Meals for homeless and poor planned for Thanksgiving (Fox 11)

Meals for homeless and poor planned for Thanksgiving

 – Thanksgiving will be marked in Los Angeles County today by large gatherings on Skid Row and in Pasadena and Canoga Park to feed homeless and poor residents, and distance races that include charitable aspects.

Actors Dick Van Dyke and Ed Begley Jr. are expected to be among more than 300 volunteers serving Thanksgiving brunch at The Midnight Mission to thousands of homeless or nearly homeless men, women and children. Food bags and donated clothing will also be distributed.

“Of the many services The Midnight Mission provides to our unique community, one of the most important is the sense of family we offer to those who often feel lost and forgotten during the holidays and other days of
celebration,” said Georgia Berkovich, the mission’s director of public affairs.

“Now, more than ever, we need to work together to restore hope and dignity to those in need.”

The Fred Jordan Mission on Skid Row will hold its annual Thanksgiving banquet, serving more than one ton of turkey, topped by 80 gallons of gravy, to homeless people and working families who can’t afford to cook a Thanksgiving dinner, organizers said.

The meal will also include 585 pounds of green beans, 560 pounds of candied yams, 500 pounds of mashed potatoes, hundreds of pounds of traditional cornbread stuffing, cranberry sauce, 400 pumpkin pies and 220 gallons of fruit punch.

Guests will also receive a family food gift bag.

About 5,000 Thanksgiving dinners are expected to be served to adults and families experiencing homelessness and poverty, senior citizens and those who are alone or unable to afford a holiday meal at Union Station Homeless Services’ Dinner-in-the-Park at Central Park in Pasadena, continuing a tradition that began in 1972.

Volunteer registration for Thanksgiving has closed. Registration to volunteer for the organization’s Christmas Dinner-in-the-Park will begin Dec. 1 on its website, unionstationhs.org.

More than 2,000 people will be served turkey dinners at the 28th annual free Community Thanksgiving Day dinner for the area’s homeless and low-income families at Guadalupe Community Center in Canoga Park.

The public is invited to the 16th annual Gentle Thanksgiving at The Gentle Barn in Santa Clarita, which will feature vegetarian food, a bonfire, Native American drum circle and the opportunity to feed turkeys “that have
been rescued from Thanksgiving,” according to organizers.

According to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s 2015 annual Homeless Assessment Report to Congress released last week, the one-night estimate of homelessness found that the Los Angeles Continuum of Care had the nation’s second-largest amount of homeless people, 41,174, and second-
largest percentage of unsheltered homeless people, 70.3 percent, among major cities’ continuums of care.

The estimate found there were 6,781 more homeless people in the Los Angeles Continuum of Care in 2015 than 2014, a 20 percent increase. A continuum of care is the local planning body responsible for coordinating the full range of homelessness services in a geographic area. The Los Angeles Continuum of Care consists of all of Los Angeles County except for Glendale, Pasadena and Long Beach.

Distance races have also become a growing Thanksgiving tradition.

The inaugural Drumstick Dash on the back lot of CBS Studios in Studio City will consist of a timed competitive 5K race, a timed community 5K run/walk and a Kids Fun Run.

Funds raised through registrations and sponsorships will be used toprovide hot meals, housing, health care and other basic needs to the homeless in the San Fernando Valley.

Organizers hope to make this an annual event.

The Turkey Trot Los Angeles 5K and 10K races will start and end at City Hall. The course will go through Bunker Hill and on Spring Street, passing The Broad contemporary art museum, Grand Park, Walt Disney Concert Hall and The Museum of Contemporary Art.

Some runners will be dressed as turkeys, Pilgrims and pies, according to organizers.

Participants are encouraged to donate time or money to The Midnight Mission.

The third annual 5-kilometer Tofurky Trot will be held outside the Rose Bowl, with prizes going to the top finishers in the men’s, women’s and kids divisions and for the best-costumed runner. Rescued turkeys from The Gentle Barn will be the guests of honor.

Profits from the race will be donated to The Gentle Barn and the National Museum of Animals and Society.

The sixth annual Burbank Community YMCA Thanksgiving Day Turkey Trot will be run on a double-loop course in downtown Burbank, with 5- and 10-kilometer races, a 5-kilometer “fun run/walk” and a “kiddie run” for
children 9 years old and younger.

Proceeds from the race will benefit the Burbank Community YMCA’s membership assistance program, which makes its facilities and programs available to the children and families in the city, regardless of ability to
pay.

The first official Thanksgiving was held in the Virginia Colony on Dec. 4, 1619. The traditional meal stems from one held in 1621 by the Wampanoag Indians and the Pilgrims who settled in Plymouth, Massachusetts.

The Continental Congress issued the nation’s first official Thanksgiving Proclamation in 1777.

President George Washington issued a national Thanksgiving Proclamation in 1789, his first year in office.

Washington declared a national Thanksgiving holiday for the newly ratified Constitution, so people may thank God for “affording them an opportunity peaceably to establish a form of government for their safety and happiness” and for having “been enabled to establish constitutions of government for our safety and happiness, particularly the national one now lately instituted.”

The first four presidents combined to issue six Thanksgiving proclamations. However, the tradition ended in 1815. Abraham Lincoln reinstituted it in 1863 in an attempt to heal the divisions caused by the Civil War. Every president since has made an official Thanksgiving proclamation.

In his Thanksgiving proclamation, President Barack Obama asked the nation to “express our gratitude by welcoming others to our celebrations and recognize those who volunteer today to ensure a dinner is possible for those who might have gone without.”

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Los Angeles Rolls Out Complex Care Teams for Chronically Ill Patients (California Healthline)

Los Angeles Rolls Out Complex Care Teams for Chronically Ill Patients

Los Angeles Rolls Out Complex Care Teams for Chronically Ill Patients

Originally posted at California Health Report.
By Robin Urevich.

Los Angeles County’s Department of Health Services is betting it can save money while radically improving the health of some of its sickest and most challenging patients. Last March, county health officials began targeting individuals in South and East Los Angeles who rely on emergency departments or hospitalizations for care and who struggle with more than one chronic disease.

“They suffer from the whole gamut of issues,” said Clemens Hong, a family physician who is medical director of the pilot program, Care Connections, which aims to reach about a thousand patients. Many of them struggle with mental illness, addiction, homelessness, poverty, and a history of childhood trauma, Hong said.

“If we can do it in this group, we can do it anywhere,” Hong said, adding that LA County’s patients are arguably sicker as a group than they are anywhere else in the state.

In recent years, counties, insurers and health care providers are increasingly investing in the least healthy in their populations with an eye on the bottom line, even as the jury is still out on whether and how much most such programs save in healthcare costs.

“Taking care of high-risk, high-cost patients is important for one very clear reason,” said Marci Nielsen, who heads the Washington D.C. based Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative, which advocates for primary care. “That’s where there are savings to be achieved.”

A 2012 report by the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality estimated that five percent of U.S. patients accounted for fully half of the nation’s health care spending.

Key to the program in Los Angeles is a small army of some 25 carefully selected community health workers whose job is to build trusting relationships with patients, and work with physicians and nurses to bring them out of emergency rooms and into primary care.

So-called complex care management programs are now in place up and down the state from Humboldt County to San Diego. Elizabeth Davis, M.D., the medical director of care coordination at San Francisco Health Network Primary Care, said participants in the city’s program have 25 percent fewer ER visits and 50 percent fewer hospital days, although it hasn’t affected the rate of readmission to the hospital, a key measure that the Affordable Care Act uses to assess hospital quality.

Managed care, which incentivizes cost savings, is driving much of the investment in complex care management. Under managed care, insurers are paid a flat fee to provide for all their patients’ health care whereas in traditional fee for service care, providers are reimbursed for each doctor visit, test or procedure. The Affordable Care Act is also full of incentives for cost savings and better management of chronic diseases like asthma and diabetes.

“You can’t save any money from a patient population who isn’t spending any money.
Focusing intensive effort where the costs are is the quickest way to get a return on investment,” Nielsen noted.

On a steamy August afternoon, community health worker Brandi Sankey, 36, searched out a shady spot in the courtyard of a Pasadena homeless shelter to catch up with one such high-cost, high-risk patient.

“I’m an alcoholic and I’m anonymous,” Bill said, his way of saying he doesn’t want his real name used. Until 2007, he transported automobiles cross-country and mostly slept in his rig. He stayed near the beach, surfed, and never felt the need for a fixed address, getting by until the economy crashed and he lost his job. “It went down and so did I.” He suffers from diabetes, back pain and seizures.

Bill, 51, wore a baseball cap and layers of clothing on his slender frame topped off with the kind of orange vest highway flaggers wear, despite the 80-degree heat. He answers Sankey’s questions in a gravelly barely audible voice and looks down his nose through reading glasses.

“Your blood sugar level was 157,” Sankey said. Normal levels are below 100, but Sankey noted that it’s important to celebrate progress. “That’s phenomenal. Dr. Ma cheered. She sat in her chair and looked like she was at a sporting event.”

Bill mostly avoids eye contact, but with that comment he meets Sankey’s gaze with a spark of appreciation. She is unfailingly enthusiastic, as she quickly runs through a detailed list of health and lifestyle-related questions.

The two first met more than a month ago when they sat down for a two-hour conversation at the El Monte Comprehensive Health Center just east of Los Angeles where Sankey is based. She asked Bill how he would design his own care plan, and the talk resulted in nothing less than a road map for rebuilding his life.

Because he was homeless, he had no place to store his insulin. His diabetes was out of control, and that not only made him sick, he couldn’t get the dental work he badly wants to replace missing teeth

A health care team that includes Sankey, a physician, and a nurse care coordinator meets weekly to track their progress on Bill’s case, and they appear to be enjoying some early success. Now that he has access to food three times a day, and a place to store his insulin, his diabetes is coming under control

“That’s how the change occurs…once you can meet basic human needs,” Sankey said.

Care Connections seems to be working for Bill, and his team of care providers.

But implementation has been challenging, said Mark Ghaly, a pediatrician who is Deputy Director of Community Health for DHS. Ghaly, who ran a similar program in San Francisco notes that Care Connections is beginning as staff adjust to another massive shift—to patient-centered medical homes.

The program is also designed to increase physicians’ job satisfaction by making them more successful in treating those who haven’t shown up to appointments, taken their medications or seemed careless about their own wellbeing.

“It’s a big culture change to add a new work force,” he said, especially when they their frame of reference is completely different.

“Our teams have largely focused on work inside the four walls of the clinic. Now you add the element of someone who breaks through four walls, someone who knows what pharmacy is not near a dangerous liquor store.”

Additionally, some doctors have been slow to accept the help of community health workers. “There was a lot of resistance,” said Leonor Castro, when she was first assigned to work with her physician at the El Monte clinic. “He wouldn’t even look at me. He was like, ‘I don’t have time.’ That was a bit frustrating. ”

Castro won him over with her work with several patients, including two who were often ill. Castro solved one woman’s problems when she discovered she was taking her many medications incorrectly. Another who was constantly in the ER with atrial fibrillation and fluctuating high and low blood pressure can now simply call Castro for help.

“She’ll say, my blood pressure is this, can you go talk to the doctor? Knowing I’m there has helped to calm her anxiety.”

Now, the physician has changed his attitude. “He’s done a complete 180,” Castro said. “In my evaluation,” he said “I was bringing a new culture.”

Across California, governments and health care organizations have high hopes for complex care management programs like the one Los Angeles County is creating.

The first ones appeared in the 1970s to coordinate care for mental health patients, Davis said. But, now they’re springing up widely and quickly as billions of dollars flow to state and private organizations to build them, even as experts grapple with how best to do so effectively.

Before he came to L.A., Hong surveyed 18 of the most successful programs nationwide, and published his findings in a Commonwealth Fund issue brief last year. Most of the programs reported some cost reductions, but few of the reports were based on formal evaluations.

“The key lesson learned is that people who are high-risk are amenable to care management,” Hong said. “The future will tell whether well designed programs drive reductions in cost.”

Marci Nielsen argued that it takes two to four years to establish the patient-provider relationships that make for successful programs.

Starting later this year, California is expected to receive more than a billion dollars in federal funding to set up complex care management in eight counties with the goal of saving money within 18 months.

The centers for Medicare and Medicaid innovation gave 167 million in funds for such programs in the state, with most of their grantees promising to save more than double the amount of their grants in three years.

In Los Angeles County, Hong makes no specific promises on cost savings; he hopes to show less ER use and fewer hospitalizations as a result of the program, and improved patient health. UCLA researchers will evaluate the program, and the county board of supervisors, which funded it, will decide in the coming years whether to double down.

Pasadena’s Operation Gobble Gobble Lands for 13th Year (Pasadena Now)

Published : Friday, November 20, 2015 | 12:51 PM

Mayor Terry Tornek, Ralphs Grocery Company and Food 4 Less will host the 13th Annual “Operation Gobble Gobble” beginning at 7:30 a.m., Saturday, November 21, 2015 in front of Pasadena City Hall, 100 N. Garfield Ave. to distribute 450 Thanksgiving turkeys with all the trimmings to local human service agencies.

In about 90 minutes, a whirlwind of charitable goodwill envelopes the area in front of City Hall as volunteers dash about to distributed the donated food to a long line of pre-determined charitable organizations that receive the items for re-distribution to their clients prior to Thanksgiving.

Including this year, more than over 4,500 Thanksgiving feasts have been provide to the Pasadena community by Ralphs and Food 4 Less, the equivalent of about 45,000 meals, as part of Operation Gobble Gobble.

“Thanksgiving is a wonderful opportunity for all of us to give thanks for the many blessings we’ve received throughout the year,” Pasadena Mayor Terry Tornek said. “I’m pleased to continue the tradition of Operation Gobble Gobble with Ralphs Grocery Company and Food 4 Less, who make it possible to extend a Thanksgiving blessing to many of Pasadena’s most needy families.”

Ralphs and Food 4 Less are generously donating the Thanksgiving turkeys, along with stuffing, canned vegetables, potatoes and pumpkin pie. In addition, volunteer representatives from the companies will team up with Pasadena firefighters and other community members to help distribute the food.

Representatives of community organizations including, among others, Pasadena Unified School District Healthy Start, Union Station Homeless Services, Armenian Relief Society, Ronald McDonald House, Mother’s Club, Friends in Deed Pantry, Lutheran Social Services, Walter Hoving Home, Elizabeth House, and Door of Hope will receive the food for distribution to the community.

“Ralphs and Food 4 Less are pleased to be active citizens in Pasadena, and we are proud to join with Mayor Tornek to help make this Thanksgiving special for many people who otherwise might not have the resources to enjoy a turkey dinner with all the fixings,” said Kendra Doyle, Public Relations Vice President.

For more information about “Operation Gobble Gobble’” contact Rhonda Stone at (626) 744-7147.

Stay connected to the City of Pasadena! Visit the City of Pasadena online at  www.cityofpasadena.net; follow the city on Twitter @PasadenaGov, www.twitter.com/pasadenagov, and like the City on Facebook at www.facebook.com/cityofpasadena. Or call the Citizen Service Center, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, at (626) 744-7311.

L.A.’s Top Master Tastemakers – Together for One Afternoon in “Masters of Taste” (Pasadena Now)

Benefits

To Savor The Finer Things in Life

From STAFF REPORTS
Published: Wednesday, November 18, 2015 | 1:09 AM

 

You are invited to be a part of Masters of Taste, a new and exciting outdoor, luxury festival that will take place on Sunday, April 3rd, 2016 from 3:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. on the field of the Historic Pasadena Rose Bowl!

Masters of Taste will bring L.A.’s Top Master Tastemakers together for one afternoon to celebrate all realms of taste. Approximately 2,500 influential food and beverage enthusiasts from all throughout the Greater Los Angeles area are expected to attend this exciting festival which will include the finest fare from 50 Master Chefs and restaurants, signature handcrafted cocktails and tastings from 25 spirit bars, wineries, local craft breweries, lifestyle and beauty brands, live entertainment and much more.

The beneficiary of Masters of Taste will be Union Station Homeless Services, a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization committed to helping homeless men, women and children rebuild their lives. Headquartered in Pasadena, the agency is the San Gabriel Valley’s largest social service agency assisting homeless and very low-income adults and families through an array of services including street outreach, meals, shelter, housing, case management and career development. Since 1973, Union Station Homeless Services has helped thousands of people who were once homeless and without hope.

Refined extravagance and luxury awaits you. Mark your calendars and save-the-date to savor the finer things in life with Masters of Taste.

Masters of Taste will take place on Sunday, April 3rd, 2016. The VIP Power Hour will be held from 3:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. and General Admission will be from 4:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.. For more information on Masters of Taste or to book your tickets directly, please visit www.mastersoftaste.eventbrite.com.

Masters of Taste will be held at the Pasadena Rose Bowl (1001 Rose Bowl Drive, Pasadena). For more information, contact Masters of Taste at (626) 791-6677, email info@MastersofTasteLA.com or visitwww.MastersofTasteLA.com.

Ho-Ho-Boy there’s A LOT of Holiday Cheer this Season at One Colorado

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: November 5, 2015

OLD PASADENA, CA

Ho-Ho-Boy there’s A LOT of Holiday Cheer this Season at One Colorado.

One Colorado loves the Holidays and we’re really pulling out all the stops this year. We’re decking our halls, donning our Holiday finery and providing Seasonal warm-and-fuzzies to reward all of you who’ve been extra good this year. We’re sure to bring glee even to the grouchiest Grinch and joy to the crabbiest of scrooges.

This year we’re hosting a Happy Holidays celebratory shindig, a Holiday Open House, mounting momentous music and providing poetry on demand. And what would the Season be without an adorable wintry puppet show for the kids. Santa will of course be here for Seasonal photo ops, and since the guy never turns down a good party he’ll make appearances at our swinging soirees.

We’re also making sure that our friends in need share in the Holiday cheer.

In the spirit of giving, we’re holding a coffee drive for Union Station Homeless Services, a Holiday Card Round Up to brighten the season for our friends in need, as well as a toy collection for the Charles Cherniss Tournament of Toys and the Pasadena Jaycee’s “Operation Santa”.

Here’s the Holiday Hoedown Lowdown:

12/5, 6p – 8p One Colorado’s “Happy Holidays Party” with music from Leftover Cuties

Start the Season off on the right note here at One Colorado. We’re serving up a cheery night of live music from the prohibition-era Jazz band Leftover Cuties. If so inclined, you can swing the night away under the stars. We’re also offering funtastic photo booth folly and sweet treat nibbles with (Dots) mini cupcakes and (cows’) milk.

We’ll also be kicking off the One Colorado Charles Cherniss Tournament of Toys collection drive, which provides gifts to 3,000 disadvantaged children throughout the San Gabriel Valley, distributed by the Pasadena Jaycees’s “Operation Santa”.

While you’re here all hopped up on the cheer, slip Santa a note through Santa’s Mailbox, sponsored by Old Pasadena Management District. We suggest playing up all the good stuff you’ve done this year, even if you have to exaggerate. All notes get a reply; don’t forget your return address!

And since it’s not all about you, please join us for our Holiday Card Round Up and pen some Holiday wishes for our friends at the Union Station Homeless services. Your act of open-heartedness will bring a smile to someone who could really use it. Consider doubling your kindness by also bringing coffee for our Union Station Coffee Drive (see below).

12/10 Holiday Open House + a concert with Dead Winter Carpenters
From 5p – 7p, One Colorado stores & restaurants will host special events and promotions dreamed up

just for this special night.

Our Courtyard and Alleys will also feature loads of festive activities and feel-good moments:

  •   On-the-spot poetics from Jacqueline Suskin’s Poem Store
  •   Handbell Choirs will ring your chimes in Smith Alley
  •   Photo booth posing with friends and family (to bring balance to your seasonal selfies)
  •   Santa strolling the festivities (to bring celebrity to your seasonal selfies)
  •   Free gift wrapping with the Pasadena Jaycees (for purchases over $100)
  •   And a fancy One Colorado tote giveaway (for purchases over $200 while supplies last)

At 7p, join us for a courtyard concert with Dead Winter Carpenters. Let Americana roots-rock band Dead Winter Carpenters further gladden your tidings with their five-part harmonies, ferocious fiddling, thumping upright bass, country ramblings and acoustic guitars with driving drums melding the music.

And in the on-going spirit of giving:

  •   Charles Cherniss Tournament of Toys collection at Patagonia (47 N Fair Oaks)
  •   Coffee Drive for Union Station Homeless Services + Holiday Card Round Up

    All funtivities are served up with mini cupcakes and cocoa.

    Holiday Open House store and restaurant + general events specifics will be on our website (and a subsequent press release).

    12/13, 3p – 7p Pet Day Photos with Santa (a tail wagging good time)

    Pose your pooch (kitty, bunny, parrot, hamster or gecko) with Old St. Nick. His lap is your lap (unless your pet is large like a llama; no offense to llamas). Hours and pricing will be on our website.

12/22 “Wacky Winter Adventure” puppet show + screening of “The Mousecracker”

(like Nutcracker but with Mice, and maybe some cheese) presented by Luce Puppet Company.

Puppet shows at 4p and 5p; “The Mousecracker” screening at 6:30p.

Join Pepe the Dog and his pal Snow Girl as they venture to the North Pole in search of the Gingerbread Princess, who rumor has it grants wishes (albeit one per customer). Madcap mayhem ensues as the duo meets some ridiculous penguins, the Abominable Snowman and Snowball King, not to mention all this whilst keeping Snow Girl from melting. This charming and whimsical tale of friendship, loyalty and resourcefulness will melt your heart.

Speaking of Heart – About the Coffee Drive for Union Station Homeless Services:

From 11/31 – 12/11, bring 1 lb. (or more!) of ground, caffeinated coffee to One Colorado’s Management Office (24 East Union) and for your kindness we’ll give you a voucher for a delicious cup of Il Fornaio’s wood-roasted Americano or Italiano

And throughout the Holiday:

  •   Local children & adult choir performances
  •   Santa’s Mailbox
  •   Santa Photo Sessions in Smith Alley
  •   Charles Cherniss Tournament of Toys collection for “Operation Santa” at Patagonia – 47 N. Fair

    Oaks (More info – PasadenaJaycees.org.)

    All event details are on our website and Facebook event page. And don’t be shy – have a question? Call us!

Giuseppe (that’s Joe in Italian). We’re collecting coffee

Monday – Friday, 9a – 5p and at our special events.

One Colorado is a collection of 17 historic buildings housing a curated mix of nationally acclaimed retailers and designers, unique local merchants, inventive restaurants and a boutique cinema. A full city block located between Colorado, Union, Delacey and Fair Oaks, One Colorado is the retail centerpiece of Old Pasadena and favorite casual gathering place for the greater community, with public events hosted year-round in its central courtyard.

One Colorado – 41 Hugus Alley, Pasadena, CA 91103
OneColorado.com / Facebook – OneColoradoOldPasadena
GENERAL PUBLIC: Please call 626.564.1066 or go to onecolorado.com
MEDIA: Please call McLean Emenegger at 626.564.1066 or mclean@onecolorado.com