2024 Top-Rated Nonprofit

Sandy Hook Promise Foundation

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Nonprofit Overview

Causes: Children & Youth, Health, Mental Health

Mission: Sandy Hook Promise (SHP) is a national nonprofit organization based in Newtown, Connecticut and led by several family members whose loved ones were killed in the tragic mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School on December 14, 2012. The mission of Sandy Hook Promise is to educate and empower youth and adults to prevent violence in schools, homes, and communities. Through our proven, evidence-informed Know the Signs programs and sensible, bipartisan school and gun safety legislation, we teach young people and adults to recognize, intervene, and get help for individuals who may be socially isolated and/or at risk of hurting themselves or others. SHP is a moderate, above-the-politics organization that supports sensible program and policy solutions that address the “human side” of gun violence by preventing individuals from ever getting to the point of picking up a firearm to hurt themselves or others. Our words, actions, and impact nationwide are intended to honor all victims of gun violence by turning our tragedy into a moment of transformation. For more information, visit www.sandyhookpromise.org.

Community Stories

15 Stories from Volunteers, Donors & Supporters

6

LiaJill, Volunteer

Rating: 5

09/02/2021

The work Sandy Hook Promise does is designed to create a safer and kinder world. Inspired to continue the legacy of the 26 innocent children and brave adults taken senselessly by gun violence, SHP provides evidence based strategies to combat future tragedies. Programs such as, “Starts with Hello” offer alternatives to children feeling isolated or potentially alienating others. The compassion of the founders, staff and volunteers is phenomenal. I’m proud to be a Promise Leader and to support a cause I deeply believe in. Gun violence is preventable! SHP is working tirelessly to save lives.

2

Sh..490 General Member of the Public

Rating: 5

09/14/2023

This is a very vigilant group who dedicate their lives to protecting our children by using programs that bring awareness to the problem we are facing in America. They use a lot of different platforms to fight for our children’s safety by petitioning for policies to be put in place for better gun control laws. We need these people and many more to continue to fight against these acts of violence and the need to change current laws in place.

1

matthewrb General Member of the Public

Rating: 5

09/13/2023

This is such an important cause to be active in and I love the effort and commitment that this team brings. Our children (and we) deserve more in response to gun violence, my heart ached every time I think about the loss that these families have endured, whatever we can do to make sure that others don't suffer the same fate, let's get active.

1

michyrttg General Member of the Public

Rating: 5

06/29/2022

Help others have been gun violence and guns control and panic attacks and panic attack and panic attacks

2

Blnqta General Member of the Public

Rating: 5

06/09/2022

They are great at spreading the message of education and gun reform. They have sensible action items that everyone can do to help. I support Sandy Hook Promise.

2

petrov General Member of the Public

Rating: 5

06/08/2022

A dedicated and meaningful group that is doing something so needed- working to protect children from gun violence.

3

wiputnam General Member of the Public

Rating: 4

06/07/2022

I’ve been interacting with Sandy Hook Promise for just a short period of time, but their mission is critical and the resources they provide to try to combat gun violence in America are truly needed. More people should invest time in seeing what things they can do, even on a small scale. SHP makes it super easy to get involved. Check it out!

2

Deusemaior1 General Member of the Public

Rating: 5

06/07/2022

When I heard about all the innocent lives that was lost in such a premature and violent way I felt compelled and companionate to hep as much as I can.
I am against gun and violence and those two should never be used in a same sentence.
We need more protection and care for our kids and not lobbying for guns.
SHP makes a great job in delivering information and awareness in the American community. Stay strong!

2

ENDTHESTUPIDITY General Member of the Public

Rating: 5

06/07/2022

I’m extremely sorry to hear that nothing is being done after so many continue to die from gun violence. Defenders of the gun laws say IT’S NOT THE GUNS ITS THE PEOPLE. But there are mentally ill people in every country but you don’t hear about massacres like this in other countries. IT’S NOT JUST THE PEOPLE ITS THE GUNS!!!!

1

mcmahon.shaunarose General Member of the Public

Rating: 5

06/07/2022

The Sandy Hook Promise is an organization near and dear to my heart. Their mission is to end school shootings and honor all victims of gun violence. This is something that needs to happen in our country! The shootings need to end. Enough is enough. I encourage everyone reading this to do what they can to support this organization and cause.

2

tashatrink General Member of the Public

Rating: 5

06/07/2022

I recently wanted to take action in regards to the violence in schools. I did an internet search and I discovered Sandy Hook Promise. They have wonderful programs and provide monthly tasks that volunteers can perform to make an impact in the fight against violence in schools. This is a great organization!

3 karenflam

karenflam General Member of the Public

Rating: 5

09/01/2021

Gun violence is on the rise in our schools, places of worship and on our streets.
SHP is so important to ad

4

ChelseaBivens General Member of the Public

Rating: 5

10/23/2019

It's heartbreaking! I am proud your keeping this out there in media. People who never experienced this cannot imagine what it's like and that's okay we are just fortunate for the time being. Your strength and advocating to help save others is awesome! You got guts to face the process it takes to create change. I admire you for it. Thank you.

12

Daniel Harris General Member of the Public

Rating: 1

09/17/2019

I think that this particular site is a scam. I believe in preventing gun violence. However, I sometimes multiple Emails in a day asking for money. I have lost count of the number of the number of times that I have clicked on Unsubscribe, only to continue to get Emails asking for money. I have even tried contacting Sandy Hook on Facebook and by sending Emails. Nothing works. If they are not even telling the truth about being able to Unsubscribe, then I doubt that they are telling the truth about anything, especially where the money is going. I would avoid donating to this site.

7

Bonnie Mac Laughlin C. General Member of the Public

Rating: 5

08/15/2019

I have followed this foundation since that horrific day in 2014 when children died in school. As a former teacher, I always wanted my classroom to be a safe place for all those to enter. Sadly, times have changed and that is no longer true.

On one of my many trips back to Cape Cod, I took the exit off 84 for Sandy Hook. Something told me that I needed to visit the site and pay my respects, as a teacher and fellow human being. I approached the entrance to the long road to the new school and saw a very small sign with the school name on it. Usually these signs are quite large but in this day and age, towns do not want to advertise the whereabouts of a school. As I turned into the entrance road to the school, I came upon barricades across the road which impeded by progress and needed prior identification to open. I stopped the car and sat and just cried for what seemed like a long time. To be barricaded from visiting an elementary school has become our new normal and it saddens my heart. No longer a safe haven of learning, we need barricades and bars to be safe while young children learn. This is not the way I want children of American to live
their young lives and it behooves all of us to stand tall and say, "No more".....

So I follow Sandy Hook Promise Foundation and cheer them on as they go forward for the good of all children......let's all join them in their quest for safety and security for our children.....

15

Penny_C General Member of the Public

Rating: 5

04/22/2016

“I’m going to shoot you. I’m going to kill you.” Tom yelled at me while pointing the pistol at me. I slowly rose up from the couch, frantically yelled “put the gun down, you can hurt someone” and made my way to the bathroom nearby. Locked inside with the towels and scented soaps, I noticed the telephone on the counter. This was the 80s, and a phone in the bathroom was an uncommon sight. Without that phone to call my dad, and the parents of the boy I was babysitting – I could have become one of accidental shooting statistics now reported weekly across the United States.

Thirty-plus years later, I am the mother of two school aged children. Like many, I reached new levels of despair open learning that 28 people were killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown CT. The shooter, Adam Lanza committed matricide, followed by murdering twenty children ages 7 and younger, six school staff members, and then committed suicide.

In the three years following Sandy Hook, I got involved in the cause to reduce gun violence. To me, this meant being vocal about my stance on gun law reform. I donated to the advocacy group founded by Gabby Giffords and Mark Kelly, following her survival of an Arizona Mass Shooting. I posted my views on Facebook, I spoke with friends and family. I thought I was doing enough.

On October 1, 2015 – a shooter at Umpqua Community College stormed the campus killing nine and committing suicide in the process. This time upon hearing the news, something changed. I questioned what good I was doing. I doubted how throwing money at advocacy groups, and voicing my opinion on Facebook was making a difference. But what had really changed was….I wasn’t horrified. In fact, I felt numb. I became fearful of desensitization. Was I indifferent? In an attempt to rally myself back to a place of being shocked – I watched a documentary produced by Nightline regarding the NRA’s rise to power. I’d hoped I would recharge my resolve, and generate new ideas on how to “solve our gun violence” problem.

But instead, I sat broken. Defeated.

It’s no use. The NRA has won. Americans, we love our guns. We can’t win. It’s over.

Head in hands, I cried and quit the fight.

The next morning, as a brand new day often does, I found myself staring at an opportunity. With Facebook’s Suggested Page fairies sprinkling their pixie dust on my screen – a beautiful green tree – with leaves made of handprints caught my eye. I spent the next several hours educating myself on the Sandy Hook Promise (www.sandyhookpromise.org), and rediscovered my soul.

Sandy Hook Promise spoke to me, in a way that other efforts hadn’t been able to. It provided a vehicle for volunteering my time, not just my money and social network. I could get directly involved in my community.

I loved how Sandy Hook Promise’s programs were heavily weighted on prevention – not waging war on gun lobbies or alienating responsible gun owners.

I loved that the focus was on mental health first aid programs. That the definition of gun violence was inclusive of suicide prevention & unintentional shootings. That the programs are predominately youth led. Volunteering and spending time with kids – teaching them how to be inclusive of other kids, how to recognize mental crisis in their friends and classmates, how to #saysomething to a trusted adult when they have witnessed a potential sign, signal or threat of gun violence. This spoke to me. That tattling and looking out for your friends and classmates are different. That we need to have a plan for kids, which they can easily follow, should they encounter a firearm unexpectedly. That we open the dialogue with youth on these issues, not brush the tough talks under the rug.

I loved that Sandy Hook Promise’s legislative philosophy is based on upholding the rights of gun owners, while advocating for gun safety, gun lethality (magazine size) and that reducing gun violence is not solely about the gun – that Mental Health advocacy, education and programs are key components.

I signed on as a Promise Leader. A Promise Leader makes the commitment to be an active participate in their community, to bring the Sandy Hook Promise programs to schools, youth centers, places of worship, and any other community organization where we can educate the public on Mental Health First Aid, and other prevention programs like #saysomething, #startwithhello #Keepitsecureandsafelystored (Kiss). That as a Promise Leader, I will educate other adults on the programs and how to get involved.

Before I donated financially, I decided it was time to donate that most valuable of all resources – time. I created a plan for how I was going to get involved with Sandy Hook Promise within my community, starting with the local middle and elementary schools my children attend.

Sitting in my son’s middle school principal’s office, I was fearful that he would view me as “an overly involved, helicopter parent”. I presented my reasons for signing on as a Promise Leader and that I wanted to get our middle school, and other schools involved with Sandy Hook Promise Programs. That I felt our public school systems were already strapped, and thin on time and resources, and that I wanted to be “the heavy lifter” to help get Sandy Hook Promise off the ground running for them.

As I sat looking at my son’s principal, nervous about what he would say, he began slowly, “Penny, this cause is one that is near and dear to my heart. We are all very concerned that something like this could happen here, in fact, our demographic is not necessarily an if it’s going to happen in some ways it’s a when. Our school already had one lock-down due to a man in a nearby neighborhood brandishing a shotgun as he walked through the streets, so I really want to support this, and in fact have some ideas on how you can get started.”

The look on his face, of surprise and gratitude that a parent would want to help them in this way – answered any doubts. It felt good to show them how much I value all their hard work in caring for our community’s kids.

He gave me unlimited access to the staff, suggested a small taskforce of teachers and administrators, communicated with them that this was something they were to get involved in. He asked me to get involved with the student led News Network and the elected student body and council. He wanted the programs to be student led – which provided me a huge sigh of relief, wondering how I was going to pull this all off with a full time job, a family to raise, and a 90-lb German shepherd nipping at my feet.

We are now in full swing preparing for our first “Say Something” week. A week of inclusion and education events which will dovetail with other positive behavior programs that our county has rolled out to districts county-wide.

Despite all this “doing” and “action” and “communicating” – the biggest gift I’ve received from volunteering for Sandy Hook Promise- is the return of hope.

That a group of families, who experienced devastating loss, could redirect their grief, for the greater good and provide an unwavering example of forgiveness – I am deeply humbled and grateful for each and every one of them.

I owe Sandy Hook Promise so much in return.




Review from #MyGivingStory

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