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FareStart
It’s more than just job training
Seattleites
have come to know about FareStart which offers comprehensive culinary
training to homeless men and women. On average, more than 80 percent of
graduates are employed within ninety days of graduating from the
program. The program has amazing support from the restaurant community
as well as the general population. Training is important, but FareStart
does much more that often flies under the radar.
The publicly visible part of culinary training takes place at the
FareStart restaurant in downtown Seattle. Students practice their craft,
whether that’s cooking, hosting, bussing or waiting tables. Menu items
are remarkably good and range from soups and salads to sandwiches,
vegetarian items, pastas and ribs. It’s a very professional kitchen.
Photo: chef Drew with a trainee, courtesy of FareStart
FareStart also runs the Library Café at the downtown Central Library.
The Café serves espresso and tea, cookies, sandwiches, chips, pastries
and other snacks. In addition, there’s the FareStart Café at 2100 inside
the 2100 Building in the Rainier Valley. It’s a full café with hot
soups, lunch to order and coffee drinks.
Catering takes place at both the FareStart Restaurant and Café at
2100. The catering arm of FareStart is fairly new and growing. They will
cater at any location—home, office, the FareStart dining room—and offer
multi-course dinners, cocktail parties and sandwich platters. They take
care of all the details of a catered event, not just the food.
All locations are training sites for those enrolled in the FareStart
training program. Besides providing training through these venues,
FareStart also helps other nonprofit programs (low income childcare,
Head Start, homeless shelters, senior centers) by providing meals at
greatly-reduced prices. Since 1987, FareStart has provided over two
million meals to the community.
When someone enrolls in the FareStart program, they receive more than
job training. As special events manager Suzanne Sullivan explains,
"People who have been homeless often have other obstacles to success
that they need to address beyond lack of marketable skills. We work with
partner agencies to get our students what they need to build a healthy
self—it may have to do with substance abuse, mental health, physical
health, a place to sleep, continued education, resume building,
interview training—whatever they need. Ours is a 16-week program that
guides people back into the community."
FareStart is unusual in that as a nonprofit, only 60 percent of their
annual budget comes from individual donations and grants. The other 40
percent comes from the revenue generated from their businesses. They are
the beneficiaries of several annual events around town (like Taste of
the Nation) and also produce two of their own—Guest Chef on the
Waterfront in the summer and A Night on the Town auction in fall. The
proceeds from both of these events go directly into the general
operating fund to sustain the program.
A Night on the Town is a sit-down dinner and auction and has been a
staple in charity dinner events for the past 14 years. Guest Chef on the
Waterfront is a new event, having started in 2005, and is a summer party
with games, live jazz and lots of food and wine. When over 900 people
showed up last year, they knew they had a hit on their hands. This year,
they’ve doubled the number of chefs and the Rhone Rangers will be on
hand to sponsor wine tasting and a chance to win a collection of wine.
Guest
Chef on the Waterfront is loosely based on their weekly Guest Chef
Nights at the FareStart dining room. Each Thursday, a local chef
volunteers his/her time to partner with the students to create a
three-course gourmet meal for 200 people. Thursday nights almost always
sell out. They’re a bargain at just $19.95 and the food is great. All
proceeds from the evenings go to student services and training.
Photo: Chef Josh Green at Guest Chef on the Waterfront 2005,
courtesy of FareStart
As you can imagine, a program like this relies on chef/restaurant
participation—chef time, food donations, event participation and the
willingness to hire program graduates. "The Seattle restaurant community
is extremely generous," says Suzanne. "They are truly partners in this
program. It’s amazing how supportive they are."
Both
Chef Dan Thiessen, soon to open his own restaurant in Bellevue this fall
called the 0/8 Seafood Grill and Twisted Cork Wine Bar, and Chef Josh
Green of Ponti Seafood Grill in Seattle have been very involved with
FareStart. As Josh says, "I support FareStart because I know
their program creates life-changing opportunities for people. I’m
honored to have the chance to share my passion for cooking
with the students when we work hands-on at the Guest Chef Nights.
I volunteer for at least two nights a year and every time has been an
uplifting experience." Chef Dan obviously feels the same way. "I’ve been
involved with FareStart for over 8 years. I still remember the goose
bumps I had the first time I walked into the kitchen with 12 anxious
students ready to learn anything possible in the next couple of
hours. Since then, I’ve been involved in many aspects of their program
and events and have employed four different graduates over the years. I
look forward to continuing that with my own restaurant."
Another sign of the popular support FareStart has in the community is
their recent capital campaign to raise funds to move to an expanded
location. "We wanted a new home because there’s a community need for
FareStart and job training for the homeless population. With this new
location," explains Suzanne, "we’ll be able to double the number of
students we help annually to close to 600. We’ve been under-equipped and
over-capacity in the past and have had to turn people away."
The capital campaign had an eight million dollar goal. Co-chairs Bill
Adamucci and Chris and Alice Canlis, along with the FareStart Board of
Directors and other volunteers, made it happen. They have actually met
their goal and FareStart is slated to move into new digs in January
2007. The Canlis family chose to celebrate their 55th
anniversary in business with a fundraising dinner for FareStart that
raised $125,000.
The capital campaign got FareStart into a new location, but the next
challenge is to fund a program that has doubled in size. Increased space
will allow more people at Guest Chef Nights, lunch and increased volume
in catering. Continued support at Guest Chef Nights and annual events is
critical as are general donations.
"Staff at FareStart get to actually witness the progress of those in
the program," says Suzanne proudly. "It’s so amazing to see someone at
the start with little or no self-confidence and then see them at 16
weeks, polished and able to find work. One woman was a homeless mom of
two. Can you imagine what she had to deal with just go get through each
day with two kids and she still managed to get to the program every
single day so she could create a better life."
FareStart Dining Room
FareStart's New Location (January 2007)
1902 2nd Avenue
2004 Westlake Avenue
Seattle, WA 98101
Seattle, WA
206-441-1233Guest Chef on the Waterfront
A Night on the Town Auction
Wednesday, July 26, 2006, 5-9 p.m.
Sunday, October 8, 2006
Elliott Hall & Pier 66
Seattle waterfront
Cost $50 per person, VIP $75
VIP includes parking, carnival tickets and more
For group ticket rates, call Suzanne at 206-267-6213
Must be over 21 to attend
Tickets can be purchased online for either event at
www.farestart.org
or by phone at 206-267-6223 |
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Connie Adams/July 2006 |
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