Kadlec outreach program assisting Othello community
GABRIEL DAVIS | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 1 year, 10 months AGO
Gabriel Davis is a resident of Othello who enjoys the connections with his sources. Davis is a graduate of Northwest Nazarene University where he studied English and creative writing. During his free time, he enjoys reading, TV, movies and games – anything with a good story, though he has a preference for science fiction and crime. He covers the communities on the south end of Grant County and in Adams County. | February 2, 2024 1:20 AM
OTHELLO — Kadlec Regional Medical Center, based in Richland, has entered the fifth month of providing a pilot outreach program to Othello community members in need, called “One Day at a Time.”
The program was created by Kadlec Community Health Worker Maria Perez, who runs a similar program in Tri-Cities called Homegrown Connect. Both programs focus on providing food, supplies, assistance and company to individuals in their respective communities.
Perez outlined the basics of the Tri-Cities program, and the Othello program’s influence.
“We were able to partner with libraries here in Pasco, and every month we do free breakfasts, we do free haircuts, free phones, insurance information if they need it,” she said. “We also try to bring in substance abuse treatment. If they want to be out of the streets, we help them out to get connected with housing.”
The Othello program serves a similar purpose, with a focus on impoverished areas of the city, Perez said.
“So it's pretty much more about building connection; interact with people, sit down, eat with them, share the meal and talk about their stories and their goals and what they really want and their struggles,” Perez said. “I've been running (the Tri-Cities) program for the last year and a half, and I was raised in Othello and I thought that I see the need in people over there too, and I see the increase of homeless, the increase of substance abuse.”
Perez elaborated on the Othello pilot.
“We do outreach every Saturday,” she said. “(Last) Saturday, we were able to give like 25 blankets, and clothes and food, and we were able to build trust with, I would say, 30 individuals … We're working with them, just bringing them hope and a warm meal, because I know that often it's a struggle.”
Perez said the program is primarily volunteer-operated and relies on donations of food and supplies, but that awareness of the program has not spread much in the community.
“I think it's because we still haven't broken the stigma of speaking out about what the situation is, but we're hoping to get there,” Perez said. “I am getting partnerships with a couple of locations here (in Tri-Cities) and I am bringing a little bit of what I have here over there (in Othello).”
Perez said the outreach team is a mix of Othello and Pasco volunteers.
“I get people from here, from Pasco, that are like, ‘Hey, I want to go with you, can I come?’ Yes, come, come and serve, because we need that help,” she said. “And in Othello, I have close to 14 volunteers.”
The team doesn’t focus only on poor neighborhoods but also walks through the city’s parks and visits the Othello Public Library.
“We also bring food baggies from St. Vincent de Paul (Food Bank) to the Othello Library, because I noticed that when I was little, I used to go to the Othello library and I used to wait a long time because I had to wait for my dad to get home. So I noticed that a lot of kids, they go to the libraries and they're starving, and just bringing little snacks to the library, it's a way to interact and build trust and break the stigma of poverty.”
The program depends on community support to keep operating.
“I was able to partner with Restoration Market. It's a market that we have here in Tri-Cities, and they opened a 24-hour shelter,” Perez said. “They provide us items like bread, oranges, apples, stuff like that … Last week, I had a client that needed diapers. Somebody from the community gave me $100 and another woman gave me $50, and with that money, I will go and buy whatever they need.”
Perez said she has struggled with finding more partners and agencies to assist with the program in Othello, but she hopes it will expand in the future and more people will join in.
“It takes time,” she said. “It takes more than one person to help out.”
Gabriel Davis may be reached at [email protected]. Download the Columbia Basin Herald app on iOS and Android.
ARTICLES BY GABRIEL DAVIS
Work-based learning lets students build their own futures
MOSES LAKE — Work-based learning provides education opportunities for the workforce to receive hands-on training and technical education and prepare themselves to enter various industries. Educators and workforce development professionals from Eastern Washington discussed some the training they offer and the benefits of their programs. Next Generation Zone, an affiliate of WorkSource based in Spokane, provides job training opportunities for youth and young adults ages 16 to 24. Program Coordinator Kate Martin said there are multiple benefits to the program. “One of them is a paid work experience, and that’s where we reach out to area employers who are willing to take a young person and train them,” she said. “This is a short-term learning experience, so it’s typically about 240 hours; sometimes it could be longer or shorter. We’re the actual employer; we cover all of their wages, taxes, the L&I, and the employer just agrees to give them the experience and train them in whatever field it is that they’re wanting to go into.”
Serving schools: ESD superintendents reflect on operations, priorities
MOSES LAKE — Educational service districts are government-mandated agencies put in place to provide services to school districts across the state. ESD Superintendents discussed what they do and their priorities in operating their districts. ESD 105, led by Superintendent Kevin Chase, serves four counties, including Kittitas, Yakima and portions of Klickitat and Grant counties and provides support for 25 school districts – including Royal School District and Wahluke School District – and more than 66,000 students. “We help them collaborate with each other as well or collaborate with other partners,” Chase said. “(It’s) a lot of advocacy work, either regionally or across the state, or even federally, working on different issues that impact our education. And we provide very specialized services in certain situations in order to meet the needs of our students in our region and of our school districts.”
Columbia Basin Project making headway through Odessa Groundwater program
CASHMERE — The Columbia Basin Project is making gradual progress toward completion with particularly significant accomplishments for the Odessa Groundwater Replacement Program in the last six months or so, according to Columbia Basin Development League Executive Director Sara Higgins. “When we’re dealing with a project of this size, advancement is kind of like watching paint dry, but yes, there have been (developments),” she said. “There are a lot of exciting things happening right now.” There are more than 300 miles of main canals, about 2,000 miles of lateral canals and 3,500 miles of drains and wasteways in the irrigation project, according to the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation website. The CBDL advocates for the operation of those waterways and for the project to continue “build-out.”


