Tina Hoover
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People are not perfect and every society is flawed, but instead of
finding criticism, Tina Hoover looks for ways to make her world
better.
“Maybe that’s why I do what I do, because when you get involved,
you help make it the best it can be,” she said, realizing for the
first time why she has been volunteering her whole life.
A Corona del Mar resident, Hoover works to make her church, her
home and her community the best -- just because they are hers.
Holding prestigious titles such as president and lieutenant
governor of the Kiwanis Club, and being a board member of the Chamber
of Commerce, Hoover works several full-time jobs at any one time. She
doesn’t get paid for them, though. Instead, she generates thousands
of dollars for charities through fund-raising projects.
“I don’t like just doing things, I like doing things in a big
way,” Hoover says.
Adding class to everything she puts her hand on, she moved the
Child Guidance Center’s holiday tree fund-raiser into an elegant
hotel, gave the Habitat for Humanity’s fund-raising yard sale a clean
department-store look and raised the Pacific Coast Triathlon to
national attention and Olympic consideration.
Hoover’s touch is unmistakable, but she attributes success to the
people she works with.
“I am just one more small part, but all of those small parts
coming together make a huge difference,” she says.
An organizer more than a participant, she finds joy in bringing
athletes together through triathlons but confesses that until
recently she didn’t even know how to swim.
Leaving little time for personal goals, Hoover finally had to cut
down on volunteering to achieve her lifelong dream of becoming a
lawyer. This year, at the age of 61, Hoover was sworn in as an
attorney after passing the bar exam on her 20th try.
Now, Hoover has her own practice, new demands on her time and even
more skills to offer. Already, she has taken on three pro bono cases
and has committed herself to working with youth, teaching analytical
thinking through mock trials.
Reluctantly, Hoover has had to take more time for herself to
organize family gatherings, focus on her private practice and work
toward her new goal of becoming a judge.
But Hoover will continue volunteering, planning and organizing,
because that’s who she is, that’s what she has always done and that’s
what keeps her going. She may change the nature of her involvement,
but does not plan to stop giving, because it’s her passion and she
needs energy now more than ever.
-- Story and photo
by Coral Wilson
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