Innovation is the key to

Transcription

Innovation is the key to
2010
Annual
Report
Innovation
is the key to
Survival.
Oakland Livingston Human Service Agency
2010 Board of Directors Members
OFFICERS
Gregg A. Christenson
Nancy L. Dingeldey
Flagstar Bank
Chairperson
Deborah M. Majeski
Dennis Dolan
Technical Development Center – DTE Energy
Vice Chairman
Irene Onderchanin
Dennis Griffin
Livingston County Business & Industry
Secretary
Ann K. Suziedelis, PhD
Douglas Williams
St. Joseph Mercy Hospital – Oakland Business & Industry
Treasurer
Cynthia Wells
Oakwood Healthcare System
PUBLIC SECTOR BOARD MEMBERS
Douglas Williams
John Almstadt
Oakland County Business & Industry
Manager, Oakland County Employment
& Training Division
David Coulter
COMMUNITY REPRESENTATIVE
SECTOR BOARD MEMBERS
Oakland County Commissioner
Mary Antonette Flowers
Nancy Dingeldey
Youth Concerns
Wixom City Council
Dennis K. Griffin
Dennis Dolan
Senior Citizens
Livingston County Commissioner
Richard J. Holmes
Brad Jacobsen
Southeast Oakland Region
Oakland County Commissioner
Chandra Jones
Honorable Phyllis McMillen
Head Start Policy Council
Oakland County Judicial
Charles W. Jones
Jim Runestad
Livingston County
Oakland County Commissioner
Holbert Maxey
Khalfani Stephens
Housing
City of Pontiac
Ninfa Mendoza
Multi-Cultural
PRIVATE SECTOR BOARD MEMBERS
Julie Nelson
Sonia Acosta
Health & Disabled
Women & Minorities
Cheryl Braxton
Oakland County, Michigan Department of Corrections
Venture Inc. (A housing
subsidiary of OLHSA)
Venture, Inc. provides quality, energy-efficient,
affordable housing for low and moderate
income people by facilitating home purchase,
rehabilitation, construction, loans and other
community improvement activities.
O L H S A A n n ual R e p or t 2 0 1 0
Venture Inc. Board of Trustees
Ronald B. Borngesser
Sean P. Corcoran
Chair
Secretary
Susan Mosqueda
Donald Jones
Vice Chair
Holbert Maxey
Brad Michaud
Treasurer
Anthony Chasen
Jamira Chasen
OLHSA’s Mission: OLHSA enables
the low-income, elderly and persons
with disabilities living in Oakland
and Livingston Counties to become
more self-sufficient.
The Promise of Community Action:
Community Action changes people’s
lives, embodies the spirit of hope,
improves communities, and makes
America a better place to live. We
care about the entire community,
and we are dedicated to helping
people help themselves and each
other. OLHSA is proud to be the
Community Action Agency serving
Oakland and Livingston Counties.
H e l pin g P eop l e . C han g in g Lives .
1
Message from the CEO
Innovation is key to survival, and for OLHSA that
means adapting to the needs of our community by
creating the programs and opportunities necessary to
boost us all upward. In 2010 OLHSA, A Community
Action Agency, acted as the eyes and ears for our
community, propelling over 59,000 community
members towards independence through nearly
325,000 services provided.
We witnessed our food
assistance programs in
Livingston County operating
below their potential, so
we partnered with Gleaners
Community Food Bank of
Livingston County to create
Shared Harvest. Now OLHSAadministered food programs and Gleaners’ private food
programs are under one roof, providing a sophisticated
food assistance operation to battle hunger in Livingston
County. Clients of Shared Harvest are met with a
color-coded, shopping-like experience, complete with
a full assessment by OLHSA staff for eligibility in other
helpful programs.
and tools to move families,
individuals, neighborhoods,
and communities to selfsufficiency. The model
addresses continuing education
opportunities, including GEDs,
savings education, and more.
It will come to life in 2011 when
the Center for Working Families
opens in Royal Oak Township.
Innovation is key to
survival, and for OLHSA
that means adapting to the
needs of our community
We witnessed struggles to find employment, reach
savings goals, and learn successful independence.
So, we sought a grant from the W. K. Kellogg
Foundation to design a revolutionary integrated
service model that will provide concrete assistance
We witnessed success in our
returning citizen program
and also a glaring need for
juvenile support. We took our
observations to Children’s
Village and created yet another
partnership based on the needs we saw. Now children
aged 12 to 17 receive the support they need, modeled
from our highly successful Michigan Prisoner Re-Entry
Program, to become thriving adults.
This is only the beginning. We plan to stay alert and
responsive to the needs of our communities. We are
here to serve them and to teach them how to help
themselves and each other.
Ronald B. Borngesser, CEO
Message from Board Chairperson Nancy Dingeldey
As Board Chairperson, I am proud to lead OLHSA’s
team of dedicated volunteers. Passion and heartstrings
attached to a purposeful mission are at the core of
OLHSA volunteers, especially its Board of Directors.
Luckily for the community, OLHSA has an army of
such volunteers. Over 1,200 people help us each year,
donating over 43,000 hours in 2010. Those hours are
priceless, of course, but because it is important to know
a number, they are worth at least $180,000 in-kind.
That number becomes even more important when it
is used to leverage state, local, and non-governmental
funds, allowing OLHSA to provide over 60 million
additional dollars of support for our community based
from our primary source of community action funding,
the Community Services Block Grant.
2
O L H S A A n n ual R e p or t 2 0 1 0
We thank our volunteers day
in and day out, for we couldn’t
run smoothly without them,
and hope they’ll stay with us for
life. We thrive because of their
dedication to community action
and OLHSA. These bright stars light
up the sky for so many that OLHSA serves.
Perhaps you’ll consider joining our army.
We’d love to have you.
Nancy Dingeldey, Board Chairperson
Left: Team Turbo Goose Party at the 2010 Oakland Walk for Warmth Top Right: OLHSA’s Board of Director’s at the 2010 Oakland Walk for Warmth
Bottom Right: Team First Presbyterian Church of Brighton at the 2010 Livingston Walk for Warmth
Walk for Warmth
2010 marked the 20th anniversary Walk for Warmth fundraiser. Together with over 1,500 supporters, we walked
at the Hartland Educational Support Service Center and the Palace of Auburn Hills, raising over $183,000 to help
families in both counties stay warm through Michigan’s harsh winters. Heart of Platinum Sponsors Genisys Credit
Union and Palace Sports and Entertainment helped get many community members involved and keep more than
500 homes warm.
Vision
OLHSA will be the voice for social change that diminishes the causes and effects of poverty and empowers
individuals and families to become self-sufficient.
Values
1
To become
an employer
of choice for
employees of
excellence.
5
To acknowledge,
respect and value the
unique and diverse
cultures of our staff,
volunteers, consumers
and communities.
Learning and
measuring progress.
2
6
3
To demonstrate
integrity and
accountability in all
operational areas.
A partnership
approach in
helping a client
move to a
greater level of
self-sufficiency.
4
Informed and
engaged board
members and
volunteers.
7
To stay committed
to exceptional
customer service.
H e l p i n g P e o p l e . C ha n gi n g L iv e s .
3
Success Story
Rutherford
Rutherford & his partner
recently completed
a series of OLHSA’s
8-hour workshops
designed to improve
their relationship.
Roscoe Rutherford
was one of
50,000 inmates
incarcerated in the
State of Michigan
in 2009.
With the hopes of succeeding upon
his release, Rutherford enrolled into
OLHSA’s Responsible Fatherhood
Program while incarcerated at the
Macomb Regional Facility (a maximum security prison
in southeast Michigan). Funded by the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services / Office of Family
Assistance, the Responsible Fatherhood Program is
a marriage and relationship enhancement program
designed to support incarcerated fathers and
their partners.
transportation, personal hygiene and medical needs.
Since enrolling in the Responsible Fatherhood Program,
Rutherford has shown the tenacity to become actively
involved in all services offered in the program. He
connects regularly with staff, whose primary job
is to support and encourage his success.
These days Rutherford
Rutherford struggled with his role
Rutherford struggled with his
and his family
of being an incarcerated father
role of being an incarcerated
have stability and
father and eagerly participated
happiness formed in
and eagerly participated in and
in and completed Parenting
large part through
completed Parenting Classes and
Classes and Relationship
their involvement
Relationship Enhancement Classes
Enhancement Classes. These
with OLHSA. They
classes helped him to better
are homeowners,
prepare for his upcoming reunification with his family
with reliable transportation, and work each day to
and community. Upon his release Rutherford embarked
further strengthen their relationships. Rutherford
on the journey of leaving behind the lost moments that
has successfully maintained employment and is fully
his incarceration had taken from him and his family, and
invested in his role as a father and partner. He is
poured his efforts into developing and building those
aware that true success is shown in a steady pattern
precious family bonds that remained.
of appropriate choices with much strength
and determination.
To support his relationship, Rutherford and his partner
participated in and completed an eight-hour Couples
Rutherford recently met with the Responsible
Relationship Enhancement Workshop. This workshop is
Fatherhood Program’s Federal Project Officer where
designed to support couples impacted by incarceration
he stated that because of OLHSA’s Responsible
by introducing effective communication techniques and Fatherhood Program his relationship with his partner
providing opportunity to rediscover each other.
is wonderful and his life after prison is going great.
The workshop concentrates emphasis on the value of
a father’s role in the family unit. In addition, Rutherford
also received employment support, and supplemental
support services which included assistance with
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O L H S A A n n ual R e p or t 2 0 1 0
Self-Sufficiency
Theresa Hobbs
beams with the hope
of her new life.
Theresa Hobbs and Family
Theresa Hobbs was
struggling to make
ends meet in 2006.
As a single mom supporting two kids
(a teenage son and younger daughter)
she felt at a loss for how to turn the
$10.50/hr that she earned as a certified nurse
assistant into a leg-up for her family. Each month
was competition for which bill would get paid and
which ones would continue to stare up at her from
the counter, opened yet unattended to. She knew
she could do better, knew there were many skills she
hadn’t learned growing up that could help her family
get ahead, so she found her way to the Family SelfSufficiency Program (FSS) and OLHSA.
Paula Reid-Wright, FSS Program Coordinator at OLHSA,
couldn’t say enough good things about working with
Theresa. “She is my shining star,” said Paula, “and she
has come so far.”
The four years Theresa spent in the program changed
her life. She now earns $13.90/hr — a staggering 32
percent increase in pay from when she entered the
program in 2006. She went from having no savings
and no hope of affording a college degree, to
accumulating $16,000 through MSHDA’s contributions
to her escrow account — a thrilling amount of money
for most Americans.
FSS, facilitated through OLHSA, works with families in
need to develop success strategies and teach financial
management skills, while offering a savings account
funded by the Michigan
Theresa has leveraged
State Housing Development
The four years Theresa spent in the
that precious money
Authority (MSHDA). MSHDA
program changed her life. She now
into a real advantage
helps the family pay rent,
for her family. She
easing the financial burden,
earns $13.90/hr — a staggering 32
paid off her car, paid
and stressing the importance
percent increase in pay from when
bills that had been
of homeownership as a goal.
she entered the program in 2006.
haunting her for quite
The head of the household
some time, purchased
must remain employed and
desperately needed clothing for herself and her kids,
strive to further their career through pay increases.
and is currently pursuing a college degree through
Each time pay is increased the family is responsible for
Wayne County Community College. Theresa and her
a larger percentage of rent. The money that MSHDA
children have felt the benefit of saving for the future,
saves when the family pays more of their own rent is
and they continue to save on their own after leaving
put into an escrow account, accumulating until the
the program. Theresa’s kids are planning to one day
family leaves the program.
graduate from college — a goal that is now well
Entering into the program was like taking a deep breath within reach.
of fresh air for Theresa. For the first time in her life
she learned how to make a monthly budget, how to
prioritize her family’s expenses, and she began to feel
that one day they would stand successfully on their
own. She took full advantage of all the classes offered
by the program and she met each required milestone
with gumption and determination.
H e l p i n g P e o p l e . C ha n gi n g L iv e s .
5
2010 Services Provided
Child & Family Services
59,928
Housing & Energy Services
10,328
Community & Economic Services
3,203
Livingston County
15,138
127,430
Human Services
8,407
Home Support Services
Older Adult Services
70,624
South County Services
29,667
Total Services Provided
324,725
From our Service Recipients
“I have been treated with
courtesy and respect and I
do so appreciate everything
you all have managed to do
for me. Thank you!”
— J ol e n e M a r kovi ch
“I cannot thank you enough for
what you have done for me. I
pray that God will continue to
enrich all who are involved in
this project.”
— Clo u e t ta Thom p so n P e t t iway
6
O L H S A A n n ual R e p or t 2 0 1 0
2010 Annual Report Revenues
Source Amount
$47,063,049
Federal State
$5,152,224
Local
$3,761,955
$6,452,356
Private
Total Budgeted Revenues
$62,429,584
H
G
Expenses
E
Child & Family Services
$26,729,278
Housing & Energy Services
$24,725,445
Community & Economic Services
Livingston County
A
D
C
$1,393,921
$776,923
Home Support Services
$948,548
Older Adult Services
$467,210
South Office
$511,948
Total Budgeted Expenses
I
$4,516,453
Human Services
Program Support
F
$2,359,858
$62,429,584
B
A
Child & Family Services
42.82%
B
Housing & Energy Services
39.61%
C
Community & Economic Services
7.23%
D
Livingston County
2.23%
E
Human Services
1.24%
F
Home Support Services
1.52%
G
Older Adult Services
.75%
H
South Office
.82%
I
Program Support
3.78%
H e l p i n g P e o p l e . C ha n gi n g L iv e s .
7
Above and right: Royal Oak Township playground built with KaBOOM!
2010 Program Highlights
• OLHSA-Livingston spent $3,900 of CSBG-ARRA
funds to purchase 400 sleep sacks for babies during
September, which is Safe Sleep Month. Our office
collaborated with the Livingston Department of
Public Health and their WIC program to target 100
pregnant women and new mothers to receive four
sleep sacks each, two in an infant size and two in the
medium size. Sleep sacks are a safe alternative to
blankets in cribs.
• OLHSA staff, community members, and sponsors
helped build a playground from the ground up in just
one day with KaBOOM! in Royal Oak Township.
Above: Food assistance helping over 23,000 people
• The Welcome Center opened in June 2010 at the
Pontiac office and soon afterward in OLHSA’s South and Livingston offices. The Welcome Center approaches
service in a comprehensive way, helping clients succeed by assessing their needs and matching them with
eligible OLHSA programs. In Pontiac 1,900 people have been served and $199,493 in financial services has been
delivered for rent and utility assistance. Many of those recipients have gone on to the Weatherization Assistance
Program to permanently improve their home’s energy efficiency and reduce utility payments.
• In 2010, OLHSA’s housing counselors assisted 162 homeowners to avoid foreclosure, restructure their loan, or
find alternative affordable housing.
• OLHSA helped over 23,000 people with food assistance.
• The Department of Labor Prisoner Re-Entry Program earned continued success with 77 percent of participating
residents retaining employment after returning to the community. The payoff is a safer community with an 8
percent recidivism rate versus the 44 percent national average.
8
O L H S A A n n ual R e p or t 2 0 1 0
Help From Friends
CNN.com producers
visited OLHSA’s Pontiac
Lynn is interviewed for a
feature on OLHSA by CNN
Head Start site this summer
to interview and film Head
Start parents and children,
community members, and
Lynn Crotty, Director for Child
and Family Services. The
piece aired on CNN and CNN.
com in the fall and showcased
OLHSA’s Head Start program
as the efficient, effective and
life-changing program it is.
U of M AISA members helped beautify OLHSA
Mother and daughter: a Connections success
On a rainy October day, 250 University of
Michigan American Indian Student Association
(AISA) members arrived at OLHSA’s central office
in Pontiac to spend the day landscaping as part of
OLHSA’s renovations and in honor of Gandhi’s spirit
of volunteerism on Gandhi Day. A smaller group spent
the day at Shared Harvest in Howell helping to sort
food and keep thousands of pounds of food organized.
A secondary story came from CNN’s visit,
and that was a highlight piece on one of OLHSA’s
most innovative programs: Connections. Connections
keeps families with an incarcerated parent together
through visits, lessons in communication, and support.
A Connections mother and her daughter, who attended
OLHSA’s Head Start program, were featured in the piece.
2010
Federal Poverty Guidelines
ARRA Funds to OLHSA
America Recovery and Reinvestment Act funding over the next
two fiscal years:
FAMILY SIZE annual income
1 person
$10,830
Weatherization Assistance Program
2 people
$14,570
Community Services Block Grant
3 people
$18,310
Head Start
4 people
$22,050
Commodity Food Program
5 people
$25,790
HPRP Rapid Rehousing Program
6 people
$29,530
7 people
$33,270
8 people
$37,010
$11.68 million
$0
$1,066,903
$0
$80,298
TOTAL: $12,827,201
* FYI: For families with more than 8 persons,
add $3,740 for each additional person.
H e l p i n g P e o p l e . C ha n gi n g L iv e s .
9
Thank you to our 2010 Donors
A.C. Engineers
Adam Woodruff
Adayla
Construction
Company Inc.
Adela Piper
Airport Family
Physicians LLC
Baiani-Nenno
Rose-Mary
Baker College
Baldwin Howard
Industrial
Complex
Bobette Rodriguez
Charles Dewey
Body Shaping
Cheryl Barnes
Bowen Radabaugh
& Milton P.C.
Chestnut
Development
Brad Ewing
Chico Williams
Brad Neff
Chris Goetze
Brad Windorf
Christina Orosco
Bradford Jacobsen
Christina Sirakos
Bradley Michaud
Christine Dix
Alan DeGraw
Bank of America
United Way
Campaign
Brenda Mausolf
Christine Ferguson
Albert Hatrick
Barb Bentley
Brian Jonkheene
Christine Giresi
Aldrich Corenna
Barb Reeves
Brian Norred
Christine Jones
Alex Perkins
Barb Wilson
Bridget Villenueve
Christopher Hass
Alison Klott
Barbara Brooks
Chuck & Norma
Allan Martin
Barbara Gillespie
Brighton Lodge
No. 247 F. & A.M.
Allan McMorris
Barbara J. Kriigel
Allison Krys-Kelley
Barbara Kelley
Alpha Kappa
Alpha Sorority
Theta Lambda
Omega Chapter
Barbara Pickard
Al Magnus
Al Patrick
Amanda Gerhardt
Amanda Wells
Amy Hare
Amy Meharg
Amy Sanford
Andrea KendrickWilliams
Barbara Trueman
Barbara Webber
Bar’s Products Inc.
Bruce Gerhardt
Bruce McCullen
Bruce Sooner
BSA Troop 377
Buckhaulter
Nenner
Basil Bloss
Buelow Edward &
Constance
Bear Coffee
Cabaniss Family
Belinda Peters
Caitlin Kos
Ben Levin
Calvin Bell
Berkis Johnson
Carmen McIntyre
Beth Cooke
Carnita Davis
Andrea Miller
Beth Morrison
Carol Beauchamp
Angea Boisvert
Beth Schroeder
Carol Cole
Angela Mucke
Betty Delaere
Angela Vanitvelt
Betty Perlongo
Angelia D. Sharp
Betty Thomas
Angie Meredith
Beverly Mostowy
Ani Niffin
Bill Moran
Anita Lutz
Bloomfield Hills
Optimist Club
Foundation
Ann Degen
Ann Jacobs
Anna Colonnello
Anne Lazowski
Anne Michaels
Anne Scott
Anne T. Zagunis
Antioch Missionary
Baptist Church
Applied Building
Science Inc.
10
AT&T United Way
Employee Giving
Campaign
Carol GriffithJones
Carol Kalinski
Carol Nelson
Carol Rearick
Carol Sears
Carol Shelton
Carol Straub
Bob Myers
Excavating Inc.
Ashok Gupta
Bob Perkins
O L H S A A n n ual R e p or t 2 0 1 0
David Ismael
Yanga
Dubrae Newman
David J. Domas
Earl & Iole
LeTissier
David W. Swink
David Yanga
David Zmikly
Dawn Rigg
Debbie Amett
Debbie Mausolf
Debbie Pugmire
Debbie Salatin
Cindy Walbridge
Deborah Majeski
Clarkston Brandon
Community
Credit Union
Deborah Wiebeck
Clement Valot
Clement
Colleen CurreyFort
Complete
Counseling
Center Inc.
Connie Hickson
Connie Sidor
Consumer Energy
Coralene A. Bloss
Cornerstone
Community
Financial Federal
Credit Union
Debra Berry
Debra Jackson
Dee Brock
Delisi & Associates
Denise Hall
Dennis K. Griffin
Department of
Human Services
Charles Kline
Elaine Pohl
Elaine Stein
Elena Steele
Elizabeth Reiha
Elizabeth Stafford
Emily Freeman
Emma Harrris
Erica Goldston
Erica Leija
Erica Karfonta
Ferndale
Laboratories
Diane Zamberlan
Dianna Miranovic
Dianne Hawley
Don & Angela
McConnell
Cynthia Tacheny
Cecilia Marlow
Elaine Esch
Diane Toarmino
Carolyn
Henderson
Catherine Ciotti
Eileen Johnson
Felicia Lockhart
Donald Rohrer
Carteright
Eileen Hawthorne
Farwell family
Caroljean Tennant
Dan Delmerico
EE Pod LLC
Diane Stibich
Donald Grohs
Dale Welper
Edward & Mary Jo
Zurawski
Ewald Campbell
Cynthia
Stackhouse
Carpet Depot
Ed Rock Feeds &
Stuff
Diane M. Richard
Cynthia Blair
Carole Marshall
Easter Seals Michigan
Diane Bica
Donald E. Jones
Carole Weaver
Ashley Barnes
Drinkwater Betty
Drinkwater
Cindy Mendoza
Cleary University
Douglas Williams
David Coulter
Deborah A.
Blondheim
Claudia Kamar
Douglas G. Paige
Doyle Carter
Don Rohror
Blue Water
Technologies
Inc.
Bob Hoff
Cindy Kulos
Doug Symons
David & Vickie
Smith
Crystal Benjamin
Carol Wendell
Bob & Saul Fink
Cindy Denby
Dave Mihocko
Credit Union ONE
Bloomfield Hills
Townhouses
Cooperative
Bob & Pat
Komjathy
Cindi Wells
Darlene M.
McManus
Donna England
Donna Erickson
Donna L. Smith
First National Bank
Howell
First Presbyterian
Church of
Brighton
First Presbyterian
Church-Pontiac
First United
Methodist
Church
First United
Methodist
ChurchBirmingham
Dan Hartman
Donna
Scarborough
Danielle Sparks
Doris Ostrander
First United
Methodist
Church-Howell
D’arcy Gonzales
Doug Burroughs
Flagstar Bank
Thank you to our 2010 Donors (Cont.)
Flip Salon
Francis Diaz
Frenkle
Full Potential
Ministry
Hartland
Education
Association
Hartland High
Junior Optimist
Jane Sutterfield
Janet Carpenter
Janet Foster
Janet Miesle
Hartland Insurance
Group Inc.
Janet Novara
Hartland United
Methodist
Women
Janice Cross
Gareth & Susan
Volz
Hazel Stileski
Janice Trouba
Heather Halls
Janine Brazle
Gary Peters
Heidi Geissbuhler
Janis Grabmiller
Gary Windorf
Heidi Claushitzer
Genevieve Pajulio
Heidi Kameron
Jayashree
Vishwanath
Genisys Credit
Union
Heidi Kubinski
Jean Beverly
Chesney
Helaine Zack
Jean Garratt
Gail Doyle
Gail McPherson
Galilean Baptist
Church
Genisys
management
group
George McIntosh
Inc.
George Pappas
Georgia Beers
Gerald Geeck
Gerald Sedick
Gery McBride
Gina Hansen
Gine Robbins
Gisela Bosch
Gleaners
Community
Food Bank
Gregory Mary
Gregory
Gregory P.
Jablonsk
H. Rosemary
Hall & Sons
Hana Reed
John Almstadt
John Bingham, Jr.
Kristin Sanford
Kath Hocflin
Kristine Buyers
Kathleen Carney
Krueger
Kathleen JonesCutler
Kyle Hearn
John E. LaBelle
Kathleen L.
Matusik
John Hubbel
Kathleen Lowry
John Nagridge
Kathleen Yanik
John Priebe
Kathleen Zaenger
John Saunders
John
Kathryn Brain
John Wells
Jorin Rubin
Joseph & Mildred
Comps
Kathryn McAllister
Kathryn
Staszewski
Kathryn Stibich
Jean Sexton
Hexagon General
Contractors Inc.
Jeanne L. Clum
Joseph
Cunningham
Jeanne Sparks
Joseph Rankin
Hezzie Robbins
Jeff Berner
Joyce Allen
Holly DeBel
Jeff Taylor
Howell Area
Chamber of
Commerce
Jeffery Vollmar
Joyce E.
Delamarter
Jeffrey Duperon
Joyce Thompson
Jeffrey Ebeling
Joyce Vahala
Jennifer Colling
Judi Dolan
Kellermann
Stronsal
Jenny Moroski
Judith & Richard
Hickson
Kellie Prokuda
Huntington
Management
LLC
Huntington
National Bank
Ian Dempster
Jere Michaels
Jerome Branham
Jerry Moyer
Judith A. Trudeau
Judith Duhaime
Kathy Chester
Kathy Giannetti
Kathy Hill
Kathy Thelen
Kathy Wardowski
Kathy Wong
KDL Home Energy
Inspections LLC
Kelli Truszkowski
Kelly Hess
Kelly Patterson
Jessie Prepole
Judith
Huttenlocher
Jill Hilla
Judy Geiser
Kevin Galvin
Jill Viera
Judy Cowan
Kevin Leshley
Jim Chester
Judy Mellen
Kevin Liddy
Jim Dickinson
Julie Bonfiglio
Jack Wasson
Jim Freeland
Julie Hall
Kils Tae Kwon Do
2 Inc.
Jacqueline
Buchanan
Jim Nash
Julie M. Fischer
Jim Runestad
Julie Mathews
Jacqueline Wilson
Joan Cole
Julie Nelson
James & Kathleen
Wolf
Joan Vogelei
Julie Schmiermund
Joann Lindquist
June M. Everett
JoAnn Wood
June Vasu
Joanne Manns
JVS
Jodi Cook
Kameshwar Family
Jody Kohn
Karen Collom
Joe Hune
Karen JacksonHolzhauer
Irene Onderchanin
Greg Brooks
John & Sue Erich
Kristen Herrick
Kate Lawrence
Jean Dalton
Golden
Opportunity
Club
Greater Oakland
Republican Club
John & Shirley
George
Kristalin Donohue
Karmen Halibu
Herbert &
Associates
Gloria Janssen
Greater Brighton
Area Chamber
of Commerce
Janice Hawke
John & Jan Cley
Karey Crozier
Helen Coddington
Ilka Zelda
Grand Central Self
Storage LLC
Janet White
John & Ann
McMahon
Irving Burton
J.J. Benkert
Jack & Donna
Burnette
James Avedisian
James Reinhart
Jan McAlpine
Jan Secquer
Jane Hunovich
Jane Morse
Jane Peters
Joe Parker
Kendall A. William
L. Huddleston
LaFontaine
Automotive
Group
Lahousse Mary
Carnarvon
Lakeland Screen
Printing
Lakes Area
Optimists
Lakes Community
Credit Union
Lance Sue &
Christian
Schumacher
Lasertec
Laura Turner
Laurie Spooner
Layno Moses
Loida
Leonard Michalski
Lifetime Family
Chiropractic
Lil Nells Pet Salon
Linda Adams
Linda Bauby
Linda Baughman
Linda Hamlet
Linda Lynch
Linda Massimilla
Linda Morgan
Linda Sadlier
Kim Barnard
Linda Walker
Kim Chiminski
Linda Y. Lim
Kimberly Bauman
Linda Zabik
Kimberly Collins
Linden Ebeling
Kimberly Cox
Lindsay Baker
Kimberly Nash
Lindsey Buck
Kinney William
Lindsey Walenga
Kiwanis
Lions Club of
Pontiac
Kiwanis Club of
Pontiac
Knight
Construction Co.
Lisa Grodsky
Lisa Senal
Karen M. Wilson
H e l p i n g P e o p l e . C ha n gi n g L iv e s .
11
Thank you to our 2010 Donors (Cont.)
Livingston County
Small Business
& Technology
Development
Mike Wlegniak
Ohguro Family
Rachel Hatt
Rusty Hudson
Mary Cassady
Mill Creek Sport
Center
OLHSA - Child and
Family Services
Raymond J.
Nicholson
Ruth Ann Ziegler
Mimi Doherty
Orville McMorris
Rebecca Cook
Reed Swanson
Mary Fladzinski
Ruth Schluchter
Ruth TennantMcLean
Liz Fuqua
Mary Freeman
Liz Lucas
Mary Hawkins
Mirror Finish
Mobile Detailing
Oxford Rotary
Club
LOC Federal
Credit Union
Mary Jane
McCarty
Mutual of Omaha
Page Imports
REX Roto
Corporation
Lois Carlson
Mary Jones
Myra Kieffer
Pam Gordon
Rhonda Gutzke
N Doni
Pam Hibbard
Richard Belding
Nancy Clancy
Pam Rietsch
Richard Holmes
Nancy Dempster
Pam Ruth
Rita Ogg
Nancy Dingeldey
Pamela Brooks
Nancy Gohl
Pamela Brown
Riverside Chapel
Simpson-Modetz
Funeral Home
Nancy Jeffery
Pamela McLean
Pamela S. Ehde
RMG Rex Materials
Inc.
Sara Barnwell
Nancy Johnson
Nancy Mather
Paramount Bank
Robert Robert
Sarah Toney
Nancy Mester
Parda Federal
Credit Union
Robert Burch
Scott Bacon
Robert Docherty
Scott Menzel
Robert Harris
Robert Henshaw
Screams Ice
Cream Hell MI
Robert Karfonta
Shaila Jehle
Robert McGlynn
Shaklee
Robert Morse
Sharon Ann
Zieglar
Lonnie L. Bone
Mary Kay Leach
Loomis-Sayles &
Company LP
Mary Nelson
Lorelei & Bradley
Weldon
Lori Lalama
Lorraine Harrold
Lorri Jabour
Mary Ruberg
Mary Schade
Mary T. Wilson
Maureen Crowell
Maureen Kennedy
Louis Eaton
Maureen T.
Schreffler
Louis Guidone
Maureen Young
Nancy Morgan
Louise Rizzo
Melanie Macey
Nancy Piper
Lucille Prepolec
Trust
Melinda Bouie
Nancy Rosso
Lyn Close
Melissa & Kyle
Hillard
Natalie & James
Hargett
Lynn Crotty
Melissa Bugly
Nathan Cohen
Patti Griffith
Lynn Zoller
Melissa
McCullough
National Bank
Paula M. Paterson
Neil Dempster
Pauline Druschel
Network for Good
Paulson’s
Construction Inc.
Lyssandra
Gerhardt
Melissa Spickler
Maggie Jones
Melonie Heatley
Margaret Birch
Michael & Kathleen
Schwartz
Margaret Davey
Margaret McGee
Marie Christenson
Marie Chubb
Marie Verheyen
Marie Wohlfield
Marilyn Morrish
Marilyn Whisner
Marion Anderson
Marjorie Knurick
Mark and Laura
Mastracci
Mark Davison
Michael & Melissa
McDonald
Michael & Sarah
George
Michael Ennis
Michael Prince
Michele Burrell
Michele Loy
Michele Yanga
Michelle Rodgers
Michigan Catholic
Credit Union
Mark Gibeau
Michigan Laureate
Gamma Iota
Mark Robinson
Michigan Works
Market
Measurement
Inc.
Mike Csutoras
Marshall JamesScott
Martha Ninichuk
12
Martin Hansen
Mike Kohut
Mike Leaver
Mike Peters
Mike Sheridan
O L H S A A n n ual R e p or t 2 0 1 0
New Horizons
Rehabilitation
Services Inc.
Nick Degulio
Nicole Hanna
Nina Googasian
Ninfa Mendoza
Nixon & Thurs.
Group Ken
Norman & Jennifer
Dellinger
Nowak & Fraus
Engineers
Patel B.
Patricia Convery
Patricia Cummins
Patricia Zacharias
Peggy Hawke
Penny Murphy
Peoples State
Bank - Madison
Hts
Robert Rudzik
Robert W. Herbst
Robert Walker
Robert Wyatt
Roberta & Sam
Cook
Sally Reynolds
Sally Springstead
Sam Burnette
Sandie Wallace
Sandra Kacarka
Sandra Simonson
Sandy Brady
Sara Spurgeon
Sharon Kartes
Sharynn Porter
Shauna Foster
Sheila Larson
Sheila Szydlowski
Sheila Warren
Rod Criel
Shelly Chase
Romance and
Fantasy, LLC
Sherry Bouler
Peter C. Bowen
ROME Credit
Union
Sherry Regiani
Philip Roller
Ron & Sue Beford
Phyllis Washington
Ron Long
Phyllis White
Ronald & Julie
Kane
Pepsi Bottling
Group
Foundation Inc.
NuTech Graphics
Phyllis Kato
Oakland Co. Com.
Men. Health
Pinckney Senior
Center
Oakland County
Chapter of
Credit Unions
Presbyterian
Church of
Brighton
Oakland County
Children’s
Village
Foundation
Providence
Nursing
Education
Oakland County
Credit Union
Robert Rossbach
Sally Elliott
Ronald B.
Borngesser
Ronald Oldham
Ronnell Skrycki
Rotary Club of
Howell
Quilt-n-Friends
Rotary Club of
Pontiac Charities
Inc.
R. J. Inn Inc. dba
Kensington Inn
Ruby and
Associates Inc.
Sherry Hatrick
Shirla F. Kugler
Shrine Church
Sigma Alpha
Epsilon
Siney Morton
Sonja Berry
Southeast
Michigan State
Employees CU
Southwest
Elementary
(Howell Schools)
St. John’s
Episcopal
Church-Howell
Thank you to our 2010 Donors (Cont.)
St. Joseph Mercy
Livingston
Hospital-OB/
GYN
Steve Williams
St. Patrick Catholic
Church
Sue Ann Douglas
Steven Willis
Stuart Riley
Sue Bosma
Stacy Hickey
Sue Henrickson
Stephanie Summer
Sue Hubert
Stephen Bridger
Sue Rosebrough
Stephen & Leslie
Brown
Sue Urban
Stephen Haynes
Stephen Walker
Superior
Manufacturing
Corp.
Steppin Out
Foundation AIDS
Walk Detroit
Susan Burkhart
Steven A. Villarreal
Susan Hirschhorn
Susan
Hammersmith
Steve Dedene
Susan Jacobs
Steve Lawless
Susan Lindson
Steve Manor
Susan Mosqueda
Steve Pardikes
Susan Speer
Susanne
Bianchette
Suzanne Tinka
Suzy Pedlar
Sylvia Davila
Sylvia Kojima
Tamara S.
Nagridge
Thrivent Financial
for Lutherans
Tiffanie Conway
Tim Kelley
Tim Leh
Timothy Salatin
Tina Marie
Wohlfield
Teri Brewer
Terry Teasley
The Heritage
Church of Christ
The St. Andrew
Sisters
Tina Marzolf
Todd M. Sebold
Tom & Kathy
Janego
Tom Landry
Theresa Delaere
Tom Sanzica
Theresa Kersten
Tom Sullivan
Theresa Morris
Traci Banjanin
Thomas Hinsberg
Tracie O’Dea
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Livingston County Office
2300 East Grand River, Suite 107
Howell, MI 48843-7584
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fax
emailemail mail
South Oakland COunty Office
345 East Nine Mile
Ferndale, MI 48220-1719
248-542-5860
248-542-5897
[email protected]
Trinity Health
Teresa Romano
Central Office
196 Cesar E. Chavez Ave.
P.O. Box 430598
Pontiac, MI 48343-0598
517-546-8500
517-546-3057
[email protected]
Tressa Aube
Thomas
Zamberlan
Teresa Digaetano
Contact Us
248-209-2600
248-209-2645
[email protected]
Thomas Middleton
Truist
Trust Frances
Unilock Michigan
United Way
United Way of
Southeastern
Pennsylvania
Val Vangieson
Valde Garcia
Velma Lyons
Ward’s Do-it
Center
Wayne Chubb
Wendy and Lily
De Morse
West Construction
Services
William A.
Olszewski
Winfire Companies
Woodland Lake
Motel
Venita Duvall
WWJ Newsradio
950 (CBS)
Vicki Bade
Yvonne Lewis
Vickie Danforth
Zdena Knedlik
Vicky Jones
Zeta Phi BetaArchonettes
Wade & Terri
Sylvester
Walter Pawlak
Wanda Willis
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