Sunflower Fellow advocates for patients with MS
After spending the past 17 years of her career as an advocate for people living with serious health issues, Amy Goldstein recently was selected as a Sunflower Foundation Advocacy Fellow. She is one of 15 health care professionals chosen from across the state of Kansas to participate in the 2012 Fellowship program.
Goldstein is the senior director of programs, services and advocacy for the Mid America Chapter of the National MS Society. It serves 253 counties in Kansas, Western Missouri, Nebraska and Pottawattamie County in Iowa. The Mid America Chapter offers programs and services to more 11,000 individuals living with MS and annually raises more than $3.5 million to create a world free of MS.
Goldstein understands the importance of advocacy initiatives and working for people in need.
“I think advocacy is so important,” she said, “in order to allow people to realize their own potential.”
She sees the fellowship as an opportunity to improve her leadership skills in advocacy work. The foundation wants the same result.
“The Sunflower Foundation: Health Care for Kansans, based in Topeka, was created in August 2000 as part of the $75 million settlement between Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas, the state attorney general and state insurance commissioner,” as stated on its website, www.SunflowerFoundation.org.
As part of the foundation’s commitment to improve the health of all Kansans, the fellowship program was started to help “leaders in health-related nonprofit organizations develop the understanding, experience and expertise they need to become powerful voices for the Kansans they serve,” according to the website.
“We look for people who have clear professionalism in their field and a depth of knowledge,” said Doug Farmer, the foundation’s vice president for policy. “We want diversity in each class by geography, gender, ethnicity, issues and topic.”
Goldstein fits this profile perfectly.
“I want to improve the lives of people with MS,” she said. “I want to provide an opportunity for them to have a voice, and teach them to be self advocates, as well as advocate for them.”
She believes being a Sunflower Foundation Fellow will help her to meet this goal.
With a master’s degree in social work from the University of Kansas, Goldstein has advocated for people living with a variety of health issues. Although she began her career as a clinical social worker, she soon moved into working in both administration and community outreach. It was during her eight years at the American Cancer Society that she helped open and became the first director of the Kansas City Hope Lodge, which provides free lodging for people undergoing cancer treatments.
“Amy exhibits passion about her issue, MS; and her background in issue advocacy is strong,” Farmer added. “We were excited about how excited she was about both her field and about learning more.”
Goldstein was nominated to be one of this year’s fellows by someone who participated in last year’s fellowship program. Farmer said that fellows either can be nominated by others or self nominated.
As a fellow, Goldstein must attend six, three-day education sessions, during a 12 month period. During these seminars, they attend lectures given by experts from around the country, as well as role play. For example, Goldstein said, at the first session in October they had media training where they heard lectures and then practiced talking in front of cameras.
One session is held in Washington, D.C., where the fellows have the opportunity to put their advocacy training to work. “We facilitate a relationship between fellows and members of congress,” Farmer said. “We want them to know how to bring up an issue, who to talk to and what to ask.”
Farmer said that the Sunflower Foundation also hopes to foster relationships among the growing number of fellows. “We try to help them work together,” he said. “We plan to institute a series of meetings around the state to get fellows together to talk about important current health issues, and how the foundation can facilitate better health for all Kansans.”
Besides her full-time job and her new commitment as a Sunflower Fellow, Goldstein is also the married mother of two. She and her husband, Barry Dicker, are members of Kehilath Israel Synagogue, where they married eight years ago. As a lifelong member of K.I., she currently serves as a vice president of its board of directors. Their older son, Gabe, is in kindergarten at the Hyman Brand Hebrew Academy, while their younger son, Jacob, attends the Jewish Community Center’s CDC.
This full-time advocate and mother is doing what she loves best.
“I think I always have been an advocate,” she said. “It is fun to do this for work and personally.”
JEWS AT THE SUPER BOWL — I don’t know for sure if any of the New York Giants or the New England Patriots are Jewish, but I do know one Jewish Kansas Citian will be a starter in Super Bowl XLVI. Avi Sonnenschein, who is in his first year of studies at Indiana University, will be playing alto saxophone with the IU marching band, “The Marching Hundred” to open Super Bowl XLVI. The band was selected from among several Indiana colleges and universities for this opportunity. Avi will be just left of the 45 yard line in the opening musical set, “Rock in the USA.” Following his graduation from Blue Valley North High School in 2010, Avi spent a gap year in Israel. He is the son of Sheila and Ken Sonnenschein and a former Chronicle Salute to Youth honoree.
JEWS PERFORMING WITH THE SYMPHONY — Several Jewish musicians will come to Kansas City to perform with Kansas City Symphony over the next year. The first is pianist Yefim Bronfman, the son of Holocaust survivors who was born in Tashkent in the former Soviet Union and immigrated to Israel when he was 14. He will be here Friday and Saturday, March 30 and 31, and Sunday, April 1. At that time the Symphony, under the direction of Michael Stern, will present the second of its world premieres this season with Daniel Kellogg’s new work celebrating our City of Fountains, and Mozart’s glorious final symphony. Bronfman returns for a work that has won him great acclaim, Bartók’s Piano Concerto No. 2. Critics have described Bronfman’s playing as “exquisite” and described “a finely spun whir of notes that verged on the unbelievable” (Los Angeles Times). Sponsors include the Sosland Foundation. For ticket information call 816-471-0400 or visit www.kcsymphony.org.
Google Todd Stettner and you won’t find much. Yes, you can find statements attributed to him as executive vice president and CEO of the Jewish Federation of Greater Kansas City. But you won’t find stories written about him. That’s because he does his job well, leading the way for others to take credit for his successes.
A native of The Bronx, N.Y., Stettner, who now has more than 33 years of experience in the social service field under his belt, didn’t always know he was going to spend a lifetime in the field of Jewish communal service. But he’s always liked being involved in organizations in high school and college. He served as president of his high school chapter of the National Conference of Christians and Jews and among other things was on the Intra Fraternity Council while he was an undergrad at Marrietta College in Marietta, Ohio. College was where he first really discovered his Jewishness.
A pioneer is a person who is among the first to settle a region. The members of Zemach family are pioneers who live in Moshav Kadesh Barnea, a small village in Israel’s Negev Desert. They moved there 10 years ago from Rehovot.
On the first leg of their trip in Europe, Oksana, who was born in Belarus and moved to Israel more than 20 years ago, said they met mostly non-Jewish people.
For Emily Adler, the essential part of her involvement with United Synagogue Youth is giving others a place to belong.
PRESIDENT RABBI — Rabbi Debbie Stiel of Temple Beth Sholom in Topeka has spent the past two years serving as president of the Midwest Association of Reform Rabbis. MWARR’s membership is a little more than 100, and its president’s main responsibility is planning the Annual Kallah. The Annual Kallah is early next week and Rabbi Stiel will conclude her term at that time. MWARR’s president also speaks for the rabbis in the region with the Central Conference of American Rabbis when the need arises. The meeting is in Phoenix, which is not a part of the region but, as Rabbi Stiel says, is a great place to go this time of year for Midwestern rabbis. “This conference is a wonderful way for us as rabbis to let our hair down and enjoy some time together and study. It’s been great for me to go to for years and this was my opportunity to give back by putting it together.
When most people hit “retirement age,” they retire. Eileen Garry didn’t take that route. Instead she began working for what was then known as the Museum Without Walls. Almost exactly 20 years later, Garry quietly retired as executive director of The Kansas City Jewish Museum of Contemporary Art late last year.
Garry’s involvement with the Museum Without Walls came at the invitation of Sybil Kahn in 1992. Kahn and her late husband, Norman, founded the organization.
Over the past couple of years, Jewish Federation officials discovered a troubling statistic: 50 percent of Jewish Federation donors don’t know what the organization does. If they did understand its mission, they often could not explain it succinctly. So a new marketing strategy that will tell the Jewish Federation’s story better will debut on Super Sunday, Jan. 29.
When Immediate Past President Bill Carr first assumed the presidency in the fall of 2009, one of his key objectives was to more effectively communicate the importance of the Jewish Federation. He chose Ira Stolzer to lead the way because he had a strong friendship with him and was confident it was good job for him.
One way to describe the Jewish Federation of Greater Kansas City’s Shorashim I mission to Israel last October is by what it was not.
The day after arrival, the group rode in jeeps and ATVs to Tel Gezer, following in the footsteps of the fighters in their breakthrough to Jerusalem in 1948. Back in Jerusalem that evening, Major General Mickey Levy took participants on a tour of the ramparts of the Old City and for a visit to Israel Police Force headquarters.
Ever wonder what it would be like to visit Europe, China, England, Quebec, Israel, South America, South Africa? Natalie Jane Toubes can tell you because she’s been to all these places and more. And you can find out what she has to say in her book “Don’t Hug the Tour Guide!”