Video: The Bridge of Hope

Sep 13, 2018 | UA News

Click here to view this impact story in video format. (Run time: 2:44)

Video by Christopher Johnson, Communications Associate. Article by Sarah Thompson, Director of Communications & Volunteer Mobilization.

The Bridge, whose mission is to connect people to hope, is an outreach ministry of Our Savior Lutheran Church in South Windsor, Connecticut.

Through Urban Alliance’s Beyond the Basics initiative, Our Savior Lutheran Church has received training, tools, supplies and grant funding to offer a community resource center, community resource coaches and classes on financial literacy at The Bridge. By offering a community resource center, staff and volunteers at The Bridge are able to connect people who visit their pantry to additional local services and resources that match their specific needs. Community resource coaches provide case management services that motivate clients to set goals, connect to appropriate resources and take steps towards achieving their goals.

“Our pantry currently serves 37 families,” said Nancy Swiatkiewicz, who leads the efforts at The Bridge. “And of the 37 families, we have seven case management clients.”

The Bridge helps community members meet their basic needs by providing free food and clothing.

“When they come in, we greet them, and if it’s a new client we take them into the conference room and fill out the intake forms,” explained Swiatkiewicz. “At that point they go into our healthy choice pantry and they can choose the number of items according to their family.”

The Bridge has implemented the Supporting Wellness at Pantries System (SWAP) at their pantry, which was created at the University of Saint Joseph and is based on the Dietary Guidelines. The system provides detailed criteria for classifying foods as “green” (choose often), “yellow” (choose sometimes) or “red” (choose rarely). The SWAP system empowers people who visit food pantries to make informed decisions when selecting food and increases their knowledge about the nutrition of the food they eat.

34 volunteers at The Bridge serve 37 families from seven towns. Sue Albano is one of those volunteers.

“I help clients go through getting their food, getting their clothing and praying with them,” she explained.

The goal for volunteers at The Bridge is to greet the clients and build relationships with them.

“Our pantry is a little different than ordinary pantries, because we offer case management,” said Swiatkiewicz. “When a new client comes in, a community resource coach meets with them and asks them if they want to enter into our program where they pick two or three goals and then they work with the community resource coach for nine months to help meet those goals.”

The whole purpose of The Bridge’s program is to have clients become less dependent upon their services when completed.

Urban Alliance has partnered with The Bridge since 2015.

“Urban Alliance has helped The Bridge [by equipping] us with case management,” shared Swiatkiewicz. “They’ve been awesome. They provide all the case management services training to our case managers, all at no charge.”

She added, “They also offer monthly case management meetings, where all the case managers of various organizations get together and brainstorm.”

The Bridge provides material items like food and clothing to community members, while building relationships with them, but their ultimate goal is to give people hope and share Jesus’s love with them.

Staff and volunteers at The Bridge meet with clients by appointment several days a week. For more information, visit www.oursaviorct.org/groups/the-bridge, email thebridgesouthwindsor@gmail.com or call 860.372.4141.  

Click here to learn more about Beyond the Basics and other Urban Alliance initiatives.


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The staff at Urban Alliance are familiar with Pastor Frank because he is a regular attendee to many of the trainings Urban Alliance provides on subjects like domestic violence, addressing childhood trauma, and better counseling techniques. “That’s been so valuable to me to be able to bring that back, not only in my counseling but also in my teaching and preaching ministries, “ shared Termine.

Pastor Frank was also one of the original members of the Micah group, a group of pastors that meets at Urban Alliance to discuss and strategize about challenging issues that face the church today. One of those earlier discussions on justice, incarceration, and returning citizens was particularly memorable. “We all lamented the fact that these men and women were coming out of prison into our churches and just kind of being thrown there,” said Termine, “We could do better than this.” That discussion planted the seeds that eventually led to the creation of Second Chance Churches – an opportunity for churches to provide support and mentoring to returning citizens that continues today.

When we asked Pastor Frank what he would say to another church that was unaware of Urban Alliance, he said, “If you are looking to get out in the community and make a difference in the community, Urban Alliance is a super way to do it. We’re a small church … we can’t do everything. Urban Alliance is a pathway to get our people involved in ministries that are already doing it, doing it well, and just need extra volunteers.”

Pastor Frank Termine’s story embodies many things we are trying to accomplish at Urban Alliance: supporting organizations in the communities they serve with training, resources, and opportunities to make a difference. Pastors and non-profit leaders face a wide range of challenges and, therefore, need a wide range of help and resources. Your support can help turn stories of struggle into stories like you find at Calvary Church.

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