Best of 2013: Puente’s proudest moments of the year

Sometimes an anniversary is an occasion to look back and salute the past. Puente staffers are far too busy planning for the future to spend much time reminiscing. So rather than rest on our laurels, Puente used the occasion of its 15th anniversary (1998-2013) to launch some major new projects and initiatives. They range from successfully advocating for county funding for a new mobile health clinic, to getting high school students enrolled in Stanford academic programs for the first time.

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Funding for new mobile health clinic

Locals waved goodbye to their only convenient source of regular, preventive health care when San Mateo County cut funding for its mobile health clinic in 2009. With the nearest doctor’s office dozens of miles away, Puente’s staff resolved to restore funding for a new mobile health van – one that could serve the South Coast exclusively. 

This fall, their advocacy work paid off. The San Mateo County Board of Supervisors officially set aside funding for the new mobile health clinic, which will arrive in late 2014. A doctor, a nurse and a community outreach worker will staff the clinic. The initial funding for the clinic – a $1 million, two-year grant – comes from Measure A, a half-cent sales tax approved by San Mateo County voters in 2012.

“It’s a doctor on wheels.  It’s expected that people will go for every aspect of heath care problems, like asthma and hypertension and diabetes,” says Puente Executive Director Kerry Lobel.

San Mateo County Supervisor Don Horsley was steadfast in his support of Puente’s vision for a community health solution on the South Coast and provided a big dose of leadership on behalf of the project. Puente has joined forces with Stanford Professor Dr. Gabe Garcia, who will train Stanford University physicians to help staff the mobile health van and boost South Coast preventive efforts.

Puente will also train health promoters who will personally visit the poorest and most isolated residents, get them signed up for government-sponsored health care, and make sure they visit the medical van.

The 5K Veggie Run and Zumba provide important preventive efforts in a community without healthcare

The 5K Veggie Run and Zumba provide important preventive efforts in a community without healthcare

Making education bilingual, for students, parents and teachers

A whopping 48.7 percent of students in the La Honda-Pescadero Unified School District are designated as English Learners. Not having sufficient English skills can make learning extremely difficult. But too often, students’ Spanish-speaking roots are perceived as a liability, rather than the 21st C asset that they really are.

This year, Puente and the school district honored students who have excellent command of both English and Spanish with the State of California’s Seal of Biliteracy, a distinction that marks them as stewards of an increasingly diverse, multicultural future America.

Puente’s Academic Director, Suzanne Abel, approached the school district with information about the Seal of Biliteracy after she learned of it last year. It is her hope that it will become a point of pride for the students as well as a resume-builder.

“It will underscore to bilingual kids that they have a set of skills worth honing that normally aren’t recognized,” Abel says.

In May, three Pescadero High School graduates were the first to receive their Seals of Biliteracy. It’s a great resume-builder in a job market hungry for bilingual workers, and a way to let their backgrounds shine instead of downplaying them.

Many bilingual students have served as de facto interpreters during parent-teacher meetings. It’s not unusual for a student’s parents to speak only Spanish, Spanish, while a teacher may not speak Spanish at all. The tension inherent in this situation was obvious to Abel, whose conversations with Stanford Professor Guadalupe Valdés around issues related to language included exploration of educational interpreting as a new field of research and practice.  Valdés will teach a practicum in educational interpreting spring quarter at Stanford. In anticipation of that course, Stanford graduate intern Eduardo Muñoz Muñoz took the lead in recruiting bilingual interpreters from a pool of contacts at Stanford University for the high school and middle school, while Puente board member Larry Trujillo recruited from his class at San Francisco State University for the elementary school. Nearly 200 conferences were interpreted by 13 Stanford interpreters, while 40 families were served by four SFSU interpreters.  Parents and teachers alike were pleased with the effort, and students were absolved of the awkwardness of translating between parents and teachers about their own academic performance. Perhaps most importantly, parents not only came away with a better understanding of their children’s schoolwork, but learned about how they could help with homework and other projects.

 

Stanford connections spur Pescadero students on to big dreams

What’s it like to spend a year on one of the most beautiful and exciting university campuses in the country? This year, ten highly motivated students from Pescadero and La Honda got to find out. 

The students are enrolled in the Stanford Ambassadors Gateway Exchange Program (SAAGE), a university-community partnership that brings local students from Pescadero and East Palo Alto to Stanford’s Center for Latin American Studies (CLAS) for twelve 3-hour classes over the course of a year. They hear from Stanford faculty and visiting scholars from Latin America, studying all aspects of Latin America – history, literature, politics and ecology – for credit. Students are bussed in every few weeks, dinner is provided, and classes are free, courtesy of a federal Title VI National Resource Center grant to Stanford that prioritizes K-14 outreach. 

SAAGE is one facet of a multidisciplinary partnership with Stanford that gives students from an isolated, rural community an exciting academic challenge. Most of all, it helps them see themselves on the campus of a four-year college when they graduate from high school.

Pescadero students study at Stanford University

Pescadero students study at Stanford University

It’s hard to imagine what it’s like to be in college unless you’re there,” says Suzanne Abel, Academic Director for Puente. “Being at Stanford, learning directly from professors in several fields, our students can open a personal door to the very real possibility of college.”

Puente also helped connect one particularly gifted local student with Stanford’s RISE (Raising Interest in Science and Engineering) Internship Program, which took place last summer. This rigorous program essentially acts as a part-time job, involving 30 hours per week of lab work with an academic mentor, plus field trips, presentations, and other activities.

The program enrolls low-income high school students who show promise in science and engineering, and who will be the first in their families to go to college. There is a $2,500 stipend. Most students who graduate from RISE, which was founded in 2006, do enroll in college and pursue a science, engineering or math-related major.

 

Puente spots gaps in health care with community-wide survey

With all the health care changes out of Washington, and a new mobile health clinic coming to the South Coast next year, Puente undertook an unprecedented community health care survey in late 2013. From a data standpoint, so little is known about the particulars of people’s lives on the South Coast, including basic demographic information. In addition to acting as census takers, Puente’s volunteers wanted to know: who has health insurance? And who has access to a doctor?

“People who didn’t have insurance before are now going to be required to get it. And we will be on the forefront of connecting people to these new services,” says Puente Community Outreach Coordinator Ben Ranz.

Puente's survey team

Puente’s survey team

With roughly 5,000 residents spread out over the South Coast – 40 percent of the county’s overall landmass – the survey effort has been extensive. Volunteers are gathering information on people’s current health care access; informing them about Puente’s own health care services; and helping them meet the requirements contained in the Affordable Care Act, which have become a lot more confusing in recent weeks.

Survey results will be available in January. Puente intends to share the data with county health officials, and use it to help guide the doctors and nurses who will be staffing the new mobile health clinic, by directing them to the parts of the region that need them the most.

Puente also recently held two workshops about Covered California (the state version of the Affordable Care Act) specifically for an audience of male and female farm, ranch and nursery workers.

Why I give to Puente: Janet Trusso

Janet Trusso

Janet Trusso

Some people define themselves by what they achieve or what they earn. From a young age, the way Janet Trusso got to know herself was by serving other people. A devoted Christian since high school, Janet, 63, grew up to be a nurse and a mother. There was barely a time when she wasn’t involved in some community work, or sometimes church-sponsored service work, at home or abroad.

Doing good work is, for her, a practical undertaking – “being God’s hands and feet,” she calls it.

“I cling to that. It defines me. It’s kind of who I am. It’s almost like I’m not in control of it,” she says.

It’s an instinct that, happily, led her to Puente by way of a food distribution drive she did back in 2006, shortly after moving to Butano Canyon.

Handing out the food that day was the first time Janet got to meet some local families face-to-face. Although she didn’t speak any Spanish, the interaction reminded her of the many years she travelled with her former church to Mexicali on mission trips for a week each year. She helped build a church and a school, donated clothing, and socialized with the families there (through an interpreter).

It was a time she treasured. But there was one important difference between working in Mexico and the prospect of working with Puente, Janet realized. In working with Puente, she has had the satisfaction of seeing long-term results. And she could put her efforts to work on behalf of her neighbors.

“It had always been in the back of my mind as we put these trips together and got outside of the U.S. – that we have many opportunities around us every day to help and serve. We don’t have to go far to find people who need a little bit of help,” she says.

Janet left her mission trips behind when she left her Cupertino home and moved to the coast, finding a whole new community in the process (and a new church, Mariners, in Half Moon Bay). Through Puente, she was soon tutoring two high school students: one in math, one in English.

When tax season began, she helped prepare income tax returns for Puente clients – a process she found satisfying because she was able to help them claim the generous tax refunds they were entitled to.

Now Janet is a monthly Puente donor. She also likes to go shopping at Costco around this time of year, and spends her money on towels, socks, jackets, sweatshirts and food – the basic necessities Puente provides single men and families, especially around holiday time.

“I think Puente is such a great resource for the community and I really love what they do. Puente equips students and adult members of our community to build better lives for themselves. To have a little part of it means a lot to me,” she says.

By far, Janet’s favorite times with Puente were the Zumba classes she attended for a couple of years, before her work life got too busy. She loved the laughter and the camaraderie with other women in her dance sessions, mothers she would normally struggle to converse with because of a language barrier. And she noticed that her sciatica disappeared.

It was a classic example of how Puente benefits its donors and volunteers in unexpected ways.

“It was a wonderful group of women. I loved it,” says Janet. “You get in there and you laugh together, you sweat together. There’s no barriers.”

To join Puente’s monthly giving club, Partners for Sustainability, click here.

 

Immigration status and the Affordable Care Act

Healthcare-for-ImmigrantsNational rollout of the Affordable Care Act (“Obamacare”) has been extremely spotty, to the great frustration of those who need it most. Now it appears that one of the many reasons the program has gained so few participants in its initial phase is that many eligible Americans are worried about drawing attention to their family members, who are undocumented immigrants.

So-called “mixed families” are increasingly common in the U.S.; the Urban Institute estimates that nearly one in four children under the age of eight has at least one immigrant parent.

Puente is spreading the word that undocumented family members have nothing to fear. Recently the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement issued an important clarification, stating that undocumented parents can enroll their young children in government-subsidized or private health care programs under the Affordable Care Act without triggering an investigation.

Furthermore, it’s not just American citizens who are eligible to purchase health care though the “marketplace”: people with green cards, work visas, student visas, asylum applications and other designations also qualify. Unfortunately, DACA youth (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) do not, but are eligible for some health coverage options in San Mateo County.

The National Immigration Law Center is an indispensable resource for questions about the Affordable Care Act from an immigration/low-income perspective, including questions about qualifying for Medicaid and tax breaks. Visit http://www.nilc.org/ACAfacts.html.

Puente is here to help you enroll in health insurance under the Affordable Care Act as well as other State and County health coverage! Contact Safety Net Manager Lorena Vargas de Mendez directly at (650) 879-1691 ext. 116 or at lvargas@mypuente.org.