Keeping them afloat
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Christine Carrillo
NEWPORT-MESA -- The shipshape 24-foot tugboat Superior will soon pull
away from its benefactor to teach students the ways of the ocean.
The first hand-built boat in Newport Beach since World War II will be
donated to the El Viento Foundation and the School of Sailing and
Seamanship at Orange Coast College in a private reception tonight.
Starting the project a few years ago with his now deceased wife, Mike
Craig said he was compelled to continue his work not only as a memorial
to her but also in the hopes of providing young people with opportunities
to venture outside their communities.
“To see the growth of the children and how they have a broader view,”
Craig said. “They have more confidence, and they’re much better rounded.”
Witnessing such growth has been a great reward, not only for Craig but
also for many others involved in the foundation.
“We wanted to make a difference, and we didn’t want to do it writing
checks,” said Jack Shaw, the co-founder and chairman of El Viento.
With a mission geared toward providing children and young adults with
opportunities for success, Shaw and his wife, Ellen Shockro, who is the
organization’s co-founder and executive director, decided to use sailing
and swimming -- as well as their commitment -- to education to reach
their goal.
“I’m a sailor, and I thought that by adopting a program I’m interested
in I would stick with it,” Shaw said. “And I was right.”And many others
stuck it out with him.
Zayda Garcia, director of El Viento, has been an integral part of the
foundation for two years and has witnessed the effect it has had on the
children involved.
With the generous donations and devotion of people such as Craig,
Garcia said the children, 20% of whom are immigrants, will receive the
same opportunities as students of much greater means.
“It’s important to know that someone cares,” she said. “We’re giving
an opportunity, and it’s their choice to do what they want with it.”
Most of the students who were in the first class that went through the
foundation five years ago have developed a mentality that college is
their next step.
“If you’re supported by people that care and want you to succeed, then
you will,” Garcia said.
The foundation, which hopes to aid students in becoming successful, is
now focusing on making the foundation itself a lasting success.
As a member of the foundation’s board of directors, Craig holds high
hopes for its future accomplishments.
“We’re trying to make it so the foundation will be financially stable,
so it will be a self-perpetuating foundation,” Craig said.
In its attempt to do so, the foundation has placed its endowment into
the Orange County Community Foundation, which now serves as the umbrella
of El Viento, said its president, Shelley Hoss.
The key to the boat will be handed over to Shaw during a private
reception honoring Craig tonight.
“This event is going to be a celebration of Mike, whose involvement
has been instrumental,” Garcia said. “Without him, I think El Viento
would be very different.”
Craig holds a more humble view.
The best reward is “knowing that the boat has found a home and that
it’s found a purpose and that it’s going to help the kids,” he said.
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