2006 Annual Report - Family Service of Rhode Island
Transcription
2006 Annual Report - Family Service of Rhode Island
www.familyserviceri.org for brighter futures Going where we’re needed . . . Into the home, the school, the community The wolves are still there and so are we. the providence sunday journal, december 9, 1923 Family Service of Rhode Island, Inc. 55 Hope Street P.O. Box 6688 Providence, RI 02940-6688 Lafayette Mills Unit 13 650 Ten Rod Road North Kingstown 02852 Telephone/TDD 401 331-1350 401 294-6138 www.familyserviceri.org In 1892, Family Service of Rhode Island was founded as the Providence Society for Organizing Charity (PSOC), helping destitute, struggling families, many new immigrants with limited English skills. We go out into the home, the school, the community because those Additional facilities in Lower South Providence, Mount Pleasant, Smithfield, most in need can’t make it to us. They don’t have transportation or good health or child care or jobs that allow them time off during North Smithfield, Bristol, office hours. What they have are hunger, sickness, cold . . . and all and East Providence. the many wolves that lie in wait for our poorest families. Into the home . . . Into the home . . . To Keep Kids Safe and Families Together To Keep Kids Out of Hospitals When families are struggling to keep a roof over their heads, stay Children with serious emotional warm, and keep food on the table, children are at risk of neglect and and behavioral problems abuse. When illness, substance abuse, or the sudden loss of a job receive intensive treatment compound a family’s problems, the risk for children rises higher. and social service support in Case managers work in the home up to several days a week throughout the crisis, providing access to emergency child care, medical treatment, mental health counseling, and substance abuse treatment. Food, heating, and rent assistance may also be provided. their home instead of being hospitalized or placed in residential care. We are the state’s largest provider of Children’s Intensive Services. To Keep Parents Out of Hospitals Parents with mental health or substance abuse problems may enter hospitals only because they are unable to get to the health care and treatment they need in the community. Case managers help coordinate their health care needs and provide transportation to counseling, psychiatric, and medical appointments, offering an alternative to hospitalization. Into the home . . . Into new homes . . . To Keep Kids Out of Jail Being the parent of a teen isn’t easy, especially when there are problems in school or at home. Teens don’t always listen. It can be tempting to give up. We work with the families of kids with serious behavior problems, truancy, or a history of running away, including kids who may already have a first conviction. We provide family mediation and school advocacy and for some, To Help Children Heal Some children who have suffered serious abuse and neglect need intensive therapy and supervision before living with any family again. intensive family counseling, We provide group treatment homes for children and teens as well psychiatric services, and as three independent-living apartments for young adult or near even residential care. adult girls who may be pregnant or already mothers. We help kids turn their One home is for little boys ages 6 to 12. The other homes form a lives around. Seven out of continuum of care for adolescent girls, from intensive supervision eight kids stay out of court! to independent living. As girls recover, growing in responsibility and independence, they move on to a home that offers increased freedom and options. In 2005, more than 150 children and young adults (including three babies) were in our homes. Into new homes . . . Into new homes . . . Making Foster Care Better Before an adult or family can take a child into their care, they must be licensed and undergo an intensive screening and educational process. To keep foster children safe and provide them with permanency and security in their new homes, we have begun an important new pilot project in Washington and Kent Counties in cooperation with the RI Department of Children, Youth, and Families. Often, the best choice for a child is living with a close family member. We are providing intensive support to those family members To Keep Children Safe Therapeutic foster care provides children who don’t need residential treatment with a secure home in which to heal, surrounded by caring people. Most children live with a therapeutic foster care family only until their own family has overcome its crisis, resolved its problems, and is again able to care for them safely. For some, it’s the beginning of a long-term family bond that may lead to adoption. Single adults and families are always needed to open their homes and hearts for a short time or forever. Immediate 24 / 7 support and a tax-free stipend are provided. and to other prospective foster parents to help them through this licensing process as quickly as possible. As more homes become available, more children will be able to remain in their own communities, going to their own schools, and playing with their own friends. And all foster families will receive flexible levels of support and therapeutic assistance so that they can stay together through the big and little crises that are a normal part of life. Into the home. . . Into the home. . . To Help Kids Get a Good Start Infants and toddlers (to age 3) at risk of serious physical, social, or language delays receive intensive services from an Early Intervention team to give them the best possible chance in life. Educators, therapists, nutritionists and all available community resources work together for the child and family. Certified instruction in The Hanen Language Programs available for parents of children with autism spectrum disorder. Reuniting Families Staff helps parents who have lost custody of their child due to abuse or neglect to resolve those problems that led to the family’s break-up. If or when reunification occurs, family therapy and support help ensure the family’s continued stability and the child’s safety. Children in residential or foster care begin to lose ties to whatever family they have left. We organize safe, supervised visits in community settings with brothers, sisters, or parents. Visiting strengthens family relationships and communication. Into the home. . . Into the schools . . . To Help Special Needs Children North Kingstown As the managing partner of Solutions CEDARR, we match Staff develops therapeutic, harmonious classrooms for children in families whose children (to age 21) have special health care needs kindergarten and pre-school programs that create an environment to effective local services. See www.solutionscedarr.org. of learning and support for all children, overcoming early differences Most common special needs or delays in social, physical or intellectual development. are autism, attention deficit Providing on-site family counseling and support. Reaching out to hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), families in transitional housing who are overcoming the trauma developmental speech or and disruption of homelessness. language disorders, asthma, delays in development, Down Syndrome and mental retardation, cerebral palsy, adjustment and oppositional disorders, and post-traumatic stress. Solutions CEDARR is a joint program of Family Service of Rhode Island, Butler Hospital, The Kent Center, South Shore Mental Health Center, Newport County Community Mental Health Center, Spurwink / RI, and Saint Mary’s Home for Children. Into our own school . . . Into the community . . . Emergency Response for Children in Crisis The Police Go Team and CCAT (Children in Crisis Assessment Team) go out on scene, day or night, 365 days a year, to help children who are victims of violence and their families by providing crisis intervention and emergency assistance. The teams respond to calls from the Providence Police and the RI Department of Children, Youth and Families, including the Child Abuse Hotline. Mount Pleasant Academy (MPA), now in its fourth year, has earned a statewide reputation as the school of last chances – helping children who have previously known only failure. Dually approved as a private year-round elementary school and special education elementary school. MPA is also a psychiatric day hospital enrolling up to 37 children with severe learning and emotional problems who might otherwise require residential treatment. Located in Providence. Accepting children statewide. Into the community . . . Into the community . . . On the Beat On inner-city streets Bilingual staff and clinicians ride with Working to prevent renewed violence and trauma. Meeting with Providence police officers on patrol the families, friends, and neighbors of victims. Providing follow up in high crime neighborhoods to reach counseling and immediate support throughout a tragedy, including families before violence explodes and get assistance with funeral arrangements, medical expenses, child care, them help. They provide immediate family and transportation. mediations, counseling support, intake, and referral for services. At Police Substations Bilingual staff at Kennedy Plaza and Olneyville reaches out to runaway or homeless teens and young adults, keeps kids at risk from joining gangs, mediates family and school problems, and helps kids and their families connect to needed help. In Public Schools salvatore mancini photo Staff works with Student Resource Officers (police) in the schools to connect students and families to needed services and keep kids in school. At Truancy Court Staff provides referral, intake, and bilingual language support to families with a child at risk for serious behavioral problems. “Family Service got us through the hardest days of our lives, they worked with the police, they got us food, they helped with the funeral and they're still here – still with us.” – name withheld Into the community . . . Into the community . . . The Trauma and Loss Center The Family Service of RI Trauma and Loss Center provides follow-up treatment and wrap-around support to children and their families seriously harmed by abuse, neglect, or violence in their home, community, or country of origin. Science-based cutting-edge therapies are used to help avoid children's life-long struggles with school failure, depression, substance abuse, and relationship problems. Based at 55 Hope Street in Providence with hours in North Kingstown. A United Way 2004-5 Community Impact Program. Providence Safe Start The Providence Safe Start Program is the only member of the highly prestigious national Safe Start network in RI. This network, sponsored by the US Office of Justice, is dedicated to testing, developing, and researching the most promising therapies for the youngest trauma victims — children under age six. A partnership of Family Service of RI, the RI Coalition Against Domestic Violence, the RI Family Court, the Providence Police Department, and the RI Department of Children, Youth, and Families. RAND Corporation is the national evaluator. Into the community . . . Into the community . . . Neighborhoods, Workplaces, Religious Congregations Our nationally certified Critical Incident Stress Management (CISM) team responds to community tragedies. When local families died in a tragic plane accident, when violence erupted in a workplace, newport daily news photo when a child or adult went missing, when fire left a family homeless, we came to help the survivors and those devastated by the loss – friends, neighbors, and colleagues. In 2005, we assisted in 11 serious incidents statewide. Statewide First responder for both the Rhode Island and Providence Emergency Management Teams. Member of the volunteer RI CISM Network. Member of the RI Red Cross network of trained Community After Hurricane Katrina Assisting evacuees from New Orleans adjust to their temporary homes in Middletown. Supporting the statewide effort to provide counseling, connections to loved ones, and permanency, as well as Emergency Response Teams. clothes, food, and immediate necessities to those cruelly displaced providence journal photo by the storm. After the Station Nightclub Fire Our Family Resource Center, called the nerve center for grief by the Providence Journal, has worked with 327 survivors and victims’ families since the tragedy. Assistance is now focused on long-term recovery, especially for the 187 children directly affected, including 170 who lost one or both parents. Warwick 1954, Hurricane Carol The 2005 Business Excellence Awards . . . O n November 17th, I proudly accepted the first Providence To do this, we have always recruited a multiethnic, multiracial, Business News Excellence in a Non-Profit Award on behalf multilingual staff and then provided that staff with mandatory of our staff, our board, and our founders. In 1892, our founders’ cultural training. We now also meet the highest national standard purpose had been to create a charity based on sound business as a provider of culturally and linguistically appropriate services. organization that would help the poor We owe it to our clients to provide treatments based on best become self-supporting as well as provide practices, science-based proven models, experience, and cutting for their immediate relief. edge techniques. We then go further and provide regular multi- We are gratified and honored to receive disciplinary oversight of each client’s progress because even the this award, but for us “excellence in a non- most tested science-based model is no good if it isn’t helping the profit” is an unending process of continuous client achieve his or her own goals. quality improvement at every level of our organization and programming. We owe it to the community to be bound by the highest ethical and fiduciary standards. Therefore, as soon as the Sarbanes-Oxley Act was passed, our all-volunteer board chose on their own initiative to transition to its higher standard. We owe it to the residents in each city and town to offer services We owe it to our staff to listen to their professional needs and provide them with access to the newest science-based models and accepted best practices available. And then, we need to go further and support them with the training those models and practices require. My thanks to the distinguished panel who chose our agency for this honor. My thanks to our staff and board who make excellence happen daily. My thanks to our clients who recommend that are accessible to them and their families. When the Washington us to their friends and return whenever they again need help. County Coalition for Children found an acute shortage of mental And my thanks to our founders whose vision still guides our work. health services for children and families, we responded by opening our first branch office at 650 Ten Rod Road in North Kingstown. This soon led to initiatives on Aquidneck Island and Westerly. We owe it to our racially and culturally diverse clients to provide treatment options and services reflective of their needs. Margaret Holland McDuff Chief Executive Officer Into the community . . . Into the community . . . Outpatient: Children, Teens, and Adults Individual counseling and psychiatric services that can be combined with services in the home. Individual or group substance abuse crawford – standard times treatment. Psychiatric medications. Help with family relationships and schooling issues. Treatment for depression, anxiety, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and other conditions. Staff includes four board-certified child and adolescent psychiatrists It began with the Washington County Coalition for Children. That led to outpatient psychiatric and clinical services at our first branch office at 650 Ten Rod Road, North Kingstown in Lafayette Mills. That led to counseling and support services in area homes. That led to additional outpatient hours at the Westerly Integrated Social Service Program Center (WISSP) within Westerly High School. That led to help for children at Camp E Hun-Tee and Acadia Academy in Exeter. That led to Newport and case management and intake services at the Dr. Martin Luther King Community Center. That led to services in area homes on Aquidneck Island. That may lead us on to other needs, other partnerships . . . until one day, poor children are no longer falling through the cracks of bureaucracy. providing more than 100 treatment hours per week. Into the community . . . Into the community and the home . . . kate telford photo To Help Adults Learn to Live with HIV/AIDS The Afia Center for Health and Wholeness offers drop-in group counseling, individual nutritional advice, basic needs assistance, a hot communal meal, and social, spiritual, and recreational opportunities to its 168 members. Therapy groups include Living with AIDS and Overcoming Substance Abuse. Other therapeutic groups are integrated around art, movies, sewing, bingo, community meetings, and a gay men’s substance abuse support group. Located within the Mathewson Street Church in downtown Providence, the Afia Center reaches minorities as well as the isolated, poor, and Gentle Anger, member of Afia Center. To Help Individuals Living with HIV/AIDS mentally ill. All adults living with HIV/AIDS are welcome to join. Outpatient: Individual psychiatric services and counseling specifically Membership is free. A Title II Ryan White program. for adults with HIV/AIDS. Individuals who also have histories of substance abuse and hepatitis received integrated counseling addressing both issues simultaneously. Into the Home: Home-based support services help adult clients, including those co-infected with Hepatitis C, maintain their health for as long as possible. Staff assists clients with final preparations and transition to hospice care. With Miriam Hospital: Coordination of services for all clients on Interferon Treatment who are co-infected with HIV and Hepatitis C. AFIA Center exhibit of members’ paintings. kate telford photo Who we are . . . Who we are . . . Family Service of Rhode Island is one of the oldest and largest Family Service has more than 400 staff members, including non-profit human service agencies in the state. We have been contract professionals and interns. Included are: board-certified nationally accredited by the Council on Accreditation for more than psychiatrists; licensed clinicians; educators; physical, occupational 20 years. and speech therapists; nurses; dieticians; case managers; and We are state licensed for behavioral health services and substance information and evaluation specialists. abuse treatment. We accept most medical insurance or will set fees Nearly 100 Family Service staff members are minorities – 11% are on a sliding scale. Many programs are provided without charge. black / Cape Verdean; 11% Hispanic; and 2% Asian. Sixteen percent We meet the highest national standard as a provider of culturally and linguistically appropriate services. Bilingual staff is available speaking Spanish, Portuguese, Khmer, Creole, Italian, and Hmong. In addition, up to 59 languages are now available through faceto-face translation and another 100 by telephone in an emergency. We also provide TDD service for the hearing disabled. Services also include a food pantry, clothing, household items, holiday baskets and gifts for clients. of direct service staff are bilingual. Our mission . . . Our philosophy of care . . . Respect for our clients We respect you — your needs, your goals, your strengths. We respect your religious beliefs, sexual orientation, and cultural and racial heritage. We respect your family and offer treatment for children that is inclusive of the family whenever possible. Respect for our community We are constantly working to improve our services and create meaningful community partnerships. Respect for our profession We combine cutting edge research, best practices, science-based To respond creatively to the unmet needs of individuals, families and the community by building partnerships that help people help themselves. therapy, and community experience to create improved services that may be modeled within the state and nationwide. Who our clients are . . . What our clients say about us . . . Residents of every community in Rhode Island: In 2005, our core home-based and outpatient programs provided services to 3,517 families (unduplicated) impacting 8,687 individuals from every area of Rhode Island and nearby communities. Hundreds more were helped through our community programming. Many receive multiple services. Half are minorities: 27% Hispanic; 13% African-American/Cape Verdean; 7% multiracial/other; 2% Asian; and 1% Native American. Three-fourths of all clients are children, ages 18 or younger. From our past four annual client satisfaction surveys: Family or Individual Clients Served 1,547 Mental health services in the home 1,297 566 80 Mount Pleasant Academy 57 Residential/Foster Care/Family Care 266 Solutions CEDARR 899 ▲ Trauma Center 97% would come back if they needed help again; ▲ Early Intervention 94% were satisfied with the services they received; ▲ Outpatient services 96% would recommend us to a friend who needed similar help. Training . . . Family Service of Rhode Island . . . kate telford photo Interns Family Service is a teaching institution with 27 interns from the University of Rhode Island, Rhode Island College, Boston College, Simmons, and Salve Regina. Staff Board of Directors All members are volunteers. Robert S. Waddington Treasurer Cynthia Leonard Mary McGoldrick Richard L. Morin Jay M. Orson, M.D. William E. Smith Adriana Vargas Robert Vincent Rev. Jeffery Williams Leigh Ann Woisard Joan J.Hertel Secretary CEO Advisory Committee All members are volunteers Allan (Sandy) Ballou Curt G. Beckwith, M.D. Melvoid J. Benson Susan E. Bodington James M. Bower Frank J. Cenerini Christopher J. Crosby Betty-Jo Cugini Caroline Ebong Dean M. Esserman Peter C. Fuller William F. Hatfield Saul Kaplan Bradford B. Kopp Ardena Lee-Fleming William Allen Elizabeth Dennigan Christine Ferguson Jill Goldstein Anna Cano Morales Philip Rivers Diane Sangermano Marguerite Schnepel Maxine Shavers Stephen Zito Malcolm Farmer, III President Gina M. Raimondo Vice President All case managers and clinicians complete extensive mandatory trainings using recognized local and regional experts. Training is ongoing in the cutting-edge Client Directed OutcomeInformed Approach to Care. This approach strengthens the partnership with clients and prompts timely adjustments in services. We are now also a test site for “Giving Youth a Voice in Mental Health Services,” a new URI-developed treatment model. Community Sponsor of Recovery from Trauma: The psychological aftermath of violence and disaster. Conference featured national experts in children’s trauma, including Heidi Ellis, Ph.D.; Betsy McAlister Groves, LICSW; and Steven Marans, Ph.D. In partnership with Butler Hospital. Margaret Holland McDuff Chief Executive Officer The Brighter Futures Award . . . The Brighter Futures Award . . . The Boston Red Sox organization has been chosen as the second recipient of our Brighter Futures Award because of their commitment to the young boys in our East Providence group home as well as children in group homes and hospitals throughout New England. Our home was “adopted” by the Red Sox family in 2003, shortly after John Henry became the team’s principal owner. Their continuing constance brown photo personal attention as well as their generous gifts and support are helping our boys overcome their terrible histories of abuse and neglect and reach toward a brighter future. From left to right: Mayor David Cicilline, Malcolm Farmer III, Anne Mimi Sammis, Colonel Dean Esserman and his wife, Gilda Hernandez. Trying out Papa Jack's (Ron Jackson) World Series ring. Colonel Dean Esserman of the Providence Police Department was chosen as the first recipient of our Brighter Futures Award for his outstanding contribution to the well-being of the children of Providence. He has shown an unwavering commitment to building strong respond to the immediate needs of children and families who are victims of violence. The impact of his leadership affects both our local community and communities nationwide. luca del borgo photo partnerships between the police and community organizations to Community support . . . Community support . . . Major Corporate, Government, Capital City Community Centers Foster Pharmaceutical National Grid and Foundation Donors* Carey Floors Frank Hazard Fund National Security Systems Carter Family Charitable Trust Freedom Bank of Greenville Nautic Partners, LLC Cassarino’s Restaurant Fresh and Fancy Foods Navy-Marine Corps Reserve Center Cathedral of Life Fuller & Son NBC 10 CB Richard Ellis Fuller Box Co., Inc. NCEB AAUW The Champlin Foundations GlaxoSmithKline Neighborhood Health Plan of Rhode Island Charles & Donald Salmanson Foundation Gould Charitable Lead Trust New Commons Charlesmead Foundation Grant Sherburne Fund New England Gas Company Citizens Bank Greater Providence Chamber of Commerce New England Pest Control Citizens Community Foundation GTECH Corporation NFL Films Cooley Group H. Carr & Sons, Inc Nortek, Inc. Cornelia Howell Fund Hasbro Novartis Cornish Associates Haynes / de Boer Associates Architects O. Ahlborg & Sons, Inc. Cox Communications, Inc. The Helen Howell and Fred Ocean State Charities Trust AAA Foray AAA Southern New England Abbott Laboratories Adler’s Hardware Advertising Ventures, Inc. Aid Maintenance Company Aim High Early Learning Center Alga Plastics Co. All Children’s Theatre Allison Reed Alperin/Hirsch Family Foundation American Express Amica Mutual Insurance Andrade-Faxon Charities AstraZeneca Aurora Civic Association B.A. Ballou & Company Inc. Bakeford Properties, LLC Bank of America Bank Rhode Island Bed Bath & Beyond Bilodeau Property Management Inc. Bishop Hendricken High School Blish & Cavanagh, LLP Blue Cross & Blue Shield of RI Boston Red Sox Bristol Female Charitable Society Bristol-Myers Squibb Broad Spectrum Services Brown Lisle/Cummings Inc. Brown University Bryant University Burns & Levinson LLP Butcher Shop Deli Butler Hospital Capco Steel Corp. Creative Office Environments Otis Fund Ocean State Job Lot Charitable Foundation CVS Herff Jones, Inc. Otsuka Pharmaceutical Davisville Middle School Hinckley, Allen & Snyder, LLP Parent Consultant Program, RI Dept. of Delta Dental of Rhode Island Hudson Companies Dexter Donation Trust International Stamping, Inc. PawSox The Disney Stores International Tennis Hall of Fame Payden and Company The Dr. Martin Luther King Community Jansen Peabody and Brown Jessica Hagen Fine Art & Design The Pellegrini Trust East Providence CDBG Program John Clarke Trust Pfizer Education Partnership The John & Happy White Foundation Phoenix Investment Management Edwards Angell Palmer & Dodge, LLP John A. & Elsa J. DeAngelis Fund Piccerelli, Gilstein & Co., LLP The Women’s Group of Edwards Angell Jordan, Apostal, Ritter Associates Picture This Joseph S. and Rosalyn K. Sinclair Foundation Point Judith Capital EFD, Inc. June Rockwell Levy Foundation Pottery Barn and Pottery Barn Kids Eli Lilly KPMG LLP Pranda North America, Inc. The Ellen D. Sharpe Fund Lifespan Price Rite, Cranston Eisai Co. Ltd. Lincoln School Prince Charitable Trust Emma L. Myrick Memorial Fund M. Hearn Hair Designs ProJo Santa Fund Encore Catering Mary Dexter Chafee Fund Providence CDBG Program Episcopal Charities McAdams Charitable Foundation The Providence Center Fidelity Information Services Mellon, Providence, RI The Providence College Economic Financial Architects Morgan Stanley The First Unitarian Alliance Mullen Scorpio Cerilli Center Palmer & Dodge, LLP, Health Committee Providence Group Investment Advisory Co. Community support . . . Providence Housing Authority Sir Speedy Downtown The Providence Journal South County Hospital Providence School Department Sovereign Bank Public Relations Society/SENE Sprint Nextel Corporation RDW Group, Inc Stephen T. Haun, Inc. Residential Properties Ltd. Sturtevant Group Rhode Island AGC Synthon Pharmaceuticals Rhode Island Council of Takeda Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd. Community Mental Health Centers Budget . . . PUBLIC SUPPORT & REVENUE Year ended June 30, 2005 Year ended June 30, 2004 Talbot’s and Talbot’s Kids Public Support $1,222,079 $2,048,770 Rhode Island Donation Exchange Program Teknor Apex Company Contract Revenue $6,296,113 $6,006,672 Rhode Island Food Bank Tillinghast Licht Perkins Smith & Cohen, LLP Program Fees $10,787,618 $9,395,360 The Rhode Island Foundation Timothy Flanigan Trust Other Revenue $320,335 $353,169 Rhode Island Housing & Mortgage Towne & Country Beauty Salon $18,626,145 $17,803,971 Finance Corp. Tug Hollow Corporation Total Support & Revenue Rhode Island Kids Count US Office of Justice RI Chapter Associated General Contractors US Marine Corps Toys for Tots EXPENSES RICORP United Healthcare Program Services $16,332,323 $15,427,573 RI Department of Children, Youth, and United Way of Rhode Island Management $2,066,742 $1,742,463 University Medicine Foundation Development $94,494 $91,891 RI Department of Health The Vigneron/Johnston Foundation Rental Property & Equipment $40,883 $42,750 RI Department of Human Services Village Retirement Communities RI Justice Commission V. George Rustigian Rugs, Inc. $18,534,442 $17,304,677 RI Department of Mental Health, W.B. Mason Company Families Retardation & Hospitals Wal-Mart RI State Council on the Arts The Washington Trust Company RISD The Westerly Integrated Social Service Robbins Properties Program Robertson Foundation Wheeler School Robinson Green Beretta Corp. The Wickford Art Association Roger Williams University Williams-Sonoma Rue De l’Espoir Wilson’s of Wickford Saint-Gobain Corporation WPRI/WNAC TV Sam’s Club Yawkey Foundation Total Expenses E X P E N S E S Fiscal Year 2005 Community Services 48% Community Services includes Homebased Services, Providence School Services, Prevention, Early Intervention, Family Resource Center, Trama Center, Emergency Services and Solutions CEDARR Educational Services 8% Other Services 14% Other Services includes Administration, Quality Management and Development *Including the entire board of Family Seifert mtm Systems, Inc. Service of Rhode Island. For the entire Siena’s listing of donors, please visit our website. Signature Digital Offset Printing Educational Services includes Mount Pleasant Academy Behavioral Health Services includes Outpatient Mental Health, Substance Abuse and Psychiatric Treatment Sansiveri, Kimball & McNamee, LLP Schnepel Woodworking Children's Services includes Residential Treatment, Therapeutic Foster Care/ Adoption and Family Care Community Services 48% Behavioral Health Services 5% Children’s Services 25% www.familyserviceri.org Family Service of Rhode Island, Inc. 55 Hope Street P.O. Box 6688 Providence, RI 02940-6688 Lafayette Mills Unit 13 650 Ten Rod Road North Kingstown 02852 Our team has been hard at work . . . and at last, it's finished! Telephone/TDD 401 331-1350 401 294-6138 www.familyserviceri.org Additional facilities in Lower South Providence, Mount Pleasant, Smithfield, North Smithfield, Bristol, and East Providence. Our new website featuring: news and events; program information; parent information; and job openings.