DIANA
O'NEILL
Executive Director, Long Island Volunteer Center
By Maureen Traxler
Diana O'Neill's eyes sparkle
when she talks about fitting girls for their prom dresses and seeing
their happy faces as they find accessories and shoes, too. It's like
"being a fairy godmother," she says.
O'Neill is speaking, of course, about the Long Island Volunteer Center's
Prom Boutique, now in its 13th year, which provides prom dresses for
girls who would otherwise not be able to afford them. Gowns, assorted
handbags, lipsticks, jewelry Ð they're all donations collected
by the Volunteer Center throughout the year. A dozen seamstresses
donate their time at the April Prom Boutique events to make sure the
girls get the right fit, and a DJ keeps the atmosphere bubbly. Prom
Boutique was recently "adopted" by Weight Watchers, and
as its clients slim down, they donate their fancy dresses Ð 250
this year alone. O'Neill calls the events "memory markers for
the girls," a time to celebrate their accomplishments and hard
work in school.
"Prom Boutique captures the imagination" of those who donate
items or volunteer, O'Neill continues, and that, along with the Volunteer
Center's connections with organizations and agencies that service
at risk youth and children with special needs, makes the event a success.
In its first year, Prom Boutique outfitted 35 girls; last year, the
Volunteer Center sponsored three events and outfitted 880 girls for
their big day.
For Prom Boutique, the Center partners with fashion and marketing
students from Nassau Community College and the Social Work Club at
C.W. Post. O'Neill says it's a great opportunity "to teach another
generation how to plan a program around a community need" and
the students gather real world experience soliciting donations, and
promoting and planning a special event.
The Long Island Volunteer Center was founded by Joan Imhof, a longtime
advocate for volunteer efforts on Long Island. When Imhof's Nassau
County Office of Volunteers was defunded in the early 1990s, she continued
to receive calls for volunteers at home. In response, she contacted
the Points of Light Foundation, and through grants from the Mott and
Kellogg Foundations, she opened the doors of the Volunteer Center.
And within a year, she tapped the services of a relative newcomer
to Long Island who brought with her a history of volunteerismÑDiana
O'Neill.
Growing up in Virginia, O'Neill's mom modeled examples of personal
giving. Although her mom worked on "Capitol Hill" by day,
she had time to help Vietnamese refugees acclimate to life in the
states, and at night, run a children's shelter.
O'Neill, too, had a connection to Points of Light. In 1988, she was
working for the U.S. Treasury department in Austin, Texas, when she
heard the Republican nominee for president, George H.W. Bush, give
a speech in which he called upon Americans to live the spirit of volunteerism.
He spoke of the "thousand points of light,"all the community
organizations that are spread like stars throughout the nation, doing
good. She was captivated by his words and, drawing on her degree in
accounting from Mount St. Mary's University in Emmitsburg, Maryland,
and receiving some administrative leave time monthly, she began teaching
women at the San Antonio Women's Shelter how to set up a bank account
and formulate a personal or household budget. She was "exhilarated"
that she had been given an opportunity to "touch another human
life."
When O'Neill and her husband Peter relocated to Garden City in 1991,
she began volunteering with the local Junior League, where she says
she learned about nonprofit organizations, how they address issues
through community resources, collaborate and build networks, develop
a strategic plan, budget and set goals. She joined the Volunteer Center
as Vice President of Projects, and with a number of stalwart volunteers,
built up the organization.
One of the Center's major tasks is to maintain a list of nonprofit
organizations and agencies that are seeking volunteers, and "make
the bridge," says O'Neill, between them and the individuals and
groups seeking opportunities. The list is by category from animal
assistance to social services. Contact names and numbers, as well
as appropriate web addresses, are provided, and organizations can
join the list by calling the Center at (516) 564-5482.
The Center supports corporate community service through LIVE, the
Long Island Volunteer Enterprise, which matches corporate volunteer
teams with nonprofits that are in need of extra hands to complete
a project. It also supports the Postal Letter Carriers Food Drive
and other holiday collections. O'Neill says the Center will be "going
virtual" this year with an online presence. They have targeted
National Volunteer Week (April 23-29) for their official connection
to www.1-800-volunteer.org, a national system specializing in recruiting
and engaging volunteers to meet the complex needs of nonprofits. Through
the website, potential volunteers can check out opportunities at their
convenience, and agencies will have the capability to upload their
information and needs. The Center will still be on hand to help people
navigate the volunteer process.
"Volunteers are a working asset of any not-for-profit organization,"
remarks O'Neill who claims, "Volunteerism isn't nice; it's needed."
She says that in recent years, and especially post-9/11, people talk
more about volunteering, and seem to have a greater sense of purpose
and desire to be part of something. She hears people ask: "How
can I, who have so much, give to people and programs that can benefit?"
and she adds, "The motivation is so pure, so real."
In 2001, O'Neill was a member of the regional steering committee to
support and celebrate the United Nations International Year of Volunteers,
the result of a request made by Japan, which was overwhelmed by the
outpouring of generosity following the earthquake in that country.
When the year was over, thoughts turned to building on the momentum
and the idea for a Long Island Volunteer Hall of Fame took root. The
effort recognizes the humanitarian spirit of volunteer founders of
nonprofit organizations whose vision, dedication and drive address
community needs and improve quality of life. Since its inception in
2003, 54 individuals, chosen from 12 categories of service spanning
the gamut from culture to hunger and homelessness, have been inducted
into the Hall of Fame.
O'Neill acknowledges the offer by New York State Parks Commissioner
Bernadette Castro to give the Hall of Fame permanent reflection at
Bethpage State Park through the placement of benches with inscribed
plaques in honor of inductees at the Carlyle on the Green clubhouse
and the grounds of the Blue, Green and Yellow golf course tees. The
benches will generate a visual display of the Volunteer Center's portable
trade-show size presentation board that documents each honoree, his/her
biography, contributions and photograph.
The Long Island Volunteer Center is also a member agency of NVOAD,
National Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster. O'Neill shares
the co-chairmanship of volunteer planning with United Way. The team
includes, among others, the Red Cross, Salvation Army, and Nassau
and Suffolk County Offices of Emergency Management. The goal is to
formulate a plan to manage spontaneous volunteers and channel people
where the need is greatest during a disaster or emergency.
"It's an awesome responsibility," notes O'Neill, "to
be part of creating protocol and methodology. But it's very rewarding."
O'Neill says that she realized the true meaning of giving and volunteering
in one incident that took place at the Mary Brennan Soup Kitchen in
Hempstead. For three-and-a-half years, she volunteered there two days
a week. She'd set up the clothing outreach that was part of the lunch-hour
service. Every few months, they'd hold a free Flee Market, and the
INN's guests would receive a large bag in which they could put any
items they wanted. She was working the housewares table when a day
laborer walked in. "Can I help you," she said, and he responded
that he needed one fork. She spread out a wide selection, which he
perused, and then he selected a fork, put it in his front pocket and
walked out.
"In that one instance of human contact I learned that the gift
we give as individuals is unconditional," says O'Neill. "The
opportunity to connect with another human being is so profound and
we're invited to it. If we're not open to the opportunity, we could
miss it." She adds: "Volunteerism isn't what you give or
what you get. It's what you become."
O'Neill and her husband Peter, a dermatologist in private practice
in Garden City, have a son Colin, who is studying environmental science
at Stony Brook University. In addition to her many volunteer endeavors,
including Literacy Nassau, she likes to read and cherishes "making
a home," because home is the first place where the heart is.