By SUE WUETCHER
Reporter Editor
Although the official theme of this year's State Employees Federated
Appeal (SEFA) campaign is "Recipe for Success," the terrorist attacks
on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon provided an additional context
for those attending the campaign's annual kick-off event on Sept. 20.
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Jeffery
Reeves of the Buffalo City Mission gets acquainted with Harley,
the snake, at a booth set up by the Audobon Society, a United Way
agency, at the SEFA kick-off event in the CFA Atrium. |
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Photo:
Jessica Kourkounis |
"As we begin our 2001 campaign for SEFA, we all think back to last
Tuesday's events and the tragedy," Mary Gresham, vice president for
public service and urban affairs, dean of the Graduate School of Education
and 2001 SEFA chair, told unit liaisons assembled in the Center for
the Arts Atrium. "One thing I would like us all to think about
is that the agencies represented by the United Way are agencies that
deal with tragedy and distress year round. And indeed, this year in
particular, they will need our support much longer than this week, or
the end of the year because people will be grappling with the results
for a long time."
The liaisonsfaculty and staff members who volunteer to lead campaign
efforts in their individual unitsgathered to pick up campaign materials
and learn more about how money raised during the campaign makes a difference
to local agencies and organizations supported by SEFA and the United
Way.
UB's goal this year is $725,000. The campaign raised $763,979 last
year, more than $60,000 above the goal of $700,000.
With the terrorist attacks paramount in everyone's minds, those attending
the kick-off event heard how United Way agencies are responding to support
those affected by the tragedies.
Katherine N. Lwebuga-Mukasa, associate director of Crisis Services,
noted that her agency has been responding to Western New Yorkers who
have been directly affected by the events of Sept. 11. "We forget how
many ties there are (in Western New York) to New York City and even
to Washington, D.C.," she said. Many other United Way agencies volunteered
their own counselors to man Crisis Services' phone lines, "which were
lighting up, and continue to light up," she said. "Daily we receive
calls for our trauma response unit to respond to people who are unable
to get out of their cars to go into work because they're afraid to go
into a tall building.
"I want you to remember, as you dig deep this year, that the needs
are many," she told the liaisons. "We have the ongoing needs that our
agencies provide for the people in our community, but we have increasing
needs in terms of how we as a nation begin to address this terrible
trauma that has afflicted us."
Ann McCarthy, chair of the 2001 Buffalo and Erie County United Way
Campaign and director of consumer affairs for Wegmans, pointed out that
following the terrorist attacks, Crisis Services experienced a 30 percent
increase in the number of calls it usually receives, and that most organizations
and businesses would have difficulty absorbing a 30 percent increase
in their workloads. Many United Way agencies were in the same situation
last week, McCarthy added.
"Over and over again as campaign chair, in these past few days, I've
heard business after business tell me that they didn't know what to
do, and United Way agencies were there to help," she said, urging those
who do not know which United Way agency to designate their money to
channel it to the Community Care Fund, which provides money to smaller,
lesser-known agencies.
McCarthy said that since Sept. 11, she's been hearing people ask what
they can do to help. "I'm here to tell all you good people at the University
at Buffalo that you were there to help; you were there to help last
week by virtue of the tremendous support that you as an organization,
and that you as individuals, have given to the United Way and SEFA campaigns
over the years."
President William R. Greiner echoed McCarthy's remarks about UB's
support to the United Way campaign, noting that the university leads
Erie County and Western New York in terms of its contributions to the
SEFA campaign. UB has the most leadership givers161 last yearamong
all institutions in Western New York, is the largest employer-donor
in terms of the total contributions of its employees, contributes 38
percent of the SUNY SEFA campaign, and represents 8 percent of the statewide
SEFA campaign, Greiner said.
"That's what I call leadership from a leadership institution," he
said.