Nonprofit Workforce Crisis – Family Service of Rhode Island https://www.familyserviceri.org Wed, 28 Dec 2022 20:08:53 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://www.familyserviceri.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/ae612d_7ecd948a7a264d99a3b9e72de0219a90_mv2.png Nonprofit Workforce Crisis – Family Service of Rhode Island https://www.familyserviceri.org 32 32 5 things I’m grateful for this year https://www.familyserviceri.org/5-things-im-grateful-for-this-year/ Wed, 28 Dec 2022 20:06:32 +0000 https://www.familyserviceri.org/?p=7495 A special message from our CEO, Margaret Holland McDuff
MHM Headshot Website

To my dear FSRI supporters and friends,

This year has brought us new joys, adventures, and yes, new challenges.  With the backing of supporters like you, FSRI has risen to meet the unique and ever-changing needs of our communities – mental health supports for students and schools, safe and loving homes for kids in foster care, care for infants and toddlers to grow healthy and strong – and so much more.

Here are 5 things I’m grateful for this year:

  • We helped over 23,000 family members to achieve healing and stability.
  • Over 2,300 children were served through our early childhood programs.
  • Rhode Island Government Leaders supported significant investments in the housing and human service sectors.
  • We were thrilled to promote internal talent into leadership positions, including three to Vice Presidential roles for Hope, Home, and Equity & Community Development.
  • We were excited to return to in-person events including the APRI Run/Walk and our biggest Brighter Futures Luncheon to date.

None of this would have been possible without the support of our dedicated Board Members. We welcomed seven new board members in 2022, and we are honored to have such a diverse and accomplished group of individuals who are willing to invest their time and efforts into ensuring the success of our many programs and projects here at FSRI.

I feel so grateful, as we move into 2023, for your care and support, which makes everything that we do possible. Thank you for your kindness and your meaningful contribution to FSRI and to our communities.

As we move quickly toward the end of the year, I’m planning on investing in solving the children’s mental health crisis in Rhode Island and I hope that you will join me.

I wish you great joy and good health in 2023 and all of the years ahead.

Happy Holidays,
Margaret Holland McDuff
CEO
Family Service of Rhode Island
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Thank you to our Rhode Island Leaders! https://www.familyserviceri.org/thank-you-to-our-rhode-island-leaders/ Fri, 15 Jul 2022 15:02:54 +0000 https://www.familyserviceri.org/?p=7301 On June 27, 2022, Governor McKee signed a historic state budget, approving significant investment into the state’s health and human service sector, particularly for Rhode Island’s most vulnerable children and families.

We are deeply grateful to Governor McKee, Speaker Shekarchi, Senate President Ruggiero, and House and Senate Leadership for their collective hard work to ensure rate increases and investments for Early Childhood and DCYF-funded programming, as well as to create a system to regularly review the array and rates of human service programming in our state, which will ensure access to services for those who need them and adequate funding for organizations who provide them, like FSRI. These actions can save vital services for future generations of vulnerable Rhode Island children and families.

 

Thank you for making a brighter future for our state’s children! 

Signed With Gratitude, Margaret Holland McDuff and Board President John Simmons

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First Connections: Allie’s Story https://www.familyserviceri.org/first-connections-allies-story/ Mon, 24 Jan 2022 15:52:57 +0000 https://familyserviceri.org/?p=6607 Imagine gaining a few pounds and suddenly suspecting you might be pregnant. Then just two weeks later you’re giving birth to a baby– all before you even had your first sonogram.

That’s exactly what happened to Allie and her partner Kyle a few years ago. The stress of realizing she was pregnant despite her IUD was enough to kick her into early labor. And with just a matter of days to process the idea of becoming parents and prepare their home, she gave birth to Willow at Women and Infants Hospital at just 8 months along.

“When I had my daughter, it was actually very unexpected because all I’d noticed was weight gain. But Portuguese families are very good when you’re in a crisis,” she joked. “They made a room for the baby in three days so she could come home.”

Luckily before coming home, a hospital social worker had recommended they contact the First Connections program for additional support.

“We needed help,” she said. “We needed someone to tell us how to be parents.”

Though FSRI’s First Connections program is referred to about 5,000 moms like Allie after birth each year whose babies face one of a list of 13 at-risk categories– some as simple as being a first-time mom. Not all mothers follow through on the offer or make an appointment to receive free support services that First Connections provides. But when Allie heard about it, she was immediately willing to accept any and all help she could get during the huge life shift she was going through.

“Motherhood hit me hard,” she said. “I didn’t want to fail. This program is good at letting you know that no one is ready for parenthood—everyone learns as they go. No parent is perfect and you can always ask for help.”

The confidence and trust she built having First Connections nurses visit her and Willow at home helped to ease her into this new, unexpected role, and all the new worries it came with.

“They come to your home, they’re very respectful about contact. They bring a scale to weigh the baby,” she said. “If you’re a breastfeeding mom like I was, Deb was very informative with tips and tricks to help. She and Swannie had lots of resources and walked me through it on the computer. I was also able to sign up for WIC effortlessly with their help.”

Because of the support she received from First Connections over the course of the next year, Allie and her family are now thriving.

“I still stay in touch with [First Connections] staff to this day,” she said.

As for Willow, she just turned 2 and she’d doing great.

“She’s so smart and now her obsession is with animals, especially giraffes,” she said. “She’s getting really into verbal communicating.”

Moms and babies like Allie and Willow are able to receive this level of newborn support through First Connections at no cost to them, but the state reimburses First Connections staff at just $14 per hour, well below the current average hourly wage of $20. The reimbursement rate hasn’t been raised in 22 years. (Read more about the nonprofit workforce crisis in the Boston Globe here.)

Since the pandemic, staff are facing crushing caseloads of 300+ per person and working up to 60 hours a week, even going into homes at the height of the pandemic in full PPE to weigh babies.

“People need [First Connections] now more than ever,” Allie said. “Aside from that, every mother has a unique situation and not everyone has a family to be there for you when you go through this. These people and this [First Connections] program became like my family. I love them and send them updates about the baby all the time.”

Please join us in asking the Rhode Island legislature to raise the reimbursement rate for these vital support staff serving moms and babies when they need it most so that our social service providers don’t have to leave this important caregiving role to make a living.

A Change.org petition has been set up to deliver a message to the legislature on behalf of all nonprofit human service providers.

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