Fall 2015 Newsletter - Curry Senior Center
Transcription
Fall 2015 Newsletter - Curry Senior Center
N e w s a b o u t S e n i o r s i n t h e C e n t ra l C i t y Senior Independence Newsletter No. 3 | Fall 2015 333 Turk Street, San Francisco, CA 94102 | curryseniorcenter.org | 415-292-1040 Affordable Housing for Seniors is Painfully Scarce So the Best Option is Keeping Them in Place Your support for Curry helps maintain partnerships and case managers who employ scant resources to avoid having another senior thrown out onto the street. By Tod Thorpe as a gardener in Sausalito where he also found his first home on the West coast — a one-bedroom apartment for $90 per month. Have you heard about the $3-a-day diet? Now imagine living on $3-a-day for all your expenses beyond what you pay in rent/mortgage and to keep the lights on. Your food, entertainment, clothing, transportation, medications, hygiene items and everything else for $3-a-day?! William “Tom” Creveling, 77, has been subsisting on a daily budget of less than $3 per day for more than the last decade — frozen in isolation and stress and terrified of being evicted onto the streets. With homeless shelters beyond capacity and access to affordable housing at a complete standstill for months with waitlists often over 5 years long these days, he felt completely hopeless. And I felt completely insensitive and ignorant when I was planning to take his photo for this article and asked him if he had a favorite coffee shop near his SRO apartment where we could meet… minimum $2 for a cup of coffee?… of course he didn’t have Soon Tom discovered and mastered the very specific craft of painting Victorian homes and found it tangibly rewarding to see the transformation of a chipped and scrappy-looking relic into a beautiful, painted lady. His business thrived well into his 60s until the compressing economy squashed his livelihood. Tom had been subsisting on less than $3/day for years until receiving a rental subsidy via a Curry strategic partnership one! Fortunately he was very goodnatured about my foible. Tom is a US Army Veteran and just after his service, his girlfriend in New York, coaxed him to trek across the country to San Francisco in a VW bug just in time for the Summer of Love. Once here, he discovered that he greatly enjoyed the sense of accomplishment he got from working with his hands so his first job was This lead Tom to his new SRO apartment — a one-room space with a bathroom but no kitchen costing $850/month these days with his social security topping out at $941. And he had to store most of his antiques and collectibles in a storage unit across the street from Curry. This was quite fortunate because he supplemented his income by selling off his treasures one by one but more importantly — because it allowed him to discover the Clinic at Curry and our beloved Medical Director, Dr. Zercher. (Continues on page 2) Affordable Housing for Seniors (Continued from front cover) He credits Curry and Dr. Z with saving his life, just after suffering a stroke and has witnessed his dedicated doctor for the last decade devoting his life to public service. He added, “If only we had more “Dr. Zs” and fewer “Trumps”, the world would be a much better place!” Curry built a bridge to a new partnership with the very generous Q Foundation which once focused all its resources on housing for those living with HIV/AIDS but has recently been able to expand additional rent subsidies to a limited number of seniors who are stuck paying more than 80% of their monthly income on rent. The subsidy compared to what it would cost to provide housing and services for a homeless senior represents a huge financial savings before even taking into account the quality of life impact on the senior. Case Manager, Hilary Hann immediately seized the opportunity to rescue Tom. She lamented, “The lack of housing situation has left case-managers feeling completely depleted so having this opportunity to improve the quality of someone’s life so extensively is especially nice. And he’s such an easy guy to want to help!” Because of what you do to support Curry partnerships and innovation and Hilary’s efforts, Tom has per month now what seems relatively like a fortune to live on — about what it costs for just one person to have dinner and wine at the French Laundry. That’s perspective! The fear and depression had virtually locked him away from life but now he has enough to buy fresh foods and vegetables so he can explore nutritious recipes through Curry’s Healthy Living Class. Although he was never too proud, he preferred to survive on Top Ramen and what he could scrape together because for him, he equated free meals lines with giving up even though he knew many others have no choice and less than him. I could hear the smile in his voice when he admitted, “I splurged $7 on takeout Chinese food the other day which I still can’t really do but it was unimaginably delicious.” He’s now excited to get down to the Curry Computer Center to learn more about technology so he can continue his blog and start to write his book — a concept that forever eluded him in a cloud of despair. I asked Tom what he would say to all of you who support Curry and he said with a little worry and audible gratitude in his voice, “The economic divide is expanding and becoming entrenched and the middle class is hurting more and more. But when people like you can give even $50 per month to this organization that has completely turned my life around, I think we can make it. Thank you for giving back my hope and freedom to live.” IN LOVING MEMORY OF JACKIE SAX A very special woman was honored at the gala last May by the Pacific Union Community Fund — Jackie Sax, who sadly passed away just weeks ago. Here she stands with Giants Baseball Hall-of-Famer, Orlando Cepeda and her dear husband, Board Emeritus member, Richard Sax. Current Gala Chair and board member, Shirley Quitugua had this to say — “I have never known anyone like Jackie. I enjoyed working with her on Curry events, especially when she was the Gala Chair. She had sophistication and class but it was her beautiful heart that touched me. She was a good friend and I will always remember her and miss her deeply.” 2 — Curry Senior Center Fall 2015 Curry Senior Center Board of Directors Jeffrey Alan Beane, MD President Jonrie Dávila Vice-President Zachary Schiller Treasurer Robert Razzo Secretary J. David Bickham Beverly Brumfield Cynthia K. Ceres Walter DeVaughn Diane Dwyer Ime Ekanem John McKinnon Shirley Quitugua Richard Sullivan Lyn Tillery Amy Whalen Alice Zhang Leadership Staff David Knego Executive Director Richard Zercher, MD Medical Director Rachel Ainza Principal Clerk Dawn Stevens Nurse Manager Arlo Bushnell Associate Director of Development Toby Shorts Community Programs Supervisor Michael McGinley Case Management Supervisor Claudia Pinto-Mora Medical Records Margot Ragosta Behavioral Health Clinician Susmita Shah Behavioral Health Services Director Tod Thorpe Director of Development 415-292-1040 This Young, Bright-eyed College Intern Likely Left Her Fingerprint on the Last Mail You Received from Curry Read how her internet search for understanding could not compare to hands-on experience at this oasis you create for Curry seniors By Bella Lee illuminating; so I contented myself to wait and see what I was getting myself into. It all started with a Google search. As it turns out, the textbook definitions were nowhere near enough to encompass what I have found these words to mean. During my time here at Curry Senior Center, I have sat in meetings, stamped envelopes, entered data, served food, written blurbs—just to name a few items that have been VIP members of my to-do list — but most importantly, I have made connections with people. And that is what I think words like development, nonprofit, and fundraising are meant to be about. Having recently relocated to the Bay Area and possessing a seemingly infinite amount of days before the start of the new school year, I decided that the best way to get to know San Francisco was to find something to do here. After sending out a flurry of emails, I got into contact with Curry Senior Center. To be honest, I didn’t exactly know what I was getting into. My position was described to me using words like “development,” “non-profit,” and “fundraising.” At the time, these words held a different connotation for me than they probably did for people who worked in the field. I connected “fundraising” to crowdfunding websites and Girl Scout cookies, and “nonprofit” with international volunteerism. And the word “development” evoked images of children growing up, which even I knew was definitely wrong. A web search helped to connect me with Curry, so I figured I could not go wrong with another web search to figure out just what I would be doing when I started my internship. Summer intern Bella was able to do behind the scenes development work faster than lightning and also directly served seniors in the dining room My work as an intern began when I was introduced to almost every person who worked at 315 Turk Street; my first assignment started not with a bang, not with a whimper, but with the click-clack of the keys on a keyboard. I was given a stack of paper about five inches thick set out to enter the contact information of volunteers who had offered their time up in the dining room. Development. Noun. The act or process of developing. Fundraising. Noun. The act or process of raising funds, as for nonprofit organizations or for a political cause. Nonprofit. Noun. A nonprofit organization, institution, corporation, or other entity. My second assignment turned out to be a bit of a sticky situation… literally. That day, I stuck stamps and address labels on what seemed like hundreds of invitations for the 2015 Bocce Ball Competition. Some of these invitations were addressed to those whose information I had just entered the previous day into our database: they were volunteers who had given their time to Curry Senior Center. Out of all these definitions, maybe only “fundraising” was the least bit A couple weeks and more projects than I can count later, I was sent up to volunteer in the dining room, as the staff there needed a helping hand that day. There is where it all came full circle for me, when I was serving meals. I realized then that what we were developing was the Curry community; all of that work Intern Bella was integral to the team. Here with Development Associate, Michelle Noble, who volunteered as a way to transition from corporate to non-profit work curryseniorcenter.org (Continues on page 11) Curry Senior Center — 3 You Support Innovation for New Programming that Employs Empathetic Senior Peers The peers lead by new Program Manager, Daniel Hill, call upon their own life stories and experiences to reach the self-isolating seniors in the Tenderloin By Daniel Hill “I call her every day, but every day she has an excuse to not come out. So we talk on the phone for a while, talk about the family she never sees, about the money she doesn’t have. I tell her I will try again tomorrow. Maybe go to Walgreens, maybe bring her up here to Curry for lunch.” — Barbara Coleman Loneliness, fear, depression, anxiety, access and safety are a few barriers to socialization many seniors are facing while living in the Tenderloin. How we, as individuals, an agency, a community, extend support, kindness, and engagement to these individuals is the aim of Curry’s new Peer Outreach Program. In the morning I arrive to work and step lightly along the sidewalk, along the line of seniors waiting to come in for breakfast, imagining their ritual of getting up, getting out, getting here to eat. In the afternoon I often wander along Ellis and Eddy and stare down the facades of SRO’s and wonder about those seniors who do not get out, who watch Judge Judy day in and day out, who can’t get out for a medical visit, an appointment with a social worker, or even for breakfast. I ask myself over and again, how do we get in? “I felt I made a real difference when my client, who after spending many months in a rehabilitation center, told me I was the only one he could connect with and the only one who could get him out” — Anil Sukhram Peer to peer support is a new and innovative approach to increase social connectedness, strengthen support for recovery and wellness, while increasing access and use of mental health services in the community. Empathetic in that the peers call upon their own life stories and experiences to reach the isolating seniors, knowledgeable in their history of navigating service 4 — Curry Senior Center Fall 2015 Peer Outreach Program staff poses with the showcase board used to present to the state-level funders and peers. Front row left to right — Anil Sukhram, Barbara Coleman, Paul Segal: Back row — DeMarco Kutz, Program Manager Daniel Hill and Frank DeBerry programs in the community, skillful in familiarity of culture and suffering in these streets they call home. “I told him we could get him a phone. He said he had no one to call. I said, hey, you can call me. He smiled.” —DeMarco Kutz Our Peer Outreach Program has two tiers; the first being outreach to isolated seniors in the Tenderloin, the second is employing and being supportive to the peers providing these outreach services in continuing their own recovery and wellness. The thread running between these two tiers is about relationship, friendship, cultivating and developing trust to connect those in need to vital services that they will not suffer alone. “I felt deeply appreciated when my client, who I connected with mental health services, said he had been needing to do that for a long time and now, thanks to me, he was finally doing it.” — Paul Segal As I creep into my mid-fifties I mindfully watch my own aging process, at times subtle, at times alarming. In supervising the Peers, in supporting them along the way, we as a team recognize we are Peers to one another. We talk about our own challenges, the changes, the sudden disparities we experience as we age. We carry this insight into the work we do. We understand. We empathize. We learn. We are patient. In so doing we recognize what we need to promote in our own wellness, recovery, and professional development. Trainings on nutrition, exercise, mental health are scheduled as requested by the peers themselves, while more trainings will be arranged as we learn what we need to develop, cultivate and integrate into the work we do and the lives we live. Curry’s Peer Outreach Program Manager, Daniel Hill is also a humble, yet acclaimed author — D. Clifford Hill. His moving first book “Tender” is a poetic, brutally self-honest and colorfully descriptive noir memoir of living through PTSD after a workplace shooting in the Tenderloin. Check it out on Amazon.com! The Helping Hands, Healing Hearts Gala in May Broke an All-Time Record $170,000 While Paying Homage to a San Francisco Icon with a New Annual Award In memorial to the lifetime work as an icon of determined advocacy for the underprivileged and Curry Executive Director from 1983–1996, the Vera Haile Dalenberg Award was inaugurated and will be given annually to a woman or group of women who fight for those who need a hand up. Curry PALS leader Elliot Moore, Co-Founder for the Build Creative which produced the gala video, “With a Little Help” (see our home page) poses with one of the stars, Curry senior Diane Evans Maynard Jenkins, an executive with the presenting sponsor, CPMC Sutter Health, poses during the reception with life partner and major Curry supporter, Javier Dávila Asya Kripalani, the winner of the Orlando Cepeda signed jersey, here with Event Producer and CEO of Voilà Events, John McKinnon and the Giants Hall-of-Famer himself Marie Jobling (left) received the first-ever Vera Haile Dalenberg Award after the room heard about the namesake’s lifetime contributions and Marie’s accomplishments from former ED Gay Kaplan (right) ED David Knego poses with Kevin Causey, ED of St. Francis Foundation, which along with St. Francis Memorial Hospital and Abby Yant, received the Dr. Francis J. Curry Award for their work with the Tenderloin Health Improvement Project. Aisha Ahmad, Founding President of the Curry PALS professionals group received the Joseph Mignola, Jr. Award. For more info about PALS or to join, go to our website under “Who We Are” or visit them on facebook.com/CurryPALS Annual sponsor, Joyce Tinsley, honored the Cancer Angels of Bellville, Texas who knit, sew and create other handicrafts that benefit the American Cancer Society. Here is their most senior member, Verda Bell Westerman who turns 96 in November! Bay Area news personality and board member, Diane Dwyer, works the room as the premier emcee and unrivaled auctioneer curryseniorcenter.org Curry Senior Center — 5 Thank You to Our Sponsors Justice Independence Dignity Hope Health Jeffrey Beane, MD and David Wingate • Stephanie and J. David Bickham • Hope and William Curry • Jonrie and Angel Dávila Diane Dwyer and Tim Sharp • Latham & Watkins LLP • Joe Khoei — SalesX, Inc. • Rae H. Mignola • Redwood Trust • Helen B. Ripple Home The Jobling-Fazio Family • John Wiley Publishers • Polytech Associates, Inc. • RGEB Employee Benefits Katie and Bob Sharp Sarah and Zack Schiller • Kay and David Werdegar, MD • Diane B. Wilsey Family Californians Allied for Patient Protection • Catherine Chodorow and Richard Zercher • City National Bank Kirsten and Daniel M. Guill • Elizabeth Kantor • Gay and Harvey Kaplan • Get Volunteering • Sally Hatchett • InFlowTech, Inc. Margaret J. Miller, MD • Michelle and Gary Noble • Northern California Presbyterian Homes and Services Alisa Oberschelp • Shirley Quitugua • Rainbow Grocery Cooperative • Lara Sallee and Shadow Moyer • Joyce Tinsley Paula and Ed Tinsley — TME, Inc. • Amy Whalen • Alice Zhang & Calvin Wong In honor of the inauguration of the Vera Haile Dalenberg Award, sponsors were able to recognize the women below within their network or family who fight for those who need benevolence in their communities. SPONSOR Alice Zhang & Calvin Wong Amy Whalen Bank of Guam Californians Allied for Patient Protection City National Bank Diane Dwyer Dolby Laboratories Elizabeth Kantor, MD Gay & Harvey Kaplan Get Volunteering Helen B. Ripple Jeffrey Beane, MD & David Wingate Joe Khoei — SalesX, Inc Joyce Tinsley Kaiser Permanente Katie & Bob Sharp Lara Sallee & Shadow Moyer Michelle & Gary Noble 6 — Curry Senior Center HONOREE Xia Zhang Beverly Brumfield Lou Leon Guerrero Kathy Kneer Maureen Sedonaen Dorothy Blake Dwyer Midge Wilson and the Bay Area Women's and Children's Center Katie Sharp Anne Hinton, Annie Cheung, Helen Ripple and Sandy Mori Erin Petra Sandy Mori Diane Sklar, MD Michelle Rogers The Cancer Angels of Bellville, Texas Piper Cafferata Gay Kaplan, Karen Hagen, Elizabeth Kantor and Lynne Holleuffer Susan Poff, P.A. in memoriam Joan Williams Fall 2015 SPONSOR Norther California Presbyterian Homes and Services Pacific Union Community Fund Paula & Ed Tinsley — TME, Inc. Polytech and Associates Rae H. Mignola Rainbow Grocery Cooperative HONOREE RGEB — Really Great Employee Benefits Jane Stanton Richard Zercher, MD Sally Hatchett San Francisco Giants Sarah & Zack Schiller Shirley Quitugua Stepanie & J. David Bickham The Jobling-Fazio Family The Redwood Trust Employee Foundation Twitter, Inc. Voilà Events, Inc. Yammer Zendesk Catherine Chodorow Julie Tsan Sue Petersen Betsy Schiller Helen B. Ripple Susan A. Johnson Ana Aureoles Akiyo Kinst-Hori Jackie Sax Louise Tinsley, in memoriam Mehrnoush Arsanjani Aisha Ahmad Mary Murtagh Barbara Wenger All our women volunteers Julia Morgan, in memoriam District 6 Supervisor, Jane Kim Marilyn Chan Thank You to Our Live and Silent Auction Donors 5 and 10 Ace Hardware Failla Wines A.C.T. American Conservatory Theater Fairmont Hotel Agharta Wines Frog Hollow Farm AMC Theatres Amicis East Coast Pizza Amphora Nueva Arizmendi Bakery Asian Art Museum Atlantis Casino and Resort Bank of Guam Bay Area Discovery Museum Bay Home and Linens Berkeley Symphony Bi-Rite Market Books, Inc., Laurel Village Barry Booth Buca di Beppo Café Della Stella Café Rigolo Calafia Cafe California Academy of Sciences Carmichael Salon Chabot Space & Science Center Chambers Chantal Guillon Chop Bar Cliff House Clift Hotel Club Donatello Cole Hardware Credo Disneyland Dunstan Wines Diane Dwyer Ella’s Restaurant Eric Kent Wine Cellars Joshua Ets-Hokin Exploratorium Ed Fisch Gallery of Jewels Gaucho Gypsy Jazz Goat Hill Pizza Golden State Warriors Greens Restaurant Hafner Vineyard Hilton Anaheim Hilton Hawaiian Village Waikiki Beach Resort Hilton San Francisco Union Square Hotel Adagio iFly SF Bay Indoor Skydiving Jewish Community Center JW Marriott Hotel, Union Square Kabuki Hot Springs & Spa Kate @ Orange Kosta Browne Winery La Mediterranee (Noe) Lagunitas Brewing Company Lakeside Inn and Casino Le Belge Chocolatier Lovejoy’s Tea Room Mark Maberley, DDS Ron Merk Rae H. Mignola Mike Duffy Mitchell’s Ice Cream MoMo’s Mr. and Mrs. Miscellaneous New Century Chamber Orchestra Oakland East Bay Symphony Oakland Raiders Olive This Olive That Pacific Spine & Joint Medical Group Palio D’Asti Panera Bread Paradiso Restaurant Lisa Pena Philz Coffee (SOMA) Pier 39 Presidio Bowling Center Presidio Golf Course Pucci Foods Shirley Quitugua Quivira Vineyards and Winery Ravenswood Winery Rock Wall Wine Company San Francisco Bay Adventures San Francisco Ballet San Francisco Giants San Francisco Opera San Francisco Symphony Smuin Ballet St. George Spirits Stanford Athletics Studio Grow Pat Swan The 8Count The Inn Above Tide The InterContinental Mark Hopkins The InterContinental San Francisco The Kleid Group The Spinnaker The Wine Drinkers Club — Ryan Crosbie Therapy Stores Three Sticks Wines Sam Vitkoski Ira Watkins West of Pecos Wind Gap Wine Impression curryseniorcenter.org Curry Senior Center — 7 Social Programs That Draw Seniors Out of Their Isolation Are Given a Big Boost from a New, Good Neighbor Dolby Laboratories gave a sizable grant to Curry’s Community Programs events which means that more seniors are served and their social experience is enriched. By Tod Thorpe In addition to celebrating with a feast of tropical fruit-topped pancakes and fried Spam, Dolby furnished a real, live hula dancer to entertain and involve the seniors with a little island exercise. They also learned about the history of hula and how to say several words in the native island tongue. Have you ever heard this great quote? “Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has the courage to lose sight of the shore.” —André Paul Guillaume Gide At Curry await many fun experiences and new friends that once explored, give seniors a big boost in health and joie de vivre — extending their lives and vitality exponentially while giving the staff a chance to identify additional challenges that can be case-managed. Sometimes the seniors’ decision to lose “sight of the shore” of their own apartment, even if it’s only across the street is heavily weighted by whether the destination is worth the anxiety of Thanks to Dolby, the annual Summer Luau featured a real hula dancer that got Curry seniors dancing to an island beat During the inaugural celebration of Dolby’s partnership, seniors posed with thank you signs in their various languages trekking through their own Tenderloin neighborhood to get here. The staff created from scratch special island-themed bingo cards with great prizes like Dolby t-shirts, water bottles and free passes to the new Tenderloin Museum and attendees received leis and gift bags as well. Mahalo nui loa Dolby! (Thank you very much) The dedicated Curry staff and volunteers do wonders on limited resources but in the past they’ve had to serve hotdogs and potato chips at the summer luau and watch YouTube videos of hula dancers, which as entertaining as that can be, may not succeed at creating exactly an imagination destination. This year the annual luau was very well-attended and even more, created a great deal of buzz amongst the seniors that things have gotten exciting and special now that Dolby has become a key partner. That means attendance will continue to grow and more lives will be touched by Curry’s wrap-around services. Foreground to back, Dolby’s Zoe Fisher, Simon Price and Greg McBride prepare an island favorite, fried Spam and pancakes for the seniors’ luau celebration Did You Know? Curry is a premier corporate volunteer site. Zendesk incorporates volunteer service here as part of their new-hire orientation program… Art project creating suspension bridges! 8 — Curry Senior Center Fall 2015 Community Programs staff member, Humberto Piñon is now teaching Tai Chi to the seniors twice per week for balance and fall prevention. It’s a great opportunity for the seniors to develop strength of body, but also to interact with the staff in a relaxed environment! The Annual Donor & Volunteer Heroes Celebration Honored 13 Outstanding Supporters with Awards and Commendations from Nancy Pelosi Hosted by Twitter — Great Food, Drinks and Outstanding Views Entertained 170 Enthusiastic Supporters Tweeting Excitedly from Inside Twitter! Here are the honorees for 2015: Supervisor Jane Kim As San Francisco Supervisor of District 6, Jane has been an outstanding advocate for those in her area that need the most support while working to create housing and business growth benefitting the City as a whole. She also lends her summer interns to Curry every year. Now she is running for State Senator in 2016! Visit: janekim.org Elliot Moore, Jack Birmingham, Mike Epple, Sharif Nakhleh: The Build Creative The Build Creative produced a 39-second video that was shown at ATT Park and at the gala in May. Check out their video, “With a Little Help” on the Curry home page and hope to recruit them for your next promotional video. Visit: thebuildcreative.com Joan Scott: Dolby Laboratories Joan Scott is head of community relations at our newest neighbor — Dolby Laboratories. She and Dolby very generously gave a huge grant to our Community Programs and they send volunteers to participate in the various social and cultural programs. Award recipient Joan Scott of newest major partner/neighbor Dolby Laboratories enjoys visiting with Diane Evans’ daughter, Carmen John McKinnon: Voilà Events, Inc. John is founder and president of the best event producing group in the City — Voila Events, Inc. which usually focuses on large corporate events and conferences. He donated all of his time and his team to produce the gala in May which was most successful in Curry history. Visit: voilaeventsinc.com Javier Davila & Maynard Jenkins Maynard Jenkins is VP of Human Resources at Sutter Health (CPMC) Bay Randy Wong generously donated his services and captured this group shot of all the award recipients. Visit: rwpcommercial.net Area, which has been the presenting sponsor of the annual gala for the last three years! But beyond that, he and his kind and generous partner, Javier Dávila have together been among our very most generous contributors. Michael Caracciolo: Curry PALS (Professionals & Advocates Leadership Society) Michael is one of the founding leaders of the Curry PALS and has been the right-hand chief next to Founding President, Aisha Ahmad. He also starred in the video, “With a Little Help” and continues to help lead the drive for the expansion and development of this group critical to Curry’s future. Visit: facebook.com/CurryPALS Yoko Takahashi Yoko was referred to us by Board Development Committee Chair. Yoko lives in Edith Witt Housing and for the last year has been volunteering with the women’s group teaching therapeutic arts and crafts. Board President Jeff Beane, MD (back left) with a festive gang! Front row: Toby Shorts, Rory Volk, Michael DeMatty. Back row next to Jeff: John Collaros, Humberto Piñon, Board Member John McKinnon, Ashley Bingham, Michelle Murphy and Edwin Carmona-Cruz Pattie Pritchett Pattie helps keep everything together at the law firm of board member Dave Bickham, partner at Reed Smith. She volunteers in the dining room, at special events and generates valuable in-kind donations as well. Arizona Henderson You can’t miss Arizona in the Curry dining room as a leadership volunteer and most people would say it’s because of his height but we hear from other volunteers it’s his smile and enthusiasm. He volunteers virtually every day! Erin Petra Erin has been a vital resource to Curry through her leadership on Curry PALS as well as driving more volunteers to Curry than any other individual. Curry resident and client spokeswoman, Diane Evans, wanted to personally hand out the awards in appreciation of each honoree. Here with longtime Curry donor/champion Helen B. Ripple Garrett Swing Garrett also starred in the video, “With a Little Help”, and is constantly at the center willing to volunteer for anything and everything. There isn’t likely a single piece of mail that goes to all of you that he has not touched. Helen B. Ripple Helen Ripple has been among the very most generous and long-term donors at Curry and also served on the board. She rarely misses an event. She inspired VP at Bank of Guam, Shirley Quitugua, Gala Chair and board member to get involved too! Rae Mignola & Family Rae’s husband was one of the founders of Curry and he is also the namesake for one of the annual awards given at the gala. She is the one who founded the annual Bocce Ball Friendly Competition and Social fundraiser and her daughter Lisa Pena and their family are right there with her. curryseniorcenter.org Curry Senior Center — 9 Be the Difference: How You Can Help Now It’s easy to make a buck. It’s a lot tougher to make a difference. — Tom Brokaw S P E C I A L H O L I D AY V O L U N T E E R O P P O R T U N I T I E S AT C U R R Y Winter Holiday Office Gift Drives Please hold a collection drive in your office for $10 Walgreens cards! This is the seniors’ very favorite gift because they can use the card for food, medicine, hygiene supplies and one is always near just about every corner for convenience. Hold an interdepartemental competition! deliver them to Curry. Most items can even be bought online! Contact Arlo Bushnell at 415-292-1064 or email [email protected] For questions about these additional on-going ways to participate: Call Arlo Bushnell at 415-292-1064 or email to [email protected] Be a Santa to a Senior (BASTAS) — Walgreens Elves This is one of the most highly sought and definitely greatest needs! Thanks to a generous partnership with Home Instead Senior Care and Walgreens, many San Francisco Walgreens stores will participate in promoting “trees” filled with wish-list holiday gift requests for Curry seniors, many of which are homeless. You can help by working with our Queen Elf, Michelle Noble, to put up the displays at the Walgreens and by picking up gifts and delivering them to Curry Senior Center. This program begins just before Thanksgiving and ends just after Christmas Day. Contact Michelle Noble at 415-292-1095 or email [email protected] Curry’s Own Adopt-a-Senior for the Holidays Program Approximately one hundred seventyfive of the very neediest program participants at Curry are chosen by the case managers to fill out a special, personal gift request with an approximate $50 value each. Many of these seniors are homeless or have almost nothing. This is the perfect opportunity for individuals or a business group to rally their colleagues to fulfill the requests and 10 — Curry Senior Center Fall 2015 This program will begin in December and last until December 21, 2015. Contact Tod Thorpe at 415-292-1040 or email [email protected] Dining Room and Bingo Serve lunch and visit with the greatest characters you’ve ever met — Curry seniors! We always hear this is guaranteed to bring you more happiness. On Wednesdays and weekends, become the most popular person in the City and host Weekly Bingo too! Individuals or groups up to 15 for outstanding team building Daily 10:15AM to 1PM Community Programs — Cultural Celebrations Bring joy and festivity to Curry Seniors during various cultural parties throughout the year. Help decorate, serve and socialize. The events include but are not limited to: the Hispanic Heritage Festival, Halloween, Veteran’s Day, Autumn Lantern Festival, Moon Festival, Russian Festival, and Holiday Celebrations Individuals are welcome but this is a favorite for groups of up to 10 Various week days throughout the year, 9:30AM–12:30PM Photographers please! A picture is worth a 1,000 words and it’s so much better when not just taken from a smartphone! Our designer will love you and you’ll get credit for your work too — as well as attend fun events for free. We also have occasional portrait sessions with our seniors. Various dates based on event calendar Development Team Support and Special Events Join Curry’s Development Team supporting data management, mailings, event preparation and support, expository writing for publications, grant writing, research and more. We’re a very entertaining team and this is a great beginning for the person considering crossing over from corporate work to nonprofit. We are also building a core team of highly experienced volunteers for our annual gala and other special events. Very flexible timing based on project calendar Join the Curry Professionals and Executives Leadership Circle! This group provides a team approach to developing leadership and professional networking opportunities while having heightened impact on Curry’s services. They help plan Curry events, hold collections and happy hour fundraisers, rally teams of volunteers and interface with board leadership to devise new ways to respond to the crisis and indignity suffered by so many of the elderly. Go to curryseniorcenter.org/ curry-pals Does your company match donations? If so, make a donation through your company’s workplace campaign and double the impact of your donation. Ask your HR representative at work how. Donate cereal, peanut butter, new clothes or hygiene items! You’ll guarantee that our seniors will have breakfast, warm clothes and the basics we take for granted. Community Thrift Store (623 Valencia St., San Francisco) Accepts donations on behalf of Curry Senior Center. Bring your old clothes, jewelry, books, sports equipment, furniture, CD’s, electronics and luggage and tell them you want the proceeds to go to Curry Senior Center. The Annual Bocce: A Friendly Competition and Social Event Raised $21,706 for the Seniors’ Breakfast Program Thanks to Many of You! You could hear the cheers all the way from San Rafael when Executive Director David Knego announced that Genentech provided a $15,000 grant that took us over the top of our $30,000 goal and secured the program for the next year. Save the Date for next year’s Bocce: Saturday, September 17th! Daniel Cohen has the perfect form, surrounded by rose gardens on every side New board member, Lyn Tillery and her friends won the award for best team name: Mission Imbocceball College Intern Bella Lee (Continued from page 3) entering addresses and addressing envelopes and stamping letters—all of that was to develop a community of active volunteers and benefactors that support Curry’s seniors. That is the true definition of development: the building of a solid community that has a common mission, in this case, helping seniors live independently with dignity. The definition of fundraising became a smile on a senior’s face as he got his meal — having a good day because he has gotten up and on his feet that day, smiling as he chats and eats with the dining room staff and the other seniors at his table. And the word “nonprofit”? Well, that defines the infrastructure that makes all of the services Curry Senior Center offers, possible. It is the system that allows me, among the other employees, and volunteers and supporters like you, to give time to assist in developing and fundraising for that smile. On my very first day, I had been introduced to the Curry community, and on my last day, I left as a member of the Curry family. John Collaros, Humberto Piñon, Daniel Cohen and Michael DeMatty start what could become a tradition- themed and coordinated team dress! Michelle Noble and Arlo Bushnell greeted everyone as they checked in and steered them promptly toward breakfast and mimosas before their warm-ups CURRY SENIOR CENTER’S LEGACY CIRCLE Ensuring that aging with health, hope and dignity continues long into the future Curry Senior Center’s Legacy Society is composed of people who include Curry Senior Center in their will or another type of planned gift. These donors gain the satisfaction of knowing Curry’s important services — health care, nutrition, socialization, and celebrations — will continue for years to come. We ask you to consider joining this group of generous donors, either by indicating your interest with a note on the enclosed return envelope or by contacting Curry Board of Directors Vice-President, Jonrie Dávila at [email protected] or by calling her at 650-823-3280. You may also contact Development Director, Tod Thorpe at [email protected] or by calling 415-292-1040. Want to stay up-to-date with what’s happening at Curry Senior Center? Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter! CurrySrCenter @CurrySrCenter In the beginning, I had used the Internet to help me define development, fundraising, and nonprofit. After spending half of my summer with the Curry Senior Center community, I have figured my own definitions for these words. So thanks, Google, for helping me to find Curry and have an incredible summer experience — but when it comes to defining words, I think I will stick with my own conclusions. Bella left her indelible mark on us and made life-long friends. Development work is a fantastic way to learn about an organization from the inside out. If you have ever thought about transitioning from corporate to non-profit work, like our own Michelle Noble, or if you have some extra time to experience the exponential effect you can have, contact Director of Development, Tod Thorpe at 415-292-1040 or via email to: [email protected] curryseniorcenter.org Curry Senior Center — 11 SF-DPH Community Health Network 333 Turk Street San Francisco, CA 94102 Our Mission is to provide services to seniors that promote independent living while maintaining their dignity and self-esteem. SAVE THE DATE! HELPING HANDS, HEALING HEARTS GALA FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2016 THE FAIRMONT SAN FRANCISCO