Date: Fri 05-Dec-1997
Date: Fri 05-Dec-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Quick Words:
Counseling-Center-Festival
Full Text:
VOLUNTEERISM BENEFITS HOLIDAY FESTIVAL & FAMILY COUNSELING CENTER
BY SHANNON HICKS
When the 12th Annual Newtown Holiday Festival takes place this Sunday, the
holiday season will have been officially welcomed in Newtown. The festival
will be the capper of a weekend of holiday-themed events which will have
started Friday evening with the traditional lighting of the town's official
Christmas tree at Ram Pasture.
The holiday festival is a celebration of not only the holidays, but also, more
quietly, the spirit of volunteerism in Newtown. The day of events also raises
money for the Family Counseling Center, a family counseling agency that serves
the greater Danbury and Southbury areas.
The Holiday Festival is a fully volunteer-run event. Volunteers give their
time to serve on organizing committees long before the event takes place.
Additionally, none of the people who work during the festival, from the
vendors at the antiques show and sale and the crafts show and sale to the
strolling singers and the house tour guides, receive any reimbursement for
their efforts.
Volunteers also donate items for the festival. Ashlar of Newtown has promised
to provide 35 dozen fresh-baked scones for this year's Victorian Tea, held in
the Alexandria Room of Edmond Town Hall. The New England Cafe, at Newtown
Middle School, will be supported by My Place Restaurant, Anne's Red Brick
Coffee House and Elizabeth's Tea Room.
Newtown Pool has also taken part in this year's festival. The business, which
has turned its Main Street South store into a holiday-themed shopping area in
the past, is this year offering its immense collection of decorations to the
festival committee for townwide usage this weekend.
The house tour also provides a few more outlets for benevolence. Four
privately-owned homes have been opened to the public for tours this year,
which means the owners of the homes are allowing the prospect of 1,500
visitors to their homes in one afternoon. The homeowners are not paid for
their generosity, yet their homes provide what has become one of the biggest
draws to the festival annually.
Furthermore, each of the four homes will be decorated by local nurseries and
floral designers. J.W. Floral & Antiques, Lexington Gardens, Newtown Florist
and Steck's are all offering their time and expertise this year to make each
of the homes on the tour more festive.
A Busy Year
It has been a busy year for the Family Counseling Center, the beneficiary of
funds raised through Newtown's Holiday Festival. The Holiday Festival raises
money primarily through the tickets sold which provide entry to its separate
events, including the two show/sales and the walking tour of homes.
Established in 1983 as the Family Life Center, the United Way-supported agency
started the year by receiving accreditation from the Council on Accreditation
of Services for Families and Children. The distinction was critical because
such accreditation is required by third party payers, usual insurance
companies.
The organization then changed its name in past June to the Family Counseling
Center. Earlier this fall, the business also relocated into spacious new
offices at 123 Mt. Pleasant Road.
The Center may have changed its name and location, but its mission remains the
same: to encourage and enrich families, couples, children and individuals of
all ages living and/or working in the greater Danbury and Southbury areas. Its
mission also continues to be to provide services to the people who need them,
regardless of their ability to pay.
The Family Counseling Center is an outpatient psychiatric clinic. Counseling
services include individual, couple, family, children's play therapy, group
therapy, support groups, 24-hour crisis intervention, and psychiatric
assessment. On a limited basis, the Center's staff can also provide
educations, and prevention and awareness programs.
In a 1996 interview with The Newtown Bee , interim clinical director Vickie
Santore explained why the center's mission and operation remains so important.
"You don't necessarily need a mental illness disease to need counselling," she
said. "Loss of family, loss of job, loss of anything can precipitate
depression, or the need to adjust to change. It's something you just can't
predict.
"And if Family [Counseling] Center wasn't there, then the alternatives are
traveling to Danbury or Waterbury, or paying higher prices."
The agency has an annual operating budget of about $325,000. Its revenue
includes $45,000 from United Way; $15,000 from the Town of Newtown;
approximately $25,000 from contributions (such as Trinity Church's outreach
program); and nearly $200,000 reimbursement for counseling services.
Special fundraising events also benefit the center. In 1996, the center
received nearly $35,000 from such events; last year's Holiday Festival
represented $29,000 of that figure.
