We were desperate: health care transforms a family

GetCovered_webSylvia Rauch and her husband Ted were used to doing without health care. She gave up her private health coverage when it got too expensive; he was denied due to a pre-existing condition. They made do with hospital visits when something was serious.

But things got a lot more serious earlier this year, when Ted started walking strangely and losing weight. Then his vision deteriorated. Suddenly he couldn’t drive.

“He had diabetes and we didn’t know how serious it was. It was affecting his vision. His eyes were bleeding. It got to the point where we were desperate,” said Sylvia. (Sylvia and Ted’s names have been changed at their request to protect the family’s privacy.)

Ted’s mother called Puente Safety Net Manager Lorena Vargas de Mendez. When she met with the couple, she knew she needed to act fast.

Normally, getting someone enrolled in Medi-Cal takes between 45 days and 6 months. But Vargas submitted a personal request for expedited processing. She was able to back up her request with a statement from Karen Hackett, a San Mateo County Public Health Nurse who has an office at Puente. Hackett was available to examine Ted on short notice, and free of charge.

It worked. Ted’s Medi-Cal application was approved within a month, instead of 6 months.

Ted had laser surgery on both eyes in August, the first of several operations. The family’s new health care plan also covers Ted’s diabetes medications.

“He’s doing a lot better. He’s able to drive now, which is like a miracle,” said Sylvia.

Staffers at Puente already know that accessing health insurance at the eleventh hour can save somebody’s life. In the Rauch’s case, Puente’s “safety net” services solved problems for the whole family. Sylvia has health care now too, and so does their young daughter.

Not only that. When de Mendez understood more about the family’s precarious financial situation – Ted has been unemployed for some time – she realized they also qualified for CalFresh, federally known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. She helped Sylvia enroll in CalFresh in one simple step in Puente’s headquarters. Sylvia never had to visit any county or state office for health care or food stamps.

“It’s good that Puente has the kind of safety net where participants can come and get everything they need, instead of going from agency to agency and from one person to another,” said de Mendez.

Today, the Rauch family receives $530 a month to purchase food through CalFresh – nearly enough to take care of their entire grocery bill, according to Sylvia.

“When Puente helps, they do help. It’s a wonderful program,” she said.

For more information about how to enroll in a Puente, contact Lorena Vargas de Mendez at 650.879.1691 ext 116 or lvargas@mypuente.org.

 

Why We give to Puente: Atkinson Foundation

Some foundations are like the nonprofits they sustain: humble, quietly supportive, and focused impacting people’s lives on a personal, grassroots level.

That would be a good way to describe the Atkinson Foundation, which has been a steadfast Puente grant partner since 2005. Since that time the foundation has bolstered Puente’s operating expenses to the tune of $96,000.

atkinsonfdn

“They’ve been the quiet, steady and undemanding hand. They’ve been there at every turn to provide Puente with the flexibility to both meet basic needs as well as create new projects,” said Kerry Lobel, executive director of Puente.

What does that look like in the context of regional leadership? The Atkinson Foundation is one of the oldest grant-making organizations on the Peninsula, and gives the great majority of its annual support to San Mateo County-based organizations that work in some aspect of social services or education.

The foundation makes grants based on a principle of self-sufficiency – that given the right tools, people can improve the quality of their own lives.

Many grantees are the only organizations that serve a particular need in their part of the county, such as a nature awareness program for foster youth in Half Moon Bay, or rape trauma services in Burlingame.

“We’re nitty-gritty. Out impact comes from consistency over the years and helping small organizations get funded,” says Betty Curtis, the foundation’s longtime administrator.

Founded in 1939 by George H. Atkinson and his wife, Mildred M. Atkinson, with funds from the Guy F. Atkinson Company, the foundation also supports crucial international development programs in Latin America and southern Mexico.

The Atkinson Foundation has been a silent partner to many important coastal nonprofits. The foundation has supported South Coast Children’s Services for years, and helped rehabilitate its thrift shop following a fire. The foundation contributed to flood relief at Pescadero Elementary School, and at one point even helped the Pescadero Community Church replace the carpet in its multipurpose room, according to Curtis.

The Atkinson Foundation got involved with Puente after several board members took one of Rev. Wendy Taylor’s “reality tours” of farmworker housing camps. At the time, Puente’s work was focused on the male workforce who had come to the area without their families.

“That was an eye opener, to see how they live,” recalled Curtis. “You don’t think of what it actually means to arrive here with nothing, absolutely nothing. Not even the language. It takes a tremendous amount of courage to do that and I admire those people immensely,” she added.

The Atkinson Foundation is now in a period of transition from family foundation to an independent foundation, as only two family members remain on the board. However, all the funding priorities and procedures will remain the same. All funding decisions will continue to be made by its 11-member Board of Directors, and its funding priorities will remain the same.

There’s a theory in grantmaking that a foundation should make its mark by only supporting new initiatives. Supporting an organization’s overhead is far less popular.

Contrary to that philosophy, the Atkinson Foundation has proudly supported Puente’s general operating fund for years with annual donations between $5,000 and $20,000.

“We can’t have impact on the largest social issues, but we know these small organizations are going to change individuals’ lives. And we know there’s a cumulative effect,” she said.

 

To donate to Puente, contact Kerry Lobel at (650) 879-1691 x 101 or klobel@mypuente.org. You can also donate online at https://donatenow.networkforgood.org/puente.

Puente’s Bike Booth draws a following

When Juan Morales discovered a flat tire on his BMX one-speed, he knew what he needed: a visit to the Bike Booth.

So on a sunny Thursday in August, Morales, 13, walked his bike into the Pescadero Grown! Farmers’ Market and showed his damaged tire to Every Day, the convivial and dexterous bike mechanic on duty at the Bike Booth. She shook her head in mock exasperation.

Bike booth at farmers market

Bike Booth is center of gravity at Farmers’ Market

“That’s what happens when you jump your bike too hard and you don’t have good tire pressure. I’m going to get you a new tire,” she told him, reaching into a tall cardboard box and pulling one out.

Morales just grinned. He’s a Bike Booth regular, and, being 13, takes a certain pride in how quickly he can destroy a tire doing tricks on his BMX.

“This is, like, my seventh time here this summer, “ he said, unabashed. “I just ride all around with my friends, burning tires. We go everywhere.”

Bernardo Arellano and Every Day at Bike Booth

Bernardo Arellano and Every Day at Bike Booth

Every Day looks forward to seeing Morales and his BMX buddies each Thursday at the farmers’ market and teaching them the fundamentals of bike repair. Her easy manner and matter-of-fact repair tips have earned her a weekly entourage of young acolytes who like to help her work on the bikes people bring her – souped-up mountain bikes, road beaters, and everything in between.

The hive of attention that Every Day and her fellow bike mechanic, Lior Shaked, generate each week has been one of the nicest surprises for Puente, which sponsors the Bike Booth as a free service to the community.

“The kids love to learn to fix their own bikes. I’ve never seen them so attentive to anything,” said Nichole Mikaelian, Puente’s farmers’ market intern.

The feeling is mutual, said Every Day – who chose the unusual name for herself as an adult in order to call to mind that every day is a blessing. She loves having people around to chat with.

A full-time bike mechanic who lives in La Honda and volunteers with Puente, Every Day will typically fix five or six bikes during the four-hour weekly farmers’ market. She always comes prepared with boxes of nuts, bolts, screws, axle grease, tires, bike chains and many other parts. If she’s missing something she needs, Puente will supply it for her.

Clad in black latex gloves, a black work smock, heavy utility pants, and a sunhat, Every Day is ready for business. She taught herself how to fix bikes 20 years ago; her traveling bike shop is a cargo trailer named ‘Buddy.’

“I really like making things work. Square peg, round role,” she said, adding: “To pick through a box of nuts and bolts is my idea of a good time. It’s very calming.”

Now in its second year, the Bike Booth is a component of Puente’s much older bicycle donation program. Puente founder Wendy Taylor established the bicycle program when she realized that the farm workers living in and around Pescadero had no reliable transportation options to get to work.

The Bike Booth exists thanks to Liz Chapman, a former Puente board member and longtime volunteer and bike enthusiast. She recruited Kyle McKinley, who founded the Bike Church in Santa Cruz, to establish something similar at the Pescadero Grown! Farmers’ Market. She and her husband personally help fund Puente’s bicycle program.

Puente's bike team: Every Day, Liz Chapman and Lior Shaked

Puente’s bike team: Every Day, Liz Chapman and Lior Shaked

The afternoon turned mellow at the farmers’ market as Morales sat at a picnic bench in front of the Bike Booth, his tire now fixed, waiting with his friend Bernardo Arellano to get his bike fixed so the two of them could go out and ride.

Elsewhere in the market, teens blew bubbles as a guitarist sang the blues. Shoppers browsed market stalls and bought cupcakes, vegetables and meat.

A 10-year-old girl named Emerald Webb, came to ask Every Day if she could help work on a bike, so she put Webb to work, threading a new cable to help Arellano’s BMX 8-speed change gears.

Emerald Webb tries her had at bike repair

Emerald Webb tries her had at bike repair

She gave Webb a matching black smock and work gloves and they stood behind the back wheel of the bike, which was elevated on a rack. The sun filtered through the spokes, casting their faces in thin, shadowy stripes.

“I like this,” said Webb.

“I like it, too,” said Every Day.

 

To donate to Puente’s bike program, or e-mail us at (650) 879-1691 ext. 116 or lvargas@mypuente.org.