United Way for Southeastern Michigan
Allison Bunch has a diverse work experience that spans various roles and industries. Allison currently works as the Director of Corporate Relations at United Way for Southeastern Michigan. Prior to this role, they served as the Program and Development Manager at the New Hope Center for Grief Support, where they achieved significant program growth and led digital marketing campaigns. Allison also worked as an Emergency Preparedness Specialist at the Wayne County Department of Health, Human, and Veterans Services, where they played a key role in planning and executing COVID-19 mitigation strategies. Earlier in their career, they held the position of Marketing Director at The Grotto, where they successfully increased revenue and community engagement. Additionally, they worked as a Research Assistant and Undergraduate Teaching Assistant at Michigan State University, as well as an Intern at the Women's Center of Greater Lansing.
Allison Bunch attended Michigan State University from 2011 to 2015, where they obtained a Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) degree in Human Development and Family Studies. In addition, they have obtained several certifications, including Basic Incident Command System for Initial Response, National Incident Management System - Introduction, National Response Framework - Introduction, Public Information Officer Awareness, and COVID-19 Contact Tracing from The Johns Hopkins University.
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United Way for Southeastern Michigan
We mobilize the caring power of Detroit and Southeastern Michigan to improve communities and individual lives across Wayne, Oakland, Washtenaw, and Macomb counties in measurable and lasting ways. IN OUR REGION, NEARLY 40% OF HOUSEHOLDS STRUGGLE TO MEET THEIR BASIC NEEDS. Even before the COVID-19 pandemic hit Southeastern Michigan, families in our community were struggling. Now, the situation is dire. People are struggling to find jobs, or they’re working, but not making enough to provide for their families. Parents are forced to choose between feeding their children and paying the rent. Senior citizens have to go without prescriptions. Children struggle to keep up in school. College students have to go without health care. This is a problem in every city in our region — and the problem is growing. This affects your neighbors, coworkers, and friends. This is everyone’s problem. Without stable households, children will never be able to thrive. And if children aren’t thriving now, they won’t be prepared to build stable households in the future — or a stable community. Together, we can break the cycle. At United Way, we work to build communities where all households are stable and every child can thrive.