‘I just existed’

Published 9:00 am Sunday, September 8, 2013

Bruce Mauwarren staples cardboard boxes together Friday at Cedar Valley Services.  --Sarah Stultz/Albert Lea Tribune

Bruce Mauwarren staples cardboard boxes together Friday at Cedar Valley Services. –Sarah Stultz/Albert Lea Tribune

United Way kicks off fall campaign with goal of $696,000

For most of his life, Albert Lean Stan Aske has lived with his parents, leading a simple life away from the world.

Suffering from psychosis and schizophrenia, Aske, now 59, said his life was lost.

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“I just existed,” he said.

But all of that changed at least 10 years ago, when he was able to work with Cedar Valley Services to find a job.

Stan Aske, a Cedar Valley Services employee, sits on the front steps of the business Friday afternoon.

Stan Aske, a Cedar Valley Services employee, sits on the front steps of the business Friday afternoon.

“I don’t think I could have found a job if it weren’t for Cedar Valley,” he said. “Nobody would hire me. Unless it was basic things, from day to day I couldn’t do it.”

Now, he has gained much independence, living in his own apartment and driving his own vehicle — something that is made possible through his job.

Luke Virgil works on brackets Friday afternoon at Cedar Valley Services in Albert Lea.

Luke Virgil works on brackets Friday afternoon at Cedar Valley Services in Albert Lea.

Cedar Valley helps people with physical, mental or developmental disabilities find work and be able to contribute to the community. It is a partner agency with the United Way of Freeborn County, receiving financial assistance for job coaching and for transportation for its workers.

The United Way of Freeborn County kicked of its annual campaign drive Thursday at the new Edgewater Bay Pavilion.

The organization is seeking to raise $696,000, its highest ever goal, to support its partner agencies, said Ann Austin, executive director.

Last year, the goal was $661,000, and donors contributed $630,000, which was the highest that has ever been collected.

She said it will be a challenge to achieve the goal this year.

“We are very lucky to have all the programs we do in this community,” Austin said.

During the kickoff, people in attendance played a game to illustrate the struggles that come along with poverty and ate lunch.

Mary Laeger-Hagemeister, who is on the United Way board, gave a brief presentation about poverty.

Ann Austin, executive director of the United Way of Freeborn County, speaks Thursday at the annual campaign kickoff.

Ann Austin, executive director of the United Way of Freeborn County, speaks Thursday at the annual campaign kickoff.

She said 27.6 percent of households in Freeborn County live in poverty. That includes 17.5 percent of children. She gave a statistic that Freeborn County’s average weekly take-home check is $150 less than neighboring communities.

Aske, who transports residents to various activities at Good Samaritan Society of Albert Lea, is one of about 45 residents across Freeborn County who benefits from the partnership through Cedar Valley and the United Way of Freeborn County.

“When I started working, I said, ‘I missed a lot of my life,’” he said.

Others who work through Cedar Valley clean various businesses in town, repackage cereal at Malt-O-Meal in Faribault or get packaging materials ready at its Albert Lea shop.

Garry Hart, with Cedar Valley Services, said the United Way has been a great partner for the agency.

“Without their assistance we wouldn’t be able to do the things we do,” Hart said.

Only five of the 45 people employed through Cedar Valley have a driver’s license, he said.

“That’s our biggest barrier,” he said.