Steve Staden joins bike run that nets $50K toward healthy food for needy families

More than 200 needy families in southeast-central Wisconsin, two-thirds of them with children, will have an easier time affording healthy, locally grown food as a result of $50,000 raised in a weekend “Bike the Barns” bicycle event which included rider Steve Staden, Ipswitch R&D development manager in the Madison office.

Madison-area CSA Coalition logoStaden said he and his girlfriend  joined 570 bicyclers who  rode either 26 miles (“radish route”) or 63 miles (“rutabaga route”)  in rain and 50-degree temperatures around the rolling plains of Madison, Wis., to benefit the Madison Area CSA Coalition. “CSA” stands for “Community Supported Agriculture,” and in this case it applies to a 20-year-old non-profit association of 50 food-growing farms within about a 100-mile radius of Madison.

Steve Staden gearing up for "Bike the Barns" on Sept. 18

Steve Staden gearing up for "Bike the Barns"

Despite the rain, the $50,000 was “more than we have ever raised before in a single bike event,” said Gini Knight, community-program manager for the CSA Coalition. They’ll use proceeds from Sunday’s ride to provide 50-percent subsidies to the 200 needy families who purchase an annual family “share” of food. That would otherwise cost them $570 for 20 weeks of fresh produce – in quantities sufficient to feed a family of four.

To fortify the bicycle riders along the rolling route pit stops were at participating farms with names like Wholesome Harvest and Sprouting Acres. They included – all locally sourced – a breakfast of yogurt waffle cups with fruit and  lunches of either roast beef or veggie sandwiches, bean salad, green salad and homemade ice-cream sandwiches. Menu for  the post-ride after party? Tacos, coleslaw, root-beer floats and beer from a local brewery.

Staden’s registration fee and contribution for the ride will be matched by Ipswitch’s iCare program.  He’s still taking friends-and-family donations at his pledge web page. His next charity ride is Oct. 1 to benefit 12 health-related services via Tomorrow’s Hope.

 

A home-like space for friends in an oncology ward — the Jen Di Reeno Lounge at Tufts Medical Center

Jen Di Reeno

Jen Di Reeno's decade-old portrait

When Jen Di Reeno died of complications from a rare skin cancer 11 years ago, her teen-age and young-adult friends turned their grief into determination.

They created the Jen Di Reeno Foundation, to carry on the enthusiasm and purpose of the freckle-faced Reading woman.

On May 12 — what would have been Jen’s 33rd birthday — some 50 friends and family gathered in an oncology wing of Tufts Medical Center for a dedication of “Jen’s Lounge” — a stylish oasis of quiet and sanity for teen cancer patients and their families.

Kim Di Reeno and her mother, Patty

Kim Di Reeno and her mom, Patty

In the lounge, a patient can spend time with visitors on their hospital room floor — in a comfy, living room-like setting complete with high-tech entertainment and learning tools.

Besides the family lounge, the Di Reeno Foundation, with support from Ipswitch and its employees, has built two prototype portable bedside, web-enabled computer work/play stations for Tufts oncology patients. Called “Freckles,” the units consist of a sturdy, two-inch steel pole on a four-wheel stand. Mounted on the pole are a computer monitor which slides up or or down to adjust view angle, a tray which holds a keyboard and mouse, and a desktop computer and related operating gear near the bottom of the pole.

Tara Finnigan beside the "Freckles" mobile bedside computer work/play station

Tara Finnigan and "Freckles"

The units are so popular that other wards and floors at Tufts Medical Center keep asking the teen oncology unit to borrow them. Foundation board members, including Jen’s childhood friend Tara Finnigan, are now considering whether it would be possible to obtain government or foundation grants and partner with a company to manufacture the “Freckles” units for other hospitals.

About the foundation
The mission of the Jen Di Reeno Foundation is to support teens and young adults by providing ways to heal from grief caused by the presence of cancer, other serious illness, and life’s critical challenges.

These photos were taken at the dedication ceremony by Bill Densmore in support of donations to the Foundation by Ipswitch and its employees.

WATCH AN 11-MINUTE VIDEO:
vimeo.com/23731195

VIEW MORE PHOTOS:
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Jen Di Reeno Foundation Inc.
51 Parkview Road
Reading MA 01867
info@jendireeno.org
www.jendireeno.org