+ All Categories
Home > Documents > FINAL Highlights 2013-14

FINAL Highlights 2013-14

Date post: 08-Aug-2015
Category:
Upload: janeen-latin
View: 18 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
2
UCP Central PA and the UCP Foundation of Central PA 2013-2014 Highlights This is what life without limits looks like. UCP Central PA 925 Linda Lane • Camp Hill, PA 17011 Tel: 717-737-3477 • Fax: 717-975-3333 www.ucpcentralpa.org • www.ucpfoundationcentralpa.org Statistics are useful, but they don’t tell the full story. Left unmentioned and undocumented are the countless ways that UCP staff have empowered those whose lives we have touched. One such example is the story of the Ely Family. The Story Behind the Statistics Bobbi and Justin Ely certainly never envisioned their small family being the face of the United Way in its 2014 fundraising campaign. But then again, they had no reason to believe that their child would be born anything other than typical or that he would experience delays in his development. Then life threw them a curveball. In March 2011, Grant Ely was born with a rare brain malformation. Just three days after his birth, doctors told Bobbi and Justin he might not live to celebrate his first birthday. Fortunately, they couldn’t have been more wrong. Today--after receiving comprehensive early intervention therapies from UCP Central PA--Grant is a thriving 3-year-old who attends day care with the help of a nurse. Grant is just one of nearly 900 local children who received early intervention services last year through programs and services supported by the United Way of the Capital Region. As a result of early intervention, Grant Ely is living a life his doctors never thought possible. As a result of UCP services and supports, the Ely family is living life without limits. That’s what happens when a community chooses to LIVE UNITED. Real People... Real Results Bobbi, Justin, and Grant Ely share a sweet moment at home. Find us (“ucpcentralpa”): UCP Culture at Work “Life without limits.” The phrase means different things to different people. For UCP management and staff, it is reflected in the many ways we empower people with special needs to live their lives to the best of their abilities. To do that, we rely on caring, compassionate people to provide our programs and services, and other like-minded individuals and groups to support us in our efforts. Life without limits is also reflected in our efforts to create a culture of excellence throughout the agency. To that end, we have identified six core principles that we believe are critical to sustaining the ideal UCP culture: consumer first communication connected innovation inspiring leadership teamwork Our collective efforts to live out these six core principles on a daily basis are reflected in the faces of UCP staff and consumers as they experience life without limits. “UCP didn’t only support Grant, they also supported us. We didn’t know what to expect... but UCP helped us not compare him to other children, and to celebrate his accomplishments.” - Bobbi Ely TM
Transcript
Page 1: FINAL Highlights 2013-14

UCP Central PA and theUCP Foundation of Central PA

2013-2014 Highlights

This is what life without limits looks like.

UCP Central PA925 Linda Lane • Camp Hill, PA 17011Tel: 717-737-3477 • Fax: 717-975-3333

www.ucpcentralpa.org • www.ucpfoundationcentralpa.org

Statistics are useful, but they don’t tell the full story. Left unmentioned and undocumented are the countless ways that UCP staff have empowered those whose lives we have touched. One such example is the story of the Ely Family.

The Story Behind the Statistics

Bobbi and Justin Ely certainly never envisioned their small

family being the face of the United Way in its 2014 fundraising

campaign. But then again, they had no reason to believe

that their child would be born anything other than typical or

that he would experience delays in his development.

Then life threw them a curveball.

In March 2011, Grant Ely was born with a rare brain

malformation. Just three days after his birth, doctors told

Bobbi and Justin he might not live to celebrate his first

birthday. Fortunately, they couldn’t have been more wrong.

Today--after receiving comprehensive early intervention

therapies from UCP Central PA--Grant is a thriving 3-year-old

who attends day care with the help of a nurse. Grant is just

one of nearly 900 local children who received early intervention

services last year through programs and services supported by

the United Way of the Capital Region.

As a result of early intervention, Grant Ely is living a life his

doctors never thought possible. As a result of UCP services

and supports, the Ely family is living life without limits. That’s

what happens when a community chooses to LIVE UNITED.

Real People... Real Results

Bobbi, Justin, and Grant Ely share a sweet moment at home.

Find us (“ucpcentralpa”):

UCP Culture at Work“Life without limits.” The phrase means different things to different people. For UCP management and staff, it is reflected in the many ways we empower people with special needs to live their lives to the best of their abilities. To do that, we rely on caring, compassionate people to provide our programs and services, and other like-minded individuals and groups to support us in our efforts.

Life without limits is also reflected in our efforts to create a culture of excellence throughout the agency. To that end, we have identified six core principles that we believe are critical to sustaining the ideal UCP culture: • consumer first• communication• connected• innovation• inspiring leadership• teamwork

Our collective efforts to live out these six core principles ona daily basis are reflected in the faces of UCP staff and consumers as they experience life without limits.

“UCP didn’t only support Grant, they also supported us.

We didn’t know what to expect... but UCP helped us not compare him to other children, and to

celebrate his accomplishments.” - Bobbi Ely

TM

Page 2: FINAL Highlights 2013-14

New Programs and Services A hallmark of UCP programs and services is that they continually change and grow to meet the evolving needs of the disability community... whether at home, at school, at work or at play. Over the past year:

• UCP initiated two pilot programs through the Office of Developmental Programs, and Dauphin and Cumberland-Perry County Mental Health/Intellectual and Developmental Disability Services: • Pathways Academy--a group home setting where residents learn the skills necessary to live independently and secure competitive employment. The goal is to have residents move on to a more independent living arrangement (such as an apartment) within 18 months. • Independent Living Technology--a program partnership with SimplyHome that facilitates access to “smart home” and other technologies that enable people with disabilities to live as independently as possible.

• In collaboration with Temple University, UCP initiated our fourth National Institutes of Health (NIH) project. The two-year project related to increasing the physical activity in youth with disabilities has two Principal Investigators: Dr. Mary Segal (Temple) and Col. Jeffrey Cooper (UCP Central PA).

• In partnership with The Cumberland Perry Arc (CPARC), UCP opened Village Square Neighbors, the fourth such parent-driven “Neighbors”-model adult day program, with emphasis on enhanced community integration.

• D.R.E.A.M. Partnership, a subsidiary of UCP, was awarded a three-year $1.35M grant from the PA Department of Labor and Industry, Office of Vocational Rehabilitation (OVR). D.R.E.A.M. has awarded grants to Arcadia and Millersville Universities to establish postsecondary education programs for students with intellectual disabilities. The OVR funding will facilitate the development of programs at eight additional Pennsylvania colleges and universities.

UCP Foundation of Central PA The UCP Foundation of Central PA (the Foundation) was established in 2006 to support the programs and services provided by UCP Central PA. An operationally strong, fiscally sound, and efficient charity, the UCP Foundation directs 92% of all donations to programs and services that promote a life without limits for people with disabilities. Among the highlights from the past year:

The Grant Allocation Panel reviewed 20 proposals submitted by UCP program staff and recommended funding to the UCP Foundation Board of Directors, which awarded $45,670 in support of these initiatives:• Technology to facilitate independence in communication and recreation for consumers • Building modifications and furniture to facilitate increased consumer leisure time and/or safety • Technology designed to enhance quality of service provision• Marketing video to promote college opportunities for students with intellectual disabilities Special Events, 2013-14. The Foundation hosted five special event fundraisers over the course of the year: • UCP/SchmidtKramer Golf Tournament (August 2013)• UCP Annual Holiday Gift Wrap (December 2013)• UCP Magic Night Gala,(black-tie dinner dance, March 2014)• Walk for a Healthy Community (presented by Highmark, May 2014)• UCP/Harrisburg Senators Sports Memorabilia Auction (June 2014)

The five events generated $120,584 in net proceeds for the benefit of UCP programs and services. The community’s support of, and participation in, our events facilitates the agency’s ability to address the unmet and evolving needs of individuals with disabilities and their families in the midstate, as well as provide financial support for other unfunded or underfunded programs and services throughout the community.

UCP Central PA: Sixty Years and Counting

• Autism• Premature birth• Alzheimer’s/dementia• Arthritis

417

120

436

323

1,132

369

626

43

167

85

Early Intervention Services(Therapies, including physical, speech, occupational, nutritional, and special instruction for children from birth through age three)

Inclusive Childcare/Preschool Program (On-site program for children ages six weeks through five years; includes partnership with Capital Area Intermediate Unit)

Family Services(Supports designed to strengthen families of children with disabilities, ages birth to 21; includes information and referral, advocacy, family networking activities, and workshops)

Adult Day Programs(Daily activities to promote continued growth and development for individuals with disabilities, ages 18 and older; offered in 16 locations)

Home and Community-Based Services(Programs and services that empower individuals with disabilities to remain in their own homes and actively participate in the community)

Home Care Services(Non-medical, in-home support for adults 18 and older with physical disabilities and adults over age 60 needing assistance in the home)

Assistive Technology (AT)(Variety of AT devices and services; includes demonstration center, equipment reuse program, training, and outreach)

Residential Services(12 community homes and 10 apartments)

Fitness and Nutrition Program(Fitness and nutrition program that promotes health and wellnessfor individuals with disabilities, ages 18 and older)

Respite Services(AM/PM, evening, and overnight respite services for families and caregivers)

2013-2014 Program HighlightsWhether someone was born with a disability, acquired a disability through illness or injury, or is simply aging into disability, UCP has a program, service or support that puts the focus on what the individual can do... not what he can’t.

From July 2013 to June 2014, UCP provided a comprehensive array of programs and services to enhance people’s lives throughout Central PA, among them:

Program/Service Number Served

What We Do and Who We ServeUCP currently operates from 32 facilities in 16 Central Pennsylvania counties. From July 2013 to June 2014, we provided both community and center-based programs and services to nearly 3,800 individuals with disabilities and their family members. As a result, these people are leading their lives in ways that were unimaginable just 60 years ago.

Despite what our name may seem to imply, cerebral palsy is just one of more than 80 conditions and diagnoses for which UCP provides care and services. A listing of the most prevalent diagnoses or conditions of the consumers who benefited from our services over the past year includes: • Intellectual disability • Developmental delay • Cerebral palsy • Traumatic brain injury

• Multiple Sclerosis• Diabetes • Stroke• Down syndrome

The First 60 YearsIn December 1953, a devoted group of parents came together to forge a better life for their children with cerebral palsy. The group sought to make significant changes in the public perception of children with disabilities, while also striving to improve their quality of life. In the 1960s, the scope of the group’s mission expanded to serve children with all types of disabilities. Then, during the 1980s and 1990s, an array of services for adults was added to the mix. In August 2000, the organization officially changed its name to United Cerebral Palsy of Central Pennsylvania, Inc., or UCP Central PA (UCP).

Over the years, UCP has been changing lives... and changing people’s perspectives... from “impossible” to “it’s possible.” Along the way, we have helped a lot of people achieve a level of independence they previously may have thought was out of reach.

We’ve also helped a lot of people experience a number of “firsts.” From first steps on a pediatric treadmill to the first dance at the school prom... and from the first time attending college classes or the first day on the job to the first time living independently... we have empowered people of all abilities to experience milestone moments in their lives.

The Next 60 YearsWhat began as a therapeutic service for children with cerebral palsy has evolved tremendously over the past 60 years. But today UCP remains true to the group’s original purpose: to forge a better life for those with special needs.

UCP is now a $25 million service organization providing a network of services across the lifespan for acommunity of people with special needs. As a result of ongoing medical, scientific and technological advances, as positive as these are, the need for disability services--and the companion need for funding to provide these services--is greater than ever. That is one reason we also play a key leadership role in the crucial area of disability advocacy at the local, state and federal levels.

Today, premature babies are being successfully delivered weighing as little as a pound... but are in need of months or years of early intervention therapies. On the flip side of the coin, medical advances have extended the lifespan of a PA resident to 78 years of age on average. Many of these older adults are finding themselves in need of additional supports to remain independent in the home and in the community. And for all ages in between, there is a need for a full range of transitional services that empower individuals with disabilities to lead full lives... both personally and professionally.


Recommended