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Community Resources

Hundreds of Westchester Residents Benefit from WJCS Covid Relief Hub

September 10, 2021 by Inside Press

The Covid pandemic has presented people with some of the greatest challenges of their lives. Westchester Jewish Community Services (WJCS) launched the WJCS Covid Relief Hub, in partnership with UJA-Federation of NY, in November 2020 to deliver critically needed short-term mental health counseling and career services to Westchester residents at no cost.

To date, WJCS’s Covid Relief Hub has served over 200 clients and conducted close to 100 group workshops and dozens of individual sessions. Our clients have been placed in legal, accounting, graphic design, sales, marketing, teaching, public relations, project management, and other jobs, thanks to the career guidance offered by the Covid Relief Hub.

The Hub also offers parenting coaching sessions, a particularly urgent need at a time when students and parents are facing many uncertainties in the school year ahead. “At this challenging time for so many Westchester residents, we are proud that UJA-Federation of New York has allowed us to offer these vitally important services at no cost,” said WJCS CEO Seth Diamond. 
 
“It’s hard to know what the future brings and this presents many emotional challenges to people of all ages and stages of life, whether you’re a parent, teacher, adult child of a homebound senior, or someone who has suffered great loss,” said Ellen Weisberg, Program Coordinator of Mental Health Services for the WJCS Covid Relief Hub. “Our program is dedicated to helping people address difficult feelings, situations, and decisions due to the far reaching impact of the pandemic.”
 
While the job market has improved, many young and mid-life professionals need help preparing for remote interviews and using Linkedin and other platforms. “There is great anxiety among those searching for a job,” said Lisa Morris, Program Coordinator of Employment Services for the WJCS Covid Relief Hub. “At the Covid Relief Hub, we provide both emotional support and practical guidance  to the unemployed, at no cost.” 
 
Services offered through the WJCS Covid Relief Hub are:

  • up to 4 individual mental health support sessions
  • up to 4 individual parent coaching sessions
  • mental health support groups for Jewish day schools and synagogues, tailored to specific needs
  • individual career coaching
  • weekly workshops (over Zoom) that incude topics such as resume writing, LinkedIn profiles, preparation for interviews, and job resources 
  • community mental health, and financial counseling referrals

 
The following upcoming workshops are free but must be registered for at least 24 hours in advance. Please RSVP at the email addresses listed below.

Wednesday, September 1 10:00 – 11:30 am 
LinkedIn: Up Your Networking Game 
hubs@wjcs.com

Monday, September 13  3:00 – 4:00 pm 
Resume 101: Rethink and Reinvent Your Resume 
hubs@wjcs.com
 
Wednesday, September 15  10:00 – 11:30 am 
Preparing for an Interview 
hubs@wjcs.com
 
Monday, September 20 9:30 – 10:30 am
Parent Support Group
eweisberg@wjcs.com
 
Tuesday, September 21 4:00 – 5:00 pm
Feeling Connected During the Pandemic
jschmelkin@wjcs.com
 
Wednesday, September 22   9:00 – 10:30 am 
Interview Like a Pro
hubs@wjcs.com
 
Thursday, September 23 11:15 am – 12:15 pm
Life Lessons from the Jewish Calendar 
pwax@wjcs.com
 
Thursday, September 30 12:00 – 1:00 pm
Parents of College Students: Preparing to be an “Empty-Nester”
jschmelkin@wjcs.com
 
For more information about individual mental health sessions or community workshop programming, please contact the COVID Relief Hub Mental Health Services Coordinator, Ellen Weisberg: eweisberg@wjcs.com
 
For more information about career services and programs, please contact the WJCS COVID Relief Hub Career Services Coordinator, Lisa Morris, at lmorris@wjcs.com.

ABOUT WJCS
WJCS is one of the largest non-profit, non-sectarian human services agencies in Westchester, serving 20,000 people annually at 70 clinic, school, community, and home-based locations throughout the county. WJCS is a trauma-informed agency. Its  integrated network of services includes: mental health treatment and counseling, child and youth development programs, residential and non-residential programs for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, and geriatric services. The highest level of professional development and training is offered through the WJCS Educational Institute. For more information on WJCS, go to www.wjcs.com.

News Courtesy of Westchester Jewish Community Services

Filed Under: Not for Profit News Tagged With: Community Resources, Coping with Covid, Covid Relief Hub, Westchester Jewish Community Services

How the Horace Greeley Scholarship Fund Helps Students Attend College

February 22, 2020 by Amy Kelley

Upcoming March 20th Fundraiser Plays A Crucial Role 

As college fees continue to grow faster than inflation, it’s no surprise that some families, even in communities like Chappaqua, will struggle to afford the hefty price tags. What sets Chappaqua apart, though, is a beloved community resource that since 1946 has been there to help many students bridge the gap between what their families can afford, aid provided by other sources such as colleges and universities themselves, and the price they actually are required to pay: the Horace Greeley Scholarship Fund.

“I grew up in a single-mom household and my mom didn’t have much money at all,” Horace Greeley grad Andrew Santana said. “I thought college wasn’t even an option for me. (The fund) really gave me more than money–they gave me hope.”

Today, after graduating from SUNY Geneseo and law school at the University of Dayton, Santana practices civil litigation and criminal law in Cincinnati. This spring the benefit for the Horace Greeley Scholarship Fund will be held at Brae Burn Country Club in Purchase on March 20, and Linda and Ed Bosco, as well as Patrick Dougherty, will be honored. The Boscos will receive the Taylor Family Award, and Dougherty will receive, unfortunately posthumously, the Ed Habermann Award.

PHOTOS COURTESY OF HGHS

Raising Funds

Last year, the benefit leadership committee raised more than $140,000. “Every year we have a benefit and we’re expecting over 350 friends and neighbors,” Scottie Guerney, president of the board of the HGSF, said, describing the honorees as having “really stood out in their gifts of service to the community. They are really incredible.”

Last year, the fund awarded more than $300,000 to students who had financial need beyond what financial aid and scholarships supplied. “And there was still need to be met,” Guerney said.

Besides the benefit, the fund has a few other ways it accumulates money. SHARE, the major student community service organization at Horace Greeley High School, runs an annual spelling bee and donates the proceeds. There’s also a game night in the fall. “It’s much smaller but to us everything counts,” Guerney said.

Publicizing the Scholarship to Students

Rebecca Mullen, chair of the counseling department at Horace Greeley High School, said her department makes sure students and families know about the HGSF in a variety of ways, beginning in ninth grade. “Families become aware of it as soon as they get to Greeley,” Mullen said. “The counseling department is very supportive of the scholarship fund and we work very closely with it – we love working with the parents that organize the fund.”

At the annual Night Meetings held for each grade, a representative from the fund will make a 2-3 minute presentation. Additionally, the fund is highlighted in the counseling department’s newsletter, Guide Lines. Then, when juniors and their families come in for meetings to discuss the college process, once again they are told about the fund and when appropriate, encouraged to apply.

Of course, Mullen said she doesn’t know which students become recipients of the HGSF unless they choose to share that information with her. The process and distributions are entirely confidential. “We have as a subset of our fund a small and entirely confidential grants committee,” Guerney said. The committee works with an expert in college financial aid.

Guerney previously served two years as board vice president and several years before that as a member of the 27-person board. Currently, her own children attend Bell and Grafflin. Guerney joined the board after meeting a member of the board of education who suggested it. “He said he thought I’d really connect well and be interested in the scholarship fund,” Guerney said, adding that she has a background in teaching.

“We’d love to meet the need for everyone, so every Greeley grad can obtain a college education,” Guerney said. “We are big proponents of the scholarship fund because we’ve seen it be life-changing for students,” Mullen said. “It really is an amazing resource that makes Greeley very special.”

Guerney notes that the recipients of the fund have said it has really changed their lives. “It’s amazing how generous our community is,” Guerney said. “And the generosity of the community has made them want to pay that forward and that’s a beautiful sentiment.”

Providing Hope

“Given the option to attend college – your future is a world apart what it could have been,” Santana said. “People think of Chappaqua as a place where people have money. They don’t realize that a lot of people, without the Horace Greeley Scholarship Fund, just would not be able to attend college.”

 

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: Bridge the Gap, Chappaqua, College, Community Resources, families, fund, fundraiser, Horace Greeley Scholarship Fund, University

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