Family Resource Center open house well attended
By Colleen Slater, KP News
The Family Resource Center in Vaughn hosted an open
house in February with more than 50 in attendance.
The FRC is an agency of the Children’s Home Society,
which serves clients in Pierce County on this side
of the bridge. The FRC client base has grown with
the change in economy, and Morris says they’ve had
to change their focus to some extent. The 2005
client base was 800. Last year they served nearly
1600 people. There are more people who have lost
jobs and run out of resources. Many of these
consider the FRC help a kind of loan, and when they
are back on their feet, want to repay.

Pam Meeker and Diana Comfort, of the Gig
Harbor YMCA, Doey Humphry, a teenager
visiting her grandmother Vicki Biggs, who is
with Childrens’ Home Society, one of the
event’s sponsors, Tami Miller of the Family Resource Center, Marlies Van Cise, Bruce
Macdonald, Betty Power and Drake Porter were
part of the well attended Open House
showing off the newly renovated quarters of
the organization Feb. 18.
Photo by Hugh McMillan
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“The word crisis,” says program Manager Jud Morris,
“comes from the Greek word krisis, and it means
opportunity.”
When there is a crisis, there is the opportunity to
look at things differently and to make different
choices. Community networking among organizations
and agencies allows them to see opportunities and
make things happen to care for those in need.
“When I help people pay bills, it’s helping local
businesses,” Morris says, and that in turn helps the
local community. These FRC clients are consumers,
and most are customers of businesses near where they
live.
“We need to see how we can help each other,” he
says.
The FRC in Vaughn has an advantage to be a tenant in
the KP Civic Center.
“It’s an old building,” says Morris, “but we have
minimal facility costs, so we can maximize our
services.”
The FRC opened in Vaughn in 1995, with about 1,000
square feet of space. Various remodels, some
recently completed, expanded their space to 1,500
square feet.
The facility occupies the basement rooms of the Key
Peninsula Civic Center that was previously the
Vaughn Union High School.
Former female students at the school might recognize
the main storage space as the girls’ locker, shower,
and bathrooms, but the boys’ area is totally
transformed.
Windows and light colored walls of the staff room
belie the former locker space. Morris’ office is a
step up because the former shower floor drain still
exists below the floor. The modern bathroom is a
real change from the former facility.
The “interview room” next to the reception area now
has an art display on a periwinkle wall, courtesy of
local artist, Kathy Bauer.
“We’re now the Art Gallery of the Key Peninsula,”
says Morris, adding that selected art has calming
effects on the people who come in.
A former hallway, first used as a client interview
space, is now a mini-lounge for a staff member or
two.
The Group Room, a comfortable area for staff or
client meetings, was constructed last year next to
the current shop area of the building.
Major funding for the remodeling came from the
Pierce County Council, with Terry Lee and KPCC board
president Phil Bauer working together on the
project.
CenturyTel donated the cost of materials and
equipment for an updated telephone and messaging
system with a grant to KPCC, with the understanding
it would be used for the FRC remodel.
The FRC provides many programs to assist children
and families in the area.
Parenting classes, home visits, pre-school Indoor
Park, Little Buddies and Amigos mentoring, and
summer fun for several weeks at different locations
on the Key, are only a sampling.
“It might be our open house, but it's really
honoring our staff and the families that we provide
services for," said Morris. "It's all about the
community," said Morris after the open house.