‘Sunbeam’ Updater – New Stainless Steel Piping

‘Sunbeam’ Updater – New Stainless Steel Piping

BELFAST, ME — Again we thank Front Street Shipyard for providing update photos of the Sunbeam refit. This photo was posted April 24th on the shipyard’s Twitter account. The photo caption: New stainless steel piping work in SUNBEAM’s engine room.

WABI-TV News Report on Mission’s Project ReachOut

WABI-TV News Report on Mission’s Project ReachOut

www.wabi.tv
By Brianna Bires |
Posted: Fri 9:45 PM, Apr 24, 2020

BANGOR, Maine (WABI) – ​The Maine Seacoast Mission has found a way to still be a positive voice for members of the Downeast community.

They provide programs and services for thousands of people each year, but because of COVID-19, they’ve had to adapt.

The Mission has launched an initiative called Project Reach Out.

Full story

Student Pathways Moments – Photos Taken During These Complex Days

Student Pathways Moments – Photos Taken During These Complex Days

PENOBSCOT, ME — I wanted to share single Student Pathways moments, photos students sent amid these complex Covid-19 days.

Here are three photos from three of our high school sophomores, each of whom is in our College Exploration and Engagement Program:

Rachel’s painted buoys (Rachel C., Sumner Memorial H.S.)

Night Owl (Mali S., Narraguagus H.S.)

Mia and with her Baby Pigs ( Mia, Sumner Memorial H.S.)

Christina Griffith
Director of Student Pathways
Director of Davis Maine Scholarship

It’s Thank you Thursday – for Women for Healthy Rural Living!

It’s Thank you Thursday – for Women for Healthy Rural Living!

BAR HARBOR, ME — This week’s Thank you Thursday shout-out of Mission Love goes to Women for Healthy Rural Living (WHRL), a partner on so many levels in strengthening community. WHRL is part of the Downeast Roots collaboration leveraging resources to help families thrive, an organizer of diaper drives to offer food pantry patrons, an animator of Incredible Edible Milbridge, and a provider of range of educational programs that illustrate how WHRL is a passionate and persistent advocate for health and wellness!

Visit Women for Healthy Rural Living and Downeast Roots online.

This is what community looks like.

Mission Stays in Touch with Downeast and Island Families with Project ReachOut

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 21, 2020

For More Information
Contact Scott K Fish, Communications and Marketing
sfish@seacoastmission.org or 207-458-7185

Mission Stays in Touch with Downeast and Island Families with Project ReachOut

BAR HARBOR, ME — Very positive. All good. Appreciative. These are a few ways people are responding to a new Maine Seacoast Mission initiative called Project ReachOut. It is an initiative Mission President John Zavodny said “is based on a simple idea. We are all better off when we connect.”

In response to coronavirus physical distancing, the Mission suspended several popular activities where community members gathered at the Downeast campus in Cherryfield or on the islands to share a public supper, a morning coffee and conversation, musical evenings, and other events. Knowing how important social interactions are in keeping communities strong, the Mission redirected its creativity, finding new ways to do its work. ReachOut is one example.

President Zavodny explained, “Through Project ReachOut, Mission staff and volunteers call Mission friends and neighbors to check in, offer a word of support, and find out how we can help. Sometimes the call is enough. Sometimes we can help in other ways. Always, the personal connection is important.”

Isaac Marnik’s duties as Assistant Director of the Mission’s EdGE programs are temporarily redirected, in part, to oversee Project ReachOut. Several Mission staff, whose daily work is also changed in response to the coronavirus, are making phone calls to about 1500 families involved with the Mission in Downeast coastal and unbridged island communities.

In addition, the Mission is asking for volunteer help to make these phone calls. Volunteers are asked to complete an application and, after training, are provided a list of people to call and a basic call script. As of Monday, April 20, Mission staff and volunteers had reached around 300 families and individuals, said Isaac. Those called include families in the EdGE program, seniors, residents of the unbridged islands, and other households in the Mission service area.

“Everyone is appreciative of the call,” he said. We always ask if the person we’re calling would like us to call again. Many of them say, No, we appreciate your call, but we’re good. Other people ask us to call weekly. And we’ve reached several people with pressing needs such as food or an appliance or car repair,” Isaac said.

If you want to help connect, to make phone calls for Project ReachOut on behalf of the Mission, please fill out and submit your volunteer application online here. You can also email resources@seacoastmission.org or call 207-546-5860 and ask for a volunteer application.

“By staying connected, by helping out, and by focusing on the beautiful response of good people in a time of crisis, we can make more good memories than bad ones. Let’s do that,” said Mission President Zavodny.

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