OPINION | Carin Schoppmeyer: Dress for Success marks decade in NWA; CASA shines Light of Hope


Dress for Success of Northwest Arkansas backers celebrated Roaring Twenties style as the group marked a decade of outfitting area women in need with attire and skills to set them up for the success at the Little Black Dress Gala on Nov. 4 at Thaden School in Bentonville. Andrea Albright, executive vice president Global Sourcing, Walmart, served as honorary event chair.

The nonprofit organization outfits unemployed or underemployed women when they attain job interviews. The women work with an image consultant at the Dress for Success boutiques, then are outfitted with a suit and accessories from the boutique’s stock of donated, gently used women’s business and business-casual attire, shoes, belts, purses and jewelry.

Along with professional clothing, the group provides career services such as career assessment, resume and cover letter assistance, interview prep, career coaching and mentoring.

Tangel Clinard, one of the group’s Success Ambassadors, shared with guests her experience with Dress for Success NWA, which helped provide a path to her current job as a quality associate at Walmart. She encouraged guest support, saying, “It’s not just about me. There are more of us.”

Since the local chapter’s formation in 2013, Dress for Success NWA has served more than 5,100 women by providing more than 6,500 programs and services — touching nearly 19,000 lives when factoring in their children and families, according to dfsnwa.org.

Light of Hope

Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) of Northwest Arkansas got a $404,000 boost from the Light of Hope presented by General Mills benefit breakfast Nov. 7 at the Rogers Convention Center and luncheon Nov. 14 at the Northwest Arkansas Convention Center in Springdale. The breakfast featured keynote speaker Greg Sankey, senior vice president Transformation and Support – Walmart US and Adam Deckinger, general counsel and secretary – Tyson Foods, provided keynote remarks at the luncheon.

CASA provides trained volunteers to represent children in the jurisdiction of family courts. Volunteers conduct their own investigations and then make recommendations to the court for what is in the best interest of the child. A child’s court-appointed special advocate is often the one constant in his life while involved in family court. Proceeds from Light of Hope will help the group train more volunteers.

This past fiscal year, 327 trained volunteers worked on cases for 728 children. There have been 111 adoptions and 105 children reunited with their families.

“The stories shared at Light of Hope this year make up a small fraction of the hundreds of cases of child abuse and neglect each year in Northwest Arkansas,” says Crystal Vickmark, executive director. “By supporting CASA of Northwest Arkansas, you ensure every child who enters the foster care system in our community has a volunteer advocate by their side to not only fight for their best interests but also to make them feel seen, heard and cared for.”

For more event photos — nwaonline.com/photos/society.

Columnist Carin Schoppmeyer can be reached by email at [email protected].

  photo  Michelle Perry (from left), Luisa Espinoza, Tina Gilbert and Tangel Clinard enjoy the Dress for Success NWA Little Black Dress Gala on Nov. 4 in Bentonville. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Carin Schoppmeyer)
 
 
  photo  Don and Naiema(cq) Frieson (from left), Tiffany Benitez and Charlotte Robertson attend the Little Black Dress Gala on Nov. 4. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Carin Schoppmeyer)
 
 
  photo  Juli(cq) McWhorter (from left), EvaMarie(cq) David and Frank Niles, Dress for Success board president, visit at the Little Black Dress Gala. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Carin Schoppmeyer)
 
 
  photo  Juli(cq) McWhorter (from left), EvaMarie(cq) David and Frank Niles, Dress for Success board president, visit at the Little Black Dress Gala. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Carin Schoppmeyer)
 
 
  photo  Nicola(cq) King (from left), Sonya Petree and Andrea Albright, Little Black Dress Gala honorary chair, stand for a photo at the Dress for Success NWA benefit Nov. 4 in Bentonville. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Carin Schoppmeyer)
 
 
  photo  Nicola(cq) King (from left), Sonya Petree and Andrea Albright, Little Black Dress Gala honorary chair, stand for a photo at the Dress for Success NWA benefit Nov. 4 in Bentonville. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Carin Schoppmeyer)
 
 
  photo  CASA of Northwest Arkansas Executive Director Crystal Vickmark (from left) and board members Michael Griffin, Suzanne Finstad, Chris Mitchell, Nathaniel Aspinwall and Blair Dyer help welcome guests to the Light of Hope luncheon Nov. 14 in Springdale. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Carin Schoppmeyer)
 
 
  photo  Lillian Tanski(cq) (from left), Laura Stewart, Mary Bassett, Adam and Jennifer Deckinger, Laura Burns and Sara Burns help support CASA at the Light of Hope luncheon Nov. 14 at the Northwest Arkansas Convention Center in Springdale. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Carin Schoppmeyer)
 
 
  photo  Amye Buckley (from right), Linda Davis and Violet McCain with Kai Garcia stand for a photo at the CASA NWA Light of Hope luncheon Nov. 14 in Springdale. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Carin Schoppmeyer)
 
 
  photo  Kasey Meadows, CASA volunteer (left) and Sunshine Broder, Light of Hope luncheon emcee, visit at the Nov. 14 benefit. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Carin Schoppmeyer)
 
 

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