| AGPA Secures Grant To Help Those in Need After 9/11
Bonnie Buchele, PhD, CGP, FAGPA, President
Harold Bernard, PhD, CGP, FAGPA, President-Elect
The horrific events of September 11th affected a great many people, both
direct victims of the attacks and the many who are struggling with the
fallout from these cataclysmic attacks. The losses are many: families have
been destroyed; friends and colleagues by the thousands have been lost; and
the sense of safety that most Americans felt has been shattered. The latter
is the case throughout the country, not just in New York City and Washington,
DC. As group psychotherapists, we subscribe to the notion that the group
setting is a particularly effective one for meeting the needs of a great many
of those who have suffered and continue to suffer. Many of AGPA's members are
already making contributions to the healing of the nation, while others are
looking for a venue in which they, too, can contribute.
We are pleased to report that AGPA has secured a grant that will provide a
venue that will allow many of our members to contribute to the nation's
healing. We have been honored with a $2 million grant from the New York Times
Company Foundation's 9/11 Neediest Cases Fund. The purpose of the grant is to
provide expert group interventions for people who might be deterred from
seeking help because of financial considerations, ignorance of the potential
benefits of group participation, or fear of stigma. This grant provides AGPA
with the means to help many people get the help they need in the face of all
these obstacles.
AGPA has set up a Disaster Outreach Task Force to establish and carry out a
comprehensive program to achieve a variety of goals. We have established a
three-tiered approach:
- Tier One involves organizing a wide range of groups for direct victims of
what occurred on September 11th: building survivors; witnesses of the horrors
of that day; employees of particularly decimated businesses and
organizations; surviving spouses and other loved ones; surviving
firefighters, police and rescue workers; and others. The primary focus in the
first year of the project is to establish 300 groups: 270 in New York and its
surrounding areas, and 30 in the Washington, D.C. area.
- Tier Two will involve actively reaching out to businesses and other
institutions in which people were impacted, including businesses with offices
in one of the Twin Towers, the New York City Police and Fire Departments, the
Pentagon, rescue worker organizations, schools and religious institutions.
Again, the list is inexhaustible.
- Tier Three will involve working to identify and assist those who may
suffer longer-term effects of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, as opposed to
the Acute Stress Disorder so many have experienced in the immediate aftermath
of the tragedy.
We anticipate that this will be at least a three-year project, and that the
subsequent two years will involve some activity in other parts of the
country. As the grantee of the New York Times' 9/11 Neediest Cases Fund, we
must insure that services are provided to those who would have a difficult
time securing them otherwise. In the process of pursuing this multi-pronged
program, we will be reaching out to establish partnerships with other groups:
hospitals, schools, and other associations. For example, we are currently
forging a collaborative relationship with a trauma training program organized
by a consortium of four major medical centers in New York City.
As always, our greatest partnership will be with you, the AGPA members, as we
ask your assistance in carrying out this project, which is obviously enormous
in scope and no less enormous in importance. We need to hear from those in
the tri-state area around New York City, and in the greater Washington, DC,
area who either currently are running groups dealing with September 11th
issues (and might like them considered to be a part of this project) or who
would be interested in establishing such groups. Also, if you have contacts
in communities or organizations that you believe would be valuable partners
in this endeavor, please share this information with us. AGPA has hired a new
Public Affairs Director, Diane Feirman, CAE, whom many of you know from her
previous employment at AGPA. You can contact directly at 212-477-2677,
toll-free at 877-668-AGPA (2472), or dfeirman@agpa.org for more information.
We wish to thank the members of the Disaster Outreach Task Force, who are
working hard to insure this program's success. A special thanks goes to Randy
Lehrer, MSW, CGP, a member of AGPA from New York City for putting us in touch
with The New York Times Company Foundation and for all her hard work on the
Task Force once the grant was obtained, and to our CEO Marsha Block, CAE,
whose tireless efforts have been crucial in getting the program off the
ground so quickly. You will be hearing a lot more about this project as we
proceed with its implementation.
This article was published in the February/March 2002 issue of
The Group
Circle.
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