This week New York City hosted the 2010 National Conference on  Volunteering and Service: It’s Up to YOU! Over 5,000 service leaders  convened to discuss how to create greater impact and effectiveness in  meeting social needs through service and volunteering. The National  Conference on Volunteering and Service is the world’s largest gathering  of service and civic engagement leaders. This conference is hosted by  the Corporation for National and Community Service, our federal agency  home for service, and the Points of Light Institute. I was pleased to deliver the opening  remarks to frame the President’s and First Lady's vision and  commitment to service as well as to meet with a broad cross-section of  service leaders from the nonprofit, public, private, and philanthropic  sectors.
 
As you well know, our nation faces a daunting set of challenges. But,  from day one, the President has acted on the principle that “service is  a solution” – that service is a critical tool as we address our  national priorities.
That’s why one of the President’s top priorities in his first 100  days was to sign the Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act. We worked with  our colleagues on both sides of the aisle in Congress and with service  and community leaders across the country to give the American people  more opportunities to serve. Afterall, the President and First Lady have always believed that the  best ideas don’t come from Washington. They come from individuals and  communities all across the country. From coast to coast, our neighbors  are finding new and innovative ways to meet our country’s most pressing  challenges. These community-led solutions are strengthening, reforming  and supporting our schools; helping us bring quality, affordable health  care to everyone; building a sustainable energy future; and ensuring  economic recovery, economic opportunity and economic growth in every  community in the country.
To support community solutions, the President tasked me with creating  the Office of Social Innovation and Civic Participation as part of the  Domestic Policy Council in the White House – to find the best ways to  invest in and scale programs that work and find ways to help communities  better solve their own problems. We know that we need to get the  policies right, but we also know that Americans everywhere are already  working to make a difference – and they deserve our support. We have to come together – the public, private, nonprofit, academic,  and philanthropic communities. We need to share best practices, share  new ideas, and invest in what works. And we need to support a new  generation of leaders who can build on the great progress we have made  together. To get involved in your own local community, please go to Serve.gov to find opportunities to  volunteer. And to hear more about the discussions that took place at the  National Conference please visit the conference’s website.
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