she was presented with the Excellence in Leadership award by Senator Davis on Capital Hill. The ABCD Institute at Northwestern University recognized the FSN model as an exemplary capacity building approach. The FSN was referenced in “Parents Leading the Way” by the National Family Resource Coalition in Chicago. Cheryl served as an advisor to the Washington State Family Policy Council, was a member of the state’s Family Preservation Steering Committee and is currently serving on Washington State’s Co-Occuring Disorders Interagency Committee. She graduated from Washington State University’s Cooperative Extension Family Community Leadership Program, the Neighborhood Leadership Institute, a program of the Center for Ethical Leadership and Mediation Training at the Dispute Resolution Center in Everett, Washington.

Articles about Cheryl and the Family Support Network have been published in numerous newspapers around the country including two front-page articles in the Seattle Times. “Bothell volunteer grew her group into 800 pairs of helping hands” on February 8, 1997 and on March 2, 1996, an article entitle d “Substitute for Welfare: Volunteerism a Better Way?” The insight she gained from working one on one with families and local agencies indicated the need for a greater understanding of social and economic issues impacting the welfare and safety of children and families. She graduated with honors and delivered the commencement address at Edmonds Community College in June, 2003. She received certificates in Alcohol and Chemical Dependency Counseling; Mental Health Case Manager; Human Services Case Management; Mediation; A/DIS, and Family & Community Leadership. She received her Bachelors in Liberal Arts from Antioch University in Seattle in Transformative Community Building and Human Services in December, 2004. Her inspirational story about how she transformed her own life and her community inspires diverse audiences all across America.

Cheryl specializes in designing innovative community building strategies that increase community capacity and engages citizens to work together to improve their quality of life and create a more civil society. She is a valuable resource to state and federal agencies, organizations, communities, schools and faith-based organizations who are developing programs in volunteer recruitment, leadership development, civic engagement, prevention and community mobilization initiatives.


FILED IN: Communication, Human Resources & Employment, Team Development, News & Events, Networking, New Thinking, Podcast

Comments & Trackbacks

  1. Baby name meaning and origin for Cheryl Description for the baby name Cheryl, the origins of the name and its meaning
    Tracked on: Baby-Parenting.com (72.9.228.239) at 2008 12 29 06:52:50
  2. Community Weavers attend a 3-day Training Institute to start Community Weaving. They learn how to weave the human and tangible resources of the grassroots with the skills and expertise of formal systems to build and bridge social capital…Personal Injury Lawyer Houston

    Posted by Personal Injury Lawyer Houston on Aug 3, 2009 at 11:02 PM
  3. green smoke discount Smallbiz America :: The National Networker Show: Cheryl Honey
    Tracked on: green smoke discount (69.175.25.21) at 2013 05 10 20:26:45

What do you think?

Name:
Email:
Location:
URL:


Remember my personal information
Notify me of follow-up comments?

Your math skills help us prevent comment spam.
What is the sum of 5 and 9?

Previous entry: The National Networker Show: Chris Pareja

Next entry: The National Networker Show: Rick Weaver