Sunday, February 26, 2012

2012 Activities CALENDAR (week 1, Feb 26)

Lent 2012 Aging Services (week 1, Feb 26) (Article for INSIDE the Forum)

Catholic Social Services of Washtenaw County (CSSW):  Aging Services
CCSW offers many services that help older adults maintain dignified, safe, and independent lives in their own homes:   Medicare/ Medicaid Assistance Program (helps older adults obtain benefits); Neighborhood Senior Services (support and advocacy for low-income seniors, with programs dedicated to home safety, household maintenance/repair, transportation to health care, and companion services); Interfaith Volunteer Caregivers (respite care for those caring for a chronically ill family member); Grandparents as Parents (support for seniors raising children not their own); Tax Assistance (helps low-income seniors and disabled adults file income tax returns); The Oaks ~ Adult Day Services (intensive respite day program for adults with physical, mental, and cognitive impairments); RSVP (places adults ages 55+ in volunteer positions with local non-profit organizations).
*           *           *           *           *           *           *           *           *           *           *           *           *           *  
This week, we share the story of Rosie, who is involved with the CSSW program, Grandparents as Parents (GAP):
In the school of life, Rosie is a great teacher. Her unending curiosity, boundless energy—and a rare level of compassion and optimism—have transformed the lives she has touched and the children she has saved.  Now in her 80's, Rosie enthusiastically participates in monthly GAP meetings and offers encouragement to others who are raising their grandchildren.
By the time Rosie was 28 years old, she had nine children.  In addition to her own children, she raised her grandson, Roderick, who (like his grandmother) is a role model for his nephews and nieces.
Her son Andre came to her in a much different way.  After befriending a member of her church suffering from Lou Gehrig's disease, Rosie learned that the woman's daughter had given birth to a very ill infant boy.  So frail, in fact, that he was not expected to survive to his first birthday.  The young mother did not want to keep the baby; doctors held out little hope.  Rosie, being Rosie, took the rigid, malnourished infant into her arms and after months of struggling to get her baby to eat; exercising and massaging him, Andre began to thrive.  Today, he is a strapping young man.
Rosie's daughter, Andrea, began life in an equally dramatic way.  Rosie's drug-addicted granddaughter literally showed up on her doorstep one night, obviously sick, in pain—and pregnant.  Andrea was born the next day and was legally adopted by Rosie through the CSSW Adoption program.
Whatever the challenge, Rosie has remains an idealist and serves as an inspiration for others in the GAP program.

This article was edited and organized by Kelly Gauthier, St. Francis Parish Peace & Justice Committee member

Lent 2012 (week 1, Feb 26) FORUM Cover by Brian Kelley

The FORUM Cover Articles during Lent this year are written by fellow St. Francis parishioners about how serving our neighbors in need, especially through Catholic Social Services (CSS) has caused a change of heart for the better.

--------  --------  --------  --------
I belong to The Friends of Fr. Pat's, a group supporting the mission of The Father Patrick
Jackson House Program. It was my Mother who first got me involved with Fr. Pat's. I started
out as a volunteer, parking cars at the house on football Saturdays to raise money for the
program. A few years later I served on the Board and helped in the transition as Fr. Pat's
became a program of Catholic Social Services. The goal of the program is to help pregnant
and parenting teens of all faiths develop the education and living skills needed to become self
sufficient. This is a difficult task. It takes dedicated, hard working staff and volunteers. It takes
community support and financial resources. When the House was dedicated in April of 1984, a
little over a year after the death of Fr. Patrick Jackson, it really was an act of faith.

Fr. Jackson was a diocesan priest who began his ministry at Ann Arbor St. Thomas in the mid
1960s before serving as the Pastor at Old St. Patrick's in Whitmore Lake from 1971 through
the early 1980s. I first met him when I was a second grader at St. Thomas. He had a very big
impact on me. Now, nearly forty years later, I am working on behalf of a program named in his
memory and trying to put into practice what he taught me about being a part of a community
of faith. He taught me that to follow the teachings of Jesus Christ I needed to practice a living
faith. To me that means helping in whatever way I can to make the world I live in a better
place. I know that if I do this I am a better parent, a better husband and better member of the
community in which I live.

The Friends of Fr. Pat's are hosting a St. Patrick's Day Dinner on March 4th at St. John the Baptist Church in Ypsilanti to raise money for the Fr. Patrick Jackson House Program. For information go to http://csswashtenaw.org or call 734/971-9781, ext. 323.

Lent 2012 (week 1, Feb 26) FORUM Cover by Brian Kelley, member of St. Francis Parish


Neighbors in Need:  Join us in support of our local neighbors who are struggling for food, housing, and care of poverty-stricken elderly.  Our direct service partnership is with Washtenaw Catholic Social Services."    Learn more at:  www.stfrancisa2.com/lent/

Sunday, February 19, 2012

2012 Activities CALENDAR (prior to Ash Wed, Feb 19)


Lent 2012: Neighbors in Need (prior to Ash Wed, Feb 19)


Lent 2012:      Neighbors in Need
The headlines these days can be pretty sobering:


·  According to the Social Security Administration, 50% of American workers earned less than $26,364 last year
·  1/3 of all American workers (and 79% of low-wage workers ) do not get any paid sick days
·  In 2010 more people were recorded as living in poverty than in any of the previous 52 years for which rates have been published:  46.9 million (15% of the U.S. population)
·  About 17 million households were registered as food insecure, meaning they did not have consistent dependable access to enough food
·  According to a study by the MI League for Human Services:  Michigan recorded the nation’s 4th highest increase in family poverty from 2006-2010.  We also had the nation’s 2nd highest drop in median income
·  The State reduced the lifetime limit for cash welfare payments to 48 months.  Once a person reaches this limit, s/he cannot receive a cash payment after losing a job, being abandoned by a spouse, becoming seriously ill, or for any other reason
·  The State also reduced the time that citizens are eligible for unemployment assistance, and reduced workers’ compensation payments to those who are injured on the job
·  To fund business tax cuts, Michigan increased taxes on half of those who file a state personal income tax form.  The average tax increase varies depending on income – the poorest citizens will pay about $100 more and the highest-income earners will pay an extra $7 on average, according to the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy.  This is because the State eliminated several tax credits that only applied to low-income households.
·  Ten years ago, Michigan’s statutory revenue sharing for local governments was $900 million – it was only $215 million last year, which has resulted in steep cuts to human services at local levels


As more and more people are struggling, our state seems to have hardened its heart.  The limited assistance that used to be available is rapidly disappearing.  In the face of these hard realities, the Catholic Church continues to do its best to protect the poor and vulnerable.
While the Church does not have the resources to address all of the tremendous need that exists, Catholic Social Services of Washtenaw County (CSSW) provides desperately needed help to thousands of our neighbors.
During the Lenten season, we will highlight the stories of some of the people who have been helped by CSSW and describe some of the work that CSSW quietly does every day.  We will focus on their work with:
·  Senior citizens
·  Those who face housing insecurity
·  Those who face food insecurity
·  Women who are pregnant and imprisoned
·  People who have disabilities

In Mark 25:40, Jesus tells us that what we do for the least of His people, we do for Him.  The St. Francis Peace & Justice Committee hopes that this Lenten project will lead all of us to consider how we can use our time, talents, treasure, and prayers to serve Jesus when He appears among us as a neighbor in need.

This article was edited and organized by Kelly Gauthier, St. Francis Parish Peace & Justice Committee member

Neighbors in Need

Join us in support of our local neighbors
who are struggling for food, housing,
and care of poverty stricken elderly.
Our direct service partnership is with
Washtenaw Catholic Social Services.


Please return your cash and/or check contributions in the sack (attached in this FORUM) on Palm Sunday, April 1, 2012
Checks should be payable to: St. Francis of Assisi
Learn more at: stfrancisa2.org/lent