THINK Together names new executive director
Deepa Bharath
COSTA MESA -- For most of his working life, Stephan Erkelens has spent
his time monitoring profits and focusing on the bottom line.
But at some point in the recent past, his priorities changed. The man
who was working at a New York trading company until three years ago
decided to give it all up -- for the kids.
Today, he will be named the new executive director of THINK Together,
a Santa Ana-based nonprofit organization that oversees Shalimar and other
learning centers countywide and in Costa Mesa.
Erkelens, 40, fills the position formerly held by Pablo Diaz, THINK
Together’s first full-time professional director. Diaz left earlier this
year to accept a post as pastor of a Presbyterian church in New York.
In his capacity as executive director, Erkelens will be responsible
for the organization’s operations, volunteer development, fund-raising
and evaluation programs.
“I’m very excited,” he said. “Our goal is to go from serving 1,300
students a day to 10,000 students a day by the year 2005.”
Erkelens, who was born in Argentina and raised in Guatemala, also
founded and developed several businesses in Latin America and the United
States into multinational operations.
His ethnic background and his entrepreneurial skills will help a great
deal in expanding an improving THINK Together, said the organization’s
founder and vice chairman, Randy Barth.
“There are two sets of people we deal with,” said the Mission Viejo
resident. “We collect resources from the well-off people in the community
and provide services to the less fortunate people in the community.
Erkelens “has the unique ability to relate to the people we get our
resources from and the people we serve,” he said.
Erkelens said Costa Mesa, particularly the city’s Westside, is
desperately in need of after-school centers where kids can find the
academic support they cannot get at home.
“They need a good homework environment,” he said. “We need to give
less fortunate and at-risk children the opportunity to succeed
academically and in life.”
The organization now operates three centers in Costa Mesa.
“We hope to have between 10 and 12 centers in the next two years,”
Erkelens said.
He has been active in the local nonprofit community as a
philanthropist, as well as a participant in a number of youth-oriented
initiatives.
In Orange County, he has served on the board of Girls Inc., and as a
director for the United Way’s Success by Six initiative. He chairs the
United Way’s Success by Six -- Health and Healthy Families insurance fund
committee.
The motivation came from a heartfelt decision to give back to the
community, Erkelens said.
“I just felt it was my time to contribute,” he said. “There comes a
point in your life when what you earn is less significant than what you
leave behind.”
* Deepa Bharath covers public safety and courts. She can be reached at
(949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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