PRESS RELEASE
September 25, 2006
Grandmother’s
Legacy Supports Granddaughter’s
Vision to End Poverty
Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center
Awards $50,000 to Trickle Up to Help Brooklyn Microentrepreneurs
Brooklyn – Mildred Robbins Leet learned social responsibility
and activism from her grandmother, Brooklyn-born Goldie
Elowsky. Eighty
years ago, Ms. Elowsky helped found Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center
in Brooklyn by raising funds to purchase the land for the hospital’s
first building.
Five decades later, Mildred Robbins Leet and her late husband Glen
decided to start a movement to end poverty by helping people start
businesses and founded a microenterprise organization called Trickle
Up.
Now the activist drive of both women has come together. Kingsbrook
has awarded $50,000 to Trickle Up to start 70 small businesses in
Brooklyn. The Kingsbrook award will be distributed as seed
capital grants to low-income individuals selected to participate
in Trickle Up’s microbusiness development program. The initiative
will be called the Mildred Robbins Leet Entrepreneurial
Grant Program.
“This is a wonderful testimony to my grandmother’s
legacy and to the excellent work of Trickle Up,” stated Mrs.
Leet. “Kingsbrook continues to have a powerful presence
in people’s lives in Brooklyn, and now will further assist
individuals by providing tools necessary to lift them out of poverty. Working
with Trickle Up is a natural fit for Kingsbrook, and we are honored
that they chose us.”
Trickle Up has been working in Brooklyn for over ten years to assist
low-income individuals become financially independent and prosperous.
Since 1994, Trickle Up’s U.S. program has supported 4,000
entrepreneurs with business grants and training.
The award furthers Kingsbrook’s commitment to partner with
culturally diverse communities.
Trickle Up matched Kingsbrook’s grant and together they will
assist 70 Brooklyn residents to become self-sufficient through starting
a business.
“We view our mission to advance the health of our culturally
diverse community in holistic terms.
This investment in the economic future of individuals in
our community is a vital part of our community’s health and
wellness,” stated Dr. Linda Brady, President and CEO of Kingsbrook
Jewish Medical Center. “ A more solid economic foundation
frees up resources and energy for people to be able to focus on
their physical health and well-being. You cannot do this if you
are unemployed and concerned about the everyday survival of you
and your family.”
“Kingsbrook identifies needs in the Brooklyn community and
address them with a spirit of collaboration and giving that is commendable,” said
Bill Abrams, President of Trickle Up. “We are pleased to work
with Kingsbrook and our local Brooklyn partners to help home-based
daycare centers, caterers, street vendors and other small businesses
to succeed.”
The Program will officially launch during a ceremony on
September 26, 2006, at Kingsbrook. For more information
please call Enid Dillard at 718.604.5201.
Kingsbrook Jewish
Medical Center is an 864-bed teaching Medical Center, dedicated
to meeting the health needs of one of Brooklyn’s
most culturally diverse communities. Kingsbrook continues
to implement programs and services that respond to the
vital health needs and concerns of the community at large.
Centers of Excellence Include: Physical & Rehabilitative
Medicine, including Brooklyn’s only New York State approved
Traumatic Brain Injury & Coma Recovery Unit, Ophthalmology, an
inpatient Geriatric Psychiatry Program, an outpatient Caribbean
Community Mental Health Program, the Wound Healing & Hyperbaric
Center, Orthopedic Surgery, an ADA Certified Diabetes Self-Management
Center including a Comprehensive Health & Obesity Management Program,
a Women’s Wellness Center featuring Minimally Invasive Gynecological
Surgery and state of the art Digital Mammography. Other specialty
areas include: Emergency Services, Ambulatory Surgery and
a Certified Non-Invasive Vascular Laboratory and Surgery
Program, as well as Rutland Nursing Home, a 538-bed Adult
and Pediatric short and long term care facility and an Adult
Day Health Program for medically challenged seniors. Kingsbrook
and Rutland Nursing Home are JCAHO certified and not-for-profit members
of the Greater New York Hospital Association and the Healthcare
Association of New York State.
Contact:
Allyson Wainer
212.255.9980
104 West 27th Street, 12th Floor
New York, NY 10001
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