Donate it to the library or a local food bank. Simple community building.
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I'll echo food banks. $10,000 isn't much money for a municipality of more than 100 people, but a food bank might be where that money goes the furthest.
Knowing from my local outfit, while they would of course accept a donation of actual food bought with that money, they can do much more with the money than the food it buys in the grocery shops.
They do that by reaching out to vendors themselves and getting discounts that would put Costco out of business. I once heard that monetary donations being stretched 5x is typical, oftentimes going 10x or more.
From some unrelated nonprofit experience, companies seem way more cool with discounting goods and services than donating money. Probably something to do with contribution profit margin, where selling some more at a loss is still better as it covers some costs you have anyway. That plus creative tax write offs, and they probably earn money from giving you a huge discount AND feel good about it / get free PR
This is for sure the best option. Not only can they use it most effectively, but the money won't expire like food, they'd be able to fetch staple foods that don't get donated often.
I'm not feeling up to researching this statement for a broader audience (in this moment), but I can attest to what I learned many, many years ago while I was volunteering at my local food bank. I was informed by the gal who ran the food bank warehouse that monetary donations are by far the best thing you can give a food bank. You touched on it, that money doesn't expire. So they don't have to deal with the influx of food donations as often or as drastically.
Just like @JoshuaFalken@lemmy.world shared, an established food bank can easily stretch that same dollar for more food. I recall the gal at my local food bank informing me one day that she can buy food for 2/3rds of the store price with no sweat. I think she said the best she ever scored was 2/5ths of the store price on meat, as it was going to go bad in a week or so. And thankfully, they had plenty of county based food pantries that were able to distribute that meat to a lot of people in need. So not only could they save on purchasing, but they were also in the loop on overstock, near expiration food pushes, and also, farmers would donate whatever small amount of leftover food they had. Not to mention elderly people would had grown some squash, cucumbers, and even green onions in their garden, to be donated to the county food bank.
Sharing this actually has me remembering that there are plenty of unsung local heroes. Plenty of people who do good and don't ask for recognition. So while the world seems like it's all going to hell, there are plenty of good doers out there still. We just don't hear about them. Fighting the good fight to keep us all progressing forward.
My city is fairly large and their recreational projects usually have budgets in the 10s of millions. I don't think there is much I can do on that front. That being said, I think this question could be better framed as "to make your community a better place to live". From that angle, I would have to get in touch with my HOA (I know) and see about opening a community garden with that initial investment.
That's likely the best anyone can do with that amount of money.
For that kind of money you're really only talking about minor maintenance or beautification projects. Maybe funding the cleanup of a local area or two. Fresh coat of paint on a couple buildings. Maybe a mural. We're talking small scale here. Which of course isn't nothing. Small steps are what lead to bigger steps.
So personally I would probably spend it on a local park near me that needs heavy updating. Maybe redo the walking trail and if there's enough money left over plant some more trees.
Drop a bunch of solar meshtashtic nodes on roofs in waterproof casings.
Free Citywide Cell Service basically. Fuck the telecoms. 😁
Can’t fence in my backyard for 10k. And it’s not big. But giving it to the food banks would be my plan.
This amount is peanuts compared to the operating budget of the city I live in...
Realistically? I was pleasantly surprised by someone trying to make little tree pit gardens on the street where I live. $10,000 might be enough to make some of those on a few residential streets and kickstart a local initiative for the community to keep maintaining them. There may be some leftover money for acquiring a few communal trash bins to help with trash issues around the neighborhood as well
Very little you could do to a city with 10k. Probably feed a bunch of people for a little while.
Or plant a food forest with fruit trees, berry bushes etc. good for the environment, for recreation and for teaching kids about where food comes from while supplying some free food for whoever wants to do some picking.
Plant trees
I keep toying with the idea of gorilla planting trees in the neighborhood. Make them look like they were installed by the county, complete with mulch and a small fence.
If you're in the US, you'll probably get away with it. In the last two neighborhoods I've lived in we had people who planted trees of their own accord and no one lifted a finger to stop them. (Which I'm happy about.)
I'd rather allocate that $10k to some kind of feasibility study, to see what really should be prioritized when a much bigger budget is made available, since I don't really trust myself to know what an entire town really needs urgently
But if I had to be selfish, maybe we could fund an OpenStreetMap mapathon to help improve the online map of the town
Could not only improve ease of navigation of the town, but also get a clearer idea of how the space is used, which may give better insight on what might be worth redesigning in a larger project
$10k isn't a lot for city improvement, but it'd pay for an art installation or two.
I've run a lot of art workshops for mixed age groups and adults. No one is ever unhappy after making art together, it's a wholesome way to get out with friends or meet new people, or just learn a new skill.
Paid workshops charge $20-100, which is an unnecessary expense for people these days.
The initial investment in supplies can be as low as $5/person depending on the type of art, locations can be cheap to free (libraries, community centers, quiet nights at bars and restaurants,) and if you can't run the workshop yourself, many artists would be happy to do it for a small honorarium.
For 10K, you could run dozens of free art workshops for a year or two.
If I also had a fair bit of time, community micro-grants are my favorite. Solicit ideas for improvements, offering 100-1000 bucks each. Select several, widely publicize what will be done.
Next favored, run a citizen assembly on a community issue (if you can do it cheap, have some money to allocate as an agenda item).
Finally, if the point is to ask what I want done... Right now it is probably homeless shelters and food pantries in the US. Lots of grants drying up.
See if I can bribe enough local officials to pass an amendment making bike lanes mandatory on all new road construction projects. Sadly, even at the local level I don't think $10,000 would be enough.
10k will cover your needs while you wage a gorilla war on the same local officials. Hard to run for office if you're dealing with your house burning down and threats about not having bike lanes.
Funds match. Get every large company that does business in your city to match it.
Our town has a simple little amphitheater in a park, and it NEVER gets used.
For $10,000, you could set up and locally advertise a couple of fun movie nights, or music festivals with local bands, or a battle of the bands, etc. Sell refreshments and snacks, and use the money to generate the next one, etc.
Local entertainment, local participation, great for the community.
Set up a stand and give away as much ice cream as I can get for 10K
Honestly right now food is at an all time high, finding local food banks would be top of the list.
The problem with 10,000 is that any contractor is going to want to make a minimum profit of 10,000 as soon as they know it's for the government.
So I'd have to pay myself that $10,000 and go around fixing dead traffic lights.
10,000 is probably not enough. So:
- I would invest said money for a few years, in order to make it a lot more money and now:
- fund a trust for our local public library to become 100% independent from any power grab/censoring/book banning temptation. And, nope, it wouldn't matter the slightest from what political side or from what moral ground said attempt would originate from.
- Promote reading among the general population. Focusing on the younger generations, because they're our future and, even though it's starting to fade away, they're supposed to be the ones willing to make the effort of learning and be educated, but I would also not exclusively cater to younger people. I mean, unlike with kids, I tend to think that given a chance a vast majority of adults would hardly change their behavior/opinions, as they're already set in their path and most of them are way too proud to ever admit they could have been wrong, but I would still want to give them the opportunity.
Edit: typos.
I can't imagine what investments you think would be able to fund any of that off of $10,000. Invest for a few years you said, so what at best you might have $12,000?
I live in New York so practically nothing
A common eagle scout project where I grew up was surrounding vulnerable trees with beaver wire.
Make it $500,000. That makes more sense.
Skate park.
We had one when I was young but it got demolished to build a supermarket. It was devastating.
Can't do much with 10k... invest in an initiative to make the city more bicycle friendly.
bike lanes and concrete instead of ugly asphalt and pedestrian crossing signals
pay myself 10k to move
I'd give out vouchers for getting stray cats fixed. We have a huge problem with feral cat colonies.
Bike lanes and clearing brush around the dirt paths where sidewalks should be.
Cant really do much. Besides create jobs but for that 10k is also too little
Try to get the bike route blocked off for through vehicle traffic around the area where I was disabled.
I wasn't on the actual bike route. I had detoured to stop by a bank on my way to work, but the way I chose to get back to the bike route was to just take the highway because the traffic on the bike route is not a significant safety improvement worth an extra quarter mile of additional distance. If the route had no vehicle through traffic, I would have gone out of my way. There are several points where blocking traffic makes no difference. The only people driving that way are fools following nav systems, people that are lost, and asshats that have no spacial logic skills.
Other than that, probably give the money to the thrift store charity men's shelter here in town.
bike lanes.
That's vastly insufficient even to begin planning any significant improvement, so... spend it on local businesses, I suppose. 🤷♂️
Man 10k..... Can't even afford to pave 1000ft of single lane road..... ummmm
I dunno, maybe like pay to install 2 ADA crossing ramps? Can 10k get me 2? I think it might....
My town has $20 million of debt in our education department alone that we didn't know about until this year after a board of education administration change 😭 so I think 10,000 might not make too much of a difference to them. That being said I'd probably donate to a local foodbank
Buying books for public schools directly, specifically for regular and SPED classes because our Department of Education is corrupt.
I remember being in the regular class of public highschool and seeing that there's only one highly used book per 10 people. Sure the sections "for smart kids" were complete in books, often updated, but regular and special ed students were often lacking resources, and the Department Head of SPED even told me that the higher ups of the school were prejudiced against SPED students, and they couldn't get funding for those students even for talent show events because a higher up said, "they have no future, so why bother?", the specific reason I was contacted because I was identified as a Special Needs learner who had a bright (conventional) academic future as well as achievements, so I was encouraged to help the Department in proving prejudice otherwise.
I felt it was unfair that all the investments of education were to be given to already highly performing children. The reason why I wasn't even in those sections for smart kids is because I was 1 or 2 points below the required report card grade in elementary, and that was when my mental health barely recovered from bullying. The reason I was bullied was due to classist bullshit (was relatively poor in a private school) and being neurodivergent.
IDK how much one of those billboards with the rotating ad strips that come together to make up and ad would cost to rent out ad space on, but maybe advertising positive affirmations would probably be the best I can do with that amount. At least from what comes to mind right away. I live close enough to one at a busy intersection that I could watch people and see how they react to them.
As much as I hate ads and billboards, I will admit they can be effective considering I always watched that specific billboard growing up whenever I passed by it.