Parenting young children is a job that never takes a holiday-not even Mothers' Day. But it hasn't changed over the years as much as we might sometimes think.
Here's an online review of Glko Wellman's Guiding Their Way -- Day by Day.
Children today are born into a very different society than their parents or grand-parents, observes Glo Wellman (left) . But the basic nature of the kids themselves is essentially the same as it has been for generations.
In addition to teaching Child Development at Santa Rosa Junior College Glo Wellman has been a long-time staff members at the California Parenting Institute.
It worked in Napa. Now a youth-led service center for young people aging out of foster care has launched a second outlet in Santa Rosa.
Mitch Findley helps move office furniture into the new V.O.I.C.E.S. office in Santa Rosa.
Only recently have the needs of youth aging out of Foster Care gotten much public attention. But the high rates of homelessness, unemployment and early parenthood create additional demand on public social service systems that are already overburdened. So proactive alternatives such as V.O.I.C.E.S. are garnering widespread attention.
When V.O.I.C.E.S first opened their doors in Napa, Mitch Findley (left) says they had to learn how to define and explain themselves to the community around them. By now, they've gotten pretty good at it.
KRCB's North Bay Report has won an Excellence in Media award from the California Teachers Association, for a report last April on peer-driven non-violence training for junior high school students. Today we reprise that award-winning report.
Rick Phillips (left) is the creator and leading advocate for the Safe School Ambassadors program, which is a project of the Sebastopol-based non-profit, Community Matters.
The 6th annual "Real Heroes" of Sonoma and Mendocino Counties are being honored this week by the local Red Cross office. In this report we meet two of them.
His Bar Mitzvah is successfully completed, but Gabe Ferreck is not stopping his work on behalf of the displaced children of Darfur. Here he is pictured with the tabletop display he created for the JWW Backback Project. In the audio clip below, Here he describes his next project for them, the Walk for Darfur.
How does a helicopter airlift rescue unfold? Pilot Paul Bradley (right) gives a step-by-step account of the episode for which he was honored by the Red Cross this year.
Two of this year's other Red Cross Real Hero honorees are being recognized for actions that were truly a family affair.
It's not easy to measure progress in the medical effort to rein in HIV in Namibia, but Mark and Paula Nethedra say some encouraging trends are beginning to emerge.
Click here to read about all of this year's Real Heroes.
Her quiet efforts to provide homes and medical care for orphaned children in rural South Africa have brought international recognition to a 75-year old nurse, as well as a visit to northern California.
Perhaps because she was 14 by the time she was able to start school, Sister Abigail knew that she wanted to be a nurse, a career path she says was based on two sorts of inspiration.
Today, Sister Abigail is lauded and loved for her dual community based projects, Clouds of Hope, a home for orphaned children, and The Khuphuka Project, which provides heath care services for adults, especially those who are HIV-positive.
It's a long, long way from the mountains of South Africa to Sonoma County and San Francisco, a journey that Sister Abigail recalls began with a whim, and took flight with a big surprise.