Helping parents all over U.S.A.
Marisa O’Neil
Every parent gets frustrated and overwhelmed sometimes. The key is
knowing how to handle it, said Sally Kanarek, founder of Parent Help
U.S.A.
The organization, which seeks to prevent child abuse before it
happens, is using National Child Abuse Awareness Month to highlight
the issue nationally and locally. Orange County Superior Court Judge
James Gray, a Libertarian candidate for the U.S. Senate, came to
Parent Help U.S.A. on Tuesday to speak with parents and staff members
about the organization and his experiences presiding over juvenile
court cases.
“This is where we need to focus our resources,” he said of Parent
Help. “They do so much with almost nothing.”
Organizers passed out blue ribbons for child abuse awareness and
cited statistics on abuse. Orange County had more than 30,000 reports
of child abuse last year, they said.
“Here we are, living in one of the most affluent counties in the
country and yet there’s a problem with abuse,” said Tom Birch, past
president of Parent Help U.S.A.
Child Abuse Awareness Month is signified by a blue ribbon.
Parent Help U.S.A., formerly known as Mothers and Others Against
Child Abuse, uses parent education, a resource library and clothing
donations to help parents handle stressors that may cause them to
lash out at their children. Often, parents abuse their children
because they themselves were abused as children, Gray said.
“It’s always wrong to hit a child,” Gray said. “[Parent Help is]
here to break that cycle.”
Free “Peaceful Parenting” classes are offered that teach child
development, anger and stress management and parent responsibilities,
as well as parents’ rights -- like having time to eat dinner or
unwind, Kanarek said. But one of the inherent problems they face is
the fact that abusive parents might not want to face up to the stigma
of seeking help.
“We’re not here to judge, we’re here to help,” Kanarek said.
Some of that help comes from other parents in the program,
President Charlotte Kies said. If a parent is getting frustrated by a
child who talks back, for example, he or she can talk to others who
have gone through the same thing.
“I like the classes a lot,” Zonia Manco, cuddling her 7-month-old
son Mariano, said through an interpreter. “[It helps me] learn
patience and treat [my children] better.”
Free child care and, often, dinner are offered with the classes.
Kanarek said they are pushing Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to make
it a felony for social workers to falsify records. Florida already
did so, after 150 children were lost in the foster care system.
In addition to the classes, they distribute food and clothing
donations -- including adult clothes, Kies said. Men’s clothes,
especially jeans, are needed by many of their clients.
They also need volunteers to help staff the office, watch children
and conduct the classes.
Thursday night, the organization is holding its Board of Directors
Installation Dinner Dance and auction at Anthony’s Riverboat
Restaurant. They are hoping to raise money to reopen a full food
pantry.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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