Metro Think Tank Celebration Of Giving Jewish Women's Foundation marks 10 years of giving. Lisa Naftaly Brown Special to the Jewish News W hen an organization (or cou- ple, for that matter) reaches a milestone anniversary, one might expect it would throw an elaborate party. Not the Jewish Women's Foundation of Metro Detroit (JWF). Instead, to honor its upcoming 10th anniversary, the JWF voted to allocate $75,000 to three community organiza- tions to meet the urgent, critical needs of Detroit-area Jewish women, girls and their families due to the economic downturn. The following special allocations, which are separate from JWF's regular grant cycle, will be disbursed in the next couple weeks: • Jewish Family Service, $40,000 for emergency financial assistance for Jewish families; • JFS/Project Chessed, $20,000 for pharmaceuticals; •Yad Ezra, $15,000 for food for fami- lies in crisis. "By choosing to provide extraordi- nary grants in these extraordinary times, the JWF is recogniz- ing and responding to the tremendous needs in our local Jewish community," Beverly Liss said JWF trustee and former JWF chair Beverly Liss, who is also Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit's 2009 campaign chair. The JWF was founded in 1999 with a seed grant from Federation. By June, the JWF expects to have allocated more than $1 million. Sign Of Times In recent years, financial and social burdens have weighed more heavily on Jewish women and families. In 2001, Jewish Family Service provided 139 families with $134,000 in Emergency Financial Assistance (EFA), direct cash grants to individuals for food and shel- ter, transportation, clothing, utilities and other basic needs. By 2007-08, 760 families received a total of $525,000 in EFA. During 2008-09, JFS anticipates it will have to provide more than $750,000 in EFA to 800 families. "We are living with these figures:' says Norm Keane, JFS director. "The degree of need is astounding." Because EFA fund- ing is limited, and the need is "tremendous," Keane says it is dis- bursed as a last resort. "We try to see if there is another way to Norm Keane provide assistance to a family, such as a government entitle- ment or another agency that focuses on its specific issues': he said. "JFS works with each family to develop a plan so they are empowered to change their situation. JWF's $40,000 gift will literally save lives?" Project Chessed is a JFS-adminis- tered program. It connects medically uninsured Jewish adults to a network of cost-free health services and pro- bono medical and dental providers. Prescriptions, however, are not covered. In 2007T08, 626 financially qualified individuals received pharmaceuticals through Project Chessed, at a cost to the program of $100,815. In 2008-09, this cost is expected to rise to $120,000 for as many as 900 needy clients. "We are spending more than $8,000 per month on pharmaceuticals:' said Rachel Yoskowitz, Project Chessed direc- tor. "These medicines are critical to the well-being of our clients?' Added Keane, "We help people to become eligible for prescription assis- tance programs. Yet, even if they qualify, there is often a two- to six-week wait to be approved, leaving Project Chessed to pay for their required medications in the interim?' In addition, Project Chessed often must pay for medications that are not covered by prescription assistance pro- grams. Efforts are under way to devise a long-term solution. Gift Of Food Yad Ezra, Michigan's kosher food pantry, is experiencing an, "ever-growing num- ber of people coming in to our agency for Lea Luger assistance," said Lea Luger, Yad Ezra devel- opment director. "We are serving an all-time record of 1,460 families, almost half of which are headed by women:' "Every day, we add more people to our rolls:' she said. "This population fits a new demographic — people in their 40s and 50s who have always worked, who suddenly find themselves underemployed or without jobs, facing a mountain of debt and in some cases, at risk of losing their homes. According to Allan Sefton, Yad Ezra president, "JWF's grant of $15,000 for `Food for Families in Crisis' will truly help us meet our goal of feeding fami- lies and nourishing hope." The idea for the Critical Needs Allocation originated with JWF trust- ees and past JWF chairpersons Margot Halperin, Sharon Hart and Beverly Liss. To assist JWF leadership and trustees in selecting which programs to fund, Linda Blumberg, Federation planning director, and Irwin Elson, planning and allocations steering committee chair, briefed an ad hoc JWF committee led by trustees Fran Hack, Linda Hayman and Fern Kepes about the unmet needs identified by the planning department for the 2007-2008 Rebecca and Gary Sakwa Challenge Fund, established to help families at risk. ❑ Lisa Naftaly Brown is the JWF's new associ- ate director. Resources •Jewish Family Service of Metropolitan Detroit. Programs and services include: addiction recovery; adoption assistance; domestic violence inter- vention; emergency financial assistance; health care through Project Chessed; home care for older adults; mentor programs; and transportation services, among others. For a confidential eligibility assessment for emer- gency financial assistance or Project Chessed, call (248) 592-2300. •Yad Ezra is Michigan's only kosher food pantry, helping to feed Jewish people in southeast Michigan. Contact: (248) 548-FOOD; 2850 W.11 Mile, Berkley, MI 48072 . •Jewish Women's Foundation of Metropolitan Detroit: The JWF is a grant making and educational organization dedicated to expanding opportunities for Jewish women and girls. Contact: Helen Katz, director, (248) 203-1483. JWI to focus on concerns of Jewish girls. I n response to its recently com- pleted survey of professionals who work directly with Jewish girls, Jewish Women International (JWI) has launched "Brain Power for Girl Power Think Tanks," an initiative that brings together 40-50 Jewish women to learn about and engage in constructive brain- storming around the issues that affect Jewish girls. JWI's Detroit Brain Power for Girl Power Think Tank, focusing on self- destructive behaviors, will be held from 9:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 30, at the Max M. Fisher Jewish Federation Building in Bloomfield Township. The survey, "Jewish Girls and Their Behaviors," designed by JWI in con- junction with Professions Research Inc. of Washington, D.C., polled Jewish professionals on such issues as Jewish girls' participation in behaviors such as anorexia, alcohol abuse and self-mutila- tion, or "cutting?' The survey revealed the top three most common destruc- tive behaviors encountered in Jewish professional's work with Jewish girls: disordered eating habits and patterns (48 percent), bullying (40 percent), and risky or precocious sexual behavior (38 percent). "Jewish girls are coming of age in a time that is much more complicated than we did': said Loribeth Weinstein, JWI executive director. "The goal of our the Brain Power for Girl Power Think Tanks is to create a national dialogue around issues that confront Jewish girls, leading to programs and initiatives that will help them on their way to becoming become strong, healthy, successful women" The Detroit Think Tank will include presentations and moderated brain- storming sessions by experts in the field of adolescent mental health. Speakers are Mary Jo Barrett, a leading authority on trauma and violence and executive director and co-founder of the Center for Contextual Change of Metropolitan Chicago, and Leslie Goldman, health writer and author of Locker Room Diaries: The Naked Truth about Women, Body Image, and Re-imagining the "Perfect" Body. Future Brain Power for Girl Power Think Tanks are planned for Washington, D.C., New York and Los Angeles. ❑ October 23 • 2008 A23