|
Mustard Seed Project grows under Franciscan umbrella
By Chris Fitzgerald
KP News
The Mustard Seed Project, a Key
Peninsula grass-roots project spearheaded by Edie
Morgan, received an $83,340 grant from Catholic Health
Initiatives and the Franciscan Health System.
(Franciscan, builder of St. Anthony Hospital in Gig
Harbor, is affiliated with Catholic Health Initiatives.)
The goal of the project is to create an “elder-friendly”
community by offering services and programs in their
community to allow Key Peninsula residents to age in
place.

Spending a sunny morning at the Key Center
library discussing
senior health and wellness issues for the
Mustard Seed Project
are, from left to right/front row: Dale
Sandretzky, Charlotte
Winchester, Edie Morgan, Marguerite Bussard,
and left to
right/back row: Virginia Thompson, Jody
Gauthier, Mary Krumbein,
Rae Braun, Joyce Niemann, Kitty Custer.
Photo by Chris Fitzgerald |
“The Mustard Seed Project has the
qualities that CHI seeks when awarding mission and
ministry fund grants: It meets an identified community
need, is innovative, is able to be replicated, and
promotes collaboration with other organizations in the
community,” Gale Robinette, Franciscan spokesman, wrote
in a press release. “Supporting the Mustard Seed Project
and other community-based programs helps to advance the
CHI and Franciscan mission of service and healing.”
When Morgan began investigating
available services for Key Peninsula senior residents in
2006, she didn’t have a name for her passion yet. Many
months later, she refers to her efforts as “aging in
place.” Focused on four topics of particular interest
and need for this population — information and referral,
transportation and mobility, elder health and wellness
services, and housing options — Morgan was using
personal resources to bankroll the project.
She developed an area network,
amassing documents, forms, and correspondence. Every
contact led to something else that needed yet more
paper, more stamps, more gas to get places that held
promise to further her quest of assisting seniors in
their efforts to “stay put” in their elder years.
Financial resources were worrisome; she needed some
economic base that would allow her to continue this
important work without having to water it down by
splitting her time in half (part-time program research
and part-time work to support the effort).
Through the help of an expert on
nonprofit education and development, Morgan developed a
list of potential funding resources. The Franciscan
Foundation was the first one she called, she remembers.
“I felt so foolish, so pushed beyond my comfort level,”
she said. Determined, she continued down the list, sure
she was out of her league, certain no one would be
interested. Several weeks later, she was surprised when
the phone rang.
Robert Krotz was at that time the
president of the Franciscan Foundation. He told Morgan
her idea fit with the foundation’s mission, and that
they were interested.
“The Franciscan Foundation is happy
to assist Edie Morgan in her efforts to bring the
Mustard Seed Project to fruition because improving
health care access for Key Peninsula residents is one of
her key objectives in making the Peninsula an
elder-friendly community,” Krotz, who is currently the
director of the St. Anthony Hospital campaign, wrote in
an email to KP News. “Improving health care access for
residents of Key Peninsula, Gig Harbor and South Kitsap
County is the primary reason we (Franciscan Health
System) are building St. Anthony Hospital… Even though
St. Anthony isn’t scheduled to open for another 18
months, we’re viewing our support of the Mustard Seed
Project as St. Anthony’s first community-outreach
project.”
In March, a $10,000 grant from the
Franciscan Foundation enabled Morgan to keep the project
alive. The foundation also extended its nonprofit status
to Morgan’s organization (The Mustard Seed Project is
now a registered charity with the state of Washington.)
This enables her to act “as if” she were a nonprofit,
under the foundation’s guidance. It’s a large umbrella
that gives her the ability to work on something
important for every resident who plans to grow old and
remain at home on the Key Peninsula.
The Franciscan Foundation grant
writer, the fund-development staff and its nonprofit
accounting department partner with Morgan to help her
project succeed. They have several grant applications
out, and until recently, were waiting to hear about, as
Edie says, “the big one.” On June 22, the waiting was
over.
“Supporting groups like the Mustard
Seed Project is all about our mission to create
healthier communities,” Robinette said in an interview
following the announcement.
With this new windfall in place,
Morgan is moving forward with her goals to make the KP
as senior-friendly as possible. “We are very grateful to
the Franciscan Foundation and Catholic Health
Initiatives for their incredible support,” she said.
“This grant will make a huge difference in our ability
to move forward with the work of building an
elder-friendly KP. This is the best possible news.”
Morgan and a core group of citizens
meet regularly at the library. She says they have a full
set of goals to reach in 2007, and with this new
funding, can begin projects they proposed for the
two-year grant in their application. Training is ongoing
for volunteers to staff a senior information and
referral service at a Key Center site. The organization
is looking for more members to spend time focusing on
housing, wellness, and transportation issues that will
one day affect everyone choosing to remain in this rural
community through their senior years. Morgan invites
everyone interested in achieving an elder-friendly KP to
join in this evolving process and be part of the Mustard
Seed’s success.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
|
|