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June 4, 2019

United Way and Girl Scouts Partner on United2Read Literacy Program

Ossining Girl Scouts collect 3,000 books and assemble 1,000 reading kits being distributed to preschools in Ossining

Ossining, N.Y, (April, 2019) –Volunteers from Girl Scouts Heart of the Hudson in Ossining collected 3,000 books and helped build reading kits for low-income children as part of the United Way of Westchester and Putnam’s United2Read program.


The program seeks to promote literacy and boost grade-level reading among low-income children. Sixty percent of low-income children do not have even one children’s book in the home and only 38 percent of children in Westchester and Putnam are reading at grade level by the end of 3rd grade.

“Our aim is to generate a relationship to reading rather than create a one-time book gifting event,” said United Way of Westchester and Putnam (UWWP) CEO Alana Sweeny. “We want the families to develop their own library of books that can be shared with the children.”

To take our impact to a new level, UWWP developed a partnership with the Girl Scouts Heart of the Hudson Council (GSHH).

“It’s part of a larger vision to combine United Way’s focus on early literacy with the G.I.R.L. power and community service ethic of Girl Scouts across the Hudson Valley region,” said Octavia Ford, Director of Volunteer Engagement & Partnerships, Girl Scouts Heart of the Hudson.

On March 16, the Scouts helped clean and repair books as well as assemble 1,000 reading kits (with three books per kit) for United Way to distribute to Head Starts and other preschools in the Ossining community several times throughout the year.

Over the past three years, United Way of Westchester and Putnam (UWWP) collected and distributed nearly 15,000 books that were distributed to 3,000 underprivileged children, from birth to age five.

About United Way of Westchester and Putnam

United Way of Westchester and Putnam (UWWP) helps residents who are financially insecure to become self-sufficient and thrive in a stronger community. Our 2-1-1 helpline takes nearly 80,000 calls a year, providing online resources to resolve everything from basic to critical to urgent needs – heating, food, shelter, tax assistance, mortgage questions, childcare, natural disaster and crisis calls. We provide job skills training and financial education to adults. And we help to make sure children are reading on grade level by 3rd grade, a critical marker of academic success and future viability in our society. UWWP partners with governments, businesses, non-profits and community leaders to solve complex problems. We provide capacity building training as well as physical resources to other agencies for their own operation and those in their care. We understand that the community and residents must be interwoven, in a supportive way, to help everyone succeed.