NEVER SAY ‘NO’
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June Casagrande
It’s 9:30 on a Friday morning, and the Oasis Senior Center is teeming
with life.
In one room, members are learning French. Next door, a ceramics
class is underway. Across the pleasant courtyard, Judy Aprile is
teaching an exercise class just for seniors. Two men play pool in a
billiards room. Another is harvesting kale in the Oasis garden. Three
volunteers bustle with the work of planning senior travel adventures.
And everywhere you look, people are smiling.
“The programs here are wonderful,” said Ray Gootgeld, a member of
Oasis since 1997 who, like many, has become active as a volunteer as
well. “It keeps the mind active. It gives seniors something to look
forward to each day.”
Gootgeld, an active 80-year-old who holds the title of first vice
president of Friends of the Oasis, takes exercise classes three times
a week at the center. He has also taken Spanish conversation classes
and is signed up for a writing course.
Classes are a big part of what Oasis is all about, center Director
Celeste Jardine-Haug said.
But to fully understand what Oasis does, it’s almost simpler to
ask: What don’t they do? If a Newport Beach senior needs a ride to
the doctor, yes, they do that. If someone needs a referral for
housing, yes, they do that, too.
If a senior wants to go on a junket to Vegas, learn to write a
life history, or play mah-jongg or bridge; if someone wants to join a
computer club or a garden club or even a sailing club with its own
boat; if someone needs information about how to get their insurance
company to pay for health care -- the answer to all those questions
and more is, Yes, they do that.
The one thing they don’t do?
“No bingo,” Jardine-Haug said. For one thing, it’s not legal in
Newport Beach. For another thing, there are so many more enriching
activities that seniors can enjoy at Oasis that bingo, by comparison,
might seem like a waste of time.
CLASS ACTS
A quick glimpse of the ceramics class and it’s clear what she
means. Here, an emeritus class of Coastline College has Oasis members
working alongside other students to create some impressive ceramics
pieces.
“I find it very relaxing and stress-reducing,” said Dr. Richard
Tester, a member who has taken three ceramics classes there. “I’ve
made cups and vases and figurines. A favorite of mine is a little
locomotive. It’s a fun piece.”
The college’s emeritus program brings classes to the center that
are free to seniors, though state budget cutbacks mean that Oasis may
have to begin providing some of the classes in coming years. UC
Irvine and Orange Coast College also hold a few classes on campus.
Other classes are taught by volunteers, such as Nancy Lieberg and
Sue Hersch, who lend their expertise at the Friday morning ceramics
class. Other classes are presented by instructors paid by the center
to teach things like computer skills.
Oasis has about 6,000 members and about 4,500 active members. The
center owes its success to a mix of professional city staff members,
the Friends of Oasis and other volunteers. On average, the center
serves about 400 seniors every day.
Friends of Oasis is an auxiliary of mostly volunteer members who
do raise funds and plan events for Oasis. They run the Oasis Travel
Office, which offers trips for seniors, members and nonmembers.
“There’s usually at least one gambling trip a month,” said Sheila
Hatchell, president of Friends of the Oasis. “Then, there are other
trips all over the place.”
A huge calendar on the wall at the busy travel office lists
upcoming trips to Canada’s Atlantic Coast, Pechanga, Montana and Las
Vegas, nicknamed “Viejas” -- Spanish for “old women” -- on the big
board.
The trips raise about $20,000 a year for the center. The travel
office is run by volunteers, some who’ve been at it for about 20
years.
“The volunteers really help make the place run,” Hatchell said.
The Friends of the Oasis budget is about $320,000 a year, some of
which is raised by the Friends, much of it coming from grants and
other outside sources and is managed by the friends.
NO ‘NO’ FOR AN ANSWER
The city has six full-time and two part-time staff at the center,
paid for from a budget of $499,428 last year from the city’s general
fund. Transportation services at the center include four vans
shuttling seniors at a cost of about $2 each way, door to door in
Newport Beach. One of the vans is funded by Hoag Hospital; another is
provided by South County Senior Services. The city budgets $146,899
from its transportation fund for two vans, drivers and maintenance.
“Whether you’re frail and homebound, or whether you’re active and
looking for more of those types of services, we have something to
offer,” Jardine-Haug said. “We tell our volunteers who answer the
phone that there is no ‘no’ answer. When someone calls looking for
any type of service, no matter what it is, we try to offer whatever
information or help we can.
“Our philosophy is, you come to us, tell us what you need or want,
and we’ll do what we can to get it going,” Jardine-Haug said. “That’s
the biggest secret of Oasis’ success.”
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