IMPACT cville

Interfaith Movement Promoting Action by Congregations Together

  • Who We Are
  • What We Do
  • HOW WE DO IT
  • Invest
  • Email
  • Home
    • Current Member Congregations
    • About Us & Mission
    • Justice Ministry
      • Justice Ministry Networks
      • Nehemiah Action
    • Investing in IMPACT
    • IMPACT Calendar
    • Contact
  • Current Initiatives
    • Affordable Housing (2016- Present)
    • Transit Wait Times (2021- Present)
  • Past Victories
    • Transportation
    • Affordable Housing 2008
    • Dental Care
    • Law Enforcement Translation Services
    • Pre-K Education and Afterschool Care
    • Mental Health Care
    • Homelessness
    • Young Adult Unemployment
You are here: Home / Archives for IMPACT Announcments

More Child Psychiatry Added in Fluvanna, Greene Counties

October 30, 2014 By IMPACT

Report from Robert Johnson to IMPACT 9th Annual Assembly, 10/27/14

Region Ten has been moving forward with our plan to increase our child psychiatry hours availability to 40 per week. Our strategies have been to increase our overall child psychiatry hours through tele-psychiatry contracts and to hire a part-time child psychiatrist.

We have been able to increase our available hours in Greene County through tele-psychiatry by four hours. We also have a pending contract to get three additional hours in Fluvanna. Once the contract is signed we will purchase the equipment and move forward to assure that more youth in Fluvanna have access to psychiatric medication management in our Palmyra office. We approximate that 100 additional kids will be able to be served annually with the additional Fluvanna and Greene telepsychiatry hours. We hope to have our child psychiatry services in Fluvanna begin by the first of next year.

We are also planning to replace our current twelve hour per week contract with UVA psychiatry with a part-time child psychiatrist that works about 30 hours per week. We are currently exploring a partnership with a neighboring Community Services Board to see if we could share a full-time doctor which we believe will be easier to recruit and hire. Our hope is to have a new doctor on board by the summer of 2015.

Child psychiatry remains a gap in our community with a current wait time of one to six weeks at Region Ten. This is a service gap that is not just local but statewide and we appreciate your support in addressing this need for our local children and families.

Filed Under: IMPACT Announcments, Mental Health, Uncategorized

Crime & Drugs Elected as Ministry’s New Focus

October 30, 2014 By IMPACT

Election of Crime at Drugs as New Focus

Content for this post was taken from the Daily Progress coverage of our 9th Annual Assembly.

Annual Assembly 2014

For years, Loretta Martin said, her sister has battled drug and alcohol abuse without being able to find adequate rehabilitation programs close to her family. She has been to programs in Richmond and Roanoke, but is “incapable of finding help on her own,” Martin said. She has been turned away from a psychiatric ward and can’t find housing.

“If there was some program for women with alcohol and drug problems in the local areas, families could stay connected and then the healing could begin,” Martin said. “I pray that she is okay and that God will continue to watch after her. Am I my sister’s keeper? Yes, I am. And I and my family will fight to find the care that she needs.

Martin’s story led to the Interfaith Movement Promoting Action by Congregating Together, IMPACT, choosing drugs and crime as its next project.

The nonprofit group, comprised of 27 Christian, Jewish, Muslim, and Unitarian Universalist congregations across Charlottesville and Albemarle County, met Monday evening to direct its focus on drugs and crime, housing or education.

Along with Martin, three other members told their stories and leaders encouraged voters to think about their own experiences to make a decision.

Mallika Rodriguez, a single mother, spoke about her struggle to find affordable, convenient and high-quality childcare. She said she had a hard time finding childcare that was able to work with her job schedule, which could change weekly.

“Sometimes when I’ve found a child care center that offered this flexible coverage, I found myself disappointed by the quality of the actual programs, the facilities or even the staff,” Rodriguez said.

Statistics provided from Child Care Aware show that, in 2011, Virginians typically paid between $8,300 and $10,650 a year for full-time care for infants and toddlers. In comparison, the 2012 in-state tuition at the University of Virginia was just more than $12,000.

Stephanie and Dominique Eley told their story of homelessness, stemming from the inability for both of them to keep a job expecting their child. They went through several houses, but never had to spend a night on the streets due to help they received from churches. They are now working with Habitat for Humanity to build their own home.

According to Habitat for Humanity, about 4,000 families in Charlottesville spend more than half of their income on housing.

Of the 254 votes cast Monday, crime and drugs received 116, housing received 80 and education received the remaining 58. Members from 24 congregations voted.

The night also featured a progress report on two earlier initiatives: young adult unemployment and youth mental health.

Through working with IMPACT, UVa Health Systems has applied for a grant that would allow it to take 50 unemployed or underemployed young adults, aged 18-25, for skills training, mentoring and education to help them get employment in the healthcare field, said Patricia Cluff, associate vice president for strategic relations and marketing for UVa Health Systems.

After completion of the program, candidates will then be able to apply for entry level positions at UVa Health Systems.

As for youth mental health, both Fluvanna and Greene counties have been able to install telepsychiatry equipment to help children get psychiatric services, said Region Ten Executive Director Robert Johnson.

Filed Under: Drugs & Crime, IMPACT Announcments, IMPACT in the News, Uncategorized Tagged With: Albemarle, Annual Assembly, Charlottesville, Charlottesville Virginia, Crime, Drugs, Grassroots, Interfaith Movement Promoting Action, Loretta Martin, News

Child Psychiatry: Post-Action Progress

July 1, 2014 By IMPACT

Since the Nehemiah Action, the IMPACT mental health committee responded to Robert Johnson’s commitment at the Nehemiah Action. We asked for clarity and an outline of their approach, since his response was so in-depth. We have since heard back from Mr. Johnson, and has has outlined their plan for us. You can read the letter for yourself here: Region Ten’s Plan.

The committee will be meeting with Region Ten again in August to get an update on what from this plan has truly been executed. In addition, Mr, Johnson will be giving a report to the justice ministry network at the Annual Assembly in October.

Filed Under: IMPACT Announcments, Mental Health, Uncategorized

8th Annual Nehemiah Action

May 7, 2014 By IMPACT

Crowd      Fr GregoryCrowdShawayne Berry

The content of this post is taken from the Daily Progress coverage of the Nehemiah Action.

Maybe they aren’t changing the world, but a yearlong effort by members of a local interfaith and cross-denomination organization is changing Central Virginia.

Efforts by the Interfaith Movement Promoting Action by Congregations Together — IMPACT — led to Region Ten plans to double the number of hours available for children’s mental health; more funding of homeless prevention programs; better communication and cohesion among homeless service providers; and an effort by the University of Virginia Health System to train local youth for entry-level medical positions.

A thousand or more community faithful from Christian, Jewish and Islamic congregations met Monday evening at John Paul Jones Arena for the eighth annual Nehemiah Action assembly to hear from agencies tasked with implementing the organization’s goals.

The goals were set at an October meeting of the organization.

“Our primary motive is faith, not civic duty,” said Bob Bayer, of Westminster Presbyterian Church and IMPACT’s co-president. “We are not a political movement, although we acknowledge that there is a political component to almost of the injustices we hope to address.”

The assembly was called to report the results of IMPACT’s efforts at addressing social and economic injustice, from unemployment among youth to the lack of mental health care for youth. Members of the organization met to discuss proposals and spent the past six months, and longer in some cases, working with local officials.

IMPACT committee members reported strides made in serving the region’s homeless families and in preventing those with emergency needs from becoming homeless. They noted that the organization’s efforts helped bring service providers together and make an additional $250,000 available via grants.

Perhaps the big win was a commitment by Region Ten, the agency that provides mental health services for Central Virginia, to hire a part-time child psychiatrist and expand the number of treatment hours available.

IMPACT officials noted that Region Ten, funded by state money and Medicaid, had only enough child psychiatrists and psychologists available to provide 15 hours a week, from 9 a.m. to noon Fridays. That left hundreds of children without care.

“For a community with the abundance of resources this community has, this patched together program is not enough,” said Sheila Herlihy, of Church of the Incarnation Catholic Church, who served on the group’s mental health committee.

Robert Johnson, executive director of Region Ten, said he and his staff agreed.

“We believe we have developed a plan, a basic strategy to expand telepsychiatric contacts and secure a part-time child psychiatrist, which would bring us to 40 hours a week of service,” Johnson said.

Johnson said Region Ten had found grants and money available to expand telepsychiatry into Nelson and Greene counties as well as hire the part-timer.

Although the televised service should be available in both counties by the end of the year, finding a part-time psychiatrist will be more difficult, he said. He expects someone to be hired by next summer.

Impact committee members studying youth employment had asked UVa Health System to start a pilot program of tuition waivers for 30 students to train in entry-level medical positions. They estimated the cost to be $90,000.

UVa officials agreed to look into grants that would create a similar program with other funding coming from local organizations and “stakeholders.” They stopped short of promising a unilaterally funded program should the grants fail or stakeholders not be found.

The agencies agreed to report back to Impact at the organization’s October assembly.

Filed Under: IMPACT Announcments, IMPACT in the News, Mental Health, Uncategorized, Unemployment

IMPACT Leaders Show Up 100 Strong to County Board Meeting

February 25, 2012 By impactcville

Last night, 100 IMPACT leaders attend Albemarle County’s Budget Work Session to voice their support for the Healthy Transitions program.

Last year, the City Council and County Supervisors committed to funding Healthy Transitions–a psychiatric re-entry program for ex-offenders. Since its inception in June, Healthy Transitions has provided lifesaving therapy and medication for this vulnerable population. Many of those who have benefited are stable and have found work and secured housing. This program, at a cost of only $42,500 to each jurisdiction, can save the community hundreds of thousands of dollars a year.

In the first release of the FY2012-2013 Albemarle County Budget, the Healthy Transitions program is “not recommended for funding.”

IMPACT will continue to stand for justice for ex-offenders with mental illness. Here’s how you can join us:

1. Spread the word in your congregation that Healthy Transitions is in danger.

2. Call your district supervisor (contact information here). Tell them:
-that you support the Healthy Transitions program and want theirs, too
-you expect to see them at the Nehemiah Action on March 26

3. Attend the Nehemiah Action on March 26 to stand up for justice for ex-offenders with mental illness, as well as unemployed youth.

Our work continues to be recognized in the community. You can our feature in the Daily Progress here.

Let’s continue to MAKE AN IMPACT!

Filed Under: IMPACT Announcments, Uncategorized

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • …
  • 6
  • Next Page »

Subscribe to the IMPACT Mailing List

Invest Now!

Invest
You may now invest online through PayPal! Please note that Paypal automatically keeps 2.9% of each investment as a usage fee. If you wish to avoid this fee, you can simply mail your investment to:

IMPACT
1901 Thomson Road
Charlottesville, VA 22903 impact@impactcville.com

Copyright © 2025 · IMPACT · Site managed by GrayOrbit