Ten years of partnership: BMHA recognized by the Oxford Lions Club at Kiwanis Dinner
On the evening of April 8, 2026, in a room filled with the kind of warmth that only comes from a community that has worked together for years, the Oxford Lions Club paused to honor a decade of partnership with Butler Metropolitan Housing Authority. The setting was the annual Kiwanis Dinner — itself a tradition built on the same principle that has long defined the work in Butler County: that no organization, no matter how dedicated, can serve a community alone.
For BMHA — now operating as OneCanopi — the recognition carried more weight than a typical service award. It marked ten years of showing up. Ten years of saying yes to the small asks and the large ones. Ten years of sitting at tables, attending events, contributing resources, and most importantly, lending the kind of organizational support that makes the difference between a good local nonprofit and a thriving one.
The work behind the partnership
The Oxford Lions Club is one of those organizations that operates with quiet consistency. Their work doesn’t always trend on social media or make the front page of the local paper. It happens in school cafeterias, where they fund free meal programs for children whose families are stretched thin. It happens in senior centers, where they organize visits and provide essential resources to older adults who might otherwise be forgotten. It happens at food drives that fill pantries when shelves run bare, and through vision screenings that catch problems early in children whose families couldn’t otherwise afford the care.
Lions Clubs International has a saying — “Where there’s a need, there’s a Lion” — and the Oxford chapter has lived that motto with quiet determination. The kinds of people the Oxford Lions serve are the same kinds of people OneCanopi serves: families navigating tight budgets, children whose access to opportunity depends on the adults around them, seniors aging in place, and individuals with disabilities who deserve every possible support to live full lives.
That shared mission is what built the partnership in the first place. And it’s what has sustained it for a decade.
Why this recognition matters now
OneCanopi finds itself at an inflection point. The organization spent decades as Butler Metropolitan Housing Authority, building the relationships, the credibility, and the operational excellence that allowed it to serve Butler County’s most vulnerable residents. The new name reflects an expanded vision — one that extends beyond traditional housing assistance into the supportive services, partnerships, and community-building work that determines whether a family doesn’t just have a roof, but actually thrives.
In that context, being recognized by the Oxford Lions Club isn’t just a nice acknowledgment. It’s a reminder of what made the previous decade possible — and what will continue to make the next one possible.
Recognitions like this often feel like endings, like a chapter closing. But this one feels different. It feels like a foundation being formally acknowledged before the next phase of building begins. The Oxford Lions saw OneCanopi clearly enough to know that what’s changing is the scale of the work — not the values driving it.
A two-way street
It’s worth saying that the gratitude flows in both directions. Yes, OneCanopi is honored to be recognized. But the organization is equally honored to stand alongside groups like the Oxford Lions Club — groups that show up year after year, that invest in their communities without expectation of recognition, and that demonstrate every day what civic life can look like when neighbors take responsibility for one another.
The Oxford Lions Club’s commitment to children, schools, seniors, individuals with disabilities, and families facing food insecurity isn’t programmatic for them. It’s personal. It comes from a place of genuine belief that everyone in the community matters, that no one should be invisible, and that small acts of consistent service add up to something meaningful over time.
This is the kind of partnership OneCanopi wants to keep building. Not transactional. Not performative. The slow, patient, decade-long kind of partnership that actually moves communities forward.
Looking ahead
As OneCanopi moves into its next chapter, the relationships built during the BMHA years aren’t being left behind. They’re being carried forward. The Oxford Lions Club has been part of that journey for ten years, and the hope — the expectation, really — is that they’ll be part of the next ten as well.
To the Oxford Lions Club: thank you. For the recognition. For the partnership. And for the work you do every day that often goes unnoticed but never goes unfelt.
Here’s to ten more.

