26th Annual Celebration

Foundation honors Moen with Bridge to Future award

Staff photo by Hillary Gavan
From left; Dr. Thomas Lang, John Weitzel, Joe Moen, and his son Gary Moen stand behind daughter Patty Halvorson and granddaughter Marita Halvorson at the Stateline Community Foundation’s Annual Celebration on Friday evening. Joe Moen was honored with the Bridge to the Future Award much to the delight of his family and friends.

The Stateline Community Foundation held its 26th Annual Celebration Friday night.
Congratulations to Mr. Joe Moen, recipient of the 9th Annual “Bridge to the Future” award.
This award honors local individuals, organizations or corporations that exemplify the spirit of philanthropy, leadership and innovation in support of our community.

To read the complete story at the Beloit Daily News, please click  Foundation honors Moen with Bridge to Future award

Visit Beloit Jet Grant’s Third Quarter 2012 Recipients

Stateline Community Foundation is pleased to announce the grant recipients for Visit Beloit’s third quarter 2012 Jet Grants are Beloit Civic Theater and Caritas.  Congratulations!

Community Need Grant Awards Recipients | July 2012

Stateline Community FoundationStateline Community Foundation is pleased to announce the recipients of the July 2012 Community Needs Grant.  Grants were awarded to the following organizations:

Any eligible non-profit organization may visit our Community Needs Grants page to learn more about the application process.  The next grant deadline is midnight January 1, 2013.

February 25th-Sipping for Nature on a February Eve

Wine and cheese tasting, along with food and music, in support of the Welty Environmental Center. Tickets in advance or at the door.  Cost is $35 for one; $30 for additionals.

Date:  February 25th, 2012

Time:  6:00 pm to 8:00 pm

Location:  Bushel and Pecks (at State and Grand in Downtown Beloit)

More Information:  www.weltycenter.org or newsome@beloit.edu

Feb. 16-19 | BIFF – Beloit International Film Festival

BIFF | Beloit International Film FestivalNow in its seventh year, is a four-day tribute to the power of film and the excitement of independent film from around the world.

Local residents and visitors from around the nation fill more than a dozen venues, ranging in size from 40 seats to the 700 seat Eclipse Center in Beloit and Janesville, Wis. and Rockford, Ill. for about 140 films and to meet more than 100 filmmakers who come from as far away as Europe and China.

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  • DATE: Jan 16-19,2012
  • TIME:  Varies by day — see website
  • LOCATION:  Beloit, Janesville, Rockford
  • MORE INFO:   www.beloitfilmfestival.org
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Beloit Regional Hospice

transitions-beloitIn 2006, Beloit Regional Hospice launched Transitions, which is a volunteer-driven service focused on supporting individuals who face a life-limiting illness with a life expectancy of two years or less.  We were honored to provide over $17,000 for this initiative.

Project offers hope to homeless veterans

By ANN MARIE AMES – Janesville Gazette, Friday, July 30, 2010
[hr] ROCK TOWNSHIP — You can see the scope of the project in Angel Eggers’ face.

One moment, she beams thinking about the ways the new program will help people. The next moment, her face clouds at the thought of the people who need help.

Angel Eggers -- Rock Valley Community ProgramsEggers is executive director of Rock Valley Community Programs, which is located in the former Caravilla Nursing Home, 203 W. Sunny Lane Road, Janesville.

This winter, Rock Valley plans to start a transitional housing program for homeless veterans. Qualified veterans would be able to participate in the Housing 4 Our Vets program for up to 24 months.

A safe place to live could be an island of stability for veterans struggling to re-adjust to life in southern Wisconsin, Eggers said. The adjustment is so difficult that some vets seek to return to active duty overseas, she said.

Many veterans suffer from undiagnosed mental illnesses such as depression or post-traumatic stress disorder, she said. Self-medication for such illnesses can lead to addiction.

It’s a tough cycle that often leaves a veteran estranged from or unable to live safely with his or her family, Eggers said.

“Hopefully just for a moment,” she said.

The veterans housing program would be separate from the residential re-entry programs the facility already runs for state and federal inmates.

But the two programs will have many similarities, Eggers said.

The veterans program would include assessments and treatment for addiction, mental illness or medical issues, Eggers said.

Those programs and others already are available for the 85 corrections clients currently living at the facility, Eggers said.

Volunteer opportunities would be available for people who want to support veterans, Eggers said. For example, volunteers could serve as drivers or mentors for veterans, she said.

The $660,000 project will include complete renovation of a 24-room wing at Caravilla. Each room would be able to house two veterans.

The rooms will include bathrooms and kitchenettes.

Rock Valley anticipates getting a $440,000 grant from the Veterans Administration for the project. Staff and volunteers will raise the rest of the money, Eggers said.

Local businesses including Welcome Home Interior, Marling Lumber and CCI already have donated the labor and materials for one room. Construction is expected to start Oct. 1.

Rock Valley Community Programs has been located in the former Caravilla Nursing Home facility since 1999. Eggers said the non-profit bought the building in April. Mid City Development Corporation, a Hendricks Development Group’s company, had owned the property.

Changing from for-profit to nonprofit status really opened the door as far as programming is concerned, Eggers said.

For example, veterans will be able to refer themselves for services, Eggers said. References also will come from public and private service organizations.

Veterans could live anywhere in Wisconsin, Michigan’s Lower Peninsula or northern Illinois, Eggers said.

She anticipates most will be from Rock County.

John Solis Jr. | Veterans Service Officer, Rock County WIJon Solis, the county’s veterans services officer, said it’s hard to know for certain how many members of Rock County’s homeless population are veterans.

Federal statistics indicate 25 percent of homeless individuals are veterans. Solis doesn’t think the number is that high in Rock County.

He does on occasion work with a veteran who is homeless or on the verge of being so. However, many veterans—homeless or otherwise—don’t seek services in the first place, Solis said.

Some veterans don’t admit they are veterans in order to avoid being stigmatized, Eggers said. Others simply don’t realize they qualify for assistance, Solis said.

“They just don’t automatically think there might be programs out there to help them,” he said.

Addressing homelessness

Volunteers found 17 homeless people living outdoors in Rock County during an overnight count this week, said Marc Perry director of planning and development for Community Action of Rock and Walworth Counties.

The Rock County Homeless Intervention Task Force count took place late Wednesday night and early Thursday morning. The task force conducts the count twice per year.

Volunteers search for people living on the streets. Workers also tally the number of people living in shelters or staying at hotels with emergency vouchers.

The count is mandated by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The results help determine the needs of the local homeless population.

The Gazette will report the full results of the count when the numbers are available.

TO LEARN MORE

Project offers hope to homeless veterans | Janesville Gazette XtraRock Valley Community Programs is a non-profit organization that provides transitional housing services for people leaving state and federal correctional facilities. The facility is located between Beloit and Janesville.

This fall, Rock Valley anticipates opening a new wing to provide housing for homeless veterans. Many of the veterans could be from Rock County.

Volunteer opportunities will be available to support veterans.

Stay in touch with the project by searching for “Caravilla Homeless Transitional Housing Program” on Facebook or visit rvcp.org.

Program helps vets rebuild broken lives

By Hillary Gavin – Beloit Daily News, Wednesday, November 9, 2011

[hr]

With Veterans Day on Friday, Nov. 11, veterans living in Rock Valley Community Program’s (RVCP) transitional housing programs will be enjoying their comrades during their first Veterans Day in the new facilities.

Rock Valley Community Program | Photo Credit - Hillary Gavin, Beloit Daily News

Staff photo by Hillary Gavan From left, John Martin, a veteran in the Rock Valley Community Programs transitional housing program, speaks with Rock Valley Community Programs Executive Director Angel Eggers in front of the veteran's wing. Martin said staying in the program has helped him get proper medical treatment and prepare for the next chapter of his life. He said the men all look out for each other because of their shared history as veterans and as those who have overcome struggles.

The vets plan to visit Beloit cemeteries for ceremonies put on by the American Legion in Beloit, followed by an outing to the Golden Corral.

U.S. Air Force veteran John Martin and U.S. Navy veteran David Schafer shared a little bit about their lives in their new home during an interview on Monday. Both agreed the veterans are getting along well because of their shared military histories and as those who’ve overcome personal battles.

“We all know we’ve served,” Martin said. “We all had some struggles, and recognize each other’s, and we want to see each other succeed.”

Martin, 53, was one of the wing’s first residents, moving in May 8. He said he’d been bouncing around in his passenger van and staying with his mother and brother in Beloit. He came to the program to get help with medical issues, being a Veterans Administration stroke patient.

He said he’s overcome a lot during his time in the transitional program. He had a difficult time adjusting and found it a bit overwhelming at first. But after getting his medical issues addressed and gaining physical strength, he’s focused on getting in a position where he can be out on his own and help take care of his mother Geraldine Martin, who will be celebrating her 80th birthday soon. Residents agree Martin’s mother has a lot of spring in her step for a 79-year-old.

“I’m responsible. She’s my best friend and my mother,” Martin said.

He’s working on socializing with the other veterans and said he’s made friends. He said there are different age veterans, ranging from 25-70. Some of the younger veterans have served in Iraq. Martin, who did his service in peacetime, says he doesn’t ask questions to those returning from war, but is available to support the other men.

“I listen,” Martin said.

Martin, who was recently baptized and became a Christian, often feeds fellow veterans on the floor from his food stash set at the ready in his room near his Bible. He takes pride in his room, keeping it neat and tidy and decorated with a Jesus and The Last Supper necktie. He enjoys attending motivational, finance and social living classes.

“I go to as many as I can,” Martin said.

Martin and Schafer said they will be going out with the other men on Veterans Day. The two didn’t see it as anything out of the ordinary. The men said that back in their day serving their country was just something people did, even if it didn’t pay much.

“We all were in the military. We all have served our country,” Schafer said.

Schafer of Janesville said the program is focused on the others, not just him, and all the veterans have different circumstances. Schafer said he’s devoted to his recovery from alcoholism and starting his life over. Before coming to the program he was sleeping on a park bench for a couple of months and had served time in prison.

He works as a sales associate at Full Circle Furnishings, the new resale shop where many of the veterans work, and has plans to enroll in school to become an alcohol and other drug addiction counselor.
Executive Director for RVCP Angel Eggers said Schafer is an expert with the cash register at the store and other work duties.

“Paper pushing is easy,” Schafer said.

Schafer enjoys preparing healthy food and residents report smelling the aroma of his chicken breasts, pork chops and greens floating down the hall. Schafer, the self-proclaimed “nut” of the group, said he’s a bit of an individual and “doesn’t need a baby-sitter.” He said the program is good for how it’s crafted for individuals, as the veterans all have different stories.

Eggers said the program is designed to be transitional. Once legal, medical or other financial issues are worked out, the men make plans to either get a job or find a more permanent home. She said the veterans have been a mix. Some have had substance abuse problems or physical and mental health issues, while others have lost a job and found themselves homeless.

She said since the wing opened in April, several men have found employment and left the program. On Monday, one of the men happily reported he had just found full-time employment.
Eggers said there was an overwhelming response to the grand opening of Full Circle Furnishings on Saturday, and the men agreed. They said families were buying entire room sets and staff was happily busy keeping up with demand.

Full Circle Furnishings, 2526 Riverside Drive, is a resale shop with gently used and modestly priced quality home furnishings. Regular business hours are Wednesday through Sunday 10 a.m. – 7 p.m.

Full Circle Furnishings’ mission is to create jobs for veterans and other residents living in RVCP’s transitional housing programs. It’s a division of Caravilla, Inc., a non-profit, 501C3 agency.

Renovations at the Caravilla Homeless Veterans Transitional Housing Program were completed in April. RVCP renovated 24 studio apartments, two of which are handicap accessible. Each unit can provide housing for two homeless veterans, serving 48 homeless veterans at a time. Currently there are 35 veterans living in the facility. There are 13 beds open and Eggers said staff will be working to get more homeless veterans moved in soon in light of the changing weather.

Beloit Daily NewsEggers said the program is collecting winter coats, hats, gloves, hygiene products, laundry soap, towels, blankets and twin bed sheets.

Those who want to mail a donation can send them to Homeless Veteran’s Program, care of Rock Valley Community Programs, Inc. 203 W. Sunny Lane Road, Janesville, WI 53546. Anyone interested in making a donation can contact RVCP at 608-741-4500. The number of Full Circle Furnishings is 608-365-2130.

Beloit Meals on Wheels Established an Agency Endowment Fund

meals-on-wheelsThis endowment will help to contribute to the ongoing mission of delivering warm, nutritious meals to the elderly, ill and handicapped in the Greater Beloit Area, along with furnishing needed services and information to promote dignity and independence.

The Beloit Meals On Wheels, Inc. program was established in 1971 by a dedicated group of community volunteers and health care professionals (including the VNA, Red Cross and Our Savior’s Lutheran Church) to answer an unmet need for meals for those home-bound community members who were unable to cook for themselves, or had no one to accomplish that task. Since day one, the program has delivered meals to the home-bound elderly, ill and handicapped in the Grater Beloit area… seven days a week, 365 days a year, including holidays.

For the first seventeen years of the program’s operation, it was totally managed by volunteers. In 1987, the first part-time program coordinator was hired to oversee the agency operations in an effort to assuage an aging volunteer board, as well as provide consistent financial management and client accessibility to services. The current Executive Director was hired in 1989, part-time. Over the years, the program has grown functionally from four small delivery routes to nine delivery routes, a dedicated route at Rock Bay Harbor apartment complex, (delivered by Beloit Clinic employees), and most recently, the creation of a frozen meal delivery option.

Beloit Meals on Wheels websiteBeloit Meals on Wheels Website

“Check of Hope” William Barth – Beloit Daily News

A Promise for Beloit

Beloit Daily News | 8/17/2011 editorial here.

FOR YEARS NOW, in editorial after editorial, I’ve been writing about the obvious: For Beloit, for Wisconsin, for America, the future will be won or lost in the classroom.

Unfortunately, though, there’s a cruel convergence of trends undermining academic progress. As the family structure has bent and sometimes broken as the primary support system for America’s kids, schools have been burdened by an ever-increasing role for social remediation. There’s a negative academic consequence to be paid. Every hour spent getting kids ready to learn is an hour of lost learning.

an economic development strategy designed to lower the barriers to college access creating potential for community transformation.

Youngsters who may not have been top academic achievers, in generations past, usually could count on landing a job at one of the community’s strong manufacturers. Not anymore. Manufacturing remains an important part of the economic base, but it’s not what it was … and never will be again. Most of the jobs remaining, in fact, require ever-higher skill levels due to technological complexities.

So it’s more critical that young people do well in school, and then obtain some form of post-secondary education. Which brings us to another part of that cruel convergence of trends. Government support for post-secondary education is in decline, which has led institutions to pass on higher costs to students and their families. Put it all together: Social challenges; job scarcity; higher required skills; prohibitive costs.

IS THERE an answer? Some folks in Beloit think so.

A group has been meeting, quietly, for some time seeking an approach to address these and other challenges facing not just families and students, but the community as a whole.

Among those involved in the group are Andrew Janke, Beloit economic development director; Ann Sitrick, Beloit Memorial Hospital; Bill Henderson, attorney; Missy Henderson, Beloit school board member; Jim Fisher, retired business executive; Lanier Gordon, retired business executive; Rick Barder, retired bank executive; Tara Tinder, Beloit Community Foundation; and Tom Johnson, principal of Beloit Memorial High School.

They have come up with an idea being called “The Beloit Promise.” That’s not original, by the way; it’s modeled after “The Kalamazoo Promise,” a successful program started a few years ago in Kalamazoo, Mich., to address similar issues.

kalamazoo-promise

Dr. Janice Brown Kalamazoo-promiseThe outlines of the proposal will be presented the morning of Aug. 24 when the Greater Beloit Economic Development Corporation and the School District of Beloit host a program at the Eclipse Center. Dr. Janice Brown, executive director of The Kalamazoo Promise, will be one of the keynote speakers. What she’ll have to say surely will open some eyes. And maybe raise a few eyebrows.

JUST WHAT IS this “Promise?” Simply put, it’s a scholarship program. It is place-based — only available to students within a specific geographic area. It is privately funded by philanthropy. And here’s the kicker: It is accessible not just for a favored few, but for every student.

That’s right. Every student. Not just the highest achievers. Not just athletes. Not just the poor.

The purpose of the Promise of universal scholarship opportunity is, according to a fact sheet, to create “an economic development strategy designed to lower the barriers to college access creating potential for community transformation.”

News flash: Behind every great accomplishment one will find the dreamers. They’re the ones who make it happen..

That’s a fancy way of saying it’s intended to address problems just like those facing Beloit. Too many kids are falling through the cracks. Too many lack hope. Too many see no bridge from their everyday circumstances to the opportunity to develop their potential. The community, not just the kids, pays a price for failure.

OK. PERHAPS there is a transformational element for the kids, but how can it be transformational for the community? Look at a few possibilities:

  1. It makes Beloit schools a magnet. What family wouldn’t give serious thought to a district that could offer substantial financing for the kids’ education?
  2. Attractive schools translate into a residential draw. You have to live here to qualify.
  3. It’s no secret: Beloit’s current demographics pose a challenge when it comes to economic development. Average educational attainment, average income, average home values … you name it, Beloit lags behind and needs to do better. The Promise program is designed to build higher demographics by promoting achievement, while also attracting families interested in participating.
  4. Combined, those factors become an incentive for developers and investors to give Beloit a hard look. Make no mistake, innovation matters. Finding a way to separate a community’s attributes from the crowd gets noticed. Call it sizzle, call it added value. The point is business decisions are more than cold, hard spreadsheet calculations and comparisons. Quality of life issues count, and the opportunities represented in a Promise community would make a strong selling point for Beloit to attract investment, jobs and residents.

SO FAR, SO GOOD, right? Everybody can get behind a scholarship program for all kids, offering financial help potentially all the way up to a full ride of 100 percent tuition and fees for four years.

There has to be a catch and, as always is the case, that catch is money.
How much money?

It’s envisioned as a 12-year plan, starting smaller with a first-year estimate of roughly $400,000. That goes up year-by-year as more youngsters participate, to a potential 12-year total cost of perhaps $20 million.

Well. Nice dream while it lasted. Can’t be done.

Beloit Daily NewsLike the RiverFront Project, which transformed Beloit’s central city corridor, couldn’t be done, right?

Like the Main Street program, which rebuilt Beloit’s downtown, couldn’t be done. Right?

Like the rebirth of the former Beloit Corporation campus into the gleaming Ironworks complex couldn’t be done. Right?

Like opening up the corridor east of I-90 into the Gateway Business Park, with hundreds of thousands of square feet of commercial space and thousands of jobs couldn’t be done. Right?

HERE’S HOPING readers get the point. Sure, the notion of a Beloit Promise program — raising $20 million, offering every kid a shot at college — is a big idea, literally boiling over with challenges. It’s custom-made for naysayers to laugh and scoff at the foolishness of the dreamers who think it could work.

Dreamers like Principal Tom Johnson, who aptly describes the Promise as “writing a check of hope.”

News flash: Behind every great accomplishment one will find the dreamers. They’re the ones who make it happen, by hard work and iron will, while the naysayers sit on the sidelines throwing raspberries.

To my way of thinking, dreamers need to be encouraged. That includes the good folks who envision a Beloit Promise program.

And it includes all those future Beloit students, and their families, who may think they can’t dream, that whatever potential they have is destined to be overwhelmed by obstacles.

What’s a dream worth? Twenty million dollars?

Beloit may have an exciting opportunity to answer that question.

 

Bill Barth | Beloit Daily NewsWilliam R. Barth is the Editor of
The Beloit Daily News.

Beloit Health Systems

Beloit Memorial Hospital Renovation

Beloit Health Systems implemented a 3-phase plan to expand and renovate its Emergency Room.  The Stateline Community Foundation is a proud to partner with the hospital in this worthy endeavor.

Susan Sweetin – SCF Newsletter Signup Winner!

Sue Sweetin IPad WinnerOur recent newsletter subscription campaign turned out to be a great success on several accounts. Indeed we were able to welcome many more community-minded people to opting in to be in the loop on updates regarding the Stateline Community Foundation and our programs. We’d offered up an Apple iPad for the winner of the drawing from all those who had subscribed.

We’d like to congratulate Susan Sweetin as our winner.

If you don’t know Susan, she is very involved in the community including volunteering at The Angel Museum among other things. The bonus for us is that the iPad is being put to good use. Not only is Susan enjoying it for herself but we understand she’s put it to good use for her involvement with the Angel Museum.

She’s taking pictures of museum visitors and activities, using it to compose stories for their print and website marketing outreach efforts. And as manager of the Angel Museum gift shop she’s been using it to compile content to further their store sales effort so important to maintaining their operations.

So all-in-all it was a grand success all around. Thank you to those who participated and signed up. And thank you Susan for your community involvement and putting the iPad to such good use.