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October 19, 2006
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Volunteers pitch in for a special cause
Team Depot fixes up new home for Monroe's Special Strides
BY JESSICA SMITH
Staff Writer

JESSICA SMITH The double-wide mobile home donated to Special Strides by the Landy family is being completely renovated by Home Depot's Team Depot.
MONROE - Volunteers at Special Strides will be better equipped to help the developmentally disabled children they serve, thanks to the help of Home Depot.

Team Depot is expected to renovate a house that was donated for use as office space for the nonprofit organization, which operates on Congress Hill Farm, Federal Road. Special Strides provides therapy through horseback riding, which benefits children with autism, cerebral palsy and other motor and sensory conditions.

"Home Depot has gone way beyond the walls of their stores for community outreach," said Karen Goldberg, development coordinator for Special Strides. "They have been just amazing."

Goldberg, a decorator, had been asked to assist Special Strides in renovating the house, which was donated by the Landy family, which owns the farm. She brought in some people she knew to build a ramp for handicap accessibility, then began searching for programs. Home Depot's Team Depot agreed to take on the job.

For seven of the 10 years since Special Strides was founded by director and occupational therapist Laurie Landy, a 15-person staff was forced to operate out of a small, dilapidated office above a barn. Not only was it not an ideal work space, but it was not handicap accessible. Landy and the other director, Susie Rehr, a physical therapist, would have to run up and down the steps of the barn to do business with parents of their clients.

"I don't think we ever would have given ourselves offices or a therapy room, because we want all of the money to go to the kids," Landy said. "We really don't pay ourselves either, but we love it."

The double-wide mobile home being donated was once used as quarters for caretakers at the farm. When the previous caretakers moved to Florida, the Landys decided to give it to Special Strides.

The house was left in extremely poor condition and was uninhabitable, Landy said.

Team Depot members from Howell, Freehold, Marlboro and Neptune were expected to come with 20 to 25 employee volunteers this morning to begin their work. Through what the corporation calls a "community build process," they planned to complete their portion of the job by 3 p.m. A ribbon-cutting ceremony was to follow, with Special Strides clients participating.

With the help of donations from other companies, the volunteers were to paint the interior, install all new appliances, lighting fixtures and a new bathroom, as well as new flooring, countertops and molding.

Next week, another team of 20 to 25 will come from the South Brunswick and Milltown Home Depot stores to complete the work. They will install shelving and closet organizers, as well as provide outdoor landscaping and benches.

When the work is completed, the building will house a therapy room, conference room, work station and volunteer area.

Team Depot reaches out to help communities through philanthropic and volunteer efforts. Their work has included building homes for Habitat for Humanity and constructing playgrounds in underprivileged neighborhoods, among other projects.

"It's really nice to see businesses helping the community," Landy said. "It's wonderful, and it also sets an example for its employees."

Team Depot has already supplied Special Strides with a sign, which is something it never had. It is hand-painted to match the organization's logo.

Special Strides now has 50 students, some from Monroe's Academy Learning Center, which received a grant to participate in the program. Previously, a teacher at the school had left money in her will for the students there to take part in the program, Landy said. Students come once or twice a week for therapy.

"They're getting therapy, but they don't know they're getting therapy because they're having fun," Landy said. "It's a powerful therapy."

The program runs during school hours and on Saturdays. It is able to operate year-round because it has an indoor facility.

Volunteers from surrounding schools, churches and synagogues, and scout troops spend time at the farm helping with the program as a part of their community service projects.

Special Strides costs a lot of money to operate because of the horses, Landy said. As a result, it can be difficult for some families to afford the cost of the program for their children. To help with this, Special Strides raises money for the Steven Werthan Scholarship Fund. Last year, it was able to give out 13 scholarships totaling $45,000 for students to participate in the program.

The annual barn benefit dance, held Saturday, was attended by 300 and raised $80,000 for the organization between ticket sales and the auctioning of donated items.

Congress Hill Farm consists of 200 acres, 100 of which are wooded with trails for riding. Along the trails, there are sensory areas for the children, with things like ladders and playgrounds that were donated. The farm is also used for boarding horses, and Landy offers it for use as a summer camp to groups like Chabad House Jewish Center. It also houses a petting zoo, which is used by Special Strides.

"It really gives you a lot of strength when you're working so hard, that people pitch in and help out," Landy said. "It's a dream. It's really a dream."