MHA April Luncheon Recognizes Progress

At the Mental Health Association in Chautauqua County’s April luncheon, Afroula Snell (left), Chautauqua County coordinator for NY Connects, described the services her organization provides. Marty Carcione made a carrot cake for the event in appreciation for all the help the MHA has given her family.
Afroula Snell, Independent Living Specialist for NY Connects, spoke at the most recent Mental Health Association in Chautauqua County recovery luncheon held in April, describing the services available through her office.
The agency can help people of all ages, any disability, and caregivers to find care, support, and transportation, remain independent, and get help with Medicare, Medicaid and other benefits by three-way calls to these services. Part of Southwestern Independent Living Center, Snell can be reached at 716-661-3010 or NYConnects.ny.gov.
Michelle Colaiacovo, grants manager, awarded certificates to three participants who achieved employment – at a fast food restaurant, as a teacher’s aide, and at the MHA. Awarding a certificate to a participant who achieved three years of sobriety, she noted that, “Every day is a miracle for those of us in recovery.” She is now a Narcan trainer herself.
Peer Specialist Justin Jimenez offered grace before the spaghetti dinner that was prepared by St. Susan Center and served by Activities/PR Coordinator Dianne Valvo and volunteer Marty Carcione.
Having learned that the MHA needed help providing the food for their luncheons, Carcione contributed her special carrot cake with cream cheese frosting that everyone enjoyed. In a conversation, she shared how much the MHA helped her family when her son started coming to MHA groups last May after returning from three months in a rehabilitation center.
“For those without a family to support them, substance use and mental health disorders can lead to homelessness, where they find themselves in a hole they can’t climb out of,” she said. “The MHA has really been a blessing because it is a peer organization. Everyone here can relate to participants, working with them one-on-one as a guide to resources they need.”
The Mental Health Association invites local businesses, churches, organizations and individuals to assist in providing these lunches. To help by making a meal or sharing its cost, contact Dianne Valvo at 716-720-8098 or Dianne.Valvo@MHAChautauqua.org.
All are welcome to the recovery luncheons at 1 p.m. on the third Tuesday of every month. The luncheon and all MHA services are free.
The Jamestown recovery center in the Gateway Building, Door 14, at 31 Water Street is open Monday, Wednesday and Thursday, 9:30 a.m. to 7 p.m., and Tuesday and Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The North County center at Grace Lutheran Church, 601 Eagle St., Dunkirk, will resume hours as soon as restoration work is completed on the building. Until the reopening, anyone who would like to talk to or meet with an MHA coach in Dunkirk can call 716-661-9044 or email info@MHAChautauqua.org.
To learn more about the Mental Health Association, call 716-661-9044 or visit MHAChautauqua.org or facebook.com/MHAChautauqua. A schedule with descriptions of MHA’s dozens of groups and classes is at MHAChautauqua.org/groups.