Long-time women`s advocate and volunteer named recipient of
Transcription
Long-time women`s advocate and volunteer named recipient of
Winter/Spring 2013 News from the Women’s Resource Center Long-time women’s advocate and volunteer named recipient of 2013 Extraordinary Woman Award Enid Brodsky to be honored at annual luncheon on March 15 A long-time business consultant and advocate for women has been selected as the 2013 recipient of the Women’s Resource Center’s Extraordinary Woman Brodsky Award. Enid Brodsky, a former Women’s Resource Center board member who continues to volunteer for a number of Center programs, will be honored at the annual Extraordinary Woman Award Luncheon scheduled for 11:30 a.m. on Friday, March 15, at the Henry Strater Theater. A no-host bar opens at 11 a.m. Tickets are $15 and are available by calling the Center at 247-1242 or purchasing them online at wrcdurango.org. A 50-cent handling fee will be charged for online purchases. Luncheon will include an African-inspired, gluten-free salad with grilled Mahi Mahi, white cab- bage, grated carrots, grated fresh coconut, black pepper, julienned apples and a light mayonnaise dressing; coffee, tea and dessert. The Extraordinary Woman Award honors a woman who demonstrates leadership and is steadfastly devoted in her efforts to effect positive change in the community; is an inspiring role model for women in the community, and works tirelessly to advance women’s rights, equality and self-sufficiency in La Plata County. “Enid Brodksy perfectly embodies those qualities,” said WRC Executive Director Liz Mora. “We are proud to honor her accomplishments this year.” Ms. Brodsky has worked as an independent business consultant with her husband, Herb Brodsky, since 1979. They moved to Durango in 1987, and Ms. Brodsky immediately immersed herself in volunteer work. Wonder Women producer to be keynote speaker for annual luncheon Award-winning documentary filmmaker Kel- Kelcey Edwards will cey Edwards will bring discuss how superher latest work, Wonheroines have inspired der Women: The Unwomen to slay their told Story of American Superown dragons and not heroines, to Durango, wait to be rescued by on March 14 as part of others. this year’s Women’s History Month activities. Presented by: She also will be the keynote speaker for the annual Extraordinary Woman Awards Luncheon on March 15. Supported by Presenting Sponsor Alpine Bank, Women’s History Month will offer a unique series of lectures, panel discussions, and workshops to focus attention on the issues that impact the success of women and girls in society today. This year’s theme, Women Inspiring Innovation Through Imagination – Celebrating Women in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics, See Award, Page 4 See Wonder Women, Page 4 Learn how to get your products into the stores of your dreams! So you have a great design for the “must-have” purse, and everyone who sees your prototypes clamors to buy one. If it’s so popular among your friends, why can’t you seem to get the big department stores to order hundreds of your creations? It’s not who you know, it’s how you approach them, says Sarah Shaw, a successful entrepreneur whose product line Simply Sarah is sold in more than 400 stores nationwide with exclusive distribution deals in Australia and Japan. Shaw will offer her secrets to successful marketing strategies during a daylong work- shop called Retail Mogul: Four Steps to a $1 Million-Dollar Business. The workshop will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Thursday, May 2, at the Smiley Auditorium. Cost for the day is $99 and inShaw cludes all workshop materials. Participants are encouraged to bring a brown-bag lunch. All proceeds will benefit the Women’s Resource Center. Shaw, who calls herself a “third-generation entrepreneur,” has a “hard-earned Street MBA.” She launched a successful purse line called Sarah Shaw Handbags in the late 1990s, only to see her business fail after the 9/11 attacks in New York City. Not one to let a little failure stop her, she then launched her second business in 2006, and grew it to profitability within 10 months. Simply Sarah sells patented handbag hangars, cosmetic bags, and organizing baskets. Now, Shaw consults with other entrepreneurs through her businesses Entreprenette. com. Her workshop will cover: • How to create persuasive catalogs, pitch letters and order forms to increase sales See Retail Mogul, Page 3 omen’s Resource Center 2 • Winter/Spring 2013 Note from the Director Girls learn you’re never too young to be role models By Liz Mora Executive Director I recently asked my 7-year-old daughter, now a second-grader at Park Elementary, if she had anyone she respected and liked as a role model. I had expected her to name her teacher or principal. Instead, she named a fourthgrader, “because she’s always nice to me and my friends,” she told me. That’s when it dawned on me. Girls are never too young to become role models for other girls. And that’s the message we tried to convey to the 30 fourth- and fifth-grade girls who attended our first-ever Get Your Girl Power Conference on Saturday, Feb. 9. Funded by a generous grant from the White Elephant Foundation, the one-day conference for fourth- and fifth-grade girls and their parents is based on our successful Girls to Women Conference for eighth-grade At the end of the Get Your Girl Power Conference, the girls made their version of a Tibetan prayer flag to reflect upon what they’d learned during the day. girls. Our experiences with “I just want to Girls to Women have taught us that we need to thank the start planting the seeds of Women’s Resource self-empowerment earlier Center and Girl than eighth grade. We chose to reach out Scouts for putting to fourth and fifth grades, on this [conferbecause that’s the time ence]. I would not have known how to defend when young girls start myself or just be myself.” looking toward their peers and media for their identi– Needham Elementary Fourth-Grader ties. We want to arm young creativity was amazing! One Barbie wore girls with the critical-thinking skills to assess glasses and tennis shoes; a GI Joe sported and overcome the societal messages that dark curly hair, was noticeably skinnier, and seek to undermine their self confidence. We was identified as a “gentle” man. want them to embrace their “smartness,” to The second workshop, offered by the pursue career goals and dreams, and beGirls Scouts of Southwest Colorado, taught come economically self-sufficient women the girls how to identify bullies and how to who can take care of themselves. intervene on the victim’s behalf. Girls and their parents braved a heavy Parents also had an opportunity to learn snowstorm to spend the day at the La Plata more about the challenges that “tweens” County Fairgrounds with our adult facilitaface in a discussion group led by a panel of tors, who encouraged them to be aware of experts on topics such as puberty or cellmedia messages that encourage girls and phone use, women to pursue physical perfection over Girls ended the conference with a cereintellectual growth. mony that allowed them to share what they Using Barbie and GI Joe dolls to illuslearned by drawing and stringing together trate, Durango School District 9-R Health prayer flags. Educator Linda Herz encouraged the girls to As I watched them make their individidentify the features that no human could ual presentations, I knew I would be proud attain, like Barbie’s impossibly narrow waist, to have any one of these girls serve as a or feet perpetually ready for high heels. role model for my daughter! The girls then drew pictures of more realistic Barbies and Joes, and their G2W Conference now in its 13th year! • Friday, April 19, at the Sun Ute Recreation Center • Tuesday, April 23, at the La Plata County Fairgrounds The Women’s Resource Center recognizes that a good education is the best way to avoid a life of poverty. One of the most critical times in a young woman’s educational career is her passage from middle school to high school, when she leaves her childhood and enters her teenage years. Since 2000, the Women’s Resource Center has helped eighth-grade girls prepare for their passage into young adulthood with the “Girls to Women, Women to Girls” Conference held each spring. About 300 girls from La Plata County learn from peers and adult women how to negotiate life’s trials and tribulations that may interfere with their education. Visit our Web site at www.wrcdurango.org. Click on the Education Link to learn more about Girls to Women. NetWorks is published quarterly by the Women’s Resource Center of Durango for members, sponsors, and the community. Women’s Resource Center 679 E. Second Ave., Suite 6 Durango, CO 81301 970.247.1242 • www.wrcdurango.org Staff Liz Mora, Executive Director Christy Schaerer, Programs Coordinator Deborah Uroda, Marketing & Fund Development Director Judy Abercrombie, Bookkeeping omen’s Resource Center Winter/Spring 2013 • 3 Anne Swisher named Volunteer of the Year at annual meeting Anne Swisher, a retired fifth-grade teacher who is “compassionate, thoughtful, and very organized,” was named the 2013 Volunteer of the Year at the Women’s Resource Center’s annual Volunteer Appreciation Dinner and Annual Meeting held Jan. 16. More than 85 members attended the annual event, where they elected new board members and officers. Daniel Wiggins, who joined the board in 2011, will be the Women’s Resource Center’s first-ever male board chair. Bev Wells was elected vice chair; Michelle Sainio, treasurer; and Kristin Nielsen, secretary. Nielsen is a new board member as are B.J. Boucher and Lesley Gannon Meiering. Returning board members are Tonya Ensign, Margie Deane Gray, Moni Grushkin, and Beth McMacken. WRC staff selected Swisher as the Volunteer of the Year for her work a the chair of the Womenade Council and her contributions to the Girls to Women, Women to Girls and the Get Your Girl Power conferences. Swisher helps plan the conferences and conducts several workshops. She is one of 125 volunteers who gave 2,377 hours of service to the Center in 2012. That’s equivalent to about Anne Swisher, left, with Womenade Coun- $50,000 in salaries Womenade is a grasscil member Janet Oliver. Retail Mogul (Continued from Page 1) • Step-by-step strategies to getting buyers • How to leverage the power of fame to promote your products through movie placement, getting celebrities to talk and use your products, and convincing national magazines to These Handy Hold-All® Handbag Holders by feature your products in Simply Sarah are sold in more than 400 retail outlets nationwide. Sarah Shaw, their creator, their news stories will share how she placed her holders with re“By the end of the tailers in a daylong workshop called Retail workshop, you’ll know how Mogul scheduled for Thursday, May 2, at the Smiley Building. All proceeds from the workto contact the right pershop will benefit the Women’s Resource Center. son, what to say to knock their socks off, and what to give them so you look like a superstar. I’ll demystify the process and show you exactly how to get your products in the stores of your dreams with all the confidence of an experienced, savvy Entreprenette,” she says. To learn more about the Retail Mogul Workshop and to register online, go to entreprenette.com/retailmogul. roots organization of women who provide financial assistance to individuals through one-time grants. The grants are awarded to help those women and families who have a temporary and often unexpected financial hardship to overcome to move forward with their lives. Womenade donors decide how their contributions will be spent. All contributions collected are given to elected recipients; no funds are used for administrative expenses. In 2012, Womenade assisted 31 women with $12,895 in requests. All that money came from individual donations from women who want to make a difference in other women’s lives. Since 2002, Womenade has awarded nearly $77,000 in funding to help women in crisis! omen’s Resource Center 4 • Winter/Spring 2013 Award Continued from Page 1 She served on the WRC board of directors from 1989-95 and was its president in 1993-95. She was one of the founders of the Girls to Women, Women to Girls Conference and continues to be actively involved in the annual event. Ms. Brodsky also has served on the Colorado Women’s Foundation Board of Directors, the Women’s Educational Advisory Council, the VALE Board of Directors, the Tri-County Headstart Board of Directors, and has volunteered countless hours with Durango School District 9-R to improve vocational and career education programs. She also is involved with the Sexual Assault Services Organization, the Volunteers of America Southwest Safehouse, and has served on the Regional Advisory Board with the Southwest Col- orado Small Business Center. Once a month, Ms. Brodsky holds office hours at the Women’s Resource Center to meet with clients who need help with job searches, résumé writing, or starting or growing their own businesses. During the past two years, she has worked with more than 50 clients. “Enid has mentored many women and teens in the community. Her straightforward, no-nonsense approach has proven to be effective in helping those she meets work through their processes so they become more successful,” wrote Joe Keck, executive director of the Southwest Colorado Small Business Development Center in his nomination of Ms. Brodsky. For more information, contact the Women’s Resource Center at 247-1242. Wonder Women Continued from Page 1 prompted the collaborating organizations to feature presentations by women in the STEM professions on issues as wide ranging as gender differences and how they define women’s roles in society to how a science-fiction comic-book character like Wonder Woman became an icon for the feminist movement. “We’re proud to be collaborating for the fourth year in a row with the Gender and Women’s Studies Program at Fort Lewis College, the Girl Scouts of Southwest Colorado, and the American Association of University Women to bring our community an entertaining and intellectually stimulating series of low-cost or free events that we hope will raise awareness about the ways our society continues to undermine women’s efforts to become economically and emotionally self- sufficient,” said WRC Executive Director Liz Mora. “While we wish to raise awareness about the work that still needs to be done, Women’s History Month also celebrates the achievements that women have made to ensure equal opportunity for all, and it celebrates the role models that continue to inspire us to create a better future for our sons and daughters.” Women’s History Month Schedule of Events WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27 Mortality in Eternity:Mayumi Amada Exhibition Opening Reception: 4:30 to 6 p.m. Fort Lewis College Art Gallery in the Art Hall Japanese installation artist Maymi Amada explores the brevity of human life within the eternal flow of time. Exhibit runs through March 28. Contact Hillary Raab at 247-7167 for more information. FRIDAY, MARCH 1 Pub Science with Dr. Michelle Hemingway 5:30 p.m. at the Discovery Museum Free to WRC members, $7.50 all others Beer and wine available for purchase. Are Men REALLY from Mars and Women from Venus? Dr. Michelle Hemingway explores the factors at the root of gender differences. MONDAY, MARCH 11 EcoFem Lenses 7 p.m. in the Vallecito Room, Fort Lewis College Free. A panel discussion featuring students and faculty in the fields of environmental and feminist activism, who will speak on the oppression felt by both movements and the correlation between the two. MARCH 11-19 A Light to Remember Exhibit Gallery, Fort Lewis College Art Building Free A screening of the new, award-winning documentary Wonder Women: The Untold Story of American Superheroines with producer Kelcey Edwards will be the anchor event for the month along with the Women’s Resource Center’s annual Extraordinary Woman Award Luncheon scheduled for Friday, March 15, at the Henry Strater Theater. The documentary will be shown at 6 p.m. on Thursday, March 14, in the Fort Lewis College Ballroom. Edwards, who produced Wonder Women with director Kristy Guevara-Flanagan, will be on hand to discuss the film and how superheroines have inspired women to slay their own dragons and not wait to be rescued by others. Admission is free and open to the public, and audience members are encouraged to dress as their favorite superheroine for the night. See a complete list of Women’s History Month activities at www.wrcdurango.org. Campus and community members are invited to decorate a veladora (a votive candle) with a drawing or photo of a woman in their lives whom they wish to honor during Women’s History Month. Contact Nancy Stoffer, coordinator of Diversity Programming, 2477170 or [email protected]. THURSDAY, MARCH 14 Wonder Women: The Untold Story of American Superheroines 6 p.m. in the Student Union Building Ballroom, Fort Lewis College. Free. Join Producer and Co-Director Kelcey Edwards for a screening of her new, award-winning documentary, and learn how and why Wonder Woman came to be and why she continues as an enduring role model and feminist icon. Audience members are encouraged to dress up as their favorite superheroine, whether she be Wonder Woman, the Bionic Woman, or Xena Warrior Princess! FRIDAY, MARCH 15 Extraordinary Woman Award Luncheon 11:30 a.m. at the Henry Strater Hotel Cost is $15 for lunch; cash bar Call 247-1242 for advanced ticket reservation Kelcey Edwards, producer and co-director of the award-winning documentary Wonder Women: The Untold Story of American Superheroines, will be the keynote speaker at the Women’s Resource Center’s annual luncheon that honors the recipient of the Extraordinary Woman Award. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20 Second screening of Wonder Women: The Untold Story of American Superheroines 5:30 p.m. at the Durango Discovery Museum omen’s Resource Center Women’s History Month Schedule of Events THURSDAY, MARCH 21 Codependency and Women: The Madonna / Whore Conflict 6 p.m. 130 Chemistry Hall. Free Dr. Kristin Roush, a private practitioner and faculty member at Central New Mexico Community College, will discuss how personality traits associated with being co-dependent have been used to describe the “ideal woman” in American culture. SATURDAY, MARCH 23 AAUW’s Annual Book and Author Luncheon, Featuring Dinah Swan, author of the Mary Alice Tate Southern Mysteries series 11:30 a.m. in the Vallecito Room at Fort Lewis College. Contact Katherine Burgess at [email protected] for ticket information Dinah Leavitt Swan will be the featured author at the annual luncheon and fund-raiser that benefits the AAUW scholarship fund. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27 STEM-Power! How Girls Can Change the World! 5-7 p.m. at the Durango Discovery Museum. Free. This interactive evening for elementary school-aged girls will give them an opportunity to learn from professional women about the intriguing and fun career opportunities available to them in STEM industries. Includes hands-on science activities with Discovery Museum staff. Sponsored by the Girl Scouts of Southwest Colorado. Contact Kyle Conrad at [email protected]. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, MARCH 29-30 The Vagina Monologues 7 p.m. both nights at the Durango Arts Center Tickets: $10. Available at the door or on campus the week of the performances. Join Fort Lewis College student and community actors in this annual production of The Vagina Monologues, an episodic play based on author Eve Ensler’s Vagina Interviews with women from around the world. The collection of stories give voice to women’s lusty, outrageous, poignant, brave and thoroughly human experiences. Produced by Feminist Voice. Women’s History Month Sponsors: Presenting Sponsor: • Alpine Bank Gold Sponsor: • Red Willow Production • Strater Catering and Events Silver Sponsors: • HANSON HONDA • Rochester Hotel Bronze Sponsors: • Signature Salon, Spa & Med Spa • Urban Market: Wares for the Home Our Partners: • Fort Lewis College Gender & Women’s Studies Program • The Discovery Museum • Girls Scouts of Southwest Colorado • La Plata County Chapter of the American Association of University Women Winter/Spring 2013 • 5 Thank you to our corporate donors and sponsors New & Renewing Memberships October 15, 2011 to February 28, 2013 PLATINUM • 99X American General Media • Alpine Bank • Animas Surgical Hospital • ASAP Business Services • Athena Communications • BuzzTown.com • Coca-Cola Bottling of Durango • Colorado Bar Nonprofit Foundation • Colorado Trails Ranch • DirectoryPLUS • Durango Herald • Durango Motor Company • Enterprise Rent-A-Car Foundation • Guitar Dojo • IlluminArts Photography • The Johnson Foundation • Liberty Mutual Insurance Company • Thrive: A Creating Wellness Center • Women’s Foundation of Colorado GOLD: • Blue Lake Ranch • BP America Production Company • Celebration Events • Don Gaspar Inn c/o Blue Lake Ranch • Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad • Durango Area Association of Realtors • Durango Mountain Resort • First National Bank of Durango • Four Corners OB-GYN, LLP • Gail C. Harriss, LLC • High Noon Rotary Club • Kiwanis Club of Durango • Mercy Regional Medical Center • Red Willow Production Company • Rent-A-Man • Sam S. Bloom Foundation • Spaaah Shop & Day Spa • Steamworks Brewing Co. • Strater Catering and Events. • Tom & Mary Orsini Fund c/o The Denver Foundation • Wells Fargo Advisors • Wells Fargo Bank of Durango • The Yellow Carrot SILVER: • aaha! design studio /Timothy Hanagan • Advanced Concrete Solutions • Aldrich Art Jewelry • Being First, Inc. • Durango Dermatology • Durango Mountain Resort • Durango Party Rental • Durango Urgent Care Thank you to our Lifetime Members! • Gail Aalund • Terry Bacon and Debra Parmenter • Richard and Mary Lyn Ballantine • Morley Ballantine (In Memorium) • Enid and Herb Brodsky • Erteszek Family Foundation • Kay Byerly • Candice Carson and George Banker • David Farmer, Durango Sports Club • Lynn Gray • Polly Garner & Bill Vega • Carol Griffith • Betty Haskell (In Memorium) • Nancy Henry-Lasley • JM Jones and Jim Mohle • Susan Lander • Lloyd B. Lifton, M.D. • Jessie Morgan • Carol Salomon and Norman Broad • Ginny Segerlund • Elizabeth “Bette” Serzen, in husband Russ’ memory • Lenora Tracy • Diane Wildfang & Kirk Komik, Rochester Hotel • Howard & Marjie Wilson • Secret Angels • E.P.I.C. Empowering People, Inspiring Community: Conscious Living Magazine • • • • • • • • • • • • First Southwest Bank Glacier Club Hanson Honda La Plata County Energy Council La Plata Electric Round-Up Foundation Ore House Restaurant Peak Energy Resources Prudential Foundation SOS Staffing Sutcliffe Vineyards Vectra Bank Colorado White Elephant Foundation BRONZE: • Advanced Massage Therapy • Bethany Bachmann, LLC • Blu Boutique • C&J Gravel • Courtney Harshberger Farmers Insurance Agency • Crane & Tejada, P.C. • Dental Associates of the Southwest • Durango Coffee Company • Durango Embroidery and Print • Durango Magazine • Durango Nursery & Supply • emagine, LLC. • Empowered Energy • Entreprenette • Feminist Voice • Flooring America • Fox Fire Farms • Fredrick Zink & Associates • Gazpachos Restaurante y Cantina • Goldman, Robbins & Nicholson, P.C. • Karen Skelly Photography • Maria's Bookshop • Maynes, Bradford, Shipps & Sheftel, LLP • Mountain Bike Specialists • Mutu's Italian Kitchen • Norton's Catering • Open Shutter Gallery, LLC • Ore House • PASCO/SW Home Health • Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains • Rapp Corral • Region 9 Economic Development District • John Rothchild, DDS • Salon del Sol • Sanders Skin Care Center • Signature Salon,Spa & Medical Spa Continued on next page omen’s Resource Center 6 • Winter/Spring 2013 Individual Members: the foundation of the Women’s Resource Center INSPIRING MEMBERS: • Laura Addington • Cissy and John Anderson • Karen Anesi • Elizabeth Ballantine • Marcy Branham • Reading Club of Durango c/oLynn May, Treasurer • Cindy Coleman • Cindy Cortese • Cathy Crum • Janet Curry • Carolyn Dailey • Flora Davidson • Susan A. Davies • Deborah Demme • Trefny Dix • Christina Erteszek • James Foster • Margie Deane Gray • Moni Grushkin • Al and Carol Harper • Pamela Hasterok • Jan Bowler and Robert Haugen • Judy and Don Hayes • Helen Ballantine Healy • Michelle Hemingway • Susie Herb • Cecily and Terry Klingman • Ken and Debbie Kurz • Ljuba Lemke • Mary Husemoller and Bill Hobson • Ed Lehner and Julianne Ward • Kim Martin and Stephen Phillips • Heather Martinez • Dick & Foxie Mason • Phyllis R. Max • Tracey McInerney • Mindy and Patrick Meiering • Carolyn Moller • Christine Monk • Liz Mora • Sydney Morris • Barbara Morris • Michelle and Robert Oppenheimer • Ingrid Peterson • Gina Piccoli • Nancy Richmond • Sheri R. Rochford Figgs • John Rothchild, D.D.S • Gideon Rothwell • Kris Ryall • Dene and Gordon Thomas • Kristin S. Thomas • Karen Thompson and Larry Eads • Carol and Gary Treat • Deborah Uroda • Beverly Wells • Daniel Wiggins • Sharilynn Williams • Dana Wilson • Patti Zink EMPOWERING MEMBERS: • Judy Abercrombie • Judith B. Aitken • Linda Anderson BRONZE CORPORATE MEMBERSHIPS CONTINUED • Sinberg Capital Lending • Ska Brewing • Sonas Integrative Medical Center • Southwest Appliance • Southwest Colorado Bar Association • Southwest Colorado Community College • Specialists in Women's Care • StoneAge Tools, Inc. • Tami Graham Professional Services • True Life Coaching and Retreats • Urban Market: Wares for the Home • Wells Fargo Bank • Wiesbaden Spa and Hotel • Wild Rivers Expeditions • Zuke's Pet Treats FRIENDS: • Alley House Grille • Animas B&B • Animas Detail • Boar Glass Studio • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Castle Creek Winery City Market Cares DoubleTree by Hilton Durango Animal Hospital Elsa Ross Fresh Off the Press Fort Lewis Community Concert Hall Fox Fire Farms General Palmer Hotel Ken and Sue's Restaurant Music in the Mountains Mutu’s Italian Kitchen Oohs and Ahs Quality Home Furnishing Red Cliff Lodge San Juan Inn Seaons Rotisserie & Grill Silver Pick Lodge Silverton Brewery Sow’s Ear Strater Hotel The Bon Ton Resturant The Jewelry Works The Springs Resort and Spa Vallecito Service League Wolf Creek Ski Area • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Mary Lee Anderson Carol Appelbaum Robin Awe Sally Bellerue Maureen Brandon Marjorie and Scott Brinton Stephenie Brost Linda Bunk Lilly Burkett Susan and Wayne Caplan Dee Dee Carlson Cindy Cortese Anita Cribley Janet Curry Eileen Dawson Christine Deem Deborah Demme Beth Drum Shakti Dudley Jim and Shari Dyer Claudia Engle Kathy Firestone Jo Fusco Marlene Gebhardt Julie and John Gentry Mary Gillam Connie Gordon Deborah Gorton and Peter Loranger Sue and Dick Griffith Hope Hamilton Timothy Hanagan Pamela Hasterok John Heavenrich Michelle Hemingway Judy Hodges and Peter Norton Janalee Hogan Barbara B. Hunter Patty Isensee Anne Jackson Lucia & Charles Jenney S. Maile & Olin Kane Haeryon Kim and Carol Smith Susan Koonce Linda Kramer Connie Langenbahn Virginia Lashbrooke, MFT Shelley Leader Ljuba Lemke Karren Little LaVerne Luz Sweetie Marbury Emily McCardle Melanie McLean Keneen McNiven Mandy Mikulencak Tekla Miller Liz Mora Stephanie Moran Kristin Nielsen Mary Nowotny Penny O’Keefe Mary Ocken Mark and Chris Opplinger Nancy and Jim Ottman Carol and Ron Ozaki • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Leah and Perry Pahlmeyer Susie Patalan Susie and Richard Peterson Christine and Howard Rachlin Jennifer Reeder Carol Rhan Ronald G. Ritz Dot Robinson Delores Rodman Peg Rogers and Steve Boos Faye Schrater and Dick White Jill Schuman Christine Serwe Lynne Sholler Barbara Shore Carol Simmons Bunnie Smith Joanne Spina Ann Stringfellow Marilyn Swanson Anne Swisher Karen Thompson and Larry Eads Kathy Uroda Beverly Wells Justin Werts Linda and Tom West Bob and Arden Westerwick ADVOCATE MEMBERS: • Animas Valley Elementary School Community c/o Niki Hansen • Drs. Mary F. and Clint Barter • Willa Beatty • Tom Ann Casey & Walt Walker • Moni Grushkin • Holly Hagan • Diane Howe • Susan Kroes • Karren Little • Eilene Lyon • Nicki Massieon • Christine Monk • Jeanne Parks • Marie Roessler • Patti Salomon • Charles Siegele • Annette Trick • Marilee Jantzer White FAMILY MEMBERS: • James and Toni Marie Abbey • Shauna Agnew • Susan and Davitt Armstrong • Donna Bailey, c/o VPC • Gigi and Mike Baty • Karen Bell • Beth and Alan Benefiel • Cheryle Brandsma • Ginny (Virginia Wood) Brown • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Susan Bryson c/o SJMA Lourdes Carrasco Maria Carsburg Sheila Casey Cathy Craig Eileen Dawson Jim and Shari Dyer Louise Edwards Carolyn Feller and David Hammer Ann Flatten Sandra and Richard Gibbs Mary Gillam Jana Goldstein Jan Bowler and Robert Haugen Connie and Mike Kane S. Maile & Olin Kane Connie and Mike Kane Maureen Keilty Susan Kroes Beth Lamberson Karren Little LaVerne Luz Suzy Lyons Ilza Aviks and John Mahoney Janice and Stephen Martin Dick & Foxie Mason Erica Max Melanie McLean Christine Monk Nanci Moore Daniel and Polly Morgenstern Allison and Tom Morrissey Will and Jenny Newcomer Rose Niederauer Andrea and Elena Parmenter Aurelia Peterson Mary Jo Rakowski Kathy Redford Jennifer Reeder Karen Reichenbach and Thom Hanna Debra and Steven Ruddell Lori Rundquist Christy and Gerry Schaerer Jill Seyfarth Kathleen Shadell Lisa & Loren Skyhorse Anita Smith Joanne Spina Terry Stalker Bill and Dorothy Tarpley Linda Thompson Carol and Gary Treat Sandy Wheaton Joe and Jeanne Zeman SUSTAINING MEMBERS: • Mary Kay Aigner • Judith B. Aitken • Cathy Alfandre • Amy Allred • Caroline Arlen • Elizabeth Bartley omen’s Resource Center Winter/Spring 2013 • 7 Individual Members: the foundation of the Women’s Resource Center • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Karen Bell Mary Ann & Tom Berry Patricia Bilyk Ruth Bloom Lisa Blue Diana Boland Judy and Harry Bolton Suzanne Bolton Sally Bradley Cheryle Brandsma Barb Brazes Marilyn T. Brown Rhonda Brown Lynne Bruzzese Katherine Burgess Tecumseh Burnett Ann Butler Victoria Calvert Stephanie and Mike Cameron Judy Campbell Bobbie Carll Lynne Carpenter Chuck and Cheryl Carson Chris Cavner Pakhi Chaudhuri, M.D. Marcia Clouser Cindy Coleman Anita Cribley Kathy Curran Alison Dance Kim Dickinson Dianne Donovan Nancy Ehlenbeck Wanda Ellingson Barbara Elliott Christina Erteszek Mary Lou Falkenstein Kathleen Fine-Dare Ginger Fisher Valerie Foreman Carlotta Frank Mary Frazer Maggie K. Galland Alison Goss Yvonna Graham Cheryl Graves Andrew Gulliford Sharon Hargett Barbara W. Harris Frances Hart Pamela Hasterok Mary Havran • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • John Heavenrich Sonja Hecker Linda Herz Barb Horn Kellie Hotter Betsy Janeczek Ginger Jenks Susan Kaiser Raymond Kane S. Maile & Olin Kane Andrea Katres Christina Knickerbocker Brigid Korce Trudy Kremer Laura Kuniansky Helen B. Kunz Judith Laine David Lawlor Nancy Leach Nancy Loftis Sunshine Lofton Annamarie Longfellow Gisela Lott Linda Mack and Wynn Berven Linda Mannix Annie McGraw Patricia McIvor Bethany McManus Donna Medeiros Leslie and Bob Meiering Leigh Meigs Barbara Miles Martha Tinsley Minot Laura Moorefield Liz Mora Nikki Morrissey Mary Anne Nelson Marsha Porter Norton Lori Norton Welz Antoinette Nowakowski, DC Peg Ochsenreiter Mary Ocken Mary O'Donnell Sandra Olson Carol and Ron Ozaki Beth Padilla Jill Patton Nancy Peake Sarah Perkins Barbara Pevny Anne Putnam • Christine and Howard Rachlin • Kathy Redford • Jennifer Reeder • Michelle Reott • Nancy Richmond • Laura Rickard • Naomi Riess • Gay Robson • Missy Rodey • Kay Rowe • Haz Said • Shari Sanford • Viola Schaerer • Randi Schweitz • Kristen Searfus • Lisa Self • Karrie Sellke • Maddie Shaline • Janice Sheftel • Lynne Sholler • Margaret Simon • Anita L. Smith • Janet Spear • Betsy Spencer • Terry Stalker • Ellen Stein • Sarah Sumner • Jeanine Surber • Shai Teeter • Mary Tesitor • Kathy "Ket" Thomas • Jill A. Tierney • Caroline Todd • Liza Tregillus • Joanie Trussel • Rebecca Turner • Nancy Vanderwal • Kelly von Stroh • Tim Walsworth • Midge & Jay Wannamaker • Julie Westendorff • Judy Wheeler • Nancy Whitson • Molly Wieser • Ann Willard • Flow Wolf • Paula Wormer • Peggy Zemach • Suzanne Zerbe Empower a Woman, Change a Life with your WRC membership today! NAME: ADDRESS: CITY: STATE: ZIP: PHONE: CELL: EMAIL: CC#: EXPIRATION DATE: SIGNATURE: Member Benefits As a member of the Women’s Resource Center, you will receive: • Discounts or free entry into WRC events, including Women’s History Month presentations, the Empowerment Workshops, and special events. • Subscription to Networks, our quarterly printed newsletter that let’s you know how your support changes lives. • Opportunities to advertise in Networks with a circulation of 1,200 readers or on our Web site at wrcdurango.org. • Subscription to News You Can Use, our online e-newsletter that informs you fast about WRC events and activities. • Member-to-member discounts on insurance and other services. • Opportunities to network with some of the most fabulous women in La Plata County. • A full heart, knowing you’ve helped a woman overcome obstacles to economic self-sufficiency. Making a difference in the lives of women in La Plata County The Women’s Resource Center offers an open door, five days a week, to a warm and safe environment, where women meet with staff members to find the community resources they need to take care of themselves and their families. Women don’t need an appointment nor do they need to qualify for our help. Any woman who walks through our doors can expect a smile, a compassionate ear, and a plan for finding help to overcome the obstacles that are getting in the way of her economic success. And we’re making a difference: • In 2012, we worked with 888 women. That represents an 11 percent increase – or 85 women more – than in 2011. • We saw a significant increase in the need for legal services, food assistance and emergency financial assistance. • The majority of our clients were equally divided between the ages of 21 and 60. A lack of education is the No. 1 impediment to economic self-sufficiency, and our intake data tell the tale: • 10 percent of our clients failed to graduate from high school. • 37 percent had a high school diploma or GED, but no college experience. • Only 21 percent had graduated from college. In 2012, we established three scholarships, two at Fort Lewis College, including one for a La Plata County high school graduate who is the first in her family to go to college, and another for a nontraditional student. The third is the Educational Opportunity Fund that we administer. It provides grants for any certified training program, workshop or class that will help women improve their employability. In 2012, we provided more than $14,000 in educational funds to more than 16 women! Your support IS making a BIG DIFFERENCE in the lives of women in La Plata County! Mark Your Calendars Join us for all-youcan-eat grilled delights 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Saturday, June 1, on Main Avenue in front of The Durango Herald. Presented by Directory Plus and The Durango Herald. Tickets available May 1. THE Girl Event of the Year! Sip champagne, nibble on fabulous hors d’oeuvres, drink in the incredible scenery the Pine River Valley at LePlatt’s Pond. 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 23. Tickets available in July. Volunteers needed for both events. Call 247-1242 for more information. Return Service Requested 679 E. Second Ave., Suite 6 Durango, CO 81301