Archive for » May 17th, 2012«

Mental Health Awareness Month and the Justice for Jeremy Project

A few weeks ago, Connie Lum contacted me on Facebook letting me know about her nephew and her work around mental health issues. Since May is Mental Health Awareness Month, I “sat down” and asked her a few questions about herself, her nephew and the Justice for Jeremy Project. Here are her responses:

Who is Connie Lum Perez?

By profession, I’m an early childhood educator with more than 30 years experience. My day job as a preschool owner/director is very rewarding and gives me opportunities to impact young lives in the best possible way every day. Even the youngest of children learn lessons in compassion, humanity, and acceptance. These are my most favorite lessons to teach. Besides, working with children is good therapy.

Personally, I’ve always been an optimist. I try to find the best in any given situation or person. Even in the worst of situations, I look for the glimmer of hope. I am forever the optimist and very rarely ever give up.

What is the JUSTICE FOR JEREMY project and how did you become involved?

My nephew, Jeremy Lum was smart, athletic, and an inspiration to his family and friends. In 2009, at age 29, he was looking forward to a new career as a traveling nurse. He had finished his studies at UC Berkeley and decided that as a traveling nurse, it would be his way to see the world while at the same time, do worthwhile work. Jeremy was 25 years old and a student at Cal when he was diagnosed with Bipolar Disorder.  This condition, historically called Manic Depressive Disorder, typically develops in young adulthood. It is a mood disorder characterized by extreme highs and lows. There may also be psychotic breaks or episodes.

It was while Jeremy was in an episode, that he was mistakenly arrested and jailed for public intoxication. Even after telling the officer at the jail he had bipolar disorder, was on medication and under the care of a doctor, he was left unseen by medical professionals, as required by law. He was released the next morning, without ID, without a phone call to family or friends or a safe means to get home. Tragically, Jeremy’s body was found days later in the river which runs behind the jail. He had drowned.

The tragic loss of Jeremy stunned not only my family and me, but an entire community. My belief in a system that safeguards the lives of the young, elderly, and those who are most ill and fragile was shattered. In the most senseless and needless manner, Jeremy was gone and I just couldn’t understand it.  Never had I felt such a deep sense of hopelessness. The optimist in me was very troubled. There had to be something more we could do.

It was in that same year that JUSTICE FOR JEREMY was established to campaign to promote positive awareness of mental illness. We have since become an organization that provides support and resources for those affected by mental health issues, even assisting in searches for individuals who are in a mental health crisis and have gone missing.

In 10 years, what do you hope people will be saying about JUSTICE FOR JEREMY?

In 10 years, I would like JUSTICE FOR JEREMY to be known for playing a pivotal role in the movement to require more training in mental health awareness for first responders, most often law enforcement, to help identify and distinguish behavioral issues and symptoms in those they come across.

I would like people to say that JUSTICE FOR JEREMY helped change the stigma and the general public’s understanding of mental illness and how it affects every single one of us in some way. Most of us know someone affected by mental illness, perhaps with our own family members, co-workers, friends and other loved ones.

It’s hard to believe that in the 21st century, mental illness is still so misunderstood. It’s a subject most people would rather not talk about, may cause you to look the other way and believe it will never affect you or your loved ones. However, mental illness has no boundaries.

In 10 years, I hope people will still remember Jeremy Lum, Mitrice Richardson, Kelly Thomas, and all of the others who lost their lives unnecessarily, due in large part to the ignorance and misinformation about mental illness. I hope that our grassroots Justice For Jeremy movement will have played a huge role in bringing forth compassion and understanding of mental illness where there was a lack of, or sadly, none.

How can people get connected to and support the JUSTICE FOR JEREMY project?

For more information please visit: www.justiceforjeremy.orgon facebook | by email

We welcome you to our annual events. They’re always a lot of fun and very family friendly. Dates for these events are on our website and announced on Facebook.

Donations are gratefully accepted and may be sent to:
JUSTICE FOR JEREMY LATHROP CA INC.
P.O. Box 1415, Lathrop, CA, 95330

Pay it forward a bit. Let us know about a couple of organizations or people who are doing good work in the world:

Two organizations that are a source of information and assistance to us are:

National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI): “At the heart of NAMI’s mission is our grassroots and the sharing of information with people with mental illness, their families, friends, mental health professionals, and the general public. NAMI strives to offer hope, reform and health to our American community through support, education and advocacy efforts.”

Social Planet.org: Social Planet is a philanthropic network that helps connect people with grassroots causes and projects from around the world. They do this by helping anyone find, follow and become involved with things that are important to them.Our mission is to improve the human condition and protect the natural environment -one person, one place, and one project at a time. One unique aspect of Social Planet is that 100% of member donations go directly to the project of their choice. At no time are donated funds used to run the organization or other overhead expenses. Those expenses are covered by individual philanthropists and corporate sponsorship.

Cross-posted from my main blog.


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Ron Paul looks for new donations with Stand for Liberty money bomb’

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Ron Paul supporters


Supporters of republican presidential hopeful Ron Paul wear t-shirts that spell out “PAUL” during a campaign stop at the Park Place Event Center on January 2, 2012 in Cedar Falls, Iowa. (Justin Sullivan / Getty Images)


Justin Roy, 22, of Springfield, MA, shows off his haircut in support of Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul after a campaign town hall meeting at the Church Landing at Mill Falls January 8, 2012 in Meredith, N.H. (Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images)


Donald Barsell of Ben Lomond, Ca., a supporter of presidential candidate Ron Paul wears a mask of his candidate on day two of the California Republic Party State Convention on Saturday Feb. 25, 2012, in Burlingame, Ca. (Michael Macor / SFC)


Supporters of Ron Paul holds sings outside of the Mesa Arts Center before the start of a debate sponsored by CNN and the Republican Party of Arizona on February 22, 2012 in Mesa, Arizona. (Justin Sullivan / Getty Images)


Ron Paul for president supporter Mike Kelly of Selkirk tapes a sign on the bus going to Cornell University from UAlbany in Albany N.Y. Thursday April 19, 2012. (Michael P. Farrell / Albany Times Union)


Supporters of Rep. Ron Paul drive a decorated Jeep down USF Holly Drive before the GOP presidential debate sponsored by NBC News, National Journal and the Tampa Bay Times at the University of South Florida January 23, 2012 in Tampa, Florida. (Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images)


Landon Cook of Boston, Mass., wears an imitation tattoo on his neck in support of Ron Paul outside a scheduled event for Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, at the Pinkerton Academy Saturday morning, Jan. 7, 2012, in Derry, N.H. (Matt Rourke / Associated Press)


Ron Paul signs a campaign poster during a campaign stop Monday, Feb. 6, 2012, in St. Cloud, Minn. (Charles Rex Arbogast / Associated Press)


Breanna Wentworth, from Colchester, Conn., left, and Samantha Hart from Norwich, Conn., campaign for Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul before his son, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., arrives to campaign for his father at Windham High School in Windham, N.H., Saturday, Jan. 7, 2012. (Charles Dharapak / Associated Press)


Ron Paul supporter, Melina Brajovic calls out to voters driving into a polling station, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2012, during the first-in-the-nation presidential primary, at Hilltop Middle School in Manchester, N.H. (Matt Rourke / Associated Press)


A spirited crowd of Ron Paul supporters gathered at Rudder Tuesday night, including U of H senior Andrew Lane (holding sign) who, with 4 others, traveled from Houston for the rally. (mcd)


Victoria Forbis, from Lewiston, Maine, holds up a sign during a speech by Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul at Geiger Elementary School in Lewiston, Maine, on Saturday, Feb. 11, 2012, during Androscoggin County’s Republican caucus. (Amber Waterman / Associated Press)


Linda Silvia, of China, Maine, and a delegate from Kennebec County, supports presidential candidate Ron Paul during the Maine Republican Convention at the Augusta Civic Center in Augusta, Maine, Saturday, May 5, 2012. (Robert F. Bukaty / Associated Press)


Jordan Malone, 11, cheers for Ron Paul at The Tea Party Express rally at the Capitol in Austin, Texas, on Sunday May 6, 2012. (Jay Janner / Associated Press)


A Ron Paul supporter wears a sticker on his head as Paul speaks at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, Colo., Tuesday, Jan. 31, 2012. (Chris Schneider / Associated Press)


Charles Tuttle of Minot, N.D., and his mastiff dog Bella arrive in the snow for a campaign stop in Jamestown, N.D., Monday, Feb. 20, 2012, where Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul was to hold a meet and greet campaign event. (Nati Harnik / Associated Press)


A Ron Paul supporter in the lobby of the Hyatt Regency on day two of the California Republic Party State Convention on Saturday Feb. 25, 2012, in Burlingame, Calif. (Jason Henry / Special To The Chronicle)


Andrew Jackson, of Seaford, Delaware, Tina Rodocker, of Seaford, Delaware, and John Elliott, of Greenwood, Delaware, listen as Ron Paul speaks during a town hall meeting at the University of Maryland on March 28, 2012 in College Park, Maryland. (T.J. Kirkpatrick / Getty Images)


A supporter of Ron Paul holds up a sign during the North Dakota caucus Tuesday, March 6, 2012 in Fargo, N.D. (Charles Rex Arbogast / Associated Press)


John Sharkey (left), of San Francisco, and Ellie Black, of Santa Cruz, yell chants in support of Ron Paul outside of the Marriott Hotel on Thursday, April 5, 2011 in San Francisco, Calif. (Beck Diefenbach / Special to The Chronicle)


John Sharkey (left), of San Francisco, holds a sign supporting Ron Paul outside of the Marriott Hotel on Thursday, April 5, 2011 in San Francisco, Calif. (Beck Diefenbach / Special to The Chronicle)


John Sharkey (right), of San Francisco, hands out pamphlets on Ron Paul outside of the Marriott Hotel on Thursday, April 5, 2011 in San Francisco, Calif. (Beck Diefenbach / Special to The Chronicle)


Ron Paul supporters gather at UAlbany prior to boarding a bus to hear Ron Paul speak at Cornell University in Ithaca N.Y. Thursday April 19, 2012. (Michael P. Farrell / Albany Times Union)


A Ron Paul campaigner carries a flag and sign across a busy street February 25, 2012 in Peoria, Arizona. (Don Emmert / AFP/Getty Images)


Mike Donahue climbs a snowy hill to plant signs in support of Ron Paul outside a caucus, Saturday, Feb. 11, 2012, in Portland, Maine. (Robert F. Bukaty / Associated Press)


An exuberant crowd of supporters reach for Ron Paul to get his autograph after he address the group at a rally, Tuesday January 31, 2012. (Lacy Atkins / The Chronicle)


Ron Paul supporters Felice Ford, left, and Becky Miner take a photograph together prior to boarding a bus at UAlbany to travel to Cornell University to hear Paul speak in Albany N.Y. Thursday April 19, 2012. (Michael P. Farrell / Albany Times Union)


Supporters cheer for Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul during his caucus night rally, Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2012, in Ankeny, Iowa. (Eric Gay / Associated Press)


Supporters of Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul watch results during his caucus night rally, Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2012, in Ankeny, Iowa. (Eric Gay / Associated Press)


Supporters cheer for Ron Paul at Soldier Sailors Memorial Hall Friday night, April 20, 2012 in Pittsburgh. (Bill Wade / Associated Press)


Ron Paul supporters surround the stage during his speech at the University of Texas LBJ Library Lawn on Thursday April 26, 2012 in Austin, Texas. (Rebeca Rodriguez / Associated Press)

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There’s no better way to show a campaign is still up and running than to refuel with some campaign cash.

Today, the Ron Paul presidential campaign is holding a “Stand for Liberty money bomb.”

In just a few hours, the Paul campaign has already raised more than $225,000 from supporters across the country, who still want to see the Texas Congressman in the White House – or at least at the Republican National Convention.

In the 2012 GOP presidential race, the 12-term congressman from Lake Jackson has made the “money bomb” his trademark fundraising tactic, crowning him king of the small donation. But that doesn’t mean his resources are abundant.

Earlier this week, Paul announced he would no longer actively campaign in the remaining Republican primaries because it would require “many tens of millions of dollars we simply do not have.”

Many interpreted Paul’s decision to scale back spending as his withdrawal from the GOP race. However, Paul’s national campaign chairman, Jesse Benton, assured reporters that this is not the case.

Paul is still working to amass delegates and will appear at the Minnesota state Republican convention on Friday.

According to the FEC records, through the end of March, the Paul campaign had zero debts. Florence Sebern, an unpledged delegate and Ron Paul supporter from Colorado, said his decision to scale back spending is just another example of how Dr. Paul is the fiscally responsible candidate.

“A lot of peoples’ hard-earned money has come into the Paul campaign and when he says he is fiscally responsible, he is really painfully aware of the sacrifice people have made in order to contribute to his campaign,” Sebern said. “He doesn’t take it lightly…and he’s making a very practical decision in light of this economy.”


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Monmouth Park Charity Fund to Ring The NASDAQ Stock Market Closing Bell


ADVISORY, May 17, 2012 (GlobeNewswire via COMTEX) –
What:

Monmouth Park Charity Fund, a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit organization which raises and distributes funds to non-profit agencies in Monmouth County, New Jersey that provide services for healthcare, those at risk in the community and those in need of special services, will visit the NASDAQ MarketSite in Times Square.

In honor of the occasion, Nona Balaban, Monmouth Park Charity Fund Trustee will ring the Closing Bell.

Where:

NASDAQ MarketSite — 4 Times Square — 43rd Broadway — Broadcast Studio

When:

Friday, May 18, 2012 — 3:45 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET

Contact:
John F. Heims, Director of Media Relations, Monmouth Park Racetrack
(848) 448-3700
jheims@monmouthpark.com or johnfheimsesq@verizon.net

NASDAQ MarketSite:
Jen Knapp
(212) 401-8916
Jennifer.knapp@nasdaqomx.com

Feed Information:
Fiber Line (Encompass Waterfront): 4463

Gal 3C/06C 95.05 degrees West
18 mhz Lower
DL 3811 Vertical
FEC 3/4
SR 13.235
DR 18.295411
MOD 4:2:0
DVBS QPSK

Facebook and Twitter:

For multimedia features such as exclusive content, photo postings, status updates and video of bell ceremonies please visit our Facebook page at:
http://www.facebook.com/ #!/NASDAQ.

For news tweets, please visit our Twitter page at:

http://twitter.com/nasdaqomx

Webcast:

A live webcast of the NASDAQ Closing Bell will be available at:
http://www.nasdaq.com/about/marketsitetowervideo.asx .

Photos:

To obtain a hi-resolution photograph of the Market Close, please go to
http://www.nasdaq.com/reference/marketsite_events.stm and click on the market close of your choice.

About Monmouth Park Charity Fund:

The Monmouth Park Charity Fund, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, was established in 1947 by Philip and Betty Iselin. In conjunction with Monmouth Park Racetrack, the Monmouth Park Charity Fund raises and distributes funds to non-profit agencies in Monmouth County, New Jersey that provide services for healthcare, those at risk in the community and those in need of special services. Since its inception, the Monmouth Park Charity Fund has provided nearly $10 million to local charities and organizations.

About Monmouth Park Racetrack:

Established in 1946 in Oceanport, N.J., Monmouth Park Racetrack is one of New Jersey’s most historic and recognizable landmarks. Now in its 67th season of world-class Thoroughbred racing, Monmouth Park Racetrack is ideally located on the Jersey Shore. The signature event of Monmouth’s racing season is the $1 million Haskell Invitational, to be renewed this year on July 29, which attracts racing’s top equine athletes. For more information about “The Shore’s Greatest Stretch”, visit
www.monmouthpark.com .

About NASDAQ OMX:

The inventor of the electronic exchange, The NASDAQ OMX Group, Inc., fuels economies and provides transformative technologies for the entire lifecycle of a trade – from risk management to trade to surveillance to clearing. In the US and Europe, we own and operate 24 markets, 3 clearinghouses and 5 central securities depositories supporting equities, options, fixed income, derivatives, commodities, futures and structured products. Able to process more than 1 million messages per second at sub-40 microsecond speeds with 99.999% uptime, our technology drives more than 70 marketplaces in 50 developed and emerging countries into the future, powering 1 in 10 of the world’s securities transactions. Our award-winning data products and worldwide indexes are the benchmarks in the financial industry. Home to approximately 3,400 listed companies worth $5.1 trillion in market cap whose innovations shape our world, we give the ideas of tomorrow access to capital today. Welcome to where the world takes a big leap forward, daily. Welcome to the NASDAQ OMX Century. To learn more, visit
www.nasdaqomx.com . Follow us on Facebook (
http://www.facebook.com/NASDAQ ) and Twitter (
http://www.twitter.com/nasdaqomx ). (symbol:NDAQ and member of SP 500).

This news release was distributed by GlobeNewswire,
www.globenewswire.com

SOURCE: The NASDAQ OMX Group, Inc.


                                        -NDAQA-

(C) Copyright 2010 GlobeNewswire, Inc. All rights reserved.


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Ohio mental health care idea has local support

Ohio Gov. John Kasich’s proposal to merge two state agencies providing mental health and addiction services has broad support locally, but one agency says it’s yet another change to an already complicated system that could impact them financially.

Under the proposal, which would go into effect on July 1, 2013 with legislative approval, the Ohio Department of Mental Health and the Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services would be combined in an effort to reduce bureaucratic clutter, according to state officials. The merger was announced May 11.

Brent Phipps, president and CEO of LP Services, 207 Colegate Drive, Marietta, says the proposed merger comes on the heels of six different policy changes since 2011.

“It’s a wonder we’re even still here. There’s been so much change,” Phipps said. “In and of itself the merger may not be a bad thing, but it comes on the heels of so much other stuff. We’re swamped.”

Since July 2011, there have been statewide changes to the billing cycle, bed stays at state hospitals, management of Medicaid services and a shift to Health Homes, Phipps said.

The consolidation of the two departments follows up on those changes, several of which have been altered already since their inception, he added.

“I think Kasich is trying to do too much, too soon,” Phipps said.

While those with other area organizations see challenges with the proposed merger, most say they are excited by the move, which they feel will dramatically alter the landscape of how benefits are administered.

Instead of having to contact two different agencies to provide service to the same patient, there will be a single call to the state from a provider. It is possible that more services could be provided in the future, as delivery of aid will be more cohesive, local officials said.

“I think it’s an exciting time of change for Ohio and for folks that are receiving services,” said Helen McGrail, clinic director for the Belpre location of Tri-County Mental Health and Counseling, 809 Farson St., Belpre. “But it’s a lot for those who are providing the services.”

Phipps also admits there will be benefits from the merger, but questioned the timing and how it will be implemented.

“There’s a huge disparity in the quality of the rules, the approaches of the departments,” Phipps said.

LP Services is certified to handle both mental health and addiction treatment. Organizations that provide assistance for both diagnoses stand to benefit the most, state officials said.

“At the local level, I think the benefit is going to be dealing with a single agency, a more integrated care system if somebody has both diagnoses,” explained Trudy Sharp, communications director with the Ohio Department of Mental Health.

Reduced regulatory oversight through the certification process could be a benefit, but Phipps said he wonders how the new agency could implement the policy.

Currently, to be certified for both addiction and mental health services requires visits from two separate inspection teams. The mental health department’s team was at LP Services for half a day while the addiction services contingent was on site for two full days, Phipps said.

Under the new agency, there would only be one visit, state officials said.

Phipps noted that the drug and alcohol addiction board has much more complicated procedures to follow than mental health services, particularly when it pertains to opening a new case file.

McGrail said she also believes there will be considerable challenges with the merger of the two departments, but feels the transition will be worth it in the end.

“The benefits are really going to impact our clients dramatic5ally,” McGrail said. “When we’re there, it’s going to be awesome.”

Through the consolidation of state resources, officials will have easier access to programs and treatment options for patients.

Instead of having to wait for days or weeks for information from state officials in Columbus to approve medical care, the process will be smoother, allowing clients to receive treatment faster, local officials explained.

Officials with the Washington County Mental Health and Addiction Recovery Board said they are in support of the consolidation of the two state organizations, but it will not have a profound impact on them.

“This is not disturbing to us. Anything that will free up some money for services to our citizens, we’re all for that,” said Miriam Keith, consumer support coordinator with the Washington County Mental Health and Addiction Recovery Board.

The merger was proposed by the Office of Health Transformation, which was formed by Kasich last year to overhaul the Medicaid program and recommend a new organizational structure for the state’s health and human service agencies.

“From our perspective, in both word and deed, the governor has really focused attention on the issues surrounding both mental health and addiction services,” said Eric Wandersleben, communications manager with the Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services.

The Ohio Department of Health has a budget of $555.5 million for fiscal year 2013 and has 2,391 employees. The Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services has a budget of $103.2 million for the 2013 fiscal year and employs 100 people.

Layoffs are not expected as a result of the consolidation, though savings through attrition could result in the future, officials said.

“The prospective of any cost savings, that’s not the primary driver,” Sharp said. “The primary driver is to provide services efficiently.”

Wandersleben said the merger was proposed because both agencies serve many of the same patients, and that clients of the organizations can receive better services through the integration.

According to the 2011 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 20 to 25 percent of individuals with a mental illness also have a substance abuse disorder. In Ohio psychiatric hospitals, that number exceeds 50 percent.

“It’s really common for individuals with substance abuse disorders to also show signs, or symptoms, of mental illness,” Wandersleben said.

Having more options available for treatment of clients suffering from both addiction and mental health issues is a key point for local agencies.

“I’ve always felt we need to have more dual-diagnosis services,” Keith said.

Even though it is expected to streamline the system and reduce costs at the state level, there are still some concerns with the upcoming unification of the two state boards, Phipps said.

One is that the current fee system, which was adopted in 2011 but based on fees established in 1999, differs for providing mental health and addiction services. The money provided for drug and alcohol addiction is significantly lower than the amount afforded for mental health aid, Phipps continued.

If the two boards adopt the fee schedule in place for mental health services, LP could see substantial losses.

Right now, LP Services receives $347,796 from the mental health board and $147,616 from the addiction services board for a combined total of $495,412 in non-Medicaid funds, with additional income provided through Medicaid. If all fees were reimbursed according to the mental health figures, that total drops to $295,232.

“We constantly see how we can lose money,” Phipps said.

The current system across the state includes 50 county boards of alcohol, drug addiction and mental health. Of those 50 boards, serving all 88 of Ohio’s counties, 47 are combined boards.

Initiatives and programs of both the state mental health and alcohol and drug addiction boards will be maintained.

The fiscal offices of the two state agencies have already relocated to a central location, and communications, legal staff and the information technology departments expect to begin merging in July of this year.

An exact date for when legislation will be brought before the Ohio congress is not known at this time, but is expected in the near future.

“It won’t affect us as a board a great deal,” Keith said. “We’re still struggling to provide the services that Washington County Citizens should have available to them.”


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Blood donations needed in summer, too

Blood donations often decrease in the summertime, while the need for blood remains constant. So the American Red Cross is putting out a call for blood donations and is offering incentives for those who donate.

From May 21 to Sept. 5, all presenting donors will have a chance to win a prize certificate for $5,000 redeemable at GiftCertificates.com.

“As donors choose how to spend their time this summer, we encourage them to make time to help give the gift life by donating blood or platelets as often as they are eligible with the Red Cross,” said Greg Novinska, CEO of the Badger-Hawkeye Blood Services Region. “The more donors give this summer, the more they increase their odds of winning a prize certificate, and the more lives they help change.”

During specific summer holiday timeframes — May 24 to 30, June 29 to July 8, Aug. 30 to Sept. 5 — five presenting donors within the Badger-Hawkeye Region are eligible to win a GiftCertificates.com prize package worth $200 redeemable for items of their choosing.


How to Donate Blood

Call 1-800-RED CROSS, or visit redcrossblood.org to make an appointment or for more information.

All blood types are needed. A blood donor card or driver’s license, or two other forms of identification are required at check-in.

Who can donate:

Those who are 17 years old, weigh at least 110 pounds and are in generally good health may be eligible.


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High Five Charity Auction nets Pocono charities at least $45000

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Developer Dein Properties bought the Carlton House, an apartment building with a retail storefront on Stroudsburg’s Main Street, for $195,000 Tuesday night at an auction to benefit charities.

The building was badly damaged in a fire in December 2009 and has been vacant ever since.

“There are no specific plans for redeveloping the property at this time, but development of those plans will commence very soon,” Dein General Manager George Strunk said.

“Whatever we do will be upscale.”

Under consideration is retail space on the ground floor with offices and apartments upstairs.

“We like the site for many reasons, including that it is on the best block of a great town, downtown Stroudsburg, and it’s a corner lot,” Strunk said.

Also part of the decision to purchase the property was a new borough ordinance that allows for buildings up to 56 feet in height and underground parking.

“These things combine to allow for many different and distinct development options on the site,” Strunk said.

Six of 21 properties on the auction block were bought, with the sale of another four or five the subject of negotiations.

The Gouldsboro Volunteer Fire Company bought a 24-lot subdivision adjoining the firehouse in Gouldsboro for $150,000.

TBR Global Ventures, a private investment group, purchased the Champion sports complex in Brodheadsville for $499,000.

The three other properties sold were a commercially zoned building on about one acre on Route 447 in East Stroudsburg for $50,000; four undeveloped acres on Warner Road in Pocono Township for $50,000; and 21 acres with dilapidated cottages on Gravel Creek Road in East Stroudsburg, for $100,000. The Carlton House, the Route 447 building and the cottages in East Stroudsburg were all distressed properties.

Schreck’s Market on North Fifth Street in Stroud Township and Memorytown Resort in Paradise Township did not sell immediately. They are among the properties being negotiated.


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Colorado West is largest behavioral health services provider in northwestern Colorado

GLENWOOD SPRINGS, Colorado — The numbers are surprising.

According to Sharon Raggio, president and CEO of Colorado West Regional Mental Health (CWRMH), the Surgeon General claims that one in five Americans experiences a mental disorder during the course of a year.

That means that in the restaurant where you dine, the theater you attend, or the sporting event you go to, all you need to do is count it out. Count five people around you; one of those five will experience a mental illness this year.

According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), of the approximate 5.1 million people living in Colorado, more than 210,000 children and adults live with a serious mental illness. Thousands more in the state are dealing with less severe mental health issues that nonetheless provide challenges.

Raggio said that those numbers only represent a small portion of people who are affected by mental illness.

“In 2011, we served a little under 14,000 people at Colorado West,” she said. “But how many more were impacted by people dealing with mood disorders and substance abuse issues? You could easily triple those numbers.”

With those kinds of statistics, it’s easy to see the importance of the work Colorado West does. Celebrating its 40th anniversary this year, and Mental Health Month this month, Raggio said that as the organization looks back, the agency is more essential than ever.

“It’s about access,” she said, regarding CWRMH’s 13 outpatient clinics that now operate in 10 counties. “We believe that if we are available, [our clients] will come.”

Headquartered in Glenwood Springs, CWRMH has been working since 1972 to address the needs of individuals seeking positive outcomes for a range of mental illnesses. Colorado West now offers a range of services from outpatient mental health treatment and substance abuse counseling to employee assistance programs and school-based programs and education.

In fact, through its partnership with West Slope Casa, which provides alcohol and drug addiction treatment from its base in Glenwood Springs, Colorado West is the largest provider of behavioral health services in northwestern Colorado.

According to CWRMH’s 2010 annual report, the three main disorders that receive the largest percentage of treatment are mood disorders such as bipolar and depression, alcohol use, and anxiety disorders.

CWRMH’s reach is vast. Although most living in Garfield and Pitkin counties know only of Colorado West’s local work, the organization serves eight additional counties: Eagle, Grand, Jackson, Mesa, Moffat, Rio Blanco, Routt and Summit, basically covering the top-left portion of the state.

In addition, in 2004, CWRMH expanded its services even further when it built a new psychiatric hospital in Grand Junction, after three hospitals closed their psychiatric wings, leaving no psychiatric hospital care in the western half of the state. Even though Colorado West incurred a significant debt to do so, the agency was able to gain the funding it needed and has now retired the debt on the facility.

“The hospital not only serves our region, but the entire western half of the state, as well as patients statewide,” Raggio said.

Although mental illnesses are more common than one would initially imagine, other health ailments don’t share the same stigma. Those suffering from afflictions such as bad knees or asthma can receive medical care and treatment without a cloud of judgment hanging overhead.

“A lot of people consider mental illness a character defect,” said Raggio. “They think if the person had enough willpower, they could get themselves out of their depression or their addiction. But that same judgment isn’t applied to someone with diabetes or other types of ailments.”

Raggio said mental disorders still have a ways to go in terms of society’s understanding of various conditions, and how those suffering from mental health issues can recover and lead fulfilling, productive lives.

“Education is one of the best ways to debunk the myths,” she said.

Now that Colorado West has served northwestern Colorado for four decades, what lies ahead for the agency? Raggio said focusing on integrated care, and working on prevention programs are priorities.

“In the next phase, we are working on partnering with other health care entities, integrating the body and mind in terms of providing mental health care,” she said. “And with prevention, we are working on how to promote emotional wellness. We want to take what we’ve learned and researched to teach how to promote emotional health from the start.”


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Mental health plan unveiled in NS

The Nova Scotia government will place more clinicians in schools and assess children as young as 18 months old as part of a broad mental health strategy aimed at intervening early and reducing wait times for care.

Health Minister Maureen MacDonald laid out the province’s first mental health strategy on Wednesday, saying it will provide $5.2 million for various initiatives in the first year.

MacDonald said the focus of the five-year plan will be on identifying potential mental health conditions early and trying to deliver care to people outside of hospital settings, if possible.

“We need a system that’s more community based, we need faster access sooner and we need to intervene earlier,” she told reporters.

“These are all things that will provide us with much different results so that people don’t end up in crisis.”

Health Minister Maureen MacDonald laid out Nova Scotia’s first mental health strategy. (CBC)

The province plans to increase the number of schools with psychologists, nurses or social workers to about 80 as part of an ongoing program to detect mental health concerns, start treatment or refer young people to specialists.

MacDonald said early detection is critical since 70 per cent of mental illnesses begin before the age of 25.

She said they will also screen every child for mental health conditions at 18 months of age to identify any developmental delays and provide suitable treatment.

Not enough health-care workers, says opposition

But Liberal health critic Leo Glavine said that while the initiatives are laudable, the NDP hasn’t provided enough health-care workers to handle any increase in the number of people needing care.

“Now we’re going to get early interventions and more assessments and diagnoses, but we don’t have the resources — that’s the whole issue,” he said.

“We do not have enough mental health experts.”

MacDonald, a former social worker, said the province is expanding a 12-week telephone-based program that helps families manage children with mild to moderate behaviour problems.

She said they will also boost the number of peer support workers to help people with mental health disorders transition from hospital to their communities.

Stephen Ayer of the Schizophrenia Society of Nova Scotia praised the strategy, saying it was key to identify mental illness early to prevent the development of more serious, chronic problems.

He cited $500,000 in funding for certified peer support workers as a good boost for frontline help.

“We’re moving forward with mental health care in this province and hopefully taking a leading role in the country,” he said, adding that his group was consulted on the strategy. “I’m very pleased.”

Advisory panel made recommendations

The report comes almost a month after an advisory panel called on the province to shorten wait times for children and youths who have been referred for a mental health assessment.

The advisory committee produced 61 recommendations for creating the mental health strategy.

It found that long wait times for children and youth with symptoms of mental illness were a particular concern and recommended that urgent cases should be offered an assessment within a week instead of 10 days.

As well, it said semi-urgent referrals should be offered an appointment within two weeks instead of four weeks, and regular cases should be seen within 21 days.

MacDonald conceded Wednesday that the province doesn’t meet some of its standards, with some people waiting months beyond the acceptable time limit.

She said they hope to change that and meet their standards with the new strategy.

One in five affected by mental illness

It is estimated that about 180,000 people in the province — or one in five — are affected by mental illness.

The government announced in 2010 that it would draft the mental health strategy following some high-profile cases and scrutiny.

Nova Scotia’s auditor general criticized the Health Department in June 2010, saying it failed to evaluate the quality of mental health services across the province.

Months later, provincial court Judge Anne Derrick released her final report into the death of Howard Hyde, a mentally ill man who died in 2007 after a struggle with guards at a Halifax-area jail.

Many of Derrick’s 80 recommendations call for improved training, more funding for mental health services and better co-ordination and communication between justice and health officials.

© The Canadian Press, 2012


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Drop Kids Closet donations at credit union

COUNTYWIDE

Donations needed to stock Kids Closet

Suncoast Schools Federal Credit Union has teamed up with the Hernando County School Board to collect donations for Kids Closet, which helps homeless and needy children in Hernando County. Numerous items are needed, including toiletries, clothing and household products. For a full list of items, or for information, contact Shanika Figueroa at (352) 797-7008, ext. 132, or figueroa_s@hcsb.k12.fl.us. Donation boxes are set up at Suncoast Schools FCU branches at 18915 Cortez Blvd., Brooksville, and at 3037 Commercial Way and 4176 Mariner Blvd., Spring Hill. Donations will be collected through May 30.

SPRING HILL

Get job-ready at career workshop

Communities in Schools of Hernando County is seeking young adults, ages 18 to 24, to participate in “Ready 4 Success,” a three-day intensive job-readiness workshop that will be from 7:45 a.m. to 4:40 p.m. June 15, 7:45 a.m. to 4:15 p.m. June 16 and 7:45 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. June 23 at Career Central, 7361 Forest Oaks Blvd. The cost is $10. The workshop is being coordinated by the Greater Hernando County Chamber of Commerce’s Hernando Youth Initiative and is open to the first 50 people to register. Registration is required by May 31. Call Tracy Echols at (352) 277-3322.

BROOKSVILLE

See ‘Grease’ for $5 at Central High

The classic 1950s musical Grease: The School Version opens today at Central High School, 14075 Ken Austin Parkway, west of Brooksville. Showtimes are at 7 p.m. today and Friday and 2 p.m. Saturday. Tickets cost $5 with 50 percent donated to Relay for Life. For information, call (352) 797-7020, ext. 296 or 295.

HERNANDO BEACH

Class teaches babysitting, CPR

The Hernando County Recreation Department will offer a babysitting course, sponsored by the American Heart Association, from 4 to 9 p.m. Friday in the recreation facility at Linda Pedersen Park, 6300 Shoal Line Blvd. The class, for youth ages 11 to 18, will teach what babysitters need to know and what parents want in a safe and responsible sitter. Participants will also learn CPR, first aid and how to write resumes and interview for jobs. The cost is $55, which includes a book and certifications in babysitting, CPR and general first-aid basics, good for two years. Prepayment is required. Call (352) 754-4031 or (352) 684-5664, or visit the website at cprresq.com.

Correction

In a story on the May 10 Top of the Class page about a political forum and debate at Nature Coast Technical High School, the first name of Jared Arnold and the last names of Samantha Gronau and Sean Conrey were spelled incorrectly.

Today’s picks

Orange Blossom Jamboree: Gates open at 4 p.m. with performances beginning at 7:30 p.m. at Sertoma Youth Ranch, 85 Myers Road, south of Spring Lake. $15 today, $60 for a three-day Friday-Sunday pass, and $20 for Sunday only; optional camping available. (954) 769-1692. OrangeBlossomJamboree.com.

Charity Cruise-In benefit for Early Learning Coalition of Pasco and Hernando Counties: 5-8 p.m., Chick-fil-A, 13143 Cortez Blvd., Spring Hill. Free. Toll-free 1-800-708-0087.


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