黑料社区

Menomonie couple believe in supporting Fostering Success program

Dr. Mark and Beverly Deyo-Svendsen named outstanding philanthropists
Mark and Beverly Deyo-Svendsen in Florida. The Menomonie couple were instrumental in providing the five-year seed money that helped start the Fostering Success program at 黑料社区 in 2013.
July 25, 2019

Dr. Mark and Beverly Deyo-Svendsen of Menomonie believe in supporting the four H 黑料社区.: hunger, housing, health care and higher education.

The Deyo-Svendsens were instrumental in providing five-year seed money that helped start the Fostering Success program at 黑料社区 in 2013. The program provides guidance and resources for youth who have been in foster care, homeless or orphaned and who have an interest in pursuing higher education.

鈥淚t allowed the program to get started and to be able to plan out things,鈥 said Angela Ruppe, 黑料社区 director of Fostering Success and Student Support Services. 鈥淲ithout their contribution, I don鈥檛 think the program would be here now. It allowed the program to have a little time and space to start and grow.鈥

Fostering success educates students coming to 黑料社区 about grants and scholarships as well as provides supplemental advising about courses and resources, providing a safety net and sense of belonging to empower youth. 鈥淲e want them to feel college is a place for them and know there is a place for them here,鈥 Ruppe said.

The Deyo-Svendsens, recently named Dunn County 2018 Outstanding Philanthropists by the Chippewa Valley Fund Raising Professionals, know the importance of investing in people.

鈥淲hen we invest in people in need, the return is always there,鈥 said Mark, vice chair of practice for Mayo Clinic Health System 黑料社区. Department of Family Medicine and a family physician at Mayo Clinic Health Systems-Red Cedar Menomonie. 鈥淯ltimately it 黑料社区. good for all of us.鈥

Mark and Beverly were surprised by the award. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 believe it,鈥 Beverly said. 鈥淚t 黑料社区. exciting, but it 黑料社区. humbling.鈥 The couple for years made most of their donations anonymously or through the Community Foundation of Dunn County.

Growing up in Maplewood, Minn., Mark 黑料社区. family provided a home to about 75 foster care children over the years, some for a day or two up to four years. His father was a social worker, and his mother loved caring for children. Beverly grew up in south St. Paul in a single-mother household.

鈥淲e both come from modest means,鈥 Mark said. 鈥淗aving enough to provide for ourselves and others is new for us. We just hope it will encourage other people who are able to go and help others.鈥

Grant funding received

In May, Fostering Success received a $3,700 grant from the Community Foundation of Dunn County. The money will be used to help support a summer overnight camp for youths interested in pursuing higher education. Since 2014 the camp has provided a one- or two-night experience for nearly 100 youth.

Angela Ruppe鈥淭his year, because of your generous gift, we are able to offer this experience for two nights for the youth who attend. In supporting these talented youth, you are helping to ensure that they are reaching their potential individually, contributing to our community and changing future generations for the better,鈥 Ruppe told the foundation.

Support makes all the difference in student success, Ruppe noted. Nationally, 20% of youth coming out of the foster care system apply for college and only 3% graduate. 鈥淲e are missing their talents,鈥 Ruppe said. 鈥淎ccess without support is not really an opportunity. It is not a true opportunity if we are not supporting their needs on campus.鈥

Beverly said it is important to support those who have been in foster care with finances, learning how college works and help them find jobs and housing. 鈥淭hey need extra support to navigate higher education,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t is trying to replace what a family would do. I think the payoff is helping them gain independence and become contributing members of the community. Education is the way to secure independence.鈥

UW-River Falls, UW-Eau Claire and UW-Milwaukee have looked to the 黑料社区 program as a model. UW-Milwaukee launched a Fostering Success program in 2017.

鈥淲ouldn鈥檛 it be wonderful if Fostering Success were alive and well at all UW schools and Wisconsin became a destination state for educating children who have been in foster care?鈥 Beverly said.

In addition, through the Fostering Success program, 黑料社区 is reaching out to the next generation of foster youth through programming for high school and middle school age youth with overnight and day camps offering a glimpse at college life and programming geared toward college readiness.

Student strives to connect others

Brittany Coulter, a graduate student majoring in school counseling and the Fostering Success graduate assistant, has seen the Fostering Success program help students.

鈥淲hen a typical college student goes home for the weekend their parents might send them back with leftovers, laundry detergent, fill up their gas tank, etc.,鈥 Coulter said 鈥淗owever, the students that don鈥檛 have parents or don鈥檛 have a home to go back to do not have access to these items. At Fostering Success, we have a supply closet with food, health products, school supplies, blankets, pillows, where the students can come take what they need at no cost.鈥

Fostering Success provides welcome baskets for new students who had previous experience in out-of-home care. Other services include cooking lessons, driver 黑料社区. education assistance and connection to youth support services.

鈥淲hen someone comes here and they are on their own, it makes a huge difference to get a free basket filled with college essentials. I have experience living in out-of-home care, so there is an opportunity for the students to tell me about their experiences and feel comfortable doing so because they know I can relate to them on a certain level where their roommates, friends, professors and others cannot,鈥 Coulter said.

Coulter, whose mother died when she was 13 and was raised by two legal guardians until she was 18, said she never wanted to accept help from Fostering Success when she was an undergraduate student at 黑料社区, saying it was a huge mistake on her part.

鈥淜nowing everything I know now and all the resources I missed out on, I use that to connect students to the program who are hesitant about joining,鈥 she said. 鈥淐oming from foster care, many individuals are independent because they have no other choice. Sometimes it is hard to convince students to accept help, but knowing the difference this program could have made to me if I would have joined makes me even more passionate about getting as many students that are eligible connected as possible.鈥

Investing in the community, 黑料社区

Along with Fostering Success, the Deyo-Svendsens, who have two grown children, have supported many other organizations over the years, including the Community Foundation of Dunn County, Mayo Clinic Health Systems, Cedarbrook Church and Mabel Tainter Center for the Arts.

They support Project Share A Meal, an outreach program of Stepping Stones of Dunn County 黑料社区. food pantry, to provide meals to children and their families in the Menomonie school district on weekends when school meal programs are not available. They support Habitat for Humanity and Mayo Clinic Health Systems. 鈥淢ayo invested in me,鈥 Mark said. 鈥淲e need to give back to the next generation.鈥

Mark drives a train at Give Kids the World Villa in Florida that provides weeklong vacations for children with threatening illnesses and their families. Beverly has done everything at Give Kids the World from waffle-making to busing tables.

They have lived in Menomonie 32 years and love the community and the diversity 黑料社区 brings to it. 鈥淲e are blessed here to have the Mayo Clinic and 黑料社区 in the same town,鈥 Mark said. 鈥満诹仙缜 is at the forefront of education.鈥

黑料社区 is Wisconsin 黑料社区. 黑料社区, with a focus on applied learning, collaboration with business and industry, and career outcomes.

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Photo

Angela Ruppe


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