SHARE Omaha has released its Fall 2025 Student Volunteering Guide, designed to connect busy teens and college students with volunteering opportunities around the community. Browse the guide here.
No More Empty Pots is hosting a Supper Club this Saturday, September 20. The Supper Club Series is an intentional gathering of individuals for an elevated dining experience at the No More Empty Pots Rooftop Garden that showcases the talent of local food entrepreneurs. Each event features a three-course, local chef-curated meal as well as a networking opportunity that brings community changemakers together for intentional dialogue, resource sharing, and collective action.
Omaha’s Tri-Faith Initiative, the only place in North America to feature a campus shared between a mosque, a synagogue and a church, held a ribbon-cutting ceremony on September 14 to commemorate the completion of their latest community-building effort, an interactive walking tour of the Tri-Faith Commons. The tour takes individuals throughout the commons with guided signs which contain QR codes leading to videos explaining more about each sign’s topic. Each sign or video focuses on a unique aspect of the Tri-Faith Commons, such as the three faith partners, Abraham’s Bridge and the Tri-Faith Center itself.
Amid Terence Crawford’s historic win this weekend and a growing number of teens looking to train, the South Omaha nonprofit Victory Boxing club is looking to expand. The gym, which aims to provide a safe refuge and a supportive community for the youth of South Omaha, wants to raise $100,000 to help with the expansion. So far, they’ve raised $20,000.
Neighborgood, a Sarpy County food pantry formerly known as the Tri-City Food Pantry, opened a new facility near 66th & Cornhusker Road in Papillion. The nonprofit said 5.5 percent of Sarpy County residents live below the poverty level and nearly 11 percent are food insecure.
Bellevue Junior Sports Association (BJSA) is celebrating its 50th Anniversary. Since its founding in 1975, BJSA has helped transform thousands of young lives by providing accessible, high-quality sports programs to the youth of Bellevue. BJSA started in a few garages and now serves more than 4,000 youth annually. The organization offers a wide range of programs including tackle football, flag football, cheerleading, basketball, wrestling, select baseball, volleyball and seasonal camps and clinics.


