Winter 2009 - Livengrin Foundation
Transcription
Winter 2009 - Livengrin Foundation
Winter 2009 Vol. V #1 Signs for the times The perfect illustration of a “noticeable improvement,” a pair of new signs on Hulmeville Road lead visitors to our main campus. Helping our staff with the unveiling in October were Bensalem Mayor Joseph DiGirolamo (second from right), who lived across the street from our campus when it had been farmland during his boyhood, and our effective state Representative Gene DiGirolamo (far right). new year e u s s i o t o h p ’s A tree glows for the holidays, and grows for the future We have shared an emerging partnership with the How to Save a Life Foundation over the past two years. This Bucks County-based nonprofit raises funds for people who need treatment but don’t have the insurance or resources. HTSAL’s friends provided a holiday tree that we planted in December in front of the main building at Bensalem. The tree (to be the centerpiece of a new garden come spring) was dedicated to the memory of Karl Hottenstein, a young man who didn’t have access to treatment to fight his addiction, and to the hope we all have for the future generations. Livengrin Foundation, Bensalem, PA Levittown ~ Doylestown ~ Fort Washington ~ Northeast Philadelphia ~ Allentown 2 Livengrin life Winter 2009 STEADY AT THE WHEEL A commendation for veteran Director Dick Hartmann A private, nonprofit organization founded in 1966, providing inpatient and outpatient treatment services, education and counseling to promote recovery from alcohol and drug addiction At the helm of most nonprofits and many large companies is the person in the “chair,” the one with whom the ultimate responsibility lies. Livengrin had the good fortune to have Richard W. Hartmann steering our Board of Directors, and thus our policy and operations, from 2002-07. 4833 Hulmeville Road Bensalem, PA 19020 215-638-5200 800-245-4746 Mr. Hartmann, an attorney with Montgomery, McCracken, Walker & Rhoads, began his relationship with Livengrin in the 1970s. He’d met founder Forde Hansell some years before. In 1985 he joined the Board. Allentown / Lehigh Valley 610-264-5521 CEO Rick Pine has expressed his gratitude for “Dick’s even-keeled leadership throughout the turbulent years of the early 2000’s. He helped us to stay focused on our mission while positioning the organization for the financial revival we’ve enjoyed the past five years.” Doylestown / Central Bucks 215-340-1765 Fort Washington / Montgomery Co. 215-540-8301 Levittown / Lower Bucks 215-547-1440 Northeast Philadelphia 215-335-3419 www.livengrin.org Board of Directors Eileen M. Bonner, MD Chair Bernard K. Ciliberto Vice-Chair Daphne G. Floyd Secretary Michael D. Chapman Treasurer Donald A. Billingsley Rev. Msg. William A. Dombrow Frank Foley Anne H. Jewell George F. West Richard M. Pine President & CEO Honorary Directors Patricia Chapman David R. Johnson* James M. Stewart* Richard W. Hartmann* Hartmann recently recounted one aspect of his experience in the ‘80s as an illustration of the length of his involvement . A friend who was a young mother was staying overnight for a week in our co-dependency program, and Hartmann was helping to take care of the baby. Each night the young lawyer would drive from the city to our Bensalem campus, bringing the child to his mother for feeding. That boy, with whom Hartmann remained close, just graduated from college. “It’s been a long time, a wonderful experience,” he remembered as his coDirectors gave Hartmann a little send-off in November. “My thinking (was) to look beyond all the projects, and challenges and difficulties of serving on a board, and get the job done. You look at least one life that was positively changed as a result of what we’ve done, one life who looked addiction in the face and said ‘I win, you lose.’ Then it’s all worthwhile. “I’m grateful for the opportunity of doing it here at Livengrin.” Richard Hartmann enjoys his final official Board appearance, with his successor as chairperson, Dr. Eileen Bonner. * Emeritus Livengrin life© is published by Livengrin Foundation © 2009 Photographs © Keith Mason for Livengrin 2009 or as noted The Annual Report of Livengrin Foundation is available by contacting the Communications Office. To receive or discontinue any Livengrin publication, call or email: 215-638-5200 ext. 146 comm@livengrin.org Life After Livengrin (#8 in a series) “I was at Livengrin in June of `94 . With the help of a lot of friends (and) hundreds of meetings, I have stayed sober over fourteen years. Now that is beyond my wildest dreams. For the first time since `94, I went back to Livengrin (last year) for the Ride for Recovery. I ride with a club out of Lehighton, Last Chance. I just wanted to say hi and thanks… someone told me while I was at Livengrin to go to meetings (and) that really was the most important thing . Thank you so much.” - JB Livengrin life Winter 2009 A Call To Arms Some hear the call, other do not. A few who hear it, respond in the affirmative, others choose to step aside – perhaps for another chance on another day – “when the time is right”. I’m talking about volunteerism, and about charity. Our country – unlike any before or since – was built on the backs of those who saw what needed to be done – and did it – creating the greatest social, cultural, economic and political system in the world. Much of the work done was performed on a “voluntary” basis – with no compulsion, no paycheck, no orders…people helping people, and thereby, helping themselves. Volunteering and charity are still alive and well in the United States today. Though tough economic times may make the task more difficult – the need is often greater. Livengrin, today, is a thriving, vital nonprofit organization that helps thousands of people each year experience their first steps of recovery. Of course, in large part, we owe our success to those dedicated and caring folks who work here, and to our diverse community of referral sources who help our patients get to our front door. On New Year’s Eve, these alumni were among those who volunteered during December to visit patients spending a holiday in treatment. We depend on our alums to share their optimism for better days ahead with those who (for the moment) have difficulty seeing the future clearly. 3 Reflections on our Mission - Richard M. Pine, President & CEO But a critically important part of our success rests with the many volunteers who constitute the backbone of who we are, and what we do. At Livengrin, you’ll find them at our monthly Board of Directors meetings, helping out in the Dietary Department, meeting with patients in Detox, assisting staff with office duties, hosting special activities for rehab patients, staffing events and fundraisers...and much more! What does it take to be a volunteer? Mostly, just the interest and initiative! For more information, contact us and we’ll be happy to welcome you to our extended and growing family! Happy 2009 to all! 4 Livengrin life Winter 2009 Open house introduces Fort Washington expansion Our September move to larger offices in Montgomery County brought us the ability to re-establish our adolescent program and offer a wider schedule of outpatient services. The ribbon-cutting was followed by an eye-opening panel discussion about the need for our mission and programs in the county. At the ribbon-cutting, program manager Dennis Franklin does the official scissoring, witnessed by (from left) outpatient services director Kathleen Houston, Curtis Griffin from the Hatboro-Horsham schools, CEO Rick Pine, Ambler Mayor Bud Wahl, Dickie Noles of the Phillies organization and Montgomery County administrator Joe Roynan. The wide, wide world of Clyde... Every employee at Livengrin rates applause, be they clinical, administrative or support staff. Yet, every so often, someone comes along that the entire organization agrees is the epitome of dedication, class and dignity. Clyde Bertram is that guy. Clyde started as a Foundation counselor in 1995, after an already-long life that included a difficult Canadian childhood, two heart attacks, and experiences in counseling alcoholics that took him from Indian reservations in Maine to the founding days of Bucks County’s Good Friends treatment agency. Well-known to thousands of patients that have passed through our residential program and their families, Bertram “retired” from active duty this fall at the age of 88. Not that retirement, for Clyde, means resting and golfing. He vows to continue his public appearances and lectures, investing his stories and skills in the future of recovery, and getting his book Sixty Years an Alcoholic, Fifty Years Without a Drink, in front of more readers. (It’s available through our patient store!) Livengrin paid tribute to this remarkable friend after his talk at our December Alumni Breakfast. We expect him to pop in from his home in Bristol for regular visits. Livengrin life Winter 2009 Clockwise from upper left: one-time Phillies pitcher (and current community affairs rep) Dickie Noles talks with Dennis Deal of Eagleville Hospital and employee assistance specialist Jack Shirley; an alumnus shares his passion for recovery with guests; welcoming remarks outside the new office’s private entrance; Dennis Franklin with Gary Nightingale and Deborah Dichter from Mental Health Consultants; Kathy MacMoran of Keystone Center and Gary Murphy from Horsham Hospital get a tour from Kathleen Houston Our panel of officials and observers gave voice to the community’s need for addiction treatment, particularly for young adults and teens in those years of exploration and peer pressure. Livengrin is responding to the call vigorously through program expansion. At the sold-out December Breakfast, alumni and guests brought in holiday toy donations and heard Clyde Bertram review his lifetime of accumulated wisdom. Guest Frank Foley, a member of our Board who’s in his 90s (and thus the only one around who can call Clyde a “kid”), brought some newspaper clippings about local addiction treatment in the “old days.” After Bertram’s talk, CEO Rick Pine and Diane Womer, Clyde’s ex-supervisor in residential programs, presented him with a portrait autographed by many of his friends and co-workers. 5 6 Livengrin life Winter 2009 Big guns: As more of our strategic plans move from the drawing board to fruition, we draw on the many elements of the community that will help achieve our initiatives. Conferring with key leaders on the state’s support for Livengrin and addiction treatment: Honorary Livengrin Director Patricia Chapman with Governor Edward Rendell and PA Representative Gene DiGirolamo; Livengrin CEO Rick Pine with PA State Senator Robert Tomlinson. Newly-appointed program manager for the Doylestown Counseling Center, Babette Benham is well-known to treatment professionals in our region. Experienced in the issues, politics and “ins and outs” of addiction treatment in Pennsylvania, she came to us from the Bucks Co. Council on Alcoholism & Drug Dependence. A social worker and addictions counselor since 1980, Benham studied at West Chester State and Temple. We consider ourselves fortunate to have brought her to our team. clips Maria Tormasi received honors for her twenty years in our dietary department. Certified at Auburn University and Penn State, Maria became head of nutritional services in 1995. At its national conference in October, the International Nurses Society on Addictions named Dr. William Lorman, our chief clinical officer, as its President. In his two-year term, Dr. Lorman will be a front-line advocate for the people and issues in addiction nursing worldwide. The Livengrin family extends congratulations to Bill as he represents his profession (and the Foundation) at professional and governmental conferences and meetings everywhere. Media Watch That Clyde Bertram fellow was profiled by the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Bucks County Courier-Tines, and KYW Newsradio. Right, Bertram is interviewed by the Inquirer’s Gail Shister. Livengrin began a series of guest appearances on a recovery-themed radio program on WURD 900AM. Host Derrick Ford is well-known in the region as a behavioral health professional (including a stint on the Livengrin staff some years back). Heard Wednesday evening at 8PM, the program (also sponsored by Livengrin) streams worldwide on the Internet. Detox counselor Larenda Wise and Keith Mason from the Communications office were Ford’s first guests, and spoke with the host and several callers about the basic themes of Livengrin's mission and wide scope of services. Family therapist Dana Cohen appeared on Ford’s show on January 14, with other staff scheduled for the future. (People are also hearing about us in our series of messages on KYW, the most listened-to station in the market.) Livengrin life Winter 2009 The season of giving: Livengrin annually offers holiday pies to employees as a small token of gratitude for everyone’s dedication. This year, many passed the goodwill along by contributing their pies to local food charities. We distributed 75 pies to three church-based kitchens in lower Bucks Co. Livengrin is grateful to those on the staff who responded to our invitation to brighten up the holidays for others. Tracey Edwards and Bobbi McHale (from the billing office in Levittown) assisted with distribution at Cornwells Methodist; a volunteer from United Christian got a hand loading up from Renee Unruh (lower right) and Henry Rhodes of our dietary staff; counselor Dave Alfe visited Love Fellowship Tabernacle. The local chapter of the Salvation Army brought meals, gifts and cheer to more than 500 Bucks County families facing difficult times. To assist in those efforts, we asked guests at the Alumni Breakfast on Dec. 14 (as well as the staff) to contribute games, toys and sports gear. Gina Shay delivered the toy drive’s results to the Salvation Army’s facility in Levittown. Gina is staff liaison to our volunteer corps and the Association of Alumni, Family & Friends. The alumni, through their Tuesday night meetings, also organized gift baskets to raffle at Gratitude Day in November. Those proceeds were used to purchase gifts for distribution to children of patients in residence at Livengrin on Christmas. Boy Scout Paul Baumann, a candidate for the Eagle rank last fall, brought in a crew for his community service project. Scouts from Bensalem’s Troop 132 (along with some parents) cleared mountains of brush from a section of the campus along Hulmeville Road. Their efforts provided an attractive (and safer) section of the woods along our driveway. Other Scouts from the troop have been here recently for similar projects. The Bucks County Commissioners recently marked the early success of the Southern Bucks Community Center. Our Courtney Jones (second right) from Admissions was one of the volunteers on the “vision team” that designed, and now evaluates and oversees, the Center’s services. Administered by the advocacy group PRO-ACT, it offers life-skills training, family services, recovery coaches and other programs. 7 In and Around Livengrin ~ 2009 Ride for Recovery Sunday May 17 Bensalem The Foundation for Addiction Recovery 4833 Hulmeville Road Bensalem, PA 19020 Allentown ~ Doylestown Fort Washington ~ Levittown Northeast Philadelphia 800-245-4746 email: info@livengrin.org Our annual spring tour of the Bucks County countryside (and family picnic) raises public awareness - and funds for our patient programs. See the box on page 2 of this publication, or on the website. Association of Alumni, Family & Friends Tuesdays 7PM Bensalem Everyone is welcome (not just our own alumni) to these meetings with a 12-step fellowship format, speakers and great ways to stay connected to recovery. Shanahan Hall; no RSVP needed. Volunteer Orientation Saturdays 1PM Bensalem February 7, March 4, April 11, May 9 Good opportunities to help us fulfill our mission. Office work, event staffing, and for those in their own recovery, a chance to have an impact on current patients. Info: call the Alumni Hotline below, or visit www.livengrin.org www.livengrin.org Livengrin Foundation, Inc. is recognized by the Internal Revenue Service as a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization. Official registration and financial information (Certificate 13708) may be obtained from the PA Dept. of State by calling (within PA) 1-800-732-0999. Registration does not imply endorsement. INFORMATION LINES: 215-638-5200 Newsletter Request & Public Events ext. 310 Alumni Association & Volunteers ext. 312 Academic & Professional Training ext. 313 Detach and mail Good Times or Bad, We’re Still Helping The economic headlines are nothing new to anyone by now. Some have felt a pinch in the wallet, others have seen their retirement savings lose value, and some have lost jobs. We do everything we can to help people to afford treatment, or make sure that a patient’s insurance company fulfills its obligations. But there are some folks who have run our of money, time and luck. It is for those that our Tree of Life Fund provides assistance. Livengrin is being careful with its own financial picture, and we don’t want to have to lessen our charitable care this year. So we cordially invite you to help us help those who want to recover, to return to family, responsibilities and the workplace. You can do it with a tax-deductible investment in Livengrin. It will be utilized effectively, to make a difference in someone’s life ~ thanks! Name____________________________________ Street__________________________________________ City, State, Zip____________________________________________________________________________ Telephone________________________ E-mail _________________________________________ Gift of $_______ - __ check or __Visa __MC # ____________________________ exp. __/___ security #_______ (3 digits, reverse of card) Mail to: Livengrin Development, 4833 Hulmeville Road, Bensalem, PA 19020 ___ Please record my contribution in memory / honor of ____________________________________ ___ I am submitting an additional form from my employer to register a matching gift ___ I'd like to learn more about how I can ensure Livengrin’s future through planned giving or a bequest ___ List as anonymous Please add your signature here__________________________________
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