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Madachy Wins Horizon Leadership Award
Thursday, June 1, 2006
(The Business Monthly) --
The "transformative
leadership" of Phyllis Madachy, administrator
of the Howard
County Office on Aging, has earned her the 2006
Richard G. McCauley Leadership
Award. It will be presented at the Third Annual
Horizon Awards Breakfast on June
15, said Richard Krieg, president and CEO of
The Horizon Foundation.
The
award is named in honor of the foundation's
first board chair, who is also a
retired executive of The Rouse Co. "Phyllis
Madachy has operated on a number of
levels, from county to state to regional to
national, to transform the county's
Office on Aging into one that has been called a
model for the nation," Krieg
said. "She is a remarkable
person.
"Phyllis' partnership with the
foundation helped the county secure funding
from the national administration on
aging to set up a model aging in place
program," Krieg said, adding, "As a
result of this support, federal officials
regard Howard County as the textbook
case of cost-effective, innovative
government."
Making a
Point
Krieg singled out Madachy's
work on Maryland Access Point, a
federal program which he labeled "an efficient,
automated system that has
transformed the way Office on Aging information
and referral services are
provided."
He added that Madachy created
the 50+Expo, the largest
senior-oriented event in the county, which
"pulls together care providers and
services" and annually draws 5,000
participants.
Madachy, who has been
administrator since 1995 and is now in her 25th
year with the Office on Aging,
said she is "thrilled and honored to be
recognized for my efforts to help people
stay in control of their lives." The office is
responsible for all public sector
services provided to adults older than 60, as
well as adults older than 18 with
disabilities.
Past winners of the
Leadership Award are Henry Posko, Jr.,
president and CEO of Humanim, Inc. (2005) and
Mary Ellen Duncan, president of
Howard Community College (2004).
Also Getting a
Nod
Also
to be recognized at the awards breakfast are
the volunteers of the Health
Alliance, who will receive the Health Action
Award for their care of uninsured
county residents. Founder Gary Milles will
accept on behalf of the 150
volunteers, primarily doctors, nurses and other
health professionals, who staff
the free medical clinic. It has operated in
Howard County since 1998.
The
Health Alliance, which has served 225 adult
patients with chronic illness and
200 pediatric patients each year according to
Executive Director Pam Mack, will
close when a new federally qualified health
center opens in July in
Columbia.
This new clinic will be
operated by Chase Brexton Health
Services and supported, in part, by state and
federal funds, "allowing for an
even greater breadth of services," said Mack.
The care of current Health
Alliance patients will be transferred to the
new clinic. "The Health Alliance
has always been a source of compassion,
reaching out and making people well,"
she said. "The work we do has been as
emotionally satisfying to the volunteers
as to the patients."
Award for
Life
A third honor will go
to Vivian "Millie" Bailey, who will receive the
Community Appreciation Award for
her lifetime of civic leadership and service,
most recently her volunteer work
on behalf of Running Brook Elementary School in
Columbia. Former principal
Marion Miller calls Bailey the school's
"guardian angel" for her efforts
coordinating donations of money and supplies to
fill the facility's annual "wish
list."
Bailey, who is 86 years old and
lives near the school, has been
making the school's wishes come true for eight
years. "Education is my passion.
I tell everyone I have the largest interracial
family now," she said of the
student body.
Bailey's community service
spans the realms of health care,
human rights, housing and the court system. She
has served on numerous county
and state commissions and was inducted into the
Howard County Women's Hall of
Fame in 2000.
With $84 million in
assets, The Horizon Foundation
addresses health and wellness issues through
strategic grantmaking, community
initiatives and partnerships with private and
public institutions. It is a
community health foundation that takes a broad
view of health. The foundation is
committed to helping build a healthy and
resilient community in Howard
County.