GrowingUp August 2013 NEWS FRO M Jewish Child Care Association•Every Child Deserves to Grow Up Hopeful RECONNECTING FAMILIES–A NEW MODEL For decades, JCCA’s Foster Home Services has provided thousands of children and teens who have been neglected or abused with safe and supportive foster homes, while their families work to resolve their difficulties. Part of that process has been to identify family members who can provide support, and sometimes homes, for the children. in the field. The models aim to engage In New York City, about 13,000 children birth parents and support foster parents are in foster care. Children are often and foster children. One of the models traumatized when they enter foster care, in ChildSuccessNYC is called Family not only because of abuse or neglect, Finding. It offers new but also because they My father’s family methods, strategies, lose contact with their expressed that if they had and technologies to families, are moved known that I existed they locate and engage from placement to relatives and other close placement, may have would have taken me. Antwone Fisher family friends of children multiple social workers, living in foster care, and sometimes face many of whom have lost contact with their years of uncertainty. More than one-third of immediate or extended families. Family foster children in New York City have been Finding trains staff in specific engagement in care for three or more years. strategies. For example, one step describes Last year, JCCA was one of five how to approach and involve the family organizations chosen by New York City’s members who may not be ready to take Administration for Children’s Services to implement ChildSuccessNYC, four evidence responsibility for a newly found relative. The goal of Family Finding is to expand based models that focus on what works family connections in the hope of developing permanent resources for the child. The model was inspired by the true life story of Antwone Fisher (the subject of a movie “ ” Actors Derek Luke and Denzel Washington, from the movie Antwone Fisher, about the real life struggles of a foster child. starring Denzel Washington) who had spent fourteen years in foster care and was deposited on the street in Cleveland shortly before he turned 18. He did not know until years later that he had family members (including an uncle and cousins) blocks away from his foster home. This May he testified before Congress about his support of the Family Finding program. He described his life history and said that after he had reconnected with his family, “My father’s family expressed that if they had known that I existed they would have taken me.” This would have saved him years of harsh treatment and isolation. Kevin Campbell, the founder of the Center for Family Finding and Youth Connectedness, who created Family Finding also testified before Congress. (continued on page 2) 2 Growing Up Caring (continued from page 1) He said, “Imagine how different Mr. Fisher’s childhood and transition to adulthood could have been if we had been able to locate and activate his family to participate in planning and making decisions for his future. While a birth parent may struggle with challenges that make caring for their children difficult, they often have family members who could be supports.” JCCA’s use of the Family Finding model has helped 14-year-old “Cameron,” who has been in foster care for ten years in multiple placements, including being hospitalized with mental health issues. As JCCA began to implement Family Finding, Cameron had just been reconnected with her father, whose parental rights had been reinstated after a decade. The father agreed with JCCA’s caseworker, Pierce Johnson, that she would benefit from having more family in her life. He began the difficult process of finding relatives by starting with names the father provided and networking from there. For decades JCCA and other foster care care agencies tended to emphasize finding relatives of the mother who were usually easier to trace. Family Finding expands the process to include “ While a birth parent may struggle with challenges that make caring for their children difficult, they often have family members who could be supports. ” Kevin Campbell fathers, cousins, aunts, uncles, family friends, coaches, and others who could help the child. Through Cameron’s father, Pierce eventually identified nine family members and he was able to locate five of them. Then, her father disappeared again. According to Pierce, “This was a difficult time for her, so I began meeting with these new found family members to help create a reunfication plan. All of them agreed she needed unconditional love, and I suggested they write letters and send birthday cards and begin to introduce themselves. I even arranged a birthday party, which was a very happy event. I was so pleased. It helped Cameron feel much more connected.” Mr. Johnson has helped facilitate many visits for Cameron and her extended family. The outpouring of love has provided the stability she has needed. The ultimate goal is to reunite her permanently with her family members. In addition to Family Finding, under the leadership of Paul Torres, Senior Vice President of Foster Home and Community Care Services, JCCA is working with three other pilot interventions to improve outcomes for children in foster care: 1) The Keeping Foster and Kinship Parents Trained and Supported model helps foster parents implement research showing that children respond better to positive support and incentives rather than to negative input and punishment. 2) The Parenting through Change model is similar to the above approach but services are delivered to parents while their children are in foster care and as they transition back home. 3) The Youth Development Skills Coaching model pairs youth ages 14–18 with a young adult mentor who can relate to them and provide support. Mr. Torres notes that the new models appear to be working: “Parents and foster parents are seeing the effectiveness of these four models. They are learning new skills that improve their relationships with the youth in their care and help these children make steady progress.” GU jccany.org/fhs One day your generosity can benefit JCCA! Consider including JCCA in your will as you review your estate plans. To learn more, please call 212-558-9969. Growing Up C o m pa s s P r o j e c t A Chance to be Independent Dear Friends,It is unbelievable to me how busy and exciting the past several months have been for JCCA. The lead story in this issue of Growing Up is about a remarkable new way to work with foster care children. JCCA is on the forefront of a cataclysmic change in our business. It is called EvidenceBased Modeling and we are truly lucky to be one of the five agencies selected by the City of New York to implement the new foster care model. It has been just under a year and we have already seen major successes. The end result will be that children in the foster care system will have shorter stays. This is very good for everyone. In the past few months, we held four successful fundraising events and our Gala raised a record $1,031,000. I want to thank our dedicated Board of Trustees for the incredible effort they put into the event. I especially want to thank our honorees, Terri and Jay Bialsky and Lory and Stephen Gilberg. Please look at the Gala story on the next page. I know you will be touched by the stories in this issue. I want to thank our dedicated staff who help change the lives of so many of our clients and their families. Our staff works tirelessly, day in and day out to make life better for so many traumatized children in our care. I continue to marvel at their dedication and resiliency. Thank you for supporting JCCA and our best wishes to you and your family for the upcoming holiday season. Richard Altman Chief Executive Officer JCCA’s Compass Project is one of the only programs providing comprehensive social, vocational, educational, and independentliving transition services for young adults with Autism Spectrum challenges on Long Island, in Westchester, and in New York City. For many young adults with autism, there are few services to help them live independently and productively. The Queens Independent Living Program helps college and post-college age students with learning difficulties, autism, and related disabilities live independently in an apartment as opposed to a group home. The program’s expert staff (Master’s level mental health professionals) help participants find apartments; match roommates; take advantage of sports, social, cultural, and religious opportunities; and engage in community activities. In addition, staff assist with such essentials as preparing meals, budgeting, organizing, scheduling, internships, and job coaching. “The goal of the program,” according to Evan Oppenheimer, Assistant Director of JCCA’s Compass Project, “is to help our clients maximize their abilities, learn new skills, and lead active and fulfilling lives.” One Compass participant, Daniel Braun, sees new opportunities. “What I like best is the chance to live in New York, in an apartmentstyle program made for high-functioning people, with plenty of access to things to do. It is exciting, and Forest Hills is ideal because we don’t need to rely on others; everything is close.” The Queens Independent Living Program is modeled after successful programs JCCA has run for eight years in White Plains and Long Island for more than 400 youth. In fact, JCCA’s effectiveness in helping young adults with autism is being studied and replicated in Philadelphia, Houston, and Los Angeles. The Queens Independent Living Program is a partnership between JCCA and FEGS Human Daniel Braun rock climbing with other Compass program participants. Services System, and received important early support from UJA-Federation of New York. The program is funded by private donations from parents. GU jccany.org/compass Save the date! Alumni Day Sunday, September 22, 2013 Noon–4 pm on the Westchester Campus. jccany.org /alumniday 3 4 Growing Up Peter Hauspurg, JCCA President, talks of JCCA’s mission and history. Trustee Barbara B. Mann with her husband, J. Robert Mann, Jr. Jewish Child Care Association’s annual gala, Celebration of Hope: a Reception to Benefit Children and Families, raised a record-breaking $1,031,000. The event honored longtime Trustees and volunteers Jay and Terri Bialsky and Stephen and Lory Gilberg. Jay Bialsky is owner of JBialsky Premiere Design and Development, a builder of luxury homes in the Hamptons, and Terri Bialsky was co-founder of Equinox Fitness Gear. Stephen Gilberg is President and owner of The Wealth Protection Organization and Lory Gilberg is founder of Elder Care Consulting. Key participants included Peter Hauspurg, President of the JCCA Board and Chairman of Eastern Consolidated, and Daun Paris, President of Eastern Consolidated, Benefit Chair, and JCCA Trustee. Funds will help teens like Tasha, who had to leave her biological mother and was placed in foster care in infancy. She was later abused as a child. She came to JCCA’s Pleasantville Cottage School, where she received specialized attention from expert staff and began to heal. She told the rapt audience, “The staff helped me learn to trust and I gained trust. Now I am working on getting discharged to a therapeutic pre-adoptive foster home. When I grow up, I want to be a lawyer or a social worker or a pediatrician. I want to start helping kids who are in my situation.” Another highlight of the evening was a record-breaking $140,800 auction led by C. Hugh Hildesley, Executive Vice President of Sotheby’s Auction House. The funds raised will go directly to support JCCA’s programs. GU jccany.org/hope Nick, a member of the Bukharian Teen Lounge, speaking at the Gala. C. Hugh Hildesley, Executive VP of Sotheby’s Auction House, leads the successful auction. Tasha, a resident of Pleasantville Cottage School, speaks movingly of her life. Honorees Lory and Stephen Gilberg and Terri and Jay Bialsky with their awards. (L to R) JCCA President Peter Hauspurg, Benefit Chair and Trustee Daun Hauspurg, Honoree and Trustee Stephen Gilberg, Honoree Lory Gilberg, CEO Richard Altman, Honoree Terri Bialsky, and Honoree and Trustee Jay Bialsky. Growing Up 5 LEARNING HOW TO BE A Better Parent 'They took my children and I'm going to do whatever it takes to get them back.’” His team also encouraged him to make time for his kids by participating in the Allan Houston Foundation’s weekly basketball “Father Knows Best” retreat. Mr. Houston, an assistant general manager of the New York Knicks and a retired player, founded this program to help inner city fathers and their children bond. When Demetrie and Desmond, Mr. C.’s success in building his now ages nine and ten, came to relationship with his children on Edenwald in September of 2010, the basketball court was noted they had been traumatized by by Thabiti Boone, a national being removed from their home advocate for inner city youth and and then placed in the psychiatric a “Father Knows Best” friend. units of different hospitals. They He introduced the family to Mr. were the fourth generation of their Houston. They also attended family to spend time in foster Mayor Bloomberg’s annual care. However, their parents were Father’s Day event, NYC Dads, eager to take them back home, Mr. C and his wife and children with basketball star Allen Houston. which celebrates fathers who and were willing to do whatever become more active in their they could to convince the Bronx children's lives. Being celebrated as a father who has Family Court that they would make this possible. come a long way is a huge recognition for Mr. C. But not Their father, David C., wanted to become a better as big as being a good father to his sons. parent. Working with his family’s JCCA team, he enrolled As Janelle Honeywell, a JCCA social worker, says, in a 26-week course that offered parenting and child“Desmond and Demetrie may be their family’s fourth rearing workshops, and sessions on anger management. generation to spend time in foster care, but JCCA is “I never said, ‘They took my children and they're just determined they will be the last.” GU jccany.org/ec lost in the system,’” Mr. C. explained. “I always said, Edenwald Center is one of JCCA’s residential treatment programs on its Westchester Campus, a home for boys and girls ages 7–21 who may have been abused or neglected and who have emotional and cognitive challenges. The focus is on teaching these children life skills that foster independence and improve relationships. T w o T o g e t h e r Tu t o r i n g P r o g r a m GETTING BETTER GRADES WITH A VERY SPECIAL TUTOR Two Together is a citywide program that provides free tutoring to 100 students, ages 8–18. The youth have scored below grade level in reading or math, or have other learning needs. The volunteer tutors are professionals from all walks of life. According to Anthony Sneag, who has been a tutor for many years, “I am an investment professional at Cornerstone Capital Management. I learned that I enjoy being a tutor when I was at the Columbia University Business School and participated in the Harlem Tutorial Program. I heard about the Two Together program from my sister Abigail, who works for Deutsche Bank, the program’s biggest partner. Last year I helped tutor a child named Tyrone. This year I tutored his younger brother Tyrique, who is in the eighth grade. He has pretty decent math skills, so we work on his reading and writing. I have been helping him with persuasive essay writing. I also encourage him to read an article in The New York Times every week which we discuss; this helps him improve his vocabulary. I find tutoring very rewarding. I enjoy the relationship with Tyrique and look forward to seeing him, and he looks forward to seeing me. Additionally, I help with fundraising efforts for Two Together. I have had some experience with these types of events, and look forward to continuing my involvement in Two Together, because this is a great program that could use more resources.” According to Bonnie Lichtman, Director of Two Together, “Tyrique is a better reader and writer, and gets better grades now that Anthony is involved in his life.” GU jccany.org/twotogether 6 Growing Up “ In My Own Words Lovie Arthur HONORING A LOVING FOSTER MOTHER Recently, JCCA recognized six special foster parents with Excellence in Foster Parenting Awards. These parents demonstrate skill and caring and work closely with JCCA and follow our family model. They establish positive relationships with the birth parents, serve as strong advocates for the young people in their care, and work toward a permanent placement for the children. One of this year’s winners is Lovie Arthur. “I have six children in my care at the moment. Three of the children are siblings from a family of 11 children; I have dealt with the family many years. They can be a handful. However, they do respect me, so “ In My Own Words Damitry Stallings Here is an excerpt from his winning essay: I AM OVERCOME WITH JOY Today, Damitry Stallings is a poised teenager. However, he was not always that way. His JCCA social worker, Allison Bonesteel, says, “When Damitry first arrived in foster care, he was very quiet and had trouble communicating when he felt upset.” Now, after working with Ms. Bonestell, he has become an open and caring young man. He is also so creative, that he recently won a First Prize award for Youth in Foster Care, an essay contest sponsored by New York City’s Administration for Children’s Services and the College Board. “One of the biggest challenges I have faced in foster care is being able to keep in contact with my family. I have been in three foster care placements in three years, so it is hard trying to connect to my family on a regular basis, either in person or on the phone. I can’t live with them, but that does not mean we cannot be in each other’s lives. It is very easy when you are in a foster home to think about how your family might forget you, because you are in someone else’s home. When I first got here to my current, pre-adoptive home, I had a lot of confused feelings about my aunt, my siblings, and my grandmother. I did not know if they wanted to talk to me. I knew I liked my new foster home, but would they be mad about that? I didn’t want my new I keep working with them. After all, Rome wasn’t built overnight. You have to be patient and you have to be consistent. And they do all attend school and get good grades, regardless of the bumps in their lives. The main thing I want for them is to have a relationship with each other and know that there is family out there for them. I make sure that the three I care for, and their three other siblings in a different foster care, get together every Wednesday. I buy pizza or McDonald’s and just leave them by themselves to play. Their mother, Darlene, died last May. I helped the family pay for the funeral and rented a limousine so all the children could go to the cemetery. They all wore pink and white clothes, Darlene’s favorite colors.” GU jccany.org/fhs foster family to be mad. But I had to do something, because in the back of my head, I just missed my family. My first step was to talk to my [JCCA] social worker. I asked if my family was okay. She said they were and they asked about me, but understood if I needed some time. I was able to find some of my siblings and aunt on Facebook. This actually helped because we could talk, but we couldn’t see each other. They didn’t see me cry when I wrote to them. It took almost a year, but we finally got a visit set up with everyone. I was nervous, excited, torn, and scared. But when I finally visited with my family and told them that I wanted my foster family to adopt me, they told me I didn’t need to feel worried or sad. They just wanted to make sure this new family loved me and I loved them. And that was all true. In the place I am in now, I am so lucky because I can talk to both my foster family and biological family. I am overcome with joy, because deep down in my heart I know I am accepted and loved by both families.” GU jccany.org/fhs Growing Up “ In My Own Words Tyreek Hallett THE POTENTIAL TO DO GREAT THINGS Brooklyn Democracy Academy (BDA), a partnership between the New York City Department of Education and JCCA, is a transfer high school for students who have dropped out or fallen behind, giving them a second chance to earn their Regents diploma. The school provides students with a personalized and academically vigorous learning environment. Comprised of only 200 students, the school pairs each youth with an Advocate Counselor for support and guidance. Every year, one graduating senior receives a scholarship from JCCA to apply toward higher education. This year the recipient is Tyreek Hallett. “I did not do too well in my freshman year at one of New York’s large high schools. So it looked like I would not have enough credits to graduate. My basketball coach suggested that I apply to Brooklyn Democracy Academy. Working with (L to R) Father, Terry Walker; Graduate, Tyreek Hallett; Aunt, Dolicia Monroe; and Uncle, Gary Night. Barrington Burgess, my Advocate Counselor, really helped me. He is a good mentor and has become almost like an older brother. He was supportive, and stayed on my case and made sure I finished my senior project so I could graduate. He also helped in other areas of my life. For example, I did not have a birth certificate or a Social Security card, and he helped me get them so I could get a job. The staff and teachers really care about your life outside of school and you can connect with them on the weekends if you need to. I am proud that I received a $6,000 scholarship from JCCA and got high scores on my Regents exams–88 for Living Environment and 87 for U.S. History.” According to Mr. Burgess, “Tyreek has the potential to do great things. He cared about his grades and was willing to work hard. He passed all of his classes and was made Man of the Month, a recognition based on grades, leadership, and the example set for other students.” Tyreek will be attending the State University of New York at Cobleskill this fall. GU jccany.org/bda THREE NEW VIDEOS ON OUR WEBSITE “Infinity, the number of times a person can be hurt or be loved in a lifetime…” That is what one participant said at Arts in Action, during the extraordinary performance by the teens at The Cottage Schools. Called “The Door” and based on their experiences in foster care, the performance was about doors that have mainly been closed and some that have opened for them. Visit www.jccany.org/video to watch that video and two others we just posted—one on our inspirational graduation ceremony at Brooklyn Democracy Academy, and a moving portrayal of autistic young adults in our Pursuing Our Independence Together (POINT) program. Non-Profit Organization U.S. Postage Paid Jewish Child Care Association Inc. New York, NY Permit No. 757 Every Child Deserves to Grow Up Hopeful 858 East 29th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11210 120 Wall Street, New York, NY 10005 www.jccany.org jcca@jccany.org 917-808-4800 Peter Hauspurg President Barbara Salmanson Chair of the Board Richard Altman Chief Executive Officer Mark A. Edelman Senior Vice President, Fund Development Leslie Gottlieb Director, Communication and Marketing Editorial Board Kathy Brodsky, Robert Cizma, Phina Geiger, Anna Gold, Bonnie Lichtman, Cherise Littlejohn-Ross, Gelah Penn, Debby Perelmuter, Keturah Pierre, Rick Safran, Bella Zelkin a beneficiary of Association of Jewish Family and Children’s Agencies Child Welfare League of America Council of Family and Child Caring Agencies Council on Accreditation of Services for Families and Children The Coalition of Behavioral Health Agencies ©2013 Jewish Child Care Association BUKHARIAN TEENS CELEBRATE ISRAEL INDEPENDENCE DAY More than a dozen members of JCCA’s Bukharian Teen Lounge enthusiastically participated in the 65th Israel Day Parade on Fifth Avenue in New York City. We Need Your Help. PLEASE TAKE OUR Three-MINUTE SURVEY We want to get your views and ideas about Growing Up and how we can improve it and serve you better. Please take our three-minute survey and return it in the enclosed envelope by September 30th, 2013. Your feedback will be very helpful! Thank you.
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