The Child Protective Services/Kinship Care program team, winners of the Most Generous award in this year’s Kenosha County Division of Children and Family Services Feed 100 Families Food Drive. Pictured, from left, are Jean Abell, Racine Police Officer Phil Davis as Santa, Clarice Noel, Alicia Mojica, Barb Hess and Amy Rosenberg.
PHOTOS: SUBMITTED PHOTOS

Kenosha County DCFS holds annual Feed 100 Families food drive

Friendly competition brings out creativity and generosity

By KENOSHA COUNTY COMMUNICATIONS

Kenosha County is located in the southeastern corner of the U.S. state of Wisconsin. Its population in 2019 was estimated to be 169,561, making it the eighth most populous county in Wisconsin. The county is named after the county seat, Kenosha, the fourth largest city in Wisconsin.

Staff from Kenosha County’s Division of Children and Family Services this year again exercised their creativity and generosity for a good cause.

In the annual Feed 100 Families food drive event, held earlier this month, DCFS workers collected food and cash donations, which were then distributed to families referred by the schools and various human services agencies.

As part of this effort, they also decorated their work areas within the Kenosha County Job Center, engaging in a friendly competition between service units that culminated in the awarding of trophies for Most Generous and Most Creative.

Members of the Youth Justice/DCFS clerical team pose for a photo after receiving the Most Creative award in the 2022 Kenosha County Division of Children and Family Services Feed 100 Families Food Drive. Pictured, from left, are Human Services Director and food drive judge John Jansen, Kriste Sretenovich, Sheila Petit, Ann Ashmus, Stephanie Cervantes-Garcia, Lisa Hansen, Sheryl Senn, Cheyenne Rahn, Katy Layne, and DCFS Director and food drive judge Ron Rogers.

“It was another spectacular year of holiday decorations and food collections by all,” said Kenosha County Human Services Director John Jansen, who judged the competition alongside Division of Children and Family Services Director Ron Rogers.

While Jansen praised all the competitors for their creativity, the Most Creative title went to the Youth Justice/DCFS Clerical team, for the “Polar Express” theme that it brought to its office area.

The Most Generous award went to the Child Protective Services/Kinship Care team, which reached out to community partners to supplement the staff donations. As part of this effort, the Kenosha County District Attorney’s and Victim Witness Office, the Child Advocacy Center and Bellissima’s Boutique contributed food and gift cards.

A display of snowmen and soup was part of the Kenosha County Division of Children and Family Services’ management team’s entry in the annual Feed 100 Families Food Drive — a friendly contest in which DCFS staff decorate their office areas and collect food donations for local families in need.

Other competitors in the contest included the Ongoing Services Unit, the Prevention Services Network, and the DCFS management team.

All of the decorating work was done on the staff’s own time, during non-working hours, noted Kenosha County Gang Intervention Supervisor Donna Rhodes, the coordinator of the event.

“This is a hugely popular event with our staff, and a wonderful opportunity to give back to the community that we serve,” Rhodes said. “It is awesome to see the creativity that’s used, and the generosity that benefits many families in need during the holidays.”

More information about the Kenosha County Division of Children and Family Services and its various work areas is available at https://www.kenoshacounty.org/241/Children-Family-Services.

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