The funding is to support Long Island Cares’ Nassau County food pantries, supplying toiletries and household supplies. It will also support the organization’s Veterans Project with food, toiletries and household supplies.
“Every year the Dejana Foundation steps up in the fight to end food insecurity here on Long Island,” Michael Haynes, vice president of government relations, advocacy and social policy at Long Island Cares, said.
This year the need for support is especially meaningful as experts say costs are rising, and people are struggling to make ends meet.
“We are so grateful for their most recent gift of $100,000, which equips Long Island Cares with the expanded capacity needed to keep pace with a Long Island still recovering from the increased hunger associated with the recent federal government shutdown,” Haynes said.
For the Peter & Jeri Dejana Foundation, the support is all about neighbor helping neighbors on Long Island.
“These grants embody the Peter & Jeri Dejana Foundation’s spirit of giving but also represent a call to action for both individuals and other philanthropic organizations to give what they can to address the very real problem of food insecurity in our local community. This is not a faraway need—it’s right in our own backyard,” Valerie Mallon, program director at the Peter & Jeri Dejana Foundation, said.
“Our community is strongest when we come together to feed, support, and uplift those who need it most,” Mallon added. “We have great confidence in these three organizations to use these funds to continue and expand their positive impact in our community.”
The donation “will make a big difference in helping us feed our neighbors facing food insecurity. We are grateful for the Foundation’s support because it will touch the lives of many Long Islanders. This is a great milestone in our work to ensure food access for Long Islanders in need,” John Probert, grants specialist of Long Island Cares, said.
More than 313,800 Long Islanders are food insecure, with an estimated 71,500 of them children, according to the most recent data from Long Island Cares.
Pal-O-Mine in Islandia offers equine therapy for neurodiverse individuals and people with disabilities.
CN Guidance provides mobile mental health and substance abuse treatment, plus a new crisis stabilization center.
Paws of War trains service and therapy dogs to support veterans and first responders.
Programs emphasize trauma-informed care, emotional support, and community healing.
Children and adults with unique needs benefit greatly from unique therapeutic programs that facilitate healing, growth and learning. In response to these positive outcomes, organizations have developed innovative therapies to meet the needs of people with disabilities, individuals with autistic spectrum disorder, survivors of trauma, veterans and first responders.
Here’s a snapshot of three located on Long Island:
Horsing around for healing
Founded in 1995, Pal-O-Mine Equestrian of Islandia began as a therapeutic horseback riding program for individuals with disabilities and other populations, notes Lisa Gatti, founder and CEO.
“Our mission is to provide a comprehensive therapeutic equine program using the horses to facilitate growth, learning and healing,” said Gatti, noting that equine therapy is meant as an adjunct to traditional therapy.
Half of the organization’s 450 weekly clients actually ride horses. The other half use ground-based programs, such as grooming, leading and setting up obstacle courses.
“Horses facilitate hippotherapy, by providing consistent rhythmic, three-dimensional movement. And that actually mimics a human walking gate,” said Gatti, adding, “When our patients and kids sit on the horse, they’re able to gain the same input they would while they’re actually walking themselves.”
The horse riding movement provides constant neuro-motor movements, stimulating sensory, motor and cognitive systems at the same time.
Speech and/or occupational therapists at Pal-O-Mine facilitate hippotherapy for neurodiverse individuals, ranging in age from 15 months to 60: This includes people on the autism spectrum, with cerebral palsy, ADD or ADHD, spina bifida, muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis, or language and chromosomal disorders.
“It can improve things like attention, concentration, problem solving, language skills, not to mention balance,” Gatti said. “It’s great for their core strength, their endurance, their flexibility.”
Interacting with horses also leads to greater self-confidence, a sense of accomplishment and improved socialization.
In the ground-based program, which is led by licensed mental health professionals and certified equine specialists, the horses provide non-verbal communication which facilitates therapy and healing .
“Horses are highly sensitive animals that can sense and mirror an individual’s emotional state and body language, just by being in the presence of a human being,” Gatti said.
Going beyond the four walls
CN Guidance & Counseling Services offers a Mobile Recovery Unit that can provide mental health and substance abuse treatments within patients’ respective communities. Courtesy of CN Guidance & Counseling Services
For the most part, CN Guidance and Counseling Services assists those with significant mental health challenges, including depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and severe anxiety.
“We touch over 30,000 individuals a year through our agency,” said CEO Jeffrey Friedman.
Many of their clients have difficulty getting to an office for therapy, so many services are done off site.
“We have a big Mobile Recovery Unit that can actually engage people in mental health and substance abuse treatment right in the community,” said Friedman, noting that the RV has three offices within.
As most of the people they treat have experienced trauma, CN Guidance employs healing and compassionate trauma-informed care that fosters their engagement in treatment.
The organization’s ACT (Assertive Community Treatment) team comprises a psychiatrist, a social worker and someone with lived experience.
“They’re for people who are in and out of the hospital and have trouble staying on their medication. And we can go out in the field and work with those individuals,” said Friedman, noting that many of the patients are homeless, unmedicated and lacking benefits. “We can get them benefits, we can secure them a place to live and we can also provide them with the mental health treatment that they need.”
This fall, the organization will open a crisis stabilization center at its Hicksville headquarters.
“You can think of it as urgent care for behavioral health,” said Friedman, noting that patients will be able to stay at the facility for just under a 24-hour period. “In that time, they can be assessed and treated for their mental health or substance use needs.”
When patients leave, they’ll be given a referral and an appointment for long-term treatment.
ROBERT MISSERI: ‘When a veteran, who has been through so much, is sitting with a dog that they know has been through so much equally, it makes things very, very different for them emotionally.’ Courtesy of Paws of War
Dogs helping vets, and helping themhelp others
Paws of War provides training for dogs that work with veterans and first responders, many of whom are dual purpose dogs: serving as both service and therapy dogs, notes Robert Misseri, who co-founded the organization 11 years ago. The organization also has dogs available for adoption to serve as emotional support companions.
All Paws of War’s dogs are rescued, often from abominable conditions, such as puppy mills or neglect.
“When a veteran, who has been through so much, is sitting with a dog that they know has been through so much equally, it makes things very, very different for them emotionally,” Misseri said. “And it helps, because they both bond together.”
For veterans who can’t have a dog of their own, Paws of War encourages them to spend time with the canines at their Nesconset headquarters.
“They come down to Paws of War and they will help socialize, they will help walk, they will just hang out with them,” Misseri said.
Service dogs are trained to aid in specific medical tasks; therapy dogs go to VA hospitals or ailing veterans’ and first responders’ homes.
“This service that we provide gives our veterans a unique purpose because their whole life they’ve always given back,” said Misseri. “And now that they’re getting older and they need a service dog to continue with their progress in life, having that dual purpose dog really gives them fulfillment.”
Adds Misseri: “We go to nursing homes where there are veterans in their late 90s, 80s, 70s–you name it. They look forward to seeing these dogs.”