Carrie Mehdi Foundation donates $3,000 in Memory of Greg Mehdi  to Organizations Supporting Homeless Population in Southern California

Carrie Mehdi Foundation donates $3,000 in Memory of Greg Mehdi to Organizations Supporting Homeless Population in Southern California

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 8, 2015
Carrie Mehdi Foundation
A 501(c)(3) Non-Profit Organization
530 South Lake Ave, Suite 717
Pasadena, CA 91101

Carrie Mehdi Foundation donates $3,000 in Memory of Greg Mehdi to Organizations Supporting Homeless Population in Southern California

Media contact: Zafar Mehdi
Tel. (818) 632-3049
Email: zmehdi@CarrieMehdiFoundation.org

Carrie Mehdi Foundation (CMF), a non-profit 501(c)(3) charitable organization, announces $3,000 in donations to three non-profit organizations that provide support services to the homeless population in Southern California.

The donations were made to the following organizations:

The Midnight Mission, Los Angeles — $1,000
Union Station Homeless Services, Pasadena — $1,000
Homeless Health Care, Los Angeles – – $1,000
This is the second consecutive year of these donations.  CMF began making these donations in 2014 at the direction of Greg Mehdi, a founding member of the Board of Directors of CMF.  Sadly, Greg passed away in a car accident in Los Angeles in July 2014 at an early age of thirty.   Speaking of the significance of these donations, Greg’s father and CMF Board Member, Zafar Mehdi said, “Greg lived and worked in Los Angeles. He was very passionate about helping the homeless population and had specifically recommended that CMF support these organizations. We are pleased to make these donations in Greg’s memory. In keeping with Greg’s wishes, we will continue to support these organizations for the wonderful work that they do in helping the homeless population”.

To highlight the importance of making these donations, Zafar Mehdi personally delivered the donations to the leaders of the three organizations.

Background information on the Carrie Mehdi Foundation, Greg Mehdi, and our foundation events are listed: Website: www.CarrieMehdiFoundation.org
Facebook:   Facebook.com/CarrieMehdiFoundation
Twitter:       https://twitter.com/CarrieMehdiFoun

PHOTOS

DONATIONS MADE IN MEMORY OF GREG MEHDI

 Greg Mehdi

Donation to The Midnight Mission, Los Angeles

Zafar Mehdi of CMF presents a $1,000 donation check to Larry Adamson, President & CEO of the Midnight Mission. Photo with staff of the Midnight Mission, from L to R: Ryan Navales – Manager of Government & Public Affairs, Larry Adamson, Zafar Mehdi, and Georgia Berkovich – Director of Public Affairs

Midnight Mission_CMF donation
Donation to Union Station Homeless Services, Pasadena.

USHS_CMF donation

Zafar Mehdi of CMF (middle) presents a $1,000 donation check to Marvin Gross (left), President & CEO and Dana Bean (right), Director of Development, of Union Station Homeless Services, Pasadena.
Donation to Homeless Health Care Los Angeles

HHCLA_CMF donation

Zafar Mehdi of CMF presents a $1,000 donation check to Mark Casanova, Executive Director of Homeless Health Care Los Angeles (HHCLA). Photo with staff of HHCLA, from L to R: Mark Casanova, Stephany Campos, Amber Roth, Dyhan Cardona, Jen Tougas, Maryanne Alderson, Zafar Mehdi and Chloe Blalock.

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A Rabbi and His Congregation: Marvin Gross’ Two Decades with Union Station (Outlook Newspapers)

A Rabbi and His Congregation: Marvin Gross’ Two Decades with Union Station (Outlook Newspapers)

By 

As far as congregations go, they don’t get much larger — or needier — than Rabbi Marvin Gross’ flock. But his people aren’t gathering inside a temple — or often inside anywhere, for that matter.

\For 20 years, Gross has served as the lead administrator for Union Station Homeless Services, which has grown to become one of the San Gabriel Valley’s largest social service agencies under his watch. Since 1995, the organization’s staff and operating budget has ballooned from 22 employees and less than $1 million to a 90-person operation with a budget that will approach $8 million in the next fiscal year.

But the number Gross is most concerned about is one he’s proud to report is shrinking today: Pasadena’s homeless population was tallied at 632 last year, the lowest total on record. While the number tends to fluctuate throughout the years, it’s way down from the estimated total of 1,200 in 1995, the year Gross arrived at Union Station.

“Marv has always said he considers Union Station to be his congregation,” said longtime board member Arnold Siegel. “I think it’s true and it’s rewarding, because we never lose sight of the people.”

Photos courtesy Union Station Homeless Services Marvin Gross (right) celebrates a capital campaign’s success in 2002 with (from left) Bill Goldmann and Russ and Hannah Kully. The campaign, which launched in 2000 with hopes of raising $4.5 million, eventually netted $8 million.

Throughout a wide-ranging professional career spanning stints as a rabbi in San Francisco and Glendale, a deputy statewide field director for Sen. Alan Cranston’s 1986 re-election campaign and eight years as a senior executive with the Jewish Federation Council of Greater Los Angeles, Gross said his focus has always been on the people he’s served — which is no different now that his current organization helps people who are in dire need of support.

“I’ve had some different lives,” said the Evanston, Ill., native. “But if I look at it uniformly, it’s working with people to accomplish things that we as a group, whichever group it was, believed in.”

Union Station clearly believes in Gross. Hired in 1995 as the executive director — a title that changed to CEO in 2008 — Gross’ background intrigued the Union Station board members who sat on the search committee, according to former board President Gloria Pitzer.

“He wasn’t just coming in as a [traditional] nonprofit CEO, and I think that was an attraction,” said Pitzer, a partner at local law firm Palermo, Barbaro, Chinen & Pitzer. “It’s personal for him and he brings his heart to it.”

Although his hiring could be viewed as unconventional, Gross came with plenty of experience leading a large organization from his time with the Jewish Federation. And Union Station’s roots are anchored in religion, having been started by All Saints Church.

Disney senior executives — including former Studios Chairman Richard Cook (left) and company CEO Michael Eisner (right) — joined Union Station CEO Marvin Gross (second from left) for a day of volunteering at the Adult Center’s kitchen a decade ago.

Disney senior executives — including former Studios Chairman Richard Cook (left) and company CEO Michael Eisner (right) — joined Union Station CEO Marvin Gross (second from left) for a day of volunteering at the Adult Center’s kitchen a decade ago.

“It probably wasn’t anticipated [to hire a rabbi], but once I got hired, it was never an issue. It’s allowed me to have common cause with other people of faith,” said Gross. “Almost any faith group you can name has had volunteer commitment at USHS. We are a vehicle at Union Station — they act out their faith through serving here.”

The vehicle, as Gross called it, keeps on rolling along, with Union Station planning  to open the 19-bed Mar Vista Apartments next summer. According to Gross, it will be the first purpose-built, permanent housing for families in Pasadena.

Union Station supporters gather with Marvin Gross (second from left) and then-board chair Arnold Siegel (third from right) at the 1998 opening of Euclid Villa Apartments.

Union Station supporters gather with Marvin Gross (second from left) and then-board chair Arnold Siegel (third from right) at the 1998 opening of Euclid Villa Apartments.

It’s an ambitious project, but that’s become the norm under Gross. Between opening the Euclid Villa Apartments in 1998 and providing on-site services at a residential community called Centennial Place in 2010, Union Station launched a capital campaign in 2000. A consultant’s initial feasibility study suggested the organization might be able to secure $4.5 million, but in about two years, Union Station had raised $8 million. The results were improvements to the Adult Center, as well as acquisition of property and subsequent construction of the administration building and Family Center.

Gregg von Fempe, the chief program officer at Union Station, said community commitment to the organization is, in part, a result of a collective trust in the CEO.

“We’ve been fortunate to be in the right place in the right time, but I’d stress that more importantly, we’ve had years of Marv’s guidance, foundation-building and vision to do that,” said von Fempe. “He’s kept Union Station’s reputation in the highest regard, and he’s been the face of the organization.”

Siegel, who served as the board chair a few years back and is well-versed in Pasadena’s nonprofit scene, agreed with von Fempe’s assessment.

“He’s been around so long that everybody in Pasadena knows him, and it gives the organization great credibility,” said Siegel. “He’s got the best reputation of any CEO of any nonprofit around.”

Gross has made fans internally, as well. As a 19-year employee, Director of Family Services Gil Nelson is hot on Gross’ tenure trail. Nelson, who had worked at Union Station before Gross arrived, was working for Pacific Clinics when a friend and Union Station employee named Joyce Miles began singing the praises of her new boss.

“She kept telling me how wonderful he was, and how sweet, kind and caring he was,” Nelson remembered. “She said, ‘You’d love working for him,’ and so I had to meet him.”

Within half a year, Nelson was back at Union Station — because of Gross. Back then, as he does today, Gross personally meets with every new hire to welcome him or her to what von Fempe said is “the family.”

But Gross isn’t just smiling and shaking hands during these meetings, he’s processing everything that is said. “He can name every staff member’s children; that’s just the kind of guy he is,” said Nelson. “If you walk by his office, you have to be prepared to give him a report on what your family is up to. He’s not the kind of guy that just puts in his hours and says, ‘See ya!’ He wants to know what’s going on with people.”

His grace extends beyond remembering pets’ names and children’s schools, though. A few years ago, von Fempe said, a personnel issue came up and, in a closed-door meeting, Gross and von Fempe agreed that the employee must be let go. That’s when Gross said something von Fempe never expected to come out of a CEO’s mouth.

“He looked at me and said, ‘Are we making a merciful decision?’” von Fempe said. “It really pushed me back in the chair. I’d never heard that before. I’ve had very good employers [elsewhere] but this is the best organization I’ve worked for. And in some ways, it’s because of Marv’s style.”

Marvin Gross, pictured as Elvis from the 2013 “Rockin’ for the Homeless” fundraiser, has never been afraid to let his hair down for a good cause.

Marvin Gross, pictured as Elvis from the 2013 “Rockin’ for the Homeless” fundraiser, has never been afraid to let his hair down for a good cause.

Gross’ desire to serve the people goes beyond the staff, of course. In 20 years of helping the homeless, Gross can fire off detailed stories about individuals he’s known.

“My mind is flooded with their stories,” said Gross. “We’ve seen some people be extraordinarily successful and seen people begin to be successful and slip backwards. Some people never made it, but lots of people’s lives are better off today.”

While Gross won’t take the credit for that, his co-workers and dedicated volunteers don’t hesitate to identify the person driving Union Station forward.

“We all see him as a guy always looking to improve things,” said Nelson. “I don’t want to call him a dreamer, but maybe he is. He really cares about things he does, and his thing is helping people.”

Pasadena Community Foundation Granting Strength to Nonprofits (Outlook Newspapers)

Photo courtesy PCF Pasadena Community Foundation board members Les Stocker (third from right) and Rita Diaz (second from right) took in a tour of Union Station Homeless Services’ Centennial Place, which included representatives from the organization (from left) Erin Brand, Sandy Peterson, Mike Berry, Nina Palmore, Dana Bean and CEO Marv Gross.

In the midst of its grant application review period, representatives from the Pasadena Community Foundation were making one of 31 nonprofit organization site visits in March when the top administrator of an applying organization began gushing about one of Pasadena’s most active foundations.

“The foundation has been fabulous to us,” the founder and director of the applying organization told the committee. “We couldn’t have gone on without the foundation.”

In this case, the quote belonged to Mikala Rahn of Learning Works Charter School, an organization that applied for and received $25,000. But for the stakeholders of a foundation that has given away millions to support the charities that serve Pasadena, it’s a familiar refrain, one that they’ll very likely hear again on June 18 at the annual Local Heroes Celebration breakfast event, at which PCF will formally recognize its 2015 grantees.

“The breadth of what we do is very rewarding,” said PCF Executive Director Jennifer DeVoll. “We’re narrow geographically but broad in the types of organizations we fund. We meet people who have literally lost everything to the disease of addiction, and then sail over to the Pasadena Symphony or Pasadena Conservatory, which is equally important.”

In total, PCF awarded 35 grants from 52 applications for $530,802, ranging from $1,500 to $26,000 for a variety of services that sometimes go unnoticed or unrecognized by the organizations’ donors. Some of them included requests for radios, all-terrain vehicles, showers, windows, copiers and plumbing. DeVoll laughed when recalling having trouble calling the Los Angeles Children’s Chorus, which requested — and received — funding for a new phone system.

“We’ll do the unsexy thing to buy you a new phone system because that’s often hard money to get,” said DeVoll. “Donors want to fund programs or house a family, but replacing a truck is also important.”

Speaking of trucks, a story of transportation from a few years back sums up the need for a connecting and funding group like PCF. When Journey House applied for and received a grant for funds to buy a new truck, one of the representatives came to PCF’s offices to pick up the check. But on the way there, the soon-to-be-replaced truck died on a Pasadena street. In that case, the organization demonstrated a need right in front of PCF staff.

Of course, visiting 31 sites in less than a month can be stressful, and PCF’s team has to keep each organization and its needs straight. But seeing the programs in action can be rewarding, too. DeVoll said that while visiting the Walter Hoving Home, a faith-based rehabilitation center, they witnessed a young woman graduate from the program. At the conclusion of the graduation, the young woman’s boyfriend got down on one knee in front of PCF’s crew and proposed. The woman suddenly had a new lease on life and a new fiance, while PCF had another feel-good story for its cause.

“This really feeds your soul,” said DeVoll. “It’s the site visits and the interaction, because we’re out in the community all year long. The board members work all year long on other stuff such as fundraising and the audit, but there’s no question that the site visits keep them interested in PCF.”

Photo courtesy PCF Gathered for Pasadena Community Foundation’s site visit to San Gabriel Valley Habitat for Humanity are PCF board members Judy Gain, Priscilla Gamb, Ann Dobson Barrett and Fran Scoble, Executive Director Jennifer DeVoll, Habitat for Humanity’s Chair of the Fund Development Committee Otis Marston and Executive Director Sonja Yates, the city of Pasadena’s Loren Pluth and PCF Marketing and Development Manager Mike deHilster.

The visits, which last 45 minutes, focus on five key categories: strength of leadership, need of the organization, what the project entails, how geocentric the service to Pasadena is and the state of the organization’s finances.

Applications are submitted in February to PCF’s 17-member Board of Directors, who then begin what DeVoll called a “short but efficient process” that includes the site visits. Despite knowing the leadership and general state of the organizations, DeVoll and her team don’t skip site visits because grants are won or lost during an in-person visit.

“We’re so geographically focused that we feel it’s important to stay in close touch with the community,” said DeVoll. “We make sure we have up-to-date information and we know the leadership, so we’re meeting with the people and making sure we’re not carrying around dated perceptions.”

After 62 years of providing millions to local agencies, PCF has a reputation around town of being a generous granting agency that puts the community first. While the annual giving of more than $500,000 is impressive on its own, DeVoll said the goal is to reach $1 million in donations to applicants.

To do that, PCF will need more support — and eventually more site visits. But that’s fine for DeVoll, who has an early word of advice for 2016 applicants.

“I tell them, ‘Invite us over when stuff is going on because we don’t want to sit in a conference room and just talk to you,’” said DeVoll. “We want to see your program in all its glory.”

For more information on Pasadena Community Foundation, visit PasadenaCF.org or call (626) 796-2097.

California Community Foundation Awards Nearly $9 Million to Advance Greater Prosperity and Opportunity Across Los Angeles County

LOS ANGELES – June 11, 2015 – The California Community Foundation (CCF)
has awarded $8,897,722 through 94 grants to Los Angeles County nonprofit
organizations working to address the wide-ranging needs of our region. CCF
supports this critical work in the community through discretionary funds entrusted
to the foundation by donors throughout its 100-year history.

The grants this quarter support the foundation’s diverse priority areas: the arts, civic
engagement, education, health, housing and economic development, immigrant
integration, nonprofit sustainability, smart growth and transition-aged youth.
Grants were also awarded in support of key CCF initiatives:

• Building a Lifetime of Options and Opportunities for Men (BLOOM) is
California’s most ambitious effort to improve educational and career
opportunities for Black male youth.

• El Monte Community Building Initiative engages local residents in
ensuring children in the City of El Monte grow up healthier and better
prepared for college and a career.

• Los Angeles Preschool Advocacy Initiative (LAPAI) seeks to increase
access to high quality early childhood education in underserved
communities.

• Los Angeles Scholars Investment Fund (LASIF) combines scholarships
with college preparation and completion services to increase the number of
low-income students who graduate with post-secondary degrees.

• One Los Angeles, One Nation seeks to change misperceptions and
promote incorporation of the American Muslim and perceived Muslim
communities through civic engagement, leadership development and public
policy.

• Preparing Achievers for Tomorrow (PAT) provides music, sports and
recreational opportunities to low-income youth in South Los Angeles.

 

“We applaud our donors and nonprofit partners who have not only recognized the
needs in our community, but have shown leadership to address these issues,” said
CCF President and CEO Antonia Hernández. “As the foundation enters its 100th year
of service to Los Angeles County, we are proud to support this work to improve the
quality of life for all Angelenos.”

CCF unites the power of philanthropy with innovative strategies to create greater
equity, opportunity and prosperity in Los Angeles County. The foundation has served
as a public, charitable organization since 1915, empowering donors to pursue their
own personal passions and to collaborate in transforming Los Angeles. CCF
stewards $1.48 billion in assets and manages nearly 1,600 charitable foundations,
funds and legacies.

(View full list of California Community Foundation Grants by Funding Area HERE).

For more information, visit calfund.org, like us on Facebook at
facebook.com/calfund and follow us on Twitter @Calfund.

 

Student Sleepover at Waldorf School Raises Over $3,300 for Union Station Homeless Services

Student Sleepover at Waldorf School Raises Over $3,300 for Union Station Homeless Services

PASADENA, CA – On May 29, 2015, the entire 8th Grade class of Pasadena Waldorf School turned one of the school’s annual rite of passage events, the 8th Grade sleepover in the school’s historic Scripps Hall, into something even more meaningful this year. The students used this opportunity to help raise awareness and money for Union Station Homeless Services as part of their Camp Out to Stamp Out Homelessness campaign.

The sleepover was both a fundraiser for Union Station and an opportunity for the students to deepen their understanding of the challenges homelessness poses for individuals and families right here in our local community. Students heard a presentation from Mary Ann, who talked about how Union Station provided her the foundation, support, and resources to help rebuild her life.

“My life now is so different from 3 years ago,” Mary Ann tells the class.  “I didn’t want to work, I didn’t want to do anything, I just wanted to go away –now, it is a lot better thanks to Union Station.”

The 8th graders then played an online game called Spent, in which they had to make hypothetical life decisions including vocations, starting a family, and where they may reside. They got to experience firsthand how any number of live events (losing a job or a house, having children) can lead to a person or family becoming homeless.

The compassion of the class led to more than $3,300 raised from families, friends, and community members that will go directly to Union Station Homeless Services in support of the services they provide throughout the San Gabriel Valley. The Class of 2019 and Union Station have benefited from a partnership with the class volunteering and raising awareness for the social issue of homelessness for several years with their participation in the organization’s Adopt-a-Meal program.

For more information about Union Station Homeless Services, please visit www.unionstationhs.org.

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Union Station Homeless Services, a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization, is committed to helping homeless men, women and children rebuild their lives. Union Station Homeless Services is part of a premier group of human services agencies in Los Angeles County that are leading the way to ending homelessness in our community. We are the San Gabriel Valley’s largest social service agency assisting homeless and very low-income adults and families. We believe every person deserves a life of dignity and a safe place to call home. With 41 years of experience, we proudly offer a full continuum of eight programs in seven locations; services include street outreach, intake/assessment, care coordination and navigation, meals, shelter, housing, employment development, benefits enrollment, and referrals to medical and mental health services.