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Jets help empower women with online job mentoring event with Dress for Success - GoErie.com

Jets help empower women with online job mentoring event with Dress for Success - GoErie.com


Jets help empower women with online job mentoring event with Dress for Success - GoErie.com

Posted: 28 Nov 2020 09:05 PM PST

By Dennis Waszak Jr. / AP pro football writer  |  AP Sports

Annette Guzman-Torres was feeling discouraged and frustrated, her anxiety fueled by the uncertainty of a bleak job market during the coronavirus pandemic.

The 44-year-old married mother of two boys is close to finishing the capstone project for her doctorate from Capella University. She has a 3.77 GPA, is a member of The National Society of Leadership and Success and has big professional dreams.

But Guzman-Torres was furloughed from her government job in March after the pandemic began and still hasn't been able to return. She also found no leads for employment after her upcoming graduation.

"I was like, I have no job, nowhere to go, nothing to do," said the resident of Bloomfield, New Jersey. "My fears, I was kind of letting them get to me."

So, Guzman-Torres needed help — and found it, thanks to a collaboration between the New York Jets and Dress For Success Northern New Jersey-10 Counties.

This month, 27 female Jets employees participated in an online mentoring program for women run by the affiliate of the nonprofit Dress For Success. The global organization is known for providing professional attire for women, but also helps build job search and interview skills with no-cost seminars and programs.

"It was a breath of fresh air, this event, because I felt like, OK, I see things a little clearer now," Guzman-Torres said. "I can actually feel comfortable sending out my resume."

Guzman-Torres was one of 11 women mentored during the event, with the concept conceived during the pandemic through weekly meetings between Jessica Mandler, the football team's vice president of human resources and administration and the team's three other female VPs — Jessica Ciccone (content strategy and marketing); Jill Kelley (legal affairs) and Jennifer Linn (partner management and sponsorships) — about what they could do as an organization to help encourage and empower women.

Mandler recalled being impressed by the impact a Dress For Success program had while she was working for the NBA several years ago. So, she connected with the affiliate in Madison — five minutes from the Jets' facility in Florham Park — and traded ideas with Kim Iozzi, Dress For Success Northern New Jersey's executive director.

"When I brought it back to the organization as a whole, they couldn't have supported us any more," Mandler said. "It was the first event like this that we had ever done. We had 27 women sign up right away, which was a huge win for us. ... You almost got a little bit emotional at how excited people were and how much people wanted to be a part of this."

Iozzi and the Jets huddled up to create a game plan that would benefit those participating as clients, such as Guzman-Torres, and those serving as mentors.

"They came at it with the right approach," Iozzi said of the Jets. "They didn't want a fluff program. They wanted to do something that was meaningful."

The program included the Jets employees using Zoom breakout rooms to review and improve the clients' resumes and cover letters, as well as holding mock interviews and offering tips for their LinkedIn accounts and suggestions about searching for employment opportunities.

"They were amazing," Guzman-Torres said. "They really took the time."

Sandy Osipowitz, the Jets' senior director of corporate partnership activation, felt she was relatable to a lot of them as a mother of three who has been managing her work-from-home life while also balancing the responsibilities of parenthood.

"We wanted to share our experiences and do everything we can to help them," Osipowitz said. "They're out of work and looking for some guidance and some additional help with getting their resumes or interview skills to a certain place to help them feel confident."

Dress For Success was founded by Nancy Lublin in 1997 and has expanded to almost 150 cities in 25 countries, including Erie. Iozzi's affiliate, with a staff of three and several volunteers, serves 10 counties in northern New Jersey and has helped nearly 1,000 women since the pandemic began.

"To have a stranger do something so nice for you and reach out and really want to make that connection because they can and because they care, it's really overwhelming, I think, for our clients to come to terms with the fact there are people out there like that," Iozzi said. "It's very humbling."

While many of Dress For Success' clients come from low-income brackets, some are women over 50 who had 20 or more years of professional experience and whose companies downsized and didn't rehire. Others are simply looking to further their careers.

"Basically, if you're a woman who needs to be suited with confidence, we're the go-to," Iozzi said. "You might be underemployed, unemployed, you may be newly employed and still just trying to figure out, OK, what does that mean now? How do I budget? How can I get my family to be in a better position? So we work with a woman continually through that journey."

The Jets hope to be there along the way, too, to continue to encourage and assist women through similar collaborations.

"It just helps the community and it really helps our employees overall in their career development and while they're home, it helps them in their personal development," Mandler said. "I mean, it just hit so many things for us internally and organizationally that it just felt so good all around."

One stitch at a time: Local women dress-up for a cause - Sedona Red Rock News

Posted: 19 Nov 2020 12:00 AM PST

A bedroom in Lin Ennis' Chapel area home has been transformed into a makeshift studio — a wooden desk is now a sewing machine station with thread, pins and needles about; drawers have been labeled "bias tape," "elastic" and "cutouts," and bags of donated fabric find space on the floor.

Brightly-colored sundresses, folded neatly and stacked into piles based on their size, have taken over the bed. In the nearby bathroom, the shower curtain holder is now the hanging rack for a select few dresses on display.

Recently retired, in the last few months Ennis has been, in her words, "making dresses like a banshee." What first started as a hobby now has a cause — one in which Ennis has poured her heart into.

Every handmade sundress has something unique about it. David Jolkovski/Larson Newspapers

"I realized I would never get my ancient sewing machine serviced out here in the middle of nowhere, so I put it online and sold it and bit the bullet to buy a very, very inexpensive little sewing machine," Ennis said. "I did some personal sewing for myself — just fixing sleeves and things like that, and I said, 'well, that was fun.'"

Over breakfast one morning, a friend suggested that Ennis look up a sewing charity.

"I came home from that breakfast and typed in 'sewing charity' and Dress A Girl Around the World popped up," Ennis recalled. "I looked at the pictures of the dresses, the pictures of the little girls all excited, sticking their hands in the pockets and I said, 'Oh wow, this is cool.'"

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Dress A Girl launched in 2009 as part of the nonprofit Hope 4 Women International. It's goal is to bring every girl around the world dignity by making sure they have at least one new dress.

Specifically, Ennis plans to send the hundreds of dresses sewn by her and the other local volunteers she has brought on board to dress orphaned girls in Malawi, in southeast Africa.

"In the orphanages they may have rags — whatever clothing is donated — any size, any color, any shape, any whatever." Ennis said. "And what I've read about that is that makes [the girls] very susceptible to sex trafficking because it looks like, 'this girl doesn't belong to anybody, nobody cares for her,' and with these labels that we put on the front of every dress, we know — and anybody looking would know — this girl is being cared for by an organization."

Distinctive white "Dress A Girl" labels are sewn on the front of every handmade sundress.

The organization "could be a school, it could be an orphanage, could be a church — any kind of a group. It just signals, this girl is cared for and she would be missed if she went missing," Ennis added.

Dress A Girl Around the World labels are sewn on all the dresses as a preventative measure against sex trafficking. David Jolkovski/Larson Newspapers

Besides helping to deter girls from sex trafficking in Africa, the dresses also allow the girls to attend school, which they wouldn't have been able to do in rags.

"And since she has a start in life with education, she may be able to grow up and encourage other girls to be edu­cated and go to school," Ennis added. "One of the horrendous negative fallouts of poverty is how it separates a person from education, even here in the United States …. So poverty, you can't really get out of it without being educated."

"Poverty begets poverty," added Heather Molans, one of the volunteer sewers who also happens to be Ennis' neighbor. Molans was also hooked on helping after perusing the Dress A Girl website.

"There's one picture on there that just broke my heart," she said. "It's a little, tiny girl. It looks like she's wearing a man's T-shirt — the neck is hanging down to her hip — I saw that and I thought, 'I'm in.'"

Molans said she used to sew and make all her clothes when she was a kid, but stopped when the fabric and patterns got more expensive than buying pre-made clothes.

She and the other volunteers follow the Dress A Girl chart measurements and simple instructions to sew the dresses. All the materials are already enclosed in the kits they use.

"A kit includes the fabric already pre-cut for a dress, the bias tape for the straps, the elastic for the neckline and a little armhole cutout. So a pattern," Ennis said.

But while the group has made hundreds of dresses so far, none of them have come out the same.

"I have made every mistake in the book," Ennis said. "Cute comes out of mistakes. And this is what I told all the ladies at the volunteer meeting. The mistake — by the time you fix it — turns into something really cute.

Just a few of the sundresses that were made by the group on display. David Jolkovski/Larson Newspapers

"For example, one of my early dresses was lying on the ironing board while I was cutting some pockets and I snipped a hole in the back of the dress — and [thought] 'now what?' What I did with that, I zigzagged across the cut and then I used the pocket material and made a little false belt and put two buttons on it to match the front of the dress — it was adorable. If I hadn't made that mistake, I wouldn't have even thought of that design."

And not all who want to help need to sew.

"One of the ladies didn't sew," Ennis said of the first volunteer meeting they had at Church of the Nazarene in the Village of Oak Creek in early March. "That was fine, there was plenty of stuff to do. Going through making sure there were no loose threads, measuring the dresses so they get put in the right stack and go to the right shipment…"

Others donate fabric to the cause.

"The fabric is donated and here in Sedona and the Verde Valley it's wonderful because this has been such a quilting mecca and a lot of the quilters are sort of aging out of quilting … and they have stashes. Piles of beautiful, beautiful fabrics," Ennis said.

Money, too, can be donated for the volunteers to purchase supplies for the dresses.

"My retired minister friend said, 'Lin, I love this project you're doing, making these dresses.' And I said, 'Well, you know these little African girls didn't know they were naked until you guys [missionaries] went over there and told them that.' And he sent me $100 for the project," Ennis recalled with a laugh. "West­erners came over and taught them shame. Now [their] shame has been exploited, so now we're trying to reverse that by giving them dignity — showing them something they can be proud of."

Lin Ennis poses with a sundress she made that will go to a girl who needs it in Malawi. David Jolkovski/Larson Newspapers

Along with dresses, when the coronavirus pandemic hit, Dress a Girl Around the World Sedona joined Red Rock Quilters, Liberal Ladies and Verde Sews and other sewers in Sedona Kind's mission to provide cloth masks and gowns to health care workers and com­munity groups that were in need of Personal Protective Equipment.

"The project has been so far cost free due to generous donations of fabric, sup­plies and sewing machines and transportation from the community who want to support the project in some way," Sedona Kind wrote on its website. "Over 2,050 gowns have been sewn, and masks number over 5,000 and counting."

To join Dress a Girl Around the World's Sedona chapter, visit facebook. com/DAGsedona or call 224-8255.

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