Mike SciaccaWarm temperatures and a good cause...
- Share via
Mike Sciacca
Warm temperatures and a good cause were the right combination for the
success of Friends in Service to Humanity’s fifth annual Homeless and
Hunger Prevention Charity Golf Classic Monday at SeaCliff Country
Club.
In its fifth consecutive year, the Friends in Service to Humanity
held its most successful charity event yet.
Each year the golf tournament has grown. Monday’s tournament drew
a confirmed 108 golfers -- the largest in the tournament’s history --
topping the previous record of 102 set in 2002.
“And we hope it continues to grow over the next few years,” said
Huntington Beach resident Bill Walters, a FISH board member who
golfed Monday’s event. “That is our hope.”
Thirteen sponsors were out on the golf course Monday, but the most
popular tent was BJ’s Restaurant and Brewery, which was handing out
free brews. The day of golf also included a barbecue lunch, raffle
and both silent and live auctions, golf contests, such as closest to
the pin, putting, designating long driver and hole in one cars, and a
banquet dinner closing out the event.
The tournament had an individual team format.
The 2002 tournament set a record in grossing nearly $50,000 with a
net of $30,000, said Wendy Ingham, fund developer for the FISH.
She said that this year’s event hoped to gross up to $60,000, with
a net of about $40,000.
“Finally, with this golf tournament at SeaCliff, we had a
significant fund-raiser that made money,” she said. “Since I’ve been
on this board I have watched what started as a small tournament
definitely grow in stature.”
Friends in Service to Humanity was started in 1968 by Newport
Beach resident Shirley Watts in an effort to feed the local need of
service and assistance to needy families.
A United Way organization, FISH has a mission to give direct
assistance to people in need and to prevent homelessness.
“The organization really is about helping those in need get on
their feet and try to make them independent again,” said Walters, the
chief financial officer at FISH and a retired CPA.
Walters, a Huntington Beach resident for 33 years, oversees the
organization’s budget and reviews monthly finances. When he began
working with FISH four years ago, the organization’s budget, he said,
was $400,000.
Today, it stands at $1.2 million.
“The needs are growing and luckily, our resources have been
growing along with those needs,” he said. “We stage various
fund-raisers and this charity golf tournament is our biggest event in
terms of funds raised.
“We are always looking for new volunteers and board members to
help out with this worthy organization. Any, and all, are welcome.”
Dana Timmermans, in his sixth week as executive director at FISH,
credited board members and volunteers -- some 500 strong -- for the
continued success of the organization.
“They have done such a tremendous job in helping to keep with the
organization’s vision,” he said. “We hope to always be ready where
there is a need.”
* MIKE SCIACCA covers sports and features. He can be reached at
(714) 965-7171 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.