Shalimar to add site at soup kitchen
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Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- An unexpected donation of hundreds of books arrived at
Shalimar Learning Center last week as its board of directors decided to
add a satellite facility at Someone Cares Soup Kitchen.
If the plan is approved by the soup kitchen and the board of Think
Together, which oversees Shalimar and five other learning centers, the
new facility could open in January, said Jewel Loff, Think Together’s
director of development.
Shalimar provides tutoring and academic help for Westside students in
first through 12th grades.
“The need exists,” Loff said. “One thing there is no shortage of in
the program is children at risk.
“We’re just touching the tip of the iceberg because so many kids need
help and the only thing that is going to get them out of this cycle and
this neighborhood is education. We know we want to do it, but we want to
be sure we have funding.”
Loff said working together will make each organization’s efforts more
effective since both serve the same demographic: the working poor.
“While our primary focus is the children, this collaboration will
allow us to be more holistic,” she said.
“You can’t address the needs of the children without addressing the
needs of the parents. And the children have to eat before they can
concentrate on learning.”
Merle Hatleberg, founder and director of the soup kitchen, which
serves about 300 people daily, said she expects the collaboration to
begin soon.
“It looks like its on,” she said, “but there’s a lot of fine-tuning to
be done.”
George Neureuther, the soup kitchen’s development director, said he is
excited about the possibility of working with Shalimar.
“It would give the community and children in Costa Mesa the chance to
improve the level of education while getting meals,” he said. “Education
for children is very important and help is really needed here.”
Laura Johnson, Shalimar’s executive director, said a swell of
community support in the form of increased volunteers and donations has
given the center momentum to look toward expansion and the confidence
that it will be able to find enough help to support a satellite facility.
She said she attributes the new support to publicity surrounding the
low point in the center’s six-year history, when it closed briefly in
September in response to a protest over the firing of longtime staff
member Maria Alvarez.
The donation of about 200 books, which arrived Thursday, is one
example of the dramatically increased support, Johnson said.
The books are the first installment of a donation by two Fashion
Island organizations -- Club Literacy, a reading club, and For Your
Imagination, a learning center.
The organizations will continue to collect books for Shalimar until
Wednesday and will drop off the second installment by Friday, said Tracey
Pringle, a Club Literacy spokeswoman.
“All of our kids are very low readers, so we’re been trying to
motivate them to get into reading,” said Ruth Estrada, Shalimar’s
elementary center director.
“The first priority is to help them with their homework, but improving
their skills is also a priority. Book donations really help because a lot
of these children don’t have books at home.”
Jenny Zetina, a 6-year-old student who spent time reading at Shalimar
last week, said she found a new favorite book.
“I don’t really like to read,” she said, holding a copy of the “Magic
School Bus Inside a Beehive” by Janna Cole and Bruce Degen. “I don’t have
books at home. But this one is my favorite. I’m reading it for the first
time.”
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