2012 Golf Classic Recap

The 2012 Gathering Golf Classic was held on Monday, June 25, at Evergreen Golf Course in Elkhorn. This year’s event raised nearly $17,000 to feed Milwaukee’s hungry and homeless. Over 90 golfers competed for two hole in one prizes—a Harley Motorcycle and an all expense paid trip to Hawaii  Some came close but no winners this year. Many also participated in our raffle with the most sought after item being an Apple iPad.

Key sponsors included:

  • GOLD ($2,5000) - Joy Global, John Zacher, Twin Disc, Inc.
  • SILVER ($1,000) - Law Office of Eugene E. Detert,  Mike & Ginny McBride, David & Mel Johnson Marking Services, Inc. , Ab Nicholas
  • BRONZE ($500) - Saints Andrew & Mark Charitable Gift Trust, Stony Hills Presbyterian Church,  Nordco, Inc.,  Brewcity Bruisers (Milwaukee Roller Girls)
  • HOLE SPONSORS ($100 ea.) - Advocacy Investments (1), Weber & Rick, S.C. (1), Teresa Trostmiller (1), David A. Paris, D.D.S., S.C. (2), Michael & Susan Carnahan (1), Data Financial, Inc. (2), Wixon, Inc. (1), Answerport Management & Technology Consultants (3)

Thanks to Gathering Board Members, Gene Detert and Jim Leurquin who co-chaired the event. The weather was superb - we lucked out and had a day in the low 80’s!

People that make The Gathering: Moses Cook

by Laura Luttrell

Moses Cook work as Security for the Gathering, but he was a guest first.

“I get up every morning whether I want to or not and I go down to the Gathering. I want to be there for anyone who needs me. There is no greater joy than to see them go in and come out and they're clean and they're doing well. They're happy. I don't judge them because to me everyone is going to start the race but everyone's not going to finish at the same time."

Moses Cook came to Milwaukee when he was 17. After his first daughter was born, he knew he was going to stick around. In some ways, he was happy with his life: he had a job making good money and he had two daughters, but he was also heavy into drugs and alcohol, causing major difficulties throughout his life. He lived this way for 20 years, until a near death experience caused him to reassess his life. He reflected about his friends who had died. He thought about how his family didn’t like being around him. He wanted out.

He quit his job and checked himself into the Rescue Mission shelter. He refused to let himself even step outside for a full 30 days. Moses didn’t want to go into a treatment center because “they keep you from the temptation” and he wanted to know he could keep himself from it. He experienced terrible withdrawal, but he made it through. He was on a new path.

Afterward, Moses returned to eating breakfasts and volunteering at the Gathering breakfast meal program. It was a place he found hope. Seeing his dedication, the Gathering offered him a job working security. Ten years have passed and Moses believes it is exactly where he needs to be. He views his role as much more than keeping everyone well-behaved; he understands the guests and wants to support them.

When Moses was still using, there was a woman from the Gathering, “Mama Jo,” who never gave up on him, no matter how badly he messed up. She told him to “dust yourself off and start again.” He listened.

Now Moses has taken up her position.  He does what he can to be a bright light in the lives he touches: “A word of encouragement to make them laugh... whatever it takes to put them in a happy spirit – because they may not get that any place else… if I can bring a little joy to their life, that little spark of joy may sustain them through the day and they have a good day.”

One day a guest came to Moses and gave him $400 and asked him to hold it so he wouldn’t be tempted to spend it on drugs. The guest said “I’m goin’ in [to drug rehab]. If you deem it necessary for my daughter or anyone to know where I am, you can tell them.” Moses recalled, “About nine months later, he came back, clean and engaged to be married. He was surprised I still had the money. I remember a day when a guy wouldn’t give me fifteen cents to hold for him. It made me feel so good this guy entrusted me, [with] what he was doing, and his money. That took me a long way... That was the biggest success for me.”

Moses is grateful for his life now. “Once you clean up, caring about people comes back,” he says. He has a good relationship with his family now. Moses said, “I will never lose my peace. I’m not going backward. It’s been over 15 years.” He wants to help others get to this point too. “If I got it, I give it because it was always given to me... You pass it on to the next that need it...If I can help one person a day, I’m good.” The way he sees it, “The meal is just a small part of the Gathering. It’s hope... worthiness... appreciation of the people. The Gathering never gave up on me… and here I am.”

2011 Gathering Service Award Winners

At our Volunteer Recognition Event, we awarded volunteers with Service Awards. Here is a complete list of our winners. 

Individual Awards

The George Greene Award for exceptional service by a guest turned volunteer is named after founder and long time Gathering Board President. The 2011 George Greene Award went to Robert Harrell who has been faithfully volunteering daily at our Breakfast Program.

The following individual volunteers reached service milestones in 2011 for number of years of continuous volunteering:

  • 25 years: Lisa Murray, Cook Team Leader and Kitchen Coordinator, St. James’ Saturday
  • 20 years: Sister Carolyn Stahl, Breakfast Program weekly volunteer
  • 15 years: Bill & Mitzi Roy, Coordinators, South Side Saturday
  • 15 years: Robin Coffman, Cook Team, St. James’ Saturday
  • 10 years: Andy & Marisa McKee, Cook Team, South Side Saturday
  • 7 years: Harvey & Cheryl Ganske, Coordinators, South Side Saturday
  • 7 years: Marie Hoven, Coordinator, St. James’ Saturday
  • 7 years: Deacon Ned Howe, Breakfast Program weekly volunteer
  • 7 years: Tom & Diane McGinn,Cook Team, St. James’ Saturday
  • 7 years: Carol Pat Szopinski, Cook Team, St. James’ Saturday
  • 5 years: Mike Yost, Cook Team, St. James’ Saturday
  • 5 years: Lisa Schuldt, Cook Team, St. James’ Saturday
  • 5 years: Cheri Grambo, Cook Team, ONG Saturday
  • 3 years: Velma Foster, Cook Team, ONG Saturday
  • 3 years: Noni Guddie, Coordinator, St. James’ Saturday
  • 3 years: Dan & Judy Linsley, Cook Team, St. James’ Saturday
  • 3 years: Joanna Linsley, Cook Team, St. James’ Saturday
  • 3 years: Tricia Trexell, Coordinator, St. James’ Saturday

Group Awards

The following groups reached service milestones in 2011 for number of times volunteering:

  • Over 300:  Marquette University High School
  • Over 175:  Johnson Controls
  • Over 150:  Emmanuel Community United Methodist 
  • Over 125:  Fox Point Lutheran 
  • Over 75:  Immanuel Presbyterian, St. Rafael Catholic School
  • Over 65:  St. Christopher’s Episcopal, St. John Vianney Firm Believers
  • Over 50:  Joy Global
  • Over 35:  YouthWorks
  • Over 25:  Beautiful Savior Lutheran, St. Peter’s UCC, Trinity Lutheran
  • Over 15:  Divine Savior Holy Angels High School, Mt. Carmel Lutheran, St. Boniface J2A/Rite 13 Youth Group, St. Paul’s UCC

Friend of The Gathering Awards

Friend of The Gathering Awards are given to agencies, groups or individuals who have demonstrated exceptional compassion and dedication to The Gathering itself or to those we serve. 2011 winners are:

  • Roger Carroll (St. James’ Saturday Floor Coordinator) for exceptional attitude, training new coordinators and willingness to fill in whenever asked.
  • Michael Chavez, Darrell Hopkins & Jesse Karr (Warehouse staff at Feeding America) for exceptional service to Gathering Staff and going out of their way to meet our food needs.
  • Joy Global (Formerly P&H) for consistent, generous and varied support of The Gathering’s work.
  • Joanna Linsley for commitment to The Gathering through board service, formation of Saturday cook team, and championing small Gathering Friendraiser events.
  • Nino Machi (Machi Produce) for donations of wonderful fresh produce.
  • Mount Carmel Lutheran Church (Northwest Side Church) for joining in the fight against hunger by piloting an additional Saturday meal site.
  • Israel Ojeda (National Warehouse staff) for helping above and beyond the call of duty.
  • Bill & Mitzi Roy for exceptional service as Saturday Coordinators, filling in as Breakfast Coordinators, and assisting in volunteer development for the new Shelter Meal Program.
  • Nancy Wieland (Mental Health Nurse) for many years of service to the mental health needs of our Breakfast guests through our collaboration with the Homeless Outreach Nursing Center.
Nancy Wieland and George Neureuther, Breakfast Coordinator

Nancy Wieland and George Neureuther, Breakfast Coordinator

2012 Gathering Volunteer Celebration

Cheers to Our Volunteers!

This year’s Volunteer Recognition Event was a blast, with over 200 volunteers in attendance at the MillerCoors Visitor Center on the evening of Friday May 4, 2012.  The event kicked off with a private brewery tour where attendees discovered what goes on behind-the-scenes at MillerCoors, including viewings of the large brew kettles and historic caves.

After the tour everyone gathered in the Visitor Center space for a full taco bar and enjoyed complimentary beverages donated by MillerCoors. While attendees mingled and noshed, they also had an opportunity to participate in a photo project highlighting the rewards of volunteering at the Gathering. The outcome of this project, a slide show, will be featured on the Gathering’s revamped website in the coming months.

The auditorium was filled with folks sitting and standing, to honor the recipients of the 2011 Service Awards. The crowd cheered as Gathering staff member Marianne Bach gave personal tributes to each award winner.

The evening ended as everyone re-entered the Visitor Center space to enjoy some Classy Girl Cupcakes and coffee before departing. A special Thank You to all Board members, volunteers and staff who helped make this event so memorable for our dedicated volunteers.

People that make The Gathering: Cary Gibson

by Laura Luttrell

"I'm blessed with what I've got now. I thank God everyday. I mean when you're out there and then this! I feel like I’m living a movie star life – I’ve got heat, I’ve got a TV - I watched the Packers yesterday. I have food in my fridge. Everything I would want. You're real grateful, am I right?"

Imagine yourself without a home for 20 days. You’ve exhausted your options of staying with family and friends and now you are living on the street. I’ve tried to imagine this and I can’t. I don’t understand the challenges I would face. It’s easy to think about Milwaukee’s many blustery below freezing winter nights, but somehow finding a blanket doesn’t seem like enough.

When I spoke with Cary Gibson, the cook for the Gathering’s breakfast meal program, I started to understand. He lived on the street not for 20 days, but for 20 years. Cary said that in order to help keep warm, he would hide 3 blankets. The first one would inevitably be stolen while he was trying to sleep and then he would go to the hiding places of the others, hoping that at least one of them would still be there. He counted himself lucky if the thief only took his possessions. He has been attacked while trying to sleep many times… usually by another person coping with a situation similar to his; other times the attackers were four-legged threats.

By the railroad tracks, there are skunks to avoid. Elsewhere, you have to listen for and steer clear of coyotes. The hardest to deal with are the raccoons and other rodents.  They are smart and some have rabies.

They’ll climb all over you, especially if they smell food. Then, there are the domesticated varieties. People used to let loose their pit bulls along the river where Cary had been staying; he climbed into a thicket of thorns (where even the pit bulls wouldn’t go) to avoid them. With all this, a good night’s sleep isn’t an option. Then there is the challenge of hygiene. How can you bathe, shave, or brush your teeth? Cary said he had to wash different parts of his body each place he went - taking pigeon baths, he called it.

Cary had a hard life growing up, but he made the best of it. He tried to hold his family together by cooking, cleaning, and raising his younger siblings, but when he turned 17, he set out on his own. Although he struggled with alcoholism, he had a job and a place of his own for 14 years. That life ended when a bout of pneumonia put him in the hospital and he lost his job and eventually his home.

Living on the street, Cary really valued the big hot meal that the Gathering served in the mornings. He burned a lot of calories living outside. By the time he got there, he’d already walked 5 miles. He ate breakfasts at the Gathering for about 8 years and then he started volunteering. During that time, Cary also went into transitional housing and stopped drinking alcohol.

After 5 or 6 months of volunteering, the Gathering recognized the hard work and integrity that Cary exhibited and hired him as the breakfast cook. Having this part-time job has been an important motivator for Cary. He said that working again gives him a “sense of fulfillment...

There’s a certain feeling you get when you accomplish a goal like working – doing something positive, that’s what The Gathering is to me... The Gathering helps people in so many ways.

You can get a little direction – help with your problems, find the door to help you with what you need. That’s what’s special about the Gathering: it’s more than just the meal and some place warm.”

Cary has been in his own home for almost a year and now that he is back on his feet, he’s excited about the new road ahead of him. “The Gathering is just one of many steps I hope to take on my road to success.” He saved up two months rent to get ahead of schedule and he is excited to be paying rent and preparing taxes again!

There’s another thing about Cary that left me speechless. Imagine you were homeless for 20 years and after you finally got back in housing, you got a part-time job and you’ve been getting a paycheck for about 2 months. What would you do with this little extra money you have now? Get yourself something? Go to the casino? Cary started sponsoring a little girl in Indonesia. He’s been sponsoring her now for 10 months because he feels that there are a lot of people out there who need help.

Ginny Schrag and The Gathering featured by the Shepherd Express

Ok, ok...so this was from December, 2011, but we didn't have a blog then. The interview with our own Executive Director, Ginny Schrag, is still as great of a read as it was then. Some of my favorite parts...

We have between 1,500 and 2,000 volunteers each year and they do 99% of our direct service work. We couldn't do it without volunteers.

I think that with the economic downturn, a lot of people started deciding more seriously where their money should go when they wanted to give to charities, and have started to give to basic needs.  I can't say that it is going to continue, but so far we've been blessed.

Read the article in its entirety here.