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WE ARE
2016 ANNUAL REPORT
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2016 HIGHLIGHTS• Davis Zeller Place in Brazil, IN awarded rental housing tax credits
• Highland Glen in Scottsburg awarded $3,875,500 for expansion, renovation
• Actions to raise awareness and education* NHS recognizes Disability Awareness Month (March) * Child Abuse Prevention/Fair Housing Month (April)* National Disability Employment Awareness Month (October)* NHS promotes World Breastfeeding Week (August)* HopeCare Clinic: National Women’s Health Week (May)
• Healthy Families program expands into six more counties in southeast Indiana
• Work Services awarded ISO 9001-2015 certification
• Aberdeen Woods Phase V approved; awarded funding of $1.35 million
• New Hope started renovation on M. Fine on Spring senior housing development
• Employee Appreciation Event thanks & recognizes excellence
Brad WalkerChair
Pat DailyVice Chair
Christopher BottorffSecretary/Treasurer
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Alan Applegate James Bosley Will Dierking
Vicky Kent Haire David Lewis Chet Michell
John Neace Sandy Ringer Barbara Swank-Gallegos
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EMPLOYEEAWARD WINNERS
Each year New Hope Services honors employees who were nominat-ed by their peers for their outstanding achievements. They were honored at
a dinner event for all employees. CEO James Bosley and COO Jody Reschar
presented the awards.
PRESIDENT’S LEADERSHIP AWARD
Brittany WeikelAdult Services,
Residential Services Manager
SERVICE AWARDAndrea Hannah
Adult Services, Direct Support Professional
SERVICE AWARDTrish Kite-Hannon
Family Services Outreach Coordinator
FROM THE CHAIR AND CEODear Friends,
We are pleased to report another successful year – our 58th year to be exact. It was one of growth in some areas and belt-tightening in others, as we continually seek to hold the line on expenses, while continuing to expand services.
Last fall we expanded our Healthy Families program into six southeastern counties, bringing the total number of counties we now serve to 20. We further streamlined operations in other areas, resulting in cost savings. Family Services overall served more than 13,300 people last year, Adult Services nearly 400, and Housing more than 300.
Adult Services received advanced ISO certification in Work Services, which allows us to meet the needs of more area businesses with handwork and piecework. That in turn provides our clients with disabilities more jobs, new skills, and better paychecks.
We want to recognize the excellence of our 180 employees, who continue to do an outstanding job day after day with the clients and families they serve. It is because of them and their caring hearts that New Hope has become the largest provider of these services in Southern Indiana.
Housing & Community Development continues to be our strongest focus area, as demand for affordable housing for seniors and families increases across the state. Construction began on M. Fine on Spring, to renovate and develop the former “Industrial Nightmare” building into senior housing in downtown Jeffersonville.
Aberdeen Woods continues to grow, as Phase IV was completed and Phase V was awarded funding. Added to our portfolio last year are Davis Zeller Place in Brazil (senior housing) and renovation and expansion of Highland Glen in Scottsburg.
Finally, an enormous “THANK YOU!” to everyone who supports New Hope and its families – we couldn’t do what we do without you!
Sincerely,
Brad Walker James A. Bosley
Chairman of the Board President & CEO
BOARD OF DIRECTORS AWARDRebekah Lewellen
Family Services, Healthy Families Supervisor
MISSION: Provide services responsive to individual needs.
VISION: A quality life for all in our community.
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HOPEHOPEThe Adult Services program works with adults with disabilities and their families, helping them to increase vocational and employment skills, adult daily living skills, community integration, self care, and household duties in order to increase indepen-dence.
Adult Services Programs:
• Adult Community Empowerment Services (ACES)
• Skills Training
• Employment Services
• Supported Living
• Work Services / Vocational Training (Contract Services)
• Respite, Attendant Care, Homemaker Services
• Hope SeniorCare
• Behavior Management Services
• Community Habilitation
ADULT SERVICES
MISSION: Strengthen community inclusion by empowering individuals across all ability levels to face challenges and achieve independence.
384 ADULTS SERVED IN 2016
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HOPEHOPEAdult Community Empowerment Services (ACES) focuses on empowering adults with intellectual disabilities. Through a day program at New Hope Center, we help them discover their passions, encourage independence, and boost confidence through activities and learning social skills. Community mentors volunteer their time to share with clients. One week it might be a musician or a dance troupe; another might be a local TV weatherman or a snowboarder.
Community mentor and Bellarmine University theater professor
Carol Stewart spoke about her visit to ACES, “…this was an afternoon full of fun connections and a lot of wonderful energy.”
On any given day you can find us rocking out during band practice, hosting a variety of community mentors, learning sign language, or visiting the Derby Dinner Playhouse for a backstage tour. We are anything but boring!
We let our clients drive our services and control their day, based on their interests and what we have to offer. ACES participant Mary Kay
Wilson says, “ACES is a good place to be at. ACES rocks!”
PROGRAM SPOTLIGHT: ATTENDANT CARE & HOMEMAKER SERVICES
These programs provide assistance to meet the daily living needs of a client who requires support to care for them-selves or their home independently. Attendant Care services can include assistance with cooking, eating, bathing, hygiene, and errands. Homemaker services include dusting, sweeping or mopping, cleaning the bathroom, washing clothes, bed making, and lawn care. Clients may be seniors or people with disabilities.
Pictured are Payton Durbin, a New Hope direct support professional, with Joyce, her grandmother. Joyce is a resident at the New Hope senior housing development Aberdeen Woods, and she receives services through the Aged and Disabled Waiver.
Payton works with her grandmother one day a week, giving her the help she needs, with the added bonus of spending more time with the granddaughter she loves. Payton also works with two other people that need assistance in their homes and with many other clients at New Hope Center as well.
Joyce says, “If I had to clean, most of it wouldn’t get done! The New Hope staff helps me stay in a cleaner environment.”
We help people be self-sufficient as long as possible. Our goal is to help our clients stay independent, happy, and healthy in their own homes.
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HOPEMISSION: To promote and strengthen families with respect and compassion through prevention, education, and support.
FAMILY SERVICES
HOPEPrograms range from supplemental foods and nutrition counseling to intensive home-based assistance and family planning services. Our programs work in collaboration, ensuring that families receive services with a common goal of promoting and strengthening each family by providing the foundation upon which families can flourish.
Family Services Programs:
• CAPS (Child Advocacy & Parental Support)
• Healthy Families
• WIC (Women, Infants and Children)
• HopeCare Family Planning Clinic
13,313 CHILDREN & FAMILIES SERVED IN 2016
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Di and her baby Kamila came to the WIC office as a referral from their primary care provider, Nurse Practitioner Tonie Avery. The duo was struggling to make breastfeeding successful. Di knew her daughter was getting taller but wasn’t gaining enough weight.
She knew WIC provided supplemental foods but never reached out because her family could afford groceries. She discovered that WIC also has breastfeeding experts.
With one-on-one support, weekly visits, and a lot of care from her mom, Kamila began gaining weight without the help of formula. Di credits much of her success to the support from the WIC lactation staff.
Her primary care provider agrees. “The extra support for families is tremendous. WIC is more than just formula,” said Tonie Avery. She counts on WIC to provide nutrition and breastfeeding support for her patients that qualify for the program.
Her office routinely refers to WIC when a family is in need of more education or support than her office can provide. “WIC has a positive environment and can provide more than I can in 15 or 20 minutes,” stated Avery.
Di has a simple message for other families considering
WIC: “Don’t be afraid or ashamed to reach out – WIC is more than milk and food. It is support to help you be the best mom you can be.”
Di and Kamila are just one of many families whose lives are improved because of the support and resources provided by WIC that extend beyond the clinic walls.
WE ARE THE BEST AT WHAT WE DOAt New Hope, we have WIC staff members that are clinically certified lactation consultants (CLC). Those with additional training are board certified (IBCLC). New Hope offers the program in six counties, and last year served more than 11,500 women and children.
Our team collaborates with a variety of local services and health providers, with a goal of improving health outcomes for moms and their young children. Our goal is to help families start strong and stay that way.
PROGRAM SPOTLIGHT: WIC: BREASTFEEDING BEYOND THE CLINIC
WIC – WOMEN, INFANTS AND CHILDREN – is a federally funded nutrition program that improves access to nutritious foods and promotes healthier eating and lifestyles. They provide nutrition counseling and community referrals to pregnant, breastfeeding and postpartum women and their children under age five.
It is designed to improve fetal development, reduce the incidence of low birth weight and premature births; reduce maternal and childhood anemia, and promote breastfeeding.
13,313 CHILDREN & FAMILIES SERVED IN 2016
DI’S STORY
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HOUSING & COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
Forest Glen
Duck Creek
The Lofts @ Leeson’s
Elwood
Highland GlenScottsburg
Aberdeen WoodsWillow TraceQuartermaster CourtM. Fine on Spring
Jeffersonville
River’s EdgeClinton
Davis Zeller PlaceBrazil
MISSION: To provide direction and leadership in the development of safe, affordable and suitable housing in response to public need.
HOPEOver the past 20 years New Hope has constructed single-family homes and multi-family and senior living communities in Jeffersonville and several other locations in Indiana, including Scottsburg, Elwood and Clinton.
Today New Hope is expanding at some properties and developing new ones in order to help meet the increasing demand for affordable housing in Southern Indiana.
Housing & Community Development Programs:
• Apartment Communities for seniors, multi-family, individuals with disabilities
• Community Development
306 INDIVIDUALS & FAMILIES SERVED IN 2016
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HOPE
M. Fine on Spring is a senior housing development, converting an existing historic building into 51 affordable housing apartments in downtown Jeffersonville. It will have one and two bedroom units, and some will be handicapped acces-sible. Residents will enjoy a fitness center, theater, restaurant, community room spaces, and an outdoor roof terrace.
Located at 835 Spring Street, the property was originally home to the M. Fine & Sons shirt factory in the 1930s, hence the name. It stood vacant for many years, and for the past 20 years was home to a popular haunted house attraction called “Industrial Night-mare.” Construction began in November 2016, and opening is planned for fall 2017.
Davis Zeller Place is another senior housing development, converting two existing build-ings in Brazil, IN into 36 living units, along with an additional 12 new construction units. The project features one and two bedroom units with modern amenities. Adaptively reusing the junior high and Davis buildings preserves and revitalizes two historic land-marks. The new construction (duplexes) will replace blighted structures in the neighbor-hood. Amenities include a restaurant, fitness center, and community rooms. Construction will begin in 2017 with opening in early 2018.
The Lofts @ Leeson’s will also offer affordable housing for seniors in Elwood, IN. It is an adaptive reuse development consisting of a mix of 23 apartment units in the historic Leeson’s building and 23 units of new construction (duplexes) on lots recently cleared for blight elimination. All units will have two bedrooms and most will have two baths. Amenities include a restaurant, rooftop garden, fitness center, and community room. Construction will begin in March 2018.
Highland Glen is an affordable multi-family rental community of one, two, and three bedroom units that is undergoing expansion and rehabilitation. Located in Scottsburg, IN, the complex has 48 units and expansion will add an additional eight.
Units are furnished with kitchen appliances, central heat and air, washer/dryer hook ups and private storage. The community also offers a social room with kitchenette, computer learning center, laundry facilities and in-ground pool. Construction begins in 2017.
Aberdeen Woods provides unique, pleasant and safe living arrangements for seniors that no other facility in Southern Indiana currently provides. Seniors raising grandchildren is a focus of this development but not a requirement. Being developed in phases, there are 20 duplexes (40 units) now and Phase V, currently under construction, will bring the total to 50.
Each duplex features two or three bedrooms and two baths. There is potential for one or two additional phases to be developed; a gazebo, playground and community center are also planned.
HOUSING & COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
M. Fine on Spring
Davis Zeller Place
The Lofts @ Leeson’s
Highland Glen
Aberdeen Woods306 INDIVIDUALS & FAMILIES SERVED IN 2016
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2016REPORT TO THE COMMUNITY
TOTAL PEOPLE SERVED IN 2016
14,00381% Women, Infants & Children
AFFORDABLE HOUSING COMMUNITIES
Highland Glen $294,930Willow Trace $224,932Quartermaster Court $247,506Forest Glen I $203,224Forest Glen II $53,513Forest Glen Commons $58,098Aberdeen Woods $205,860Rivers Edge $228,034Duck Creek $295,034(Annual Operating Budgets)
TOTAL INCOME
$8,911,578
66%
Gov’t Agency Program Service Fees2%
Contributions
6%
In-Kind Revenue
3%4%
7%
3%
9%
Sheltered Workshop Income
Rental Income
Other Sources
Gov’t Agency - Other
Gov’t Agency Grants
NET ASSETS
$5,089,926
ECONOMIC IMPACT
Total Employees 180Salaries, Compensation $4,441,079Employee Benefits $534,817Employment Taxes, SS $316,343Value of Real Estate $17,014,634Goods and Services Purchased $7,639,509Unreimbursed Care $69,428
Total $30,015,810
TOTAL EXPENSES
$8,359,39842%
20%
17%
19%
1%
1%
Services for Families & Children
Fundraising
Administration & General
Other Programs
Housing Development & Services
Services for Adults
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HIGHLY MOTIVATED MOMWhen donors tour the St. Elizabeth Catholic Charities campus, adminis-trators show them Taylor Anderson’s room.
The 23-year-old transitional program resident keeps her living quarters tidy and organized.
It’s a window into the life of the woman, a single mother of 3-year-old Brayden, who has already checked off several goals in her journey to a better future.
“She’s a star client,” New Hope Services case manager Amy Lewis said. “She is able to multitask really well. She has a lot of things going on between education goals and childcare needs, her employment goals. There are all these facets of daily life that she’s managing by herself with her little guy.”
Anderson has only lived at St. Elizabeth for six months. Already she’s found a job, enrolled her son in daycare and is preparing to start school at Ivy Tech Community College in January.
“She’s willing to accept help,” Lewis noted. “I think some-times that can be a real barrier to folks, but the fact that she took initiative herself to call St. Elizabeth’s all those months back ... she’s eager to make a real positive change for her future.”
Taylor hopes to eventually earn a bachelor’s degree as a registered nurse and buy her own house.
A NEW BEGINNINGLeanne McNamee and her two grandsons, Liam and Kai Auld, are 600 miles away from everything they know.
Leanne, 49, moved to Jeffersonville with Liam, 3, and Kai, 2, in September - leaving friendships, familiarity and a support system in another state. But she needed to keep her family safe.
She has full custody of her grandsons, and she feared retaliation from their father. “The boys are her No. 1 priority,” said Chelsea Parman, the family’s New Hope
Services caseworker. “That’s clear in everything she does.”
Leanne agreed. “It’s always been about the babies from the very beginning,” she said. The first time she applied for emergency custody, she thought it would be temporary. But the parents struggle with addic-tion and mental health issues.
New Hope helped Leanne secure beds for her grandsons, and it gives her a place where she can talk with other adults. Now, she and her grandsons are getting by, but they still need help.
She has furniture and other posses-sions, but she still sleeps on a pile of towels and blankets. Still, Leanne has just one wish for Liam and Kai after a year of tough changes. “I just want this to be a Christmas for them to remember,” she said.
Wish Book is a partnership between New Hope Services and the News
and Tribune, raising funds and donations of household goods and other items to help several families
each year around the holidays. Stories (abridged) and photos courtesy of News and Tribune.
Generous gifts of $5,400, plus donations of household items,
furniture, toys, clothing and more, helped five deserving families, who
were awed by the support of the community last holiday season.
Thank you, donors, one and all!
WISH BOOK STORIES
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PHILANTHROPIST$100,000 +
Edwina and Arthur* AndereggJames Graham Brown FoundationHEME, Inc. John and Penny NeaceNew Hope Services EmployeesThe Paul Ogle Foundation, Inc.WHAS Crusade for Children
FOUNDER$50,000 - $100,000
James A. BosleyThe Gheens FoundationPNC FoundationUnited Way of Scott Co.Walmart Foundation
GOOD SAMARITAN$25,000 - $50,000
Ashley Furniture Industries, Inc.Walter T. and Hazel Bales
FoundationHorseshoe Foundation of Floyd Co.Robert Lynn CompanyLinda S. LynnGeo. Pfau’s Sons CompanyPNC Bank
BENEFACTOR$10,000 - $25,000
Applegate and FiferAlan ApplegateJohn E. BroadyThe C.E. and S. FoundationEstate of Charles CoffeyCommunity Foundation
of Southern IndianaRobert G. and Tammy CourtneyPatrick J. DailyHilliard-LyonsKoetter ConstructionLBM Construction Co.Bonnie LongMAC Construction & ExcavatingMcCauley Nicolas & CompanyMeijer, Inc.Morgan Family Fund
Neace Lukens InsuranceNew Washington State Bank Regions InsuranceCharles E. Reisert, Jr. *Scott County Community
FoundationState of IndianaDonald B. ThompsonWe CareRalph WilsonWMPI RadioYour Community BankMax Zimmerman
AMBASSADOR$5,000 - $10,000
America PlaceBlue Sky FoundationBowles Mattress Co.Centra Credit UnionPamela CottonWilliam R. Davis *First Harrison BankDavid and Beckye FlemingGannett FoundationGeneral FoodsGordon Gutmann, MDGreater North Clark
Health FoundationJay C Food StoreJack Leuthart *David LewisMainSource BankChet Michell Penn StationPepsi AmericasPleasant Ridge RedevelopmentQRS RecyclingBetty C. QuilletJody RescharCurt RichardsRonald McDonald House CharitiesMary and George SchlosserL. Thorn Co. Brad WalkerJim and Wendy WalkerWalnut Ridge NurseryZoeller Company* Deceased
As of December 31, 2016leuthart-mckean-williams society
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HOPE
$25,000 to $49,999The Gheens Foundation
$10,000 to $24,999Construction Consulting Services LLCPNC FoundationEpic Insurance SolutionsEdwina AndereggLBM Construction Co.
$5,000 to $9,999Community Foundation
of Southern IndianaJim and Wendy WalkerGreater North Clark Health FoundationPadgett Inc. Pleasant Ridge RedevelopmentBetty C. Quillet
$2,000 to $4,999Marc J. McCormickW. Isaac OrwickTerry GrahamDoug YorkJoseph L. BrownUnited Way of Greater CincinnatiJane RiehlCentra Credit UnionZoeller Company
$500 to $1,999Paul CunninghamSonya BroadyWilton J. AebersoldLeslie SmithStites & HarbisonChris and Lisa BottorffBob and Tammy CourtneyDavid and Renata LewisSharon EdwardsJames and Beverly PadgettMatthew BrownRotary Club of Jeffersonville American Apartment MgmtRodefer Moss CPAsJayne M. LabesBrad and Lisa Walker
New Washington State BankP. Terry RogersAlexandra BosleyMarcia and Garry Hubbert Arney and Thelma PetersApplegate Fifer & PulliamVince KleinClark Memorial Hospital Wolf Family Charitable Endowment Fund
Under $500AnonymousUnited Way of Bartholomew Co.Sandy RingerJames CruzL.I.F.E. Inc.Dr. and Mrs. Richard LookatchKiwanis Club of ClarksvilleJames and Julia KidwellKuhl & Grant LLPRoger MaynardS. Joe DeHavenMcKinley DevelopmentMyszak and Palmer Brad MattixBarbara AmyPaul HulibaBeth and George RudwellJackson Co. United WayTom KellyVicki ConlinSusan JamisonJim RichardsonPhil ArderyDavid ColterJohn and Debbie HarbesonDoug and Teresa SidebottomFirst Savings BankNancy DavisJustin PattonVince MalovichPaula and Bob LangfordJess MahanesGerald Larson, MDJaime and Nathalie ReyesCynthia & Thomas Andres, MDMichelle, James & SandraPatricia Bliss
Bellarmine University, Rubel School of Business
Mary Helen PeterAmazonSmile Donation ProgramPatricia and Harry Lee, Jr.Heuser HardwareGreat Lakes Capital FundRauch, Inc.John LedfordMarilyn and Paul WillcoxRobert and Toni HendersonThomas KingNannette and James SchmittTodd CrawfordSean CampbellIndiana Association of Rehab FacilitiesJames T. R. JonesJon B. WamplerDonald and Belinda LyversLeesa Benjamin and Gary GatesVirginia MormanClara’s ClosetBill WilliamsRobert AndersonGeorgina Allen Jane and Dallas RichardsRobert and Susan WaizDonald HartlineCarolyn and Lynn RansdellMary CraymerKenton WoodenAnne Whisenant Randy PetersCraig MooneyJames HoodDinah SmithRuth Anne and Ronald AndresMrs. Mary Frances KernenRose HuberPatty GilletteGwen and Andy McMahonJoyce Browning
IN-KIND DONATIONSB & G Home ImprovementsBowles Mattress Co.Park View Psychiatric ServicesClarksville Fire Department
2016 DONORS
Donations are from 7/1/15 through 12/31/16 (18 months)
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Alisha BrooksJayne LabesCentra Credit UnionSchmitt Furniture Co. Medley’s Auto & TruckCinda HartMelissa SchremserJames A. BosleySandy RingerPaula and Bob Langford
IN HONOR OFEdwina AndereggDavid and Renata Lewis
Robbie DanielMrs. Mary Frances KernenJames Hood
Jennifer L. JonesJames T. R. Jones
Providena CruzJames Cruz
Maleigh KingWolf Family Charitable
Endowment Fund
IN MEMORY OFArthur AndereggDavid and Renata Lewis
Francisco Q. CruzJames Cruz
William Ross DavisNancy DavisJess MahanesDinah Smith
Jo Ann DomeLeesa Benjamin and Gary GatesMary CraymerVirginia MormanCarolyn and Lynn Ransdell
Mary Ann FisherJoyce BrowningBeth and George Rudwell
Ralph Allen Jones Jr.Michelle, James & SandraArney and Thelma PetersRandy PetersAnne Whisenant
James LewisDavid and Renata Lewis
Christopher BosleyElizabeth AdamsAmerican Apartment MgmtApplegate Fifer & PulliamPhil ArderyBellarmine University, Rubel School of
BusinessAlexandra BosleyChris and Lisa BottorffJohn BroadyBrenda BushSean CampbellShanae CherryDavid ColterVicki ConlinTodd CrawfordFirst Savings BankPatty GilletteRhonda GividenGreat Lakes Capital FundJohn and Debbie HarbesonDebbie HeacockMarcia and Garry Hubbert Indiana Association of Rehab FacilitiesJames and Julia KidwellKuhl & Grant LLPJayne LabesPaula and Bob LangfordGerald Larson, MDJohn LedfordBonnie LongVince MalovichMelissa OlsenJustin PattonRauch, Inc.Jaime and Nathalie ReyesJim RichardsonJean RobbinsKenton Wooden
2016 DONORS
Donations are from 7/1/15 through 12/31/16 (18 months)
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Elizabeth AdamsHolly ArmstrongCheryl AshbyDana AvolioTori BillingsTracey BlakeJames A. BosleyElizabeth BoydJohn BroadyAnnette BrownBrenda BushRebecca CampbellStaci CamptonMary Jo CarricoShanae CherryCara ChumleyBethany CooperLinda CooperAmanda DieterlenMarjorie ElliottCaress FullenkampSheila HaffnerGreg HarlTrinity HeathcockSusan HensleyDana Hublar
Hope HulingJenny IngleDavid KeckKen KellerKelley KendallBlyss KettererDoug KidwellJoy KleinDan LentzRebekah LewellenElizabeth LondonBonnie LongConnie MartinTammy MathisNoemi McBrideJean McCartinRebecca McGarenMary Jane McGarveyAshley MorganJennifer NeffAmber NicholsTiffany NicholsMelissa OlsenChelsea ParmanRhonda PflumJenna Plasse
Bonnie PollockCynthia PorterLeah PruettJody RescharSheila RicheyMelissa RickettsJean RobbinsMarla RobertsMichelle SmithTonya SmithMaureen StaicerJeff ToyKimberly TungateKlarinda TutterowJohn WatkinsBrittany WeikelAshley WellsBruce WhiteRondesia WhitlowKari Wright
2016 DONORS 2016 EMPLOYEE DONORS
COUNTIES SERVEDBartholomew Clark Clay Fayette Floyd Franklin Dearborn HarrisonJackson Jefferson JenningsMadisonOhioRipley Rush Scott Switzerland UnionVermillionWashington
ACCREDITATIONS & CERTIFICATIONS Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF)
Healthy Families America
Better Business Bureau
ISO 9001 - 2015
WE ARE
LOCATIONS
NEW HOPE CORPORATE OFFICE & SENIOR CENTER 725 Wall Street Jeffersonville, IN 47130 (812) 288-8248
NEW HOPE COMMONS Family ServicesHopeCare Clinic1302 Wall Street Jeffersonville, IN 47130(812) 288-4304
KIDS PLACEFamily Services & Adult ServicesHopeCare Clinic1642 West McClain Ave. Scottsburg, IN 47170(812) 752-4892
SENIOR MANAGEMENT
James Bosley President & CEO
Jody Reschar Executive Vice President & COO
John Broady Senior Vice President & CFO
Bonnie Long Senior Vice President & CAO
Elizabeth Boyd Director of Family Services
Hope Huling Director of Adult Services
Mollie Garmon Business Manager
Jean Robbins Director of WIC
Kim Tungate Executive Assistant
812-288-8248812-288-1206 fax