The News-Times

Private funding helps nonprofit serve more kids

- By Erin Kayata erin.kayata@hearstmedi­act.com

NORWALK — Figurines of the cast of Sesame Street lined the blue play mat, their plastic faces grinning at Parker Greenberg who sat with her back to them on a red, plastic roller.

“Can you go find Grover?” prompts Laura Boehmer, Parker’s physical therapist, who sits in front of the 4-year-old to help her keep her balance. “Let’s go see if we can find him.”

Parker, who loves dancing and the color purple, has a rare genetic syndrome which causes language, intellectu­al and physical delays.

It was a “mother’s instinct” that led Kimberly Greenberg, Parker’s mom, to consult her pediatrici­an about Parker when she was an infant. Her young daughter wasn’t interactin­g with toys the way other infants might and seemed to have a far off look in her eyes.

The pediatrici­an eventually sent the Westport family to STAR, Inc., Lighting the Way, a Norwalk-based nonprofit which offers services to families of children with intellectu­al and developmen­tal delays. Through STAR, Parker was able to get physical, occupation­al and speech therapy as well as additional resource classes starting from the time she was 4-months-old.

“Everyone at STAR became my sounding board,” Kimberly Greenberg said. “I have all their numbers, I can text them any hour of the night. All the therapists became my friends...they became our extended family which I think we needed.”

All this came to a halt the day Parker Greenberg turned 3. STAR previously received about 70 percent of its funding from the state Office of Early Childhood, which meant they could only offer services from birth to three as per state guidelines.

STAR could also only serve people who qualified under state criteria and received referrals. At age 3, the school district would begin providing services.

Now, with the help of a donation from an anonymous donor and grants from the likes of Community Fund of Darien plus the New Canaan Community Foundation, STAR is able to offer services to children up to age 5 with additional services available for children until they’re 8 years old which can be used in addition to those offered in school.

STAR accepts Medicaid, most medical insurances and private pay so families of all income levels can access their service.

The nonprofit also reopened the Rubino Family Center on East Avenue in Norwalk on Sept. 1 for therapy appointmen­ts. Staff previously went to a family’s home for services; now it has space for families from Greenwich, Stamford, Darien, Norwalk, Westport, Fairfield, Bridgeport, New Canaan, Wilton,

Ridgefield, Easton and Trumbull to visit.

It’s in one of these rooms, lined with toys in primary colors, that Parker Greenberg gets her physical therapy sessions to supplement the services she gets at Stepping Stones preschool in Westport. She kicks off her sessions by doing the hokey-pokey as a warm-up before using a set of toddler stairs to practice her steps.

“We’re always working on some sort of balance skill,” said Boehmer. “She’s gotten a lot better. She used to be very, very anxious on the stairs. She gets nervous every time she feels off balance.”

Boehmer said one of the benefits of extending STAR’s services to older children is getting to build trust and a relationsh­ip with a child which improves the service they’re getting. As a therapist learns a child’s abilities, they’re better able to cater their treatment to them.

Families who’ve used STAR services before said the expansion is an added bonus for their children and the community.

Kate Bagnati, vice president of STAR’s Board of Directors, got involved with the nonprofit when she and her family moved to Norwalk from Greenwich. Bagnati’s daughter, Wolf, then two, has a rare genetic condition and needed services.

Wolf aged out of STAR services when she was 3. But the family stayed in touch with the organizati­on and when they launched their services for older children a few weeks ago, Kate Bagnati immediatel­y signed her daughter up to receive physical therapy again.

Bagnati said they offer personaliz­ed care in a field where many providers don’t bother to connect with patients.

“They really, really know how to keep in touch with families,” Kate Bagnati said. “Some therapy offices are kind of cold. If you choose to leave, there’s someone right behind you to take your spot. STAR has gone above and beyond to make you feel more important. You’re not just a statistic, you’re a human with needs.”

She said she’d like to also use STAR’s group therapies when they launch again. Once social distancing guidelines are eased, STAR plans on having movement and feeding groups to connect families and children with special needs.

With grants from both local and wider scale providers, along with fundraisin­g, STAR plans to continue providing their expanded services for the long-term.

“We’ll reach that many more children,” said Barbara Fitzpatric­k, director of the Rubino Family Center. “It gives us many more options too which we’re pleased to have.”

 ?? Erik Trautmann / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Parker Greenberg, 5, works with her physical therapist Laura Boehmer at the STAR Rubino Family Center Thursday as part of an expanded multi-lingual early interventi­on program in Norwalk.
Erik Trautmann / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Parker Greenberg, 5, works with her physical therapist Laura Boehmer at the STAR Rubino Family Center Thursday as part of an expanded multi-lingual early interventi­on program in Norwalk.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States