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Flip randomly through the 320 organizations in this year’s Charity Register, and you can’t help but land on a deserving group that would benefit from your financial contribution. But for many across the region, the act of giving has transcended simply writing a check at a black-tie gala. More than ever, philanthropy includes a hands-on commitment.
Those moved to charitable efforts are getting involved by donating their time and talents to deserving organizations that often need manpower as much as money. For their efforts, these benefactors-turned-volunteers say they get greater satisfaction from seeing the fruits of their labors firsthand.
Here are nine Southwest Florida folks who decided to roll up their sleeves, dig in and give something back. “You See That Every Penny Counts” It was the animals that drew Charmaine
Yeadon to Sanibel Island. When she first drove through the mangrove-lined
streets in 1978, she fell in love with the raccoon signs that said, “Protect our
friends.” Yeadon decided to relocate there and do just that.
The animal lover
has been volunteering every Sunday at CROW, the Clinic for the Rehabilitation of
Wildlife, for the past seven years. She spends a full day—sometimes 12
hours—cleaning cages, feeding baby birds, doing laundry, shadowing the doctors,
and rescuing and releasing wildlife. “I think you realize what is involved with
the organization when you’re seeing the day-to-day [operations],” she says. “You
see that every penny counts.”
Yeadon, who works full-time for the City of
Sanibel, believes strongly in contributing to the community. “You reach the
stage in life where you wonder if you’re running out of time,” she says. “You
say, ‘I’ll do this in retirement,’ and then you think, ‘What’s wrong with
today?’” When it’s the height of bird season, she is feeding up to 50 birds a
day. But the clinic will house and rehabilitate any wildlife—possums, raccoons,
herons, eagles, ospreys, sea turtles. Once, a lady even brought in a lizard she
stepped on, Yeadon says with a laugh.
While sometimes she’s sent on rescue
missions—she once chased an injured pelican around the beach—the most rewarding
experience for her is the release. “When you open that box, and they get their
bearings, and they soar off, it’s just fantastic,” she says. “It Isn’t Hard to Build a House” In north Cape Coral, four retirees are
building a three-bedroom house. It’s one of the 10 houses the group is
constructing simultaneously this summer for Lee County’s Habitat for Humanity.
The lone woman in the group, Sanibel resident Donna Aldrich, has been
building for Habitat for 16 years, beginning in Fort Myers’ Harlem Heights. “I
just showed up with a hammer,” she says. “Thank God for a lot of patient
men.”
Alongside Aldrich is 82-year-old Harold Elsesser, who’s been building
for Habitat for 18 years; Myles Hill, who has been building for five years; and
Bill Barbre, who has three and a half years with the group. They joke that
they’ve all been kicked out of the house by their spouses and just needed
something to do. But Terri Rausch, volunteer coordinator for Lee County’s
Habitat, disagrees. “I don’t think we could function without that group,” she
says.
In season, the foursome swells to a team of six, with the addition of
Jerry Havill and Norm Landis. Habitat for Humanity builds 75 houses a year in
Lee County, and “our hands touch at least half of them,” Donna says. She
estimates the group has built more than 400 houses together over the years.
“It isn’t hard to build a house,” she says, “and it’s very
rewarding.” “We Can Do Something About It” As intake counselors at the
Neighborhood Health Clinic, Kitty and Dan Sachs are on the front lines of the
healthcare crisis. The clinic provides medical care to low-income, uninsured
adults living in Collier County. Operating almost solely with volunteers, it
treats between 80 and 100 people per week. On Mondays, the retired couple
volunteers to interview potential patients and help them with the paperwork to
get them into the system.
“[Low-income, uninsured] people end up with
dealing with health concerns only when a crisis occurs, and [they] end up going
to the ER,” says Kitty. “The clinic gives them an opportunity to be proactive
about healthcare and not just reactive.”
The Sachses, who have been
volunteering for the clinic for four years, see between six and 12 patients a
day. Kitty says the hands-on volunteering gives them a greater perspective on
their lives. “I think many people who move to Naples and retire and play golf
and socialize kind of lose that perspective and don’t realize what real problems
are, and that there are people in our community who have them, and that we can
do something about it.”
Kitty also volunteers for the Literacy Counsel of
Collier County and for Hospice of Naples, visiting patients with her cat, Max.
Dan has been volunteering his business expertise for SCORE of Naples for five
years. “There’s something three or four days of the week,” she says. “We still
leave some time for golf and fun. We’re not giving that up, but it makes that
seem all the more worthwhile.” “They See That Someone Actually Cares” Giving back is a mother-daughter
affair for Kiersten Mooney and her mom, Maryann Duvall. The duo has a
two-pronged approach to helping WINGS, Women in Need of Growth Services, a
transition house in east Naples that provides lodging for six women recovering
from substance abuse. Mooney, who has been involved with WINGS for seven years,
is the president of the board and helps organize fundraising, while 60-year-old
Duvall works in the home. “She spends an incredible amount of hands-on time with
the women,” Mooney says of her mom, who holds meetings and does case work with
the residents. “She is a mentor for a lot of these women.”
Since 1991, the
house has provided a safe transitional home for young women who have struggled
with drug addiction and are released from jail or treatment centers. The
12-step, recovery-based program gives them the tools they need to go back into
the community. “When you do give, it is so rewarding to see [their faces] light
up when they see that someone actually cares.
“We didn’t have a lot growing
up,” Mooney continues, “and in our community there is such a varied degree of
resources. It can be very easy to write a check, but people need your time and
energy. Sometimes you have got to get in there, and you’ve got to get your hands
very dirty. It keeps you grounded.”
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