Share Our Selves is the largest...
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Share Our Selves is the largest agency for direct aid in Orange
County and serves anyone in need. The Westside nonprofit, which has
40 part-time/full-time employees and 450 volunteers, pays people’s
bills and distributes food, clothing and toys. They also have about
20,000 medical/dental patients annually. Right now, as with most
nonprofits, is an extremely important time of year because the number
of people in need rises during the holidays.
On Tuesday, City Editor James Meier toured the Superior Avenue
nonprofit with SOS Executive Director Karen McGlinn. There, he found
boxes of turkeys and other Thanksgiving fixings that ended up keeping
a lot of stomachs full on Thursday’s holiday.
Meier also sat down the McGlinn to discuss how the Superior Avenue
nonprofit is doing this year, some of the heartwarming stories that
occur there and those who criticize all nonprofits on Costa Mesa’s
Westside.
So how is Share Our Selves doing this year?
Well, very well. SOS’ pattern has been that when the people’s
needs are increasing, the people give. So we’ve had a good year.
We’ve been able to meet all the requests that have come across to us
and all of the serious medical issues that have come across our
desks. I’d call it a really giving year, a flourishing year.
Now how did this year compare to last year?
In terms of giving, it increased, measurable increase. We weren’t
one of these agencies that after [Sept. 11] said, “Oh my gosh, the
sky is falling.” We found that people’s response really was make sure
people are OK, so they gave to us generously.
We have a base of support that’s been unwavering for all 32 years.
We still have a little lady who gives us $10 a month that’s like the
widow’s portion of her money. Then we have donors who give us
substantial amounts.
That wide range of giving allows us to do so much.
What do you attribute that consistency to?
I believe that we offer an opportunity for people to do good, and
they want to do it. And then, out of every dollar that comes to us,
91 cents goes to programs and 9 cents goes to the cost of operation.
So, if somebody says “If I’m going to give $10, is it valuable?”
Yeah, and that makes a huge difference.
And honesty in what we do. We never shriek away from what we do.
We say we give food, we give financial, we give clothing, support,
resources, dental and medical care, and if you walk on site, like you
did today, that’s what we do.
So your dollar counts. It really makes a difference. And my belief
that people really want to do good.
How important are the holidays for Share Our Selves?
Oh, they’re key and critical in any nonprofit world. The two
months of November and December are your big-dollar months. People
remember to think about others during this season.
And it’s not just getting the money. We believe here, at SOS, that
you need to be able to participate where you can, so if the best you
can give is the free turkey you got because you bought the one
turkey, then OK.
So I don’t want to quantify what we get during these months as the
money. What I really want to qualify what we get this month is the
opportunity for people to participate and once they’ve done it
wherever they can, then the want to do it all year.
The lady who comes in with her little children and brings in the
used toys, because we have a used toy distribution, all of a sudden
she says “Oh, we can do this all the time; we’ll clean our closets.”
So the holiday season is just a door that people pass through.
Hopefully, when they come to the door, they’ll want to be a part of
it all of the time.
If people want to help, other than food, money, toys, what else
can they donate?
Anything. We have a whole program where, 12 months out of the
year, you can do things, so if you want to have your Brownie troops
do stuff or those kinds of things.
And those things are as simple as collect all your plastic bags
for the month and bring them down because we have to use plastic bags
down here. Make birthday kits for kids who aren’t going to have
birthday parties. When everyone travels and goes out and gets soaps
and shampoos, you all throw them under the cabinet when you get home.
Bring them down here and we’ll give them out to families and people
on the streets.
So the opportunity for someone to participate here is parallel to
everything they need in their lives. If they go out shopping and
they’re buying something grocery-wise, then if they think of someone
else who needs to the same things and brings a can or two along the
way, they’re really going to make a difference.
So there really isn’t a limit to the opportunity. I’ve had people
come up with the most creative ideas in the world. Our backpack
program -- we give out backpacks at back to school time; we gave out
1,600 backpacks this year -- that started from a young boy in
Spyglass Hill who was doing a community service project here and
realized kids didn’t have backpacks and went around his neighborhood
and started collecting backpacks.
That’s truly what SOS is about: giving people the opportunity to
do good, and to be able to do it where they can and how they can. If
you say “No, you can only do it if you have money,” you’ll forget
about a whole lot of people.
With an incoming Costa Mesa councilman who shares many of
Councilman Chris Steel’s views of nonprofit organizations on the
Westside, are you concerned at all?
Well, we receive no funding from the city. We are not dependent on
any funds from the city of Costa Mesa in any manner. We are also
privately funded. Over 90% of our income comes from private funding.
The only money other than that comes from the new tobacco settlement
money coming in from the county that we use for medical care.
We are what I would call a stand-alone operation. We’re what
everybody dreams you should be -- raise your own funds, be a
responsible business, serve the needs of the people and be
independent of any governmental ties. So I want to make sure that
that’s clear. And we own our facility and our business is nonprofit.
Your question was if I’m concerned. I am not. I believe that
[Allan] Mansoor has been elected by the people of Costa Mesa and that
he’s been given an incredible charge. Among that charge is to be able
to develop an intellectual, objective response to conditions that
present themselves in the city.
I believe a good responsible council person, someone who has the
courage to run for office -- makes that courage known by going out
there and exposing themselves -- certainly wants to elevate
themselves to a position that really represents the people.
So I believe that when he begins that duty of representing the
people that he will have a lot of myths and perceptions dispelled
because he’ll take the time to learn reality.
What do you say to those who say the Westside’s nonprofits are
nothing but magnets?
First, I ask them to please dispel perceptions versus reality.
First thing is I invite them to come down. Really, come on site. See
what we do here, so they understand better what we practice and how
we accomplish goals, how we spend the given dollars.
Second, I guess throughout history, charities were considered
magnets. People always have bad things to say about some kind of
charitable activity. I think the term magnet has been used in such a
derogatory manner that the only thing this magnet can do is attract
bad and evil or those who are undeserving, and truly, if we see the
services of nonprofits, we see that the people who come to us are not
all of those things that have been defined as being attracted to the
magnets.
So that’s why it’s critical, so important, that they actually
visit the organization to dispel perception and see reality. It’s all
about people.
Any final thoughts?
I am just incredibly thankful this holiday season that so many
people continue to have a moral conviction in this incredibly wealthy
community of ours that they’re not going to be judged necessarily by
how well they prosper, but how well they care for those who are not
prospering. It’s the old statement again that given the opportunity
to do ordinary things, we can create an extraordinary event. And
that’s the untold story of Orange County and Newport Beach. They’re
constantly responding in extraordinary ways. I’m just thankful for
everyone who takes the time to think about another person.
I’m really extraordinarily lucky. I get to meet so many people
that many people wouldn’t have that opportunity.
[On Monday], I met this tragically homeless woman who, if anyone
saw on the street, would pick up. It’s just not something you can
walk away from. What she was struggling with was she can’t see, so
she told me that she lost her magnifying glass and really needed
another one. And happen to have a magnifying glass, so I gave it to
her and she absolutely smiled, just smiled.
This woman that we would define as obese, smelly and really
tragically ill, and not attractive, was absolutely beautiful in that
moment. To see her smile and see her take that, I get emotional about
that, because she’s the one they talk about with the magnets. She was
beautiful. They’ll probably see her on the street and say she
shouldn’t be here, but if they had that moment with here, they
wouldn’t think that. That’s the inside beauty that we don’t see on
people when they look a little dirty, and that’s where we can make a
judgment that they’re so deserving.
And it’s not just that homeless woman. There are families who come
in here, sincere, gentle, kind people who are doing the very best
they can. And they’re so reciprocal in their response to us. I mean,
the thank-you notes I get from people are so incredible. The Daily
Pilot prints a whole thing of what people are thankful about, I can
fill the paper with notes from people here who are thankful.
Bessie, my 82-year-old woman here who cans for a living, who we
helped with a $22 utility bill. She can’t can much anymore because
it’s too hard for her to go up and down the alleys, she wrote me the
most beautiful thank-you note for this $22 bill to tell me how much
SOS has meant for her over the years that we would pay a utility bill
for her. People don’t know, but all of that canning she does, she
uses that to help support her grandchildren all these years. She said
the most she ever made canning one time was $79 and she was able to
use that money to sew her granddaughter’s graduation dress.
This is what I want to tell people about SOS. For those people who
say it’s a magnet, we’re attracting human beings with wonderful
qualities.
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