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Published: Jan 12, 2008 03:42 PM
Modified: Jan 12, 2008 03:42 PM

Residents reach out to the community
TOUCH OF GRAY

Celebrating Carol Woods' Pathways to Greatness Award are, from left, John Richter with LarsonAllen CPA; Patricia Sprigg, president and CEO of Carol Woods; Robert Dunham, chair of the Carol Woods Board of Directors; and Charles Paddock, president of the Carol Woods Residents Association.
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Carol Woods recently received the national Pathways to Greatness Recognition Award.

The American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging and LarsonAllen, CPA, recognized Carol Woods for the community's achievements and exemplary services in the older-adult and continuing-care field.

Distinguishing characteristics that were noted in the award were Carol Woods' commitment to true teamwork, resident integration and accessibility, meaningful engagement, authentic intergenerational interaction and social accountability.

Charles Paddock, president of the Carol Woods Resident's Association and a former U.S. Navy officer, has enjoyed his role in the community as a seven-year resident, an active member in the association and as a volunteer. He is pleased Carol Woods is the award recipient.

"It's a wonderful award," he said. "I think it's really an honor for Carol Woods to be recognized in this way. And I think it's true: All the things that were taken into account in making the award are true about Carol Woods."

The selection process wasn't easy, as applicants from across the country were considered based on leadership, cutting-edge programs and services, and participation in educational and research efforts.

Paddock and his wife, Janet, exemplify the type of leadership and volunteerism that helped garner the award. Paddock has spent 21 years as a volunteer tax preparer in the IRS program through RSVP and has taught the AARP Driver Safety program for 11 years. He and his wife also deliver Meals on Wheels once a week.

"I've been a volunteer in a lot of ways," Paddock said. "I just enjoy doing something, staying busy. I'm not a big sports fan and don't watch a lot of television, so I like to stay busy."

Thelma Perkins is also representative of residents engaged both at Carol Woods and in the larger community. Perkins has dedicated her time to the senior center in Chapel Hill since before the new Seymour Center opened. Perkins spends three or four days a week volunteering to help coordinate concerts, lectures, local art exhibits, social hours, yard sales and classes.

"I've been here almost 10 years, and everything good that goes on in this community emanates from people who live at Carol Woods," Perkins said. "Carol Woods' reputation is very much a part of the whole community of Chapel Hill."

In her own neighborhood, Perkins is involved in the Gay Nineties, a club for Carol Woods residents over the age of 90 that provides fun and appealing activities that include trips to art museums, bringing local artists to campus to play music and sing, and inviting lecturers from UNC or elsewhere to speak on current topics.

"We have no activities director," Perkins said. "What is done on campus and in the community is done primarily through committees of residents. Once people move here, they don't forget that there's an outer world that needs help, and so many continue their outside activities."

Carol Woods residents, staff and board take their community role as a not-for-profit very seriously. More than $500,000 a year is contributed to the community to support the greater good. Residents volunteer close to 40,000 hours in the community, and staff and residents support the many not-for-profit boards that work toward making the community aging-friendly. The residents' Community Relations Committee has led food drives, habitat projects and student-resident community intervention projects, just to name a few.

"I think Carol Woods is very much involved (in the community)," Paddock said. "I am very proud of the donations that Carol Woods makes to Orange County, the Town of Chapel Hill and the school systems. I think it's very good for Carol Woods and good for the towns and the schools that we are participating in that way. I don't know that we could do any better in that way than we're already doing."

Diane Henderson, a former president of the Resident's Association, is a life-long volunteer whose experiences range from serving on the county's Aging Services Advisory Committee to the League of Women Voters, to formatting the Carol Woods' Friday Memo. She and her husband, Nelson, moved from the North Carolina coast almost 10 years ago. Henderson sees the high level of volunteerism and community involvement among her friends and neighbors at Carol Woods.

"It's important to have something to do," Henderson said. "I've always been public service oriented. I don't think [the award] is a big surprise because a lot of people here do a great many things for the community. An enormous number of people volunteer."

The Pathways review showed that the welfare and well-being of employees at Carol Woods are priorities with residents. Myriad educational and growth opportunities, along with receiving livable wages, a robust benefits package and the annual Employee Appreciation Fund gift from residents contribute to the low 13 percent turnover rate in staff.

"Those of us who've lived here for any period of time are certainly aware of how deserving Carol Woods is of this award, primarily because of the relationship that exists between residents and staff," said Mary Ann Gross, who's serving her second term as a member of the Carol Woods Board of Directors and is a member of the Master Plan Task Force. She and her husband, Ed, have been residents of Carol Woods for almost eight years.

Through community activities such as sponsoring a summer camp for disabled children, donating revenues toward charitable causes, collaborating with higher education institutions and local schools to provide valuable learning opportunities, and through widened access to applicants who do not meet certain financial criteria, Carol Woods has left a lasting impression on the hearts and minds of the residents of Orange County and beyond.

"This award certainly reminded residents of how lucky we are to live here, and reinforces Carol Woods' mission that 'goes beyond ourselves'," Gross said.


In Brief

Carol Woods recently welcomed new members to its board of directors: Jack Benjamin, founder of the Teaching Center at UNC; Ned Brooks, clinical associate professor of health policy and administration, UNC School of Public Health; Gerda Fillenbaum, research professor of medical psychology at Duke in the School of Nursing and the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences; Lorna H. Harris, chair and professor of the NCCU Department of Nursing; Neely McLaughlin, partner at Blackman and Sloop, CPAs, Chapel Hill; and James A. Wilde, member of the N.C. Bar and in private practice of elder law. Jim Copeland will succeed Bob Dunham as chairman of the board for 2008.



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