- For Immediate Release -
December 11, 20008 |
For more information, contact:
Ashley Harness, 212-584-5000, aharness@fenton.com
What
Inspired Your Encore Career?
Seventeen People Doing Good Work in the Second Half of Life
Win an Unusual Story Contest and a Free Trip to an Historic Summit
SAN FRANCISCO — One winner retired from the military and found his true
calling: teaching disadvantaged youth in a homeless shelter. Another realized
her childhood dream of becoming a nurse after a career in office management.
A third, a former TV news producer, applied the passion she felt for vulnerable
children to her new job raising money for a pediatric care center.
These are three examples of Americans who are successfully transitioning from
mid-life careers to new encore careers — work that combines personalgreater
meaning and social impact with continued income in the second half of life.
They and 14 others have won a trip to a first-ever summit on encore careers
organized by Civic Ventures, a national think tank on boomers, work and social
purpose.
The “My Encore Moment” story contest that they entered was sponsored
by Encore.org, the growing network at www.encore.org for
people seeking encore careers. The winners were selected from 324 applicants
for their value in illustrating a growing trend: workers applying their life
experiences and passions to new careers that benefit the greater good. Their
stories may be viewed on Encore.org at http://www.encore.org/my-encore-moment-story-c-0.
(See summaries of their stories below.)
“These winners represent the real stories of how everyday people are
working to better themselves and better our country,” said Marc Freedman,
CEO of Civic Ventures and author of Encore: Finding Work That Matters in
the Second Half of Life (recently republished in paperback). “They
may not know it, but they are part of a movement that could transform our workforce
and enhance our ability to tackle critical social problems.”
A June 2008 survey commissioned by Civic Ventures revealed that more than
5 million people ages 44-70 have already begun encore careers, and tens of
millions more want such work.
The 17 storytellers won all-expense-paid trips to the first-ever Encore Careers
Summit on December 6-8 at Stanford University’s Graduate School of Business’ Center
on Social Innovation. They will join hundreds of others in encore careers — as
well as representatives of government, business, nonprofits, philanthropy and
academia — to share, learn, network and plan how to strengthen the encore
career movement.
Also attending the summit will be winners of the 2006, 2007 and 2008 Purpose
Prize, an award of up to $100,000 for social innovators over 60. A program
of the Encore Careers Campaign, The Purpose Prize honors entrepreneurial examples
of the encore career.
“The winners of the story contest show that encore careers are available
to anyone. You don’t have to start your own organization or come up with
a unique idea,” Freedman added. “There’s work that matters
in every community and for every person.”
Funding for the contest, The Purpose Prize and the Encore Careers Summit comes
from The Atlantic Philanthropies and the John Templeton Foundation, with additional
support from AARP, Erickson Companies, New York Life Foundation, Hewlett-Packard
Company and Legacy Works.
The “My Encore Moment” story contest winners are:
Patricia Boies (Gaithersburg, Maryland)
Boies’s encore career was born from tragedy. After her 10-year-old daughter
died from a cerebral hemorrhage, Boies left a public affairs career to study
thanatology, the field of death and dying. She does community outreach at a
hospice in Washington, D.C., helping others deal with loss.
Susan Burket (Potomac, Maryland)
At age 50, Burket decided computer programming didn’t satisfy her desire
to give back. She wanted to take a bigger leap than volunteering offered. Today
she’s a communications manager for a nonprofit hospice, working long
hours for less pay — but happy about making a difference.
Arlene Carter (Seattle, Washington)
When Carter was laid off from her job as an HR director/office manager for
a construction company, she saw it as an opportunity. A friend alerted her
to a fundraising position for the foundation of a senior housing community
nearby, which was turned out to be a perfect fit.
Sandy Cherry (Dayton, Ohio)
Cherry has always been grateful for quality long-term care, since her own
sister moved to a nursing facility at 19. After volunteering at a nursing home,
Cherry retired from AT&T, got a social work degree and now works as program
director and resident advocate at a nursing home.
Pat Dexter (Mesa, Arizona)
Growing up in a working-class family, Dexter was used to barely getting by.
Later in life, she gave up retirement after her son’s death to help her
grandchildren pay for college. Her wages as a literacy tutor were barely enough,
but she loves her work and now plans to be a substitute teacher.
Judi Henderson-Townsend (Oakland, California)
When Henderson-Townsend went shopping for a mannequin for an art project,
she was shocked to discover how many end up in landfills. She quit her corporate
job and founded Mannequin Madness, which recycles 100,000 pounds of mannequins
a year to retailers and individuals.
Bart Kendrick (Arlington, Virginia)
Tired of hearing Kendrick complain that “early retirement iswasn’t
what it was cracked up to be,” a friend suggested he put his 30 years
of media experience to work for the Peace Corps. After two public affairs positions,
he is now the organization’s National Outreach and Diversity Manager.
Martha Koelemay (Oden, Arizona)
When Koelemay was a little girl, she wore a handmade nurse’s uniform
and dispensed care to neighbors. But as an adult, she ended up in office management.
After finishing nursing school in her mid-50s, she now works as a registered
nurse in the ICU of a small rural hospital.
David Leopard (Richardson, Texas)
When Leopard took early retirement from his work in law enforcement and corporate
security, he began giving volunteer talks on avoiding identity theft. After
five years and speeches to 10,000 people, he now is working with the Texas
legislature to pass a bill to crack down on identity theft.
Carol Mannes (New York, New York)
Burnt out on her career as an actress, Mannes went back to school to study
social work and found the perfect job: providing social services to entertainment
industry workers. At 70, she works for the Actors Fund, specializing in assisting
women with serious medical and mental health issues.
Mark McVay (Denver, Colorado)
After retiring from the military, McVay began teaching. But it wasn’t
until he started teaching high school students in a classroom located in a
homeless shelter that he found his true calling: serving the needs of the disenfranchised,
including young people who have little place else to turn.
Sheila Moore (Ooltewah, Tennessee)
For Moore, training corporate executives to increase shareholder stock value
was no longer fulfilling. A free workshop she gave to nonprofit leaders reignited
her passion. She is now the interim executive director of the nonprofit management
center where she used tohad volunteered.
Milton Morgan (Santa Barbara, California)
Morgan put his experience as former IT consultant to work for Computers for
Families, which bridges the digital divide by providing computers, Web access
and training to low-income youth. His dream is to wire affordable housing communities
with broadband access for youth and adults.
Patti Pardini-Barrett (Chico, California)
In her 50s, inspired to provide more counseling services to low-income people,
Pardini-Barrett went back to school for an M.A. in psychology. She’s
now a mental health clinician for her county, providing treatment, case management
and parenting classes for families with children.
Elaine Purchase (North Bend, Washington)
A former TV news producer, Purchase never forgot the children she encountered
covering the crack epidemic and war zones. She devoted herself full time to
helping vulnerable children as development director for a pediatric care center,
making a new, state-of-the-art building a reality.
Valerie Stinger (Palo Alto, California)
While stuck in rush-hour traffic, Stinger had a revelation: It was time to
give up her corporate career and focus on making a difference. She joined the
Peace Corps, which led to her current stint providing business training for
entrepreneurs in places like the Sudan and the former U.S.S.R.
Robert Ward (Lewes, Delaware)
Ward has been working since he was 11, from fixing buckles in a belt factory
to stints in the Navy and in education. But it was his wife who inspired him
to come out retirement and take up her profession. Ward now works as a nurse
in a cardiology unit.
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About Civic Ventures (www.civicventures.org)
Civic Ventures (www.civicventures.org)
is a national think tank on boomers, work and social purpose.
About Encore.org
Encore.org serves the growing network of people who want the personal fulfillment
of giving back, along with continued income. It is an initiative of Civic Ventures.
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