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Mission Statement/History
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| The Venture Story |
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The
Venture organization is a not-for-profit provider for habilitative
services and family-like care to the developmentally disabled
of Rockland County, New York, committed to establishing for those
in its care a quality of life, wealth of opportunity and choice,
warmth of concern and potential for growth equal to that available
to their non-retarded peers in this suburban community.
Venture
is, moreover, an advocate for their rights, liberties and opportunities
of all developmentally disabled persons in society, a champion
of their right to be valued and dignified in the community, and
a protagonist for their liberation from the cultural prejudice
that limits full acceptance of their birthright as Americans.
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"Venture
has not forgotten that is arose as an antidote to an institutional
relationship that passed for care, when care is ultimately a cherishing
of others that is much akin to love."
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Kathy Lukens
Founder and First Executive Director of Camp Venture |
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Camp
Venture was founded in 1969 as the first free summer camp for
children with developmental disabilities.
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In
1976 Venture Inn, the first community home built specifically
for developmentally disabled adults in New York State, and the
first group home in Rockland County, opened its doors.
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Over
the years Venture has become a venerated and beloved member of
the Rockland County Community.
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Now
Serving more than 1,000 people with developmental disabilities
in Rockland County,
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aspires to be a uniquely personal organization. At Venture, the
opportunities are limitless, the atmosphere is personal and the
commitment - lifelong. |
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The Venture
Story
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A Legacy of Caring
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With
the creation of the Exceptional Child Parent-Teacher Association
in 1968, parents of the retarded and disabled in Rockland County
began to unite as advocates of their children and to explore ways
to develop a life course for their special children that matched
that which normal children enjoyed.
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Elected
President of the PTA, Kathleen Lukens began to organize resources
from Rockland's towns, businesses, and private citizens to establish
a day camp for the county's handicapped youngsters. With the aid
of then-state assemblyman Eugene Levy, Lukens and a handful of
other courageous parents gathered 85 children and launched Camp
Venture at Clark Center in the Town of Ramapo in 1969. After spending
its second year at the Rosary Academy in Sparkill, Camp Venture
settled in to its present headquarters just north of Letchworth
Village in Stony Point in 1971.
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During
the construction of the summer camp, Venture's staffers became
familiar with many of the residents of Letchworth Village, a state
facility for the mentally ill and handicapped which had suffered
greatly because of a hiring freeze imposed by then-NY Governor
Nelson Rockefeller. Lukens, who had been appointed by Rockefeller
as a consumer advocate for his Committee for Children, publicly
denounced the deplorable conditions at Letchworth and called on
the governor to address the situation immediately.
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While
reform at Letchworth and other state institutions slowly began
to take place, Camp Venture's small band of parents saw their
mission expand to include not just their own children, but the
welfare of all mentally impaired people in the county.
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In
1976, with the combined fundraising efforts of Lukens and Tappan
resident and local political activist John Murphy, 21 adults were
able to move in to Venture Inn, the first home for the mentally
retarded and disabled in Rockland County.
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Two
years later saw the opening of Venture West, a second group home
for 14 adults in Monsey, and establishment of Venture's Workshop,
a day program designed to teach employment skills to mentally
impaired adults. Two more group homes opened in 1979 and 1980,
and in 1981, the Venture Voice, a newspaper devoted to the disabled,
was born.
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Since
then, Camp Venture made great strides in improving the quality
of life of the developmentally disabled. Venture's Center for
Learning day treatment program for the severely impaired was established
in 1989, and Venture's doll made for and by the disabled, Dolly
Downs, was introduced to the world in 1992 and appeared on national
television and several renowned publications, including the New
York Times
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Venture
has also built four beautiful pools for the individuals we serve,
as well as the Kathleen Lukens Living Center, a new independent
living center for adults with developmental disabilities in Sparkill.
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Venture's
"Pond of the 200,000" is a memorial honoring the people with physical
and mental disabilities put to death by the Nazis during World
War II. Dedicated at a ceremony presided over by Cardinal John
O'Connor, the Pond is not only a remembrance of those who died,
but a somber reinforcement of the Venture family's pledge to vigilantly
guard the future of the disabled.
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And
as evidence of Venture's desire to provide a continuum of care
for all those we serve, we've recently added a new wing to the
agency's first residence, Venture Inn. This addition houses a
first-of-its-kind Alzheimer's Unit, providing a warm and supportive
environment for members of the Venture family who are now struggling
with this devastating disease.
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Venture
continues to look to the families of people with developmental
disabilities in Rockland County, striving to develop new and innovative
programs and approaches to address the unmet needs of our neighbors
with mental retardation.
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