POSTED: 04/12/16, 10:51 PM PDT
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Hospice volunteers bring comfort, love
By Corrigan Gommenginger
LAKEPORT >> National Volunteer Week is April 11 — 16 and Hospice Services of Lake County honors its core of dedicated volunteers who provide support and companionship to patients who are facing serious and life-limiting illnesses and their loved ones.
We could not do the work we do without the gifts of time and talent from our hospice volunteers who support our organization and walk with patients and families during the journey at life’s end.
Here in Lake County, 150 volunteers provide 15,000 hours per year to help Hospice Services care for patients and families in the community.
Hospice volunteers often visit patients and families in the home but they also assist in the office, help raise awareness, serve on our Board of Directors, contribute to educational programs, provide fundraising support, and volunteer in the three Hospice Thrift Stores in Lakeport, Middletown and Clearlake.
Hospice volunteers help the people they serve live every moment of life to the fullest. Most hospice volunteers choose to give their time helping others because of their own experience with the compassionate care hospice provided to a dying loved one.
It is federally mandated under Medicare that 5 percent of all patient care hours be provided by trained volunteers. This regulation reflects the vital role that volunteers play in the hospice philosophy of care and ensures that a hospice program has roots deep in the community.
For those interested in having a Community Ambassador speak to your group about the services we provide, or if you’re ready to have a nurse come to your home and talk with you about hospice care, or learning more about hospice or volunteer opportunities, please call Hedy Montoya at 263-6222 or hmontoya@lakecountyhospice.org.
Corrigan Gommenginger is executive director of Hospice Services of Lake County
Bank building donation supports patient care
By Corrigan Gommenginger, CHA, Hospice Services of Lake County executive director
Nearing the end of 2015, an offer was made by the Habematolel Pomo Tribe to buy the Upper Lake WestAmerica Bank Building and on Feb. 26, the paperwork was signed and the tribe now owns the former bank building.
In March 2015, Sinda Knight and Lisa Kline of WestAmerica Bank visited me at the hospice office. This wasn’t their first time here, the long-time support from WestAmerica Bank has brought them numerous times, usually with generous donations. Like many Lake County residents, they have had loved ones on hospice care, and they personally support our work, in addition to advocating support of our work with WestAmerica Bank employees.
The visit in March 2015 was similar in that they were stopping by to reiterate how much WestAmerica Bank supported the organization. What was unique was that instead of providing a check, they opened a folder with photos of a building. The building in the photos was the Upper Lake WestAmerica Bank Building. They told me that they were closing the branch, and that as a result of their recommendation the building was to be donated to hospice. The donation amounted to a 9,900-percent increase in support. The Board of Directors of Hospice Services of Lake County voted to accept the Upper Lake Building, located at 9470 Main St., Upper Lake, even though discussions continued about how it could support the mission of the organization.
At the September Strategic Planning Retreat, the board and staff considered many options for the building, including renting or selling it. We reached out to the Upper Lake community to get their ideas for the building, and that was when we learned that the Habematolel Pomo Tribe was interested in the building for much needed office space.
Hospice Services of Lake County will use the proceeds from the sale of the building to ensure hospice care and bereavement services continue for many generations. While hospice care is covered 100 percent by Medicare, Medi-Cal and most private insurance, we are committed for caring for those with serious illness, regardless of medical coverage and ability to pay. In 2015, Hospice Services of Lake County provided $78,000 in uncompensated care.
For more information about the care that Hospice Services of Lake County provides and to answer any questions,
visit our website at http://www.lakecountyhospice.org or call 707-263-6222.
Hospice bereavement program honored by school district

Clear Lake High School counselor Jodie Smart (left) and middle school and elementary counselor Ingrid Larsen (right) present Michy Brown with a Certificate of Appreciation. Photo By: Tami Carley
The mission of Hospice Services is to “support and comfort people by providing the highest quality medical, emotional, social, and spiritual care” in partnership with the culturally diverse communities it operates in. One of the ways they do that is through the Community Bereavement Program.
In 2015 Hospice hosted bereavement camps for 23 families, including 26 children, and supported individuals who have lost loved ones with over 1,700 grief counseling sessions through bereavement groups and individual therapy. Counseling was provided at 16 Lake County schools for 253 children who have experienced a death in their family.
The Bereavement program is led by Linda Laing, LMFT, Director of Bereavement Services, and includes Brown, Kathleen Bradley and a group of 37 volunteers, providing 1814 hours annually.
In November 2015 the Memorial Garden at the Bereavement Center on Parallel Drive was opened in a candlelight ceremony where families and friends reflected and remembered their loved ones. The Memorial Garden was a project of Lakeport Rotary.
Bereavement and Grief services are required to be offered by Medicare certified hospice agencies, however many hospice agencies provide the bare minimum to comply with the requirement. As you can see, this is not the case with the Community Bereavement Program at Hospice Services of Lake County.
Although the services are required, they are not funded. The services that Hospice provides are thanks to the donations and sales at the three Thrift Stores (Lakeport, Clearlake, Middletown), and by a grant from the Redbud Healthcare District.