ORISSA CULTURE CENTER
A 501-C(3) NON PROFIT ORGANISATION, TAX ID 26-32992699
3101 Fuqua Street, Houston, TX 77047
A 501-C(3) NON PROFIT ORGANISATION, TAX ID 26-32992699
3101 Fuqua Street, Houston, TX 77047
Orissa Culture Center (OCC) is a registered non-political, non-profit and voluntary US corporation with a tax exempt organization status of 501 (C)(3) with IRS No 26-32992699
OCC board of directors provides strategic guidance, valuable contacts and resources to the organization. While the board of directors is responsible for making a range of vital organizational decisions, it is not involved in making day-to-day operational decisions. As the most senior manager in the operational hierarchy, one of the executive director’s main roles is to act as a liaison between the board of directors and the rest of the organization. OCC executive director meets with the board once every quarter to keep them informed on operational issues and works with them to come up with strategic solutions to complex challenges such as finance.
OCC executive director oversees the heads of each committee, including marketing, fundraising, program development, finance and accounting. The executive director leads the fundraising committee in setting annual income goals, for example, and works with outreach committee to set standards for serving the organization’s targeted groups. Because OCC is a small nonprofit organization, the executive director gets more directly involved in all function areas. Currently the OCC executive director handles all accounting duties and half of the fundraising duties, in addition to executive-level duties.
The OCC executive director fulfills vital roles outside the office and after normal business hours, for example meeting with HAA grant officials. The executive director is expected to attend and possibly host a range of fundraising events, new program inaugurations and public relations events. He is also the organization’s mouth piece and often speaks directly with reporters, donors, government representatives and members of the community at these events, spending a good deal of time acting as the public face of the organization.
In addition to appearing at official events, the OCC executive director acts as a liaison between OCC and a range of external stakeholders. Often he develops and maintains relationships with other nonprofit organizations and leaders, for example, looking for opportunities to partner with other organizations to serve good causes. He also works personally with leaders in the business and government sector, cultivating long-term strategic partnerships or donor relationships to increase the organization’s effectiveness and sustainability.
OCC’s goal is to build a permanent infrastructure to support community events, and a house for its main deity that links its entire cultural heritage on a vibrant fabric. The building will also host a library and museum with a rich collection of books on Oriya literature and artifacts that are unique to the state, the most prominent being are those related to Lord Jagannath (Lord of the Universe) and Buddhism. It is expected that OCC will become a center for greater Houston Oriya community supporting activities such as, spiritual upbringing, cultural events, community service, education, music, dance, and cultural art. It will also become a center to promote Oriya language, and preserve and protect culture and tradition among the 2nd generation kids born to parents of Oriya origin.
In order to achieve the above vision OCC has organized itself into a professionally run non-profit organization with a well-structured board, operating executive body and many well-defined functioning committees, following the tradition of some of the best run non-profits in the greater Houston area. Its operations are guided by a well-documented articles and by-laws, and by a quarterly board of directors meeting with meticulous recording of meeting minutes, which are attached.
Since 2002, Houston Odia community has been publishing a yearly literary magazine under the able editorship of Dr. Arati Nanda Pati. This magazine has provided our kids and adults to express thir creative writings in the forms of poetry, prose, story etc both in the mother tongue Odia and in English, our adapted language. OCC’s yearly financial details are published in Alata.
The vision of the organization is enshrined in its mission statement: OCC will be a unique charitable, educational and cultural art organization in the US that will offer center of excellence to foster Oriya culture, heritage and tradition to all citizens in the Greater Houston metropolitan areas and beyond, while inculcating rich Oriya cultural values to the children and grand-children of the people of Oriya origin. It will seek to foster cultural bondage between the people of Orissa and all residents in general and of Oriya origin in particular in North America. In doing so it will promote diverse cultural ethos that the city of Houston is trying to foster through many of its programs like Houston Arts Alliance. OCC’s missions has therefore been to preserve, protect and promote Orissan Art and culture and the ethos of Universal brotherhood in the USA and around the world.