
Charlene Manning of Quincy will receive Interfaith Social Services Community Hero of the Year award at our Feed the Hungry Gala on Friday December 9th.
Since 1947 Interfaith Social Services has been a safety net for South Shore families in need. Our programs are focused on hunger, mental health and emergency assistance. Interfaith presents the Community Hero award each year to an individual who inspires others through selfless service.
 âWe have an amazing team of volunteers here at Interfaith, they are incredible, but Charlene goes above and beyond the call of duty,â said Rick Doane executive director of Interfaith Social Services. âOur Bureau Drawer Thrift Shop is one of our organizationâs most important fundraisers; the entire shop is run by volunteers.  Charlene serves in the shop almost every day of the week. She is there early in the morning and into the evening, sorting, organizing planning sales and getting the shop ready for our customers. She is constantly thinking about ways that she can support Interfaithâs various programs. She truly is a community hero and we are very pleased to honor her with this award.â
Charlene will receive the Community Hero of the Year Award at our Feed the Hungry Gala on Friday December 9, 2016 at Granite Links in Quincy. Interfaithâs Gala is one of the premiere social events for Greater Boston and Massachusettsâ South Shore region. The Gala features carnival-style games, door prizes, entertainment and an amazing variety of live and silent auction packages. Chefs from top South Shore restaurants host a Dine Around experience for guests while local wine and spirits distributors showcase their products. Many surprises and fun giveaways are being planned for this yearâs event. All proceeds support Interfaithâs programs.
 Charlene Manning grew up in South Boston, her husband Joe is a retired Quincy Policeman. They raised their two sons in Quincy. For decades she shopped at Interfaithâs Bureau Drawer Thrift Shop before becoming a volunteer at The Shop three years ago. âFor me volunteering is a self-serving reward,â said Manning. âInterfaith is one of the few places that I know where I can go and really make a difference in someoneâs life, even if it is as small as giving a kid in the food pantry waiting room a stuffed animal. I feel selfish volunteering because I get so much out of it.â
Click here to purchase tickets to Interfaithâs Feed the Hungry Gala.
Past Community Hero of the Year award recipients include: Ally Donnelly, Jennifer Reale, Cindy Lee, Ed Kelley, Paula Lombardo, Beverly Tangvik, Thomas F. Williams. Esq., Kris Larsen, Matti Lang, Jan Stewart, Mary Ann Walsh, Robert F. Taylor, Margaret Davidson and Andrew Scheele.
Una Armstrong received her Bachelorâs degree in Business Management and Sociology from Emmanuel College in 1984. Following graduation she immediately started working for a software sales company. After working in the field of business for a few years she felt called to a different path. She enrolled at Boston College and earned a Masterâs degree in Social Work. After graduation in 1991 she began working as a Case Manager for The State of Massachusettsâ Department of Children and Families. Unaâs years of service working in child welfare fostered a deep interest in understanding the relationship between the various systems that serve to strengthen family life.
Kerry MacDonald has a masterâs degree from Simmons School of Social Work. She has been a therapist since 2001 and began seeing clients through Interfaithâs New Directions Counseling Center in 2010. Her areas of expertise include: working with adults who are experiencing anxiety and depressive disorders; working with women who are coping with issues surrounding childbirth, infertility, and postpartum depression; helping adults cope and adjust to chronic illness or disability. Her unique specialty of helping clients adapt to blindness and vision loss stems from her own life experience in this area. Her motto as a therapist is: âGive each client the kind of individual attention and care they need to enable them to be empowered to reach their goals in life.â
Clara Sparks has journeyed around the world two times. She reached the Arctic Circle on foot with a 12-person expedition. She has traveled 1,000 miles, by ship, up the Amazon River and organized a trek to Mt. Kilimanjaro. She has lived in India, Germany, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Switzerland, and various locales around the United States including Hawaii. She has battled cancer, passed through the pain of losing a spouse and is one of the most positive and upbeat people youâll ever meet. Clara is a graduate of Boston University (B.S.), Andover Newton Theological School and Boston College Graduate School of Fine and Applied Arts (M. Ed.) with a concentration in pastoral ministry. She is a Board Certified Chaplain in the Association of Professional Chaplains and is ordained in the National Association of Congregational Christian Churches. A lifelong educator Clara has taught children around the world at numerous schools including right here at Quincyâs Middle School. Since 2008 Clara has been working as Interfaith Social Servicesâ Chaplain.
George Fahey is a licensed independent clinical social worker. He received a Bachelorâs Degree in philosophy from St. Johnâs Seminary, and a Masterâs Degree in Social Work from Boston College. George joined the New Directionâs team in 2015. Since 2004, George has also worked as a therapist and social worker with the Charms Educational Collaborative in Stoughton. This has involved meeting with adolescents and their families over issues that might be impeding their education such as autism, non-verbal learning disabilities, or emotional dysregulation. From 1975 until 2004, he was a school adjustment counselor at Norwood High School and from 1970-75 served in a similar capacity at Waltham High. George was a therapist at Boston Psychiatric Associates from 1970-76 and at George Hyland Associates from 1976-83. He integrated therapy with sports and games during his time employed by the Cutler Clinic Gym from 1989-2003. Before his career as a therapist George was a sports broadcaster at WCAS radio station, and he played baseball in the Boston Park League for 2 years in the 1960s. George is a Dorchester native but has called Quincy home for the past four decades. He is a proud husband, father and grandfather. George enjoys sports, particularly baseball and hockey. He loves to read and enjoys caring for his two dogs: Tony, a Keeshond, and Clifford, a Daschund.
Barbara Goodman joined the counseling staff at New Directions Counseling Center in 2002. Â She earned her Masters of Education in Counseling Psychology at Cambridge College. Â Barbara works with children, adolescents, and adults covering a broad spectrum of issues including self-esteem, bullying, peer pressures, parenting, trauma, abuse, loss and bereavement, depression, and anxiety. Â Barbara uses a variety of treatment options such as strength based and cognitive behavioral therapy, narrative therapy, mindfulness and meditation, and Christian counseling. She volunteered for many years with Boston Medical Centerâs Good Grief program, a program designed to assist families dealing with the loss of a loved one. This required extensive training in dealing with loss and grief. Additionally, Barbara has helped facilitate discussion groups at Senior Centers on a wide range of topics such as holiday stress, maintaining independence, and the mental health benefits of reminiscing. Barbara has a gentle, empathic approach which enables her to connect with people of all ages and backgrounds. She is an avid sports enthusiast and enjoys many outdoor activities, she also studies Tai Chi.
Anne Donovan has worked at Interfaith Social Servicesâ New Directions counseling since 2006. Anne is a licensed (LADC1) and certified (CADC) alcohol and drug abuse counselor with 30 years of experience. From 1989-1994 she completed the Alcohol/Chemical Dependency Program at UMASS Boston and the Project for Addiction Counseling Training (PACT) while working for Volunteers of Americaâs Project Rebound, an adolescent long-term treatment facility. During her time with the Boston Health Commission (1994-2008), Anne served homeless men and women who were affected by multiple challenges, including chemical addictions, mental health issues, HIV, extensive legal histories, and racial and sexual discrimination. From 2001 to 2010, Anne facilitated a bereavement support group in Quincy. She both volunteered and worked as a clinician at Maria Droste Services in Quincy from 2004-2007. From 2008-2011 Anne worked as the substance abuse/relapse prevention clinician at South Shore Mental Healthâs Quitting Time, an Intensive Outpatient Program.
Maureen Richardson is a Registered Nurse and a Licensed Mental Health Counselor. Maureen has been working at Interfaith Social Servicesâ New Directions Counseling Center since 2004. She will be the first to tell you that in her long and varied career, Interfaith is the most wonderful place she has ever worked. Although it is a nonprofit organization, it feels to her like a supportive, caring family. She very much enjoys and admires her colleagues in the Counselling Department as well as Interfaithâs other staff members and the amazing volunteers.
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