Showing posts with label nonprofit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nonprofit. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Making Prevention the Main Ingredient

by Robert Jacobi
Interface Board Member
Managing Director, Main Course California


I have lived, studied, and worked in many countries, and each place taught me something different. My primary passions in life are the art of catering, managing chefs who create delicious food, and playing classical guitar, but I also love to help those who are less fortunate than me and social services have been part of my life for many years.

In the culinary world, proper training is the key to success; and in social services, prevention can be the solution. I studied hotel management in Geneva, Switzerland, worked at the Hotel du Rhone, and was certified at the Cordon Bleu. Soon, I found myself catering high-profile events at the United Nations and the Academy Awards. My European training motivated me to set newer and higher standards of quality, and I learned that a crisis is a turning point, and not always a tragedy. Violence is cyclical, and those who have experienced violence or abuse often perpetuate those dynamics in their own families.  However, in social services and crisis intervention, we have the chance to treat immediate problems, but also to end the cycle of violence one person at a time. Prevention is the cure, and prevention is the future.

In 2001, my family spearheaded the KiD (Kind in Duesseldorf) initiative in Germany. My family has been involved in this initiative for the past 10 years, and my father gives me updates to this day. KiD primarily supports care institutions for children who have a history of physical, psychological or sexual abuse.  When the experience of violence is continuous and becomes an element of daily life, this is extremely dangerous for a child. We must interrupt the cycle and patterns of violence as soon as possible. Situated in the heart of the city of Duesseldorf, the KiD center provides children with new perspectives by temporarily separating the child from unhealthy family or home dynamics, and creating space for them to explore their feelings, memories, and begin healing.

After completing my studies, I moved to Los Angeles and then Carpinteria, where I accepted a job at the Ojai Valley Inn. I fell in love with Southern California and decided to start my own catering business, Main Course California, in 2008. I met one of the directors of Interface, Marti DeLaO, while attending a Rotary Club meeting in Ventura. We discussed my family’s involvement with KiD in Germany, and I discovered that Interface also acts on the principle that prevention is the future. Interface is one of the only local organizations offering prevention programs for kids and teens to reduce their chances of getting in trouble. I was impressed, and have served on the Interface Board of Directors since April 2011.

Interface has locally pioneered a unique model that offers families and kids a one-stop shop to meet their needs for support, called the Family Resource Center (FRC). Currently there are two in operation, one in Santa Paula and one in Oxnard.  Domestic violence and child abuse counseling, parenting support, guitar and art classes, mental health assistance and youth leadership activities are just some of the services available at the Santa Paula FRC. The children who go there often refer to it as simply “El Centro” or “The Center.” That home-like atmosphere is essential for breaking the cycle of violence. Every child who experiences safety and empowerment there could someday become a parent who knows that they have made it through the worst, and that they can handle any struggle that they face.

I would like to see more centers like KiD and Family Resource Centers formed over time. The value of giving kids a “home away from home,” a place where they can go and know they can trust everyone there, heal from past abuse and prevent future violence, is immeasurable.  Prevention should be a main ingredient in any successful recipe for hope, healing, stronger families and communities.

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Why would I go without food for 24 hours?

by Erik Sternad
Executive Director, Interface Children & Family Services

In my 48 years on the planet, I’ve never gone without food for 24 hours. That seems amazing now that I have put it in writing. So what would compel me to go without food all day on Tuesday? 

I have been supporting the Ventura County Together (vctogether.org) fundraising blitz week and been part of the planning committee for this effort for several months. VCT is a group of 40 local non-profits all focused on addressing the unmet basic needs of so many across our county – the hungry homeless, sick and disconnected.

One morning last week as I woke up, this idea hit me:  I needed to devote one day for each of the areas that VCT supports (food, shelter, healthcare, 2-1-1). So Tuesday was a day of fasting, a small sacrifice to “join” those who were also hungry yesterday in our community.

After skipping breakfast, I was fine until about 11:45am when I started to notice the food in my office, and the food that my colleagues were eating here at Interface. I realized what it must be like for kids who went to school hungry on Tuesday, seeing their friends with their Lunchables and sodas, and getting that tight feeling inside – a quiet humiliation, of going without.

At about 1:30pm, I put a sticky note on my “snack drawer” in my office just in case I got distracted and reached for one of the snacks. I didn’t dare look inside the drawer! How could it be that in our country, in one of the wealthiest counties in our state, we have kids hungry this afternoon? What are we doing wrong as a society that we keep plowing forward without stopping to pick up the little ones? I remember that someone once said as a society we are measured by how we treat those who are most vulnerable amongst us. We’ve got work to do.

I received a few encouraging Facebook posts in the afternoon, and the couple of donations that came in that day were especially uplifting. At those moments I didn’t mind being a little hungry – it’s working!

By dinner time I was watching the clock. I always grab a cookie or a bite of something as soon as I walk in the door from work, so I was feeling lost and realized four times that my body had walked over to the snacks on the counter. “You can do it, you only have until 10:30pm,” I told myself. “Why did you eat so late yesterday evening? If you last ate at 6pm we’d be done by now…” Yes, I was actively arguing with myself.

I kept myself busy with a project at home, but when I sat down to read at 9:00pm, I was actually having a hard time concentrating! It took extra effort to focus my thoughts and track the text. My thoughts again went to that hungry child who I imagined at the same time staring at her homework – “got to think, think, think…” What a horrible extra burden to lay on a hungry child.

By the time 10:30pm rolled around, I was so ready to savor that first bite of an Austrian pastry that my wife had made the day earlier. I usually give thanks for my food, but this time, I was sobered by the opportunity to eat.

Maybe that’s what we’ve done, is we’ve forgotten that eating is a gift, an opportunity and a blessing. I hope many join the VC Together effort to raise funds for our local food providers today – they have more mouths to feed these days and without a whole lot of money to do it with. In the end, I just want to find a way to assure that that young girl in my imagination two days ago has food for tomorrow.

(You can learn more and donate online at VCTogether.org or text VCT to 27722. Thank you!)

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Education For Action

After 35 years as a 501(c)3 nonprofit in Ventura County, Interface Children & Family Services' has a duty to provide the highest quality of services for children and families in our community.
  
Our goal is to educate our readers about the programs and services we provide, while spotlighting our Board of Directors, our donors, employees, volunteers, and most importantly, our success stories.
 
We hope each of you will be touched by the humility, strength, and passion of our many friends who make the work that we do possible.  Because for us, it is your generosity that makes us one of Ventura County's leading nonprofit agencies.

In the words of Herbert Spencer,  "The great aim of education is not knowledge but action."