An extra push
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Mike Sciacca
The art of giving is especially felt during the holiday season,
perhaps more than any other time of the year.
Surf City Breakfast Kiwanis Club, however, intends to extend that
gift beyond the new year.
The club, some 22 members strong and less than a year old, first
adopted a Huntington Beach family at Thanksgiving, providing all the
trimmings for a hearty, holiday meal to a single mother with five
children aged 8 to 17, living in a two-bedroom apartment.
After some discussion among its members, the club, which received
its charter just last spring, decided to adopt that same family for
Christmas -- and the entire coming year.
“We’re a very enthusiastic club,” said Barbara Van Dine, a
founding charter member and vice president of the club. “We’re a
small but mighty group.”
The adoption came through Project Self-Sufficiency, which is
coordinated through the city’s community services department.
Project Self-Sufficiency assists low-income, single parents in
achieving economic independence from governmental assistance through
a network of community and county services, said Susan Edwards,
director of Project Self-Sufficiency for the past 15 years.
Participants in the program must be a single parent -- male or
female -- in custody of minor children, live, work or attend school
in Huntington Beach and the parent has to be in school or in job
training, Edwards said.
Both public and private agencies are involved in the program.
The adoption program takes place each Thanksgiving, Christmas and
Easter.
“Project Self-Sufficiency is a program for single parents trying
to make their way but can’t make it in this economy, and that can be
due to several factors,” Edwards said.
“The adoption program is one of the best programs I have and this
community really responds to it every year. It’s just amazing and
wonderful, the way this community has given to these families, who
are taken care of very well. The Surf City Breakfast Kiwanis Club has
been very generous in this regard.”
Anita Brace, a Project Self-Sufficiency board member, suggested
the initial adoption to the Surf City Breakfast Kiwanis Club. Van
Dine took over the initial contact between the club and the adopted
family.
What was supposed to be a Thanksgiving adoption turned into
something more.
“Barbara got the family for us at Thanksgiving and I brought up
the idea to adopt them for the entire year because people need help
all year, not just at Thanksgiving and Christmas,” said club member
Mifanwy Kaiser. “The club enthusiastically said, ‘yes,’ to that idea.
“We will provide for them throughout the year, when we have the
resources to do so.”
At Christmastime, all club members donated gifts to its adopted
family, which included a refrigerator.
Club founder Randy Golden donated a tree and decorations. Kristine
Callahan, membership chair for the club, and club member Connie
Pedrenko, organized the purchase of the refrigerator, Kaiser said.
Callahan also helped secure a donated computer for the family.
“All of our club members have been extremely generous with their
time and resources,” Van Dine said. “You know, the idea to do
something like an adoption is great and wonderful but one of the
challenges with this, or any other community service, is that it
takes time and energy.
“Sometimes, we forget that there are people out there who don’t
have the resources to provide for their family. What was special
about this family is that what they wanted for Christmas were
necessities, such as socks, jackets and shoes. One of the boys in the
family loves to read, so we purchased some books. Another is into art
and we gave craft supplies. We also gave the mother a camera.”
Other community service projects the club took part in this
holiday season, Van Dine said, included working on 30 Thanksgiving
food baskets for the Huntington Beach Family Resources Center and
taking a group of local high school and college students to Pasadena
to decorate floats for the Rose Parade.
Club members likely will volunteer “in some capacity” at the
Pacific Shoreline Marathon to run Feb. 1 in Huntington Beach, Van
Dine said.
“Our club hasn’t quite been together a year yet, but we’re going
strong,” she said. “It’s all about giving and luckily, we have some
really wonderful people in our club willing to make things a little
better for others.”
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