The Crowd -- B.W. Cook
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B.W. Cook
It is easy to write about the many charitable concerns in the
Newport-Mesa community. Some of them are devoted to helping less
fortunate children. Others raise funds and awareness to support culture.
Still others feed the homeless, support the hospital and fund programs
for the local school system. It is easy to get behind these causes. How
do you feel about mental illness? How do you feel about raising money to
fund programs for people who have lost the ability to function in
society? How do you feel about facing the issue of mental illness, and
perhaps confronting the effects of the disease in your own community, on
your own block and perhaps even in your own home?
In the last decade, myriad issues relating to mental illness have come
out of the closet and into mainstream social discourse. What was once
taboo is now handled openly. Champions of helping those suffering from
mental illness, including former First Lady Rosyln Carter, have made an
enormous difference in opening doors that have been closed for not years,
but centuries.
In a way, mental illness is a last frontier of sorts with regards to
rallying community support for everything from research to housing to
medical support and to psychological-social services for victims and
their loved ones.
We do not need to look at the national model of support, encouraged by
Carter and others in the limelight, to find hope. Recently, the John
Henry Foundation, with the mission of “creating accessible, responsible,
integrated care for mentally ill adults,” held a fund-raiser at John and
Donna Crean’s Back Bay estate.
The upbeat dinner party was chaired by Nica Sheward and co-chaired by
Linda Palitz. Additional support for the evening came from the silent
auction chairwoman, Kathleen Nolan, and co-chairwoman, Rebecca Webb.
Organizers rallied support from 225 Newport-Mesa guests converging upon
the Crean estate to celebrate progress made in recent times to help the
mentally ill in Orange County.
The John Henry Foundation was founded in 1989 with the philosophy of
“treating every person affected with chronic mental illness with equal
access to health care, housing, employment and every other social
opportunity available to the free citizens of this country without the
stigma of discrimination.”
It’s a tall order. Mental illness, with so many forms and expressions
of tragedy, is perhaps the most frustrating and horrific of human
conditions. It may be even more destructive to the lives of loved ones
than the actual victim. The John Henry Foundation has developed a model
of care to help people with schizophrenia, bipolar disease,
schizo-affective disease and depression.
The care includes psychiatric medical treatment, permanent affordable
housing, job training and employment, educational services in conjunction
with Santa Ana College, family treatment programs, counseling and support
groups, social and recreational opportunities, and lastly, jail retrieval
and prevention programs. Statistics are unclear; however, it is
documented that a portion of the homeless adult population on our streets
are afflicted with mental illness and have no specific avenue of
assistance.
A number of local residents have stepped up and made their support
known. The evening at the Crean home honored Marilyn Brewer, Omer and Lou
Ellen Long, Albert Kozischek, and Terry and Nica Sheward. A long list of
generous local merchants provided a spectacular display of merchandise
for a silent auction that took place in the main salon of the Crean home.
More than $60,000 was raised from the auction and the dinner proceeds.
Also supporting the foundation were Rick Massimino, Marilyn and Glenn
Salsbury, Peggy Lucas, Mary Robison, Scott Robison and celebrity Bill
Cosby. The local board of the foundation includes Marian Bergeson, Hugh
Coble, Don Crevier, Jack Wareham and Marilyn Brewer.
* THE CROWD appears Thursdays and Saturdays.
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