|
|||||||
Pine Manor Colleges Award for Inclusive Leadership and Social Responsibility was presented to Mimi Silbert, Founder, President, and CEO of the Delancey Street Foundation, on March 31, 2004 in San Francisco. President Gloria Nemerowicz and Susan Webber, Vice President for Institutional Advancement, joined fifty alumnae and their guests from the greater Bay area in honoring Dr. Silbert at a reception, which was followed by a dinner attended by sponsors who contributed more than $5000 to PMC. The College selected Mimi Silbert as its honoree because she lives a life of inclusive leadership and social responsibility every day. Silbert began the Delancey Street Foundation in 1971 with four residents, a thousand dollars and a dream of developing a new model to turn around the lives of substance abusers, former felons, and others who have hit bottom. Thirty years later, over 14,000 residents have graduated into society as successful citizens with productive lives as lawyers, truck drivers, sales people, and even a deputy sheriff. In making the presentation President Nemerowicz said, We honor you because you have shown us the power of persistenceof never giving up on people no matter how desperate their situation. When you founded the Delancey Street Foundation you had a vision and very little else. Today the Foundation has grown to include five facilities throughout the country and is recognized as the nations leading self-help residential education center for former substance abusers and ex-convicts.
The Delancey Street program is distinguished by its extended family each one teach one approach. With no staff, no salaries, no cost to the taxpayers or clients, and no government funding, the entire organization is run by the residents -- a real grass-roots effort. Residents earn high school equivalencies and learn interpersonal and social survival skills. Your construction in 1990 of a 400,000 square foot complex on the San Francisco waterfrontthe new home for Delancey Streetwas an amazing demonstration of the power of collaboration and community, President Nemerowicz emphasized. With you as developer and Delancey as its own general contractor, 300 formerly unemployable addicts, homeless people, and ex-felons managed the entire construction process and built a unique development-- containing retail stores, restaurants, and 177 dwelling unitsthat has been called a masterpiece of social design by a Pulitzer Prize winning architectural critic. The Foundation collaborates with numerous public and private agencies and runs a charter public high school for at-risk youths which Silbert heads. Silbert has designed adult and juvenile justice master plans for numerous cities and states, designed and conducted the largest study in the country on prostitution, and designed curriculums and provided training to over 50 police, sheriff, and probation departments. For her pioneering work Mimi Silbert was appointed to the National Institute of Justice by President Carter and four times to the California State Board of Corrections by two governors. Together with Delancey Street Silbert has received awards and commendations from three presidents, numerous Senate and Congressional leaders, and several state legislatures and governors. She has been featured on 20/20, Good Morning America,and Oprah Winfrey Prime Time Special. Members of the Planning Committee for the San Francisco event included Juliette McLean Anthony 60, Candace Matsuura Iwanyc 95, Clare Rolph Wheeler Sias 46, Patricia Clark Ernsberger 51, Betsy Van Orsdel Moulds 64, Susan Pate Ulrich 78, Serena Strazzulla Kokjer Greening 59, Cid Roberts-Young 71, and Heidi Neipris Wexler 82.
Top of Page |
Back
to ilsr Leadership Awards |
|
|||||