Omega Phi Alpha national service sorority

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Omega Phi Alpha - ΩΦΑ
The official crest of Omega Phi Alpha.
Founded June 15, 1967
Bowling Green State University
Type Service
Scope National
Motto Today's Friends, Tomorrow's Leaders, Forever in Service
Colors Dark blue, baby blue and gold
Symbol The chevron
Flower The yellow rose
Chapters 21 active chapters, 8 alumnae chapters
Mascot Ophia (Raggedy Ann)
Headquarters P.O. Box 757
Russells Point, Ohio, USA
Homepage http://www.omegaphialpha.org

Omega Phi Alpha (OPA, O-Phi-A, or ΩΦΑ) is an American national service sorority. It was founded in 1967 at Bowling Green State University in Bowling Green, Ohio. OPA currently has twenty-one active chapters in the United States.

Contents

The purpose of Omega Phi Alpha reads as follows:

The purpose and goals of this sorority shall be to assemble its members in the fellowship of Omega Phi Alpha, to develop friendship, leadership and cooperation by promoting service to the university community, to the community-at-large, to the members of the sorority, and to the nations of the world.

In 1953, the Zeta Kappa chapter of Alpha Phi Omega, a national service fraternity, expressed interest in forming a group much like theirs to help them in their service endeavors. Brothers of Zeta Kappa formed interest groups for a new organization, and many of the attendees at these interest groups were female. The need for a women's service sorority then became evident.

The two groups were to be alike in objectives -- friendship, leadership, and service. A similar name -- Omega Phi Alpha -- was chosen for the new organization.

Two more Omega Phi Alpha groups were formed at Eastern Michigan University and the University of Bridgeport in 1958 and 1962, respectively. All three groups had the intention of becoming a national sorority together; however, it would be five more years before national status was reached.

In 1966, plans for a national convention, at which the three chapters could meet, were made. In the summer of 1967, the three groups met in Bowling Green for the first time and laid the foundations for what is currently Omega Phi Alpha. The Bowling Green group was given the title of Alpha Chapter, University of Bridgeport became the Beta Chapter, and Eastern Michigan was named the Gamma Chapter.

Alpha, Beta, and Gamma chapters continued for several years as a national sorority until women at Texas A&M University formed the Delta chapter in 1971. Currently, there are twenty-one chapters of Omega Phi Alpha.

Omega Phi Alpha has a diverse, flexible service program which allows each member to contribute to the world around her. Many chapters have ongoing projects that they have worked with for years.

Six areas of service:

1. Permanent Project: The permanent project is mental health. Mental health service projects are defined as any project that improves the well being of others, and these projects are typically hands on projects such as playing with kids in an afterschool program, playing Bingo at a nursing home, or serving food at a soup kitchen.

2. President's Project: Each year at Omega Phi Alpha National Convention, the National President of Omega Phi Alpha presents the cause she feels is worthy of being the focus of OPA service nationwide. For the 2005-2006 school year, the President's Project is education. The 2006-2007 President's Project is women's health. The 2007-2008 President's Project is domestic violence. Past projects include the Girl Scouts of the USA, Literacy, and internal organization keypoints.

3. Service to the University Community: Volunteering to help at a school event, holding stress relief classes, random acts of kindness

4. Service to the Community at Large: Local park clean ups, food banks, tutoring at a local school, Humane Society volunteering

5. Service to the members of the sorority: Alumnae, internal strengthening

6. Service to the nations of the world: UNICEF, AIDS Awareness, diabetes awareness (American Diabetes Association), breast cancer awareness (Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation, among others)

Through these six areas of service, active and alumnae chapters plan a variety of service projects year each to carry out and make a difference.

  • Omega Alpha - Connecticut Area Alumnae Chapter
  • Omega Beta - Michigan Alumnae Association
  • Omega Gamma - Greater Atlanta Alumnae Association [6]
  • Omega Delta - Greater Nashville Area Alumnae Chapter
  • Omega Epsilon - Chattanooga Area Alumnae Council
  • Omega Zeta - Austin Area Alumnae Chapter (inactive)
  • Omega Eta - Knoxville Alumnae chapter (inactive)
  • Omega Theta - Louisiana Alumnae Chapter

Omega Phi Alpha holds one national convention each year. Each active chapter in good standing sends two delegates to represent them to vote on sorority issues. Active chapters who are not in good standing send one delegate. Each Omega Phi Alpha district sends one alumnae delegate to represent the alumnae that live within its borders. There are two at-large alumnae delegates who vote on behalf of all OPA alumnae.

Recent OPA national convention locations:

Omega Phi Alpha has eight districts. Omega Phi Alpha districts are reviewed every ten years so that the districts properly reflect the membership of Omega Phi Alpha. Each district sends an alumna representative to convention.

  • District 1
    • Location: Northeast and countries other than America
    • Active Chapter: none
  • District 2
    • Location: Mid Central
    • Active Chapters: Epsilon, Mu, Rho
  • District 3
    • Location: Southeast
    • Active Chapters: Nu, Sigma, Omicron, Alpha Zeta
  • District 4
    • Location: South Central
    • Active Chapters: Upsilon, Alpha Beta, Alpha Epsilon
  • District 5
    • Location: Midwest
    • Active Chapters: Delta, Tau, Psi, Alpha Gamma
  • District 6
    • Location: West Coast
    • Active Chapters: Phi, Alpha Alpha
  • District 7
    • Location: North Central
    • Active Chapters: Alpha, Gamma, Alpha Theta
  • District 8
    • Location: Southeast Coastal
    • Active Chapters: Chi, Alpha Delta

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