© Courtesy of Raven Hilden
Volunteers at MilVet mail monthly treatment offers to company users deployed all about the earth.
For a course at the College of Phoenix, Raven Hilden was assigned to function with a group to develop a web page for a fictional nonprofit.
She’s a military services husband or wife and arrived up with the thought to aid servicemen and -women by compiling resources for overall health, housing, employment and other solutions in a single location.
After graduating in 2014, Hilden worked with specific-demands learners, as a discipline representative with the California State Assembly, and then begun her own business enterprise, Perfect Media Layout.
But she never forgot that class project.
“Something in me clicked,” Hilden claimed. She imagined, “This is my enthusiasm. This is what I want to do.”
Her husband, Mike, served in the Marines from 1993 to 2001 and was injured functioning on amphibious cars, severing a finger on his still left hand. Her son-in-regulation was an Army paratrooper.
© Courtesy of Raven Hilden
Raven Hilden turned what started off as a class undertaking at the University of Phoenix into MilVet, a nonprofit that allows army personnel and their family members.
In 2016, she begun MilVet, a nonprofit firm to support military veterans, energetic company users and their families, and with the assistance of volunteers, she sends hundreds of every month care packages close to the entire world.

Load Error
The boxes are loaded with food stuff, hygiene products and particular requests. Oreo cookies for a soldier in the Middle East. Mexican candy for an airman from Tucson. Duct tape, tin foil and packing tape for a device overrun by ISIS.
They get packages each and every month, alongside with letters thanking them for their assistance.
Military lifestyle has transformed, Hilden claimed. Deployments are longer, the earth far more perilous.
“The extra we can connect and remind them each and every month, ‘Hey, we’re contemplating about you, and we assist you,’ it will make a enormous difference,” she claimed.
For her volunteer work, Hilden was awarded the Key Fannie Griffin-McClendon Scholarship, which supports navy family members, from the College of Phoenix and The Countrywide Culture of Management and Achievements Foundation.
© Courtesy of Raven Hilden
Treatment packages are despatched to support members deployed abroad each and every thirty day period till they arrive house by volunteers at the nonprofit MilVet.
She’ll use the $5,000 toward a master’s degree.
And that class venture? She received an A.
To volunteer, donate or refer a company member to acquire treatment packages, go to milvet.org.
Achieve Karina Bland at karina.bland@arizonarepublic.com. Adhere to her on Facebook and Twitter @KarinaBland.
Help community journalism. Subscribe to azcentral.com now.
This article at first appeared on Arizona Republic: How a woman’s class task grew into a source of help for active services members