Koenig Memorial Program & Fundraiser
One of Jackie’s many “specialties” was mentoring new people in gerontology, a practice she began in the 1980s when she served as a local ombudsman in Ohio and as a member of the Consumer Voice's Board of Directors. She was devoted to helping people approach their advocacy with positive passion, and was always enthusiastic about the many young interns the Consumer Voice has been privileged to tutor. That's why, in honor of her legacy, Jackie’s friends and family established a special fund to support the Jackie Koenig Memorial Summer Internship Program. Each summer, a fundraiser is held in Washington, DC, to build a fund to sustain our internship program throughout the year. Interns make a special contribution to the Consumer Voice's advocacy through specific projects. Each year the Consumer Voice holds a summer event in Jackie's memory. Long-term care advocates gather at Consumer Voice for an open house and share stories and raise fund to support the Jackie Koenig Internship Program. Koenig Memorial Program InternsDeepa Menon, 2009 My Koenig Memorial Internship Experience My responsibilities at the Consumer Voice were primarily divided between assisting advocacy efforts for Nursing Home Transparency, researching the policy and legal basis to challenge the ongoing racial discrimination in nursing home care, summarizing potential legislation such as the Community Choice Act, assessing the legal implications of such legislation, and gathering content for the policy pages of Consumer Voice’s new website. In addition, I was given the opportunity to meet with and listen to healthcare and civil rights law practitioners across the country. Adding to the equation was a group of fun, committed and understanding individuals, and the result was a fruitful and enlightening summer. The full impact of my work did not strike me until mid summer, when Janet Wells, the Consumer Voice’s Policy Director, invited me to attend a Capitol Hill meeting that the late Senator Kennedy had called for to discuss the Community Choice Act. The Act aside, what really touched me was the crowd of expectant faces who attended the meeting. These were people whose lives could change as a result of what would be just words for scores of policy experts and legal practitioners across the country. That moment, looking around the room, I realized the magnitude, for lack of a better word, of the profession that I was stepping into. And the reality of its impact.
Kristy Smith, 2008 |