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NEWS & Event Calendar

Community Event Calendar


August 26, 2021 Uncategorized

The Edgewater Health Board of Directors Retreat was held at the Bottleworks Hotel in Indianapolis on August 19-20, 2021.  Ken Carr, Senior Associate with Open Minds led the board and senior leadership through the process of developing a new strategic plan.   Attorney T. James Junger with Hall Render, P.C. presented a workshop on Effective Board Governance and the 340B Drug Pricing Program.

 



August 18, 2021 Uncategorized
In recognition of National Health Center Week, Edgewater Health Staff Appreciation Day was held on Friday, August 13th.

Pictured is Dr. Danita Hughes the CEO of Edgewater Health.  Dr. Hughes thanked the staff for their years of service and gave expressions for continuing to meet the high-quality care to our patients and the community.



August 18, 2021 Uncategorized

Saturday, August 14th, Edgewater hosted a “Back to School Backpack Giveaway”.  A huge “Thank You” to everyone that help to make this event successful; Tolbert & Tolbert, AHEC, Northwest Indiana Area Health Education Center, First Financial Bank, Veterans Life Changing Services, Vendors, Volunteers, and the staff at Edgewater Health.  There were 250 backpacks given away.



August 3, 2021 Uncategorized

Edgewater participated at the City of Gary Block Party, Saturday, July 31st.

The following individuals are pictured:
Photo 1:  Nina Johnson and Sandra Campos distributing information and engaging with the community.
Photo 2: LaTanya Woodson, Deanna Prince, First Lady, City of Gary, and Board Member, Edgewater Health, Nina Johnson, and Sandra Campos.


August 3, 2021 Uncategorized

Edgewater participated at the Community Back 2 School Health Fair on Saturday, July 31st.  Representatives were available to give out information regarding our services and administer high blood pressure checks.

The following individuals are pictured:
Photo 1: Sandra Campos explaining Edgewater Health services to the community.
Photo 2:  Laduena Gunn administering high blood pressure checks to the community.
Photo 3: Nina Johnson, LaTanya Woodson, Mayor Jerome Prince, City of Gary, Laduena Gunn, and Sandra Campos
Photo 4: LaTanya Woodson, Laduena Gunn, Nina Johnson, and Sandra Campos



September 21, 2020 Uncategorized

We encourage all of our patients and stakeholders to complete the 2020 Indiana Division of Mental Health and Addiction (DMHA) Customer Satisfaction Survey.  Your answers and comments will help make mental health and addiction services better in Indiana.  The survey is NOT mandatory and no one will ask you why you don’t want to complete it.  Nothing on the survey will identify you, unless you choose to put your name on it.  Please know this will enable us to contact you about your comments.

TO COMPLETE THE SURVEY PLEASE VISIT:

https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/421_Edgewater_MHSIP_2020

or

https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/421_Edgewater_YSSF_2020

THANK YOU!



June 19, 2020 Uncategorized

Dr. Danita Johnson Hughes

Although yet to be designated as an official federal holiday, please allow me to recognize this very special occasion by wishing everyone a Blessed Juneteenth! Please note I intentionally replaced the usual “Happy” with “Blessed” to hopefully add more solemnity and significance to the traditional observance of what was originally known as Freedom Day or Jubilee Day. Also, please be sure to put some sauce in the gumbo or gospel in the word, so it rolls off the tongue like Grandma and our ancestors intended. Like in the Beatitudes or old Negro Spirituals, this day isn’t just “Blessed”, it’s “Blesid!”

Hopefully, most of you are well aware by now that Juneteenth commemorates the day Union Army General Gordon Granger rode into Galveston, Texas on June 19, 1865 to announce that all slaves in the state were free. Of course, this happened nearly two and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation, however, some 250,000 enslaved Black people were left unaware because Texas was considered the most remote of slave states.

Another misconception is that Juneteenth marked the end of slavery in the United States, although that inhumane institution was not officially abolished until ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment on December 6, 1865. Naturally, the formerly enslaved Negroes in Galveston celebrated immediately after General Granger’s announcement, however, the annual celebration of Jubilee Day was actually organized by freedmen in Texas the following year. The commemoration spread throughout Texas from there and by the 1890’s Jubilee Day had become known as Juneteenth.

Today Juneteenth celebrations are being held all over the nation and despite what someone in higher office thinks, Juneteenth is widely known throughout the African American community and in fact is recognized as a state holiday or special day of observance in forty-nine of fifty states (Bonus points if you can name the lone state that does not). Juneteenth is considered the longest running African American holiday and for many it’s considered “America’s Second Independence Day.

Juneteenth celebrations have drawn thousands of people and usually include public readings of the Emancipation Proclamation, singing of Negro Spirituals and traditional songs like “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot” and “Life Every Voice and Sing”, and readings of noted works by African American writers like Maya Angelou, Ralph Ellison, Toni Morrison, and James Baldwin. Juneteenth celebrations are also known for elaborate soul food meals, picnics, cookouts, people dressed in their Sunday best. And just in case you didn’t know, strawberry soda is the traditional drink associated with Juneteenth celebrations and of course barbecue is the centerpiece.

Recently, in the midst of a COVID-19 pandemic and after the brutal murder of George Floyd and too many other Black people at the hands of law enforcement, the celebration of Juneteenth became embroiled in controversy when President Donald J. Trump decided to hold a campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma of all places. It’s bad enough the event was originally scheduled for today, June 19, 2020, but it was especially insulting that it was taking place near the site of the historic Greenwood District, better known as Black Wall Street, which was tragically burned to the ground during the Tulsa Race Riots of 1921. Fortunately, The White House bowed to public pressure or less likely, social consciousness, and rescheduled the President’s political pride fest for tomorrow.

Today, many of you came to work at Edgewater Health stressed over current events, worried about COVID-19, and burdened with 401 years of racial discrimination, inequality and oppression. Some may have hoped for a brief respite from civil upheaval and maybe even a paid day off to commemorate Juneteenth. Unfortunately, until the holiday is officially designated at the federal level, as many congressional representatives will vote for in the House in the coming days, most American businesses, governmental offices, schools, and financial institutions will remain open. Nevertheless, until that day comes when every American, regardless of race, color or creed, can properly and officially observe Juneteenth, please take a moment to reflect on the historical nature and tremendous significance of this day. And have a strawberry soda on me!

 

GENERAL MILITARY ORDER NO. 3

“The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free. This involves an absolute equality of personal rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves, and the connection heretofore existing between them becomes that between employer and hired labor. The freedmen are advised to remain quietly at their present homes and work for wages. They are informed that they will not be allowed to collect at military posts and that they will not be supported in idleness either there or elsewhere.”