OTMJ 8.11.22

Page 8

NEWS

8 • Thursday, August 11, 2022

‘Opportunity to Grow’

By Anne Ruisi

Unless U Opens Satellite Campus in Vestavia Hills

Larry O’Berry and Will Toffel

GRAND OPENING: Above, Lindy Cleveland, Unless U’s founder and executive director and Jennifer Greer, Post Place director at the Post Place ribbon cutting last week. Unless U provides faith-based continuing education for adults with intellectual and development disabilities. Below left, Athena Hontzas shares a hug with the Chick-fil-A cow. Below right, Unless U Staffers, from left, Mary Grace Sauermann, Lisa Ferguson, Meredith Binkley and Lisa Williamson.

Journal photos by Jordan Wald

Hugs and huge smiles were the order of the day as Post Place in Vestavia Hills, an arm of nonprofit organization Unless U, held its grand opening Aug. 5. “We’re thankful to the Lord for the expansion and provision to serve more families,” said Lindy Cleveland, Unless U’s founder and executive director. Unless U provides faith-based continuing education for adults with intellectual and development disabilities. It also provides instruction in development and life skills to its students. Post Place, in the former Jefferson County ARC site on Hackberry Road, is a satellite campus of the main Unless U site next to Vestavia Hills United Methodist Church. Unless U moved into the Post Place facility on June 6, Greer said. The building was completely renovated to make it appropriate to the organization’s needs. The day program is a college-style experience for small groups of adults with special needs that had been offered at the main campus. The students now at Post Place require more assistance, and space constraints at the main campus meant Unless U could only work with five students a day, said Doug Williamson, a member of the organization’s board of directors and Cleveland’s father. The new facility will have a capacity of 40. “We’re really excited about the opportunity to expand the services of Unless U and increase services to the families we serve at this location,” Williamson said. Those services include classes in math, reading, science, history, Bible study and electives in the fine arts. Students also learn life skills, such as communication and healthy interaction, said Paula Heath, community and outreach coordinator. More oneon-one instruction is offered at Post Place and class sizes are smaller. “It gives students with different

OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL

abilities the opportunity to grow and learn,” said Jennifer Greer, Post Place director. Unless U and Post Place services are strictly for people 18 and older who’ve graduated high school, according to Unless U’s website. “The whole concept is these families and students don’t have a lot of options once they become adults. Lindy saw the need and wanted to provide services,” Heath said. Greer, who was a special education teacher for 25 years in Vestavia Hills City Schools, agreed that once special needs students graduate from high school, there aren’t a lot of options. “It’s heartbreaking,” she said. While the Post Place students now are young adults, there are no age limits as to how long they can stay, Greer said. “When I think about Post Place, the word hope comes into my heart,” Greer said.

The Accidental Entrepreneur Jennifer Senske Ryan, founder and owner of BLUEROOT and Croux, was the keynote speaker at the Mountain Brook Chamber of Commerce quarterly luncheon on Aug. 2. Ryan shared her inspirational story of moving to Birmingham in 2019 and wanting to find food that was good for her and easy to get, which led her to open BLUEROOT. Ryan also talked about how the pandemic led her to the idea of her latest venture: Croux. Croux is an app that matches vetted

Courtesy Mountain Brook Chamber

MB Chamber Quarterly Luncheon

Jennifer Ryan, above left, talks with guests at the Mountain Brook Chamber of Commerce quarterly luncheon last week. Above right, John Wilson with members of the Borland Bennefied team. Wilson received the Outstanding Corporate Citizen award at the luncheon.

local talent with opportunity to help restaurants fill shifts quickly and provide workers with choice as well as flexibility. Also during the meeting John

Wilson was named as the recipient of the Outstanding Corporate Citizen Award, “given in grateful appreciation or going above and beyond during many years of dedicated service to the

Mountain Brook Chamber.” Wilson is president/managing director of accounting services firm Borland Benefield. Maury Wald, publisher of Over The

Mountain Journal, was recognized for outstanding service and partnership with the Mountain Brook Chamber. The Journal celebrated its 32nd anniversary on Aug. 2.


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