SaddleBrooke Community Outreach Happenings

SBCO Home Tour Tickets Available March 6

Last year, the SBCO Home Tour included the beautifully remodeled kitchen of Mark and Helen Graham.

Nancy McCluskey-Moore

Want to see what other residents have done to their homes to improve traffic flow, expand storage options, create a space for guests, or simply modernize and beautify their surroundings? If so, the SaddleBrooke Community Outreach (SBCO) Home Tour is your ticket! The tour will focus on remodeled homes, allowing you to see extensive changes as well as budget-friendly transformations other residents have made to seven homes that may inspire your own home improvements.

This event helps SBCO inform the SaddleBrooke and SaddleBrooke Ranch communities about its food, clothing, and educational programs for children in nearby communities. It also helps SBCO recruit the volunteers needed to make these programs work. Tour attendees can choose between a morning (9 a.m. to noon) or afternoon (1 to 4 p.m.) tour on Saturday, April 1. During those three hours, you’ll be able to visit all of the homes. In addition to viewing the latest interior design, you’ll see smart bathroom and kitchen makeovers, casita and golf cart garage additions, revised floor plans, and renovated outdoor living spaces.

Tickets for this much-anticipated annual event go on sale at 9 a.m. on Monday, March 6, in the SBCO office, Suite L, in the SaddleBrooke Business Center on SaddleBrooke Blvd. With two tour times, 600 tickets will be available. When tickets are purchased, buyers will need to indicate which showing (morning or afternoon) they will attend. Tickets cost $20 per person and are sold only to SaddleBrooke and SaddleBrooke Ranch residents. You can purchase tickets Monday through Friday between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. until all tickets are sold. Call your friends and make plans before tickets sell out!

If you would like to serve as a docent in one of the 2023 tour homes for the morning or afternoon session, please contact Lisa Urban at [email protected]. Docents receive free admission to the tour.

One Person Can Make a Big Difference

Shawne Cryderman has led SBCO’s annual Make a Difference fundraising campaign since 2016.

Nancy McCluskey-Moore

For the past 25 years, SaddleBrooke Community Outreach (SBCO) has been providing children in nearby communities with opportunities to succeed through programs that provide food, clothing, enrichment grants, and scholarships. But to be effective, these programs require two key resources: committed volunteers and financial support from the SaddleBrooke and SaddleBrooke Ranch communities.

Since 2013, SBCO has been raising funds through the annual Make a Difference campaign. Dorothy Moore, who gave the fundraising effort its name, led Make a Difference until 2016 when Shawne Cryderman took over. The results achieved with this fundraising campaign have been significant and much needed. Of the 14 schools served by SBCO, all are Title I Schools, meaning at least 40% of the students come from low-income families. In some schools, the figure is as high as 90%.

In fiscal year 2021–22 (July 2021 through June 2022), Make a Difference donations totaled $173,778.67, which represented 89% of all donations to SBCO. A total of 319 individuals and clubs contributed funds. The money raised was enough to cover the cost of Kids’ Closet purchases for more than seven months.

Now, in the first half of the 2022–23 fiscal year (July through December 2022), Make a Difference donations exceed $80,000, with 185 individuals and clubs contributing. This total represents 87% of all donations made to SBCO in the first six months of this fiscal year.

The SBCO Board of Directors, our more than 300 volunteers, and (most of all) the kids we help deeply appreciate those who have contributed to Make a Difference. But we also recognize the campaign’s success is due to Shawne Cryderman leading this effort for nearly seven years. Promoting the campaign, tracking donations, and ensuring donors are properly thanked is a challenging task and one that Shawne has managed handily for a very long time. She clearly demonstrates that one person can make a huge difference in the lives of others.

If you would like to make a contribution to Make a Difference, you can mail or deliver a check made payable to SaddleBrooke Community Outreach to 63675 E. SaddleBrooke Blvd., Suite L, Tucson, AZ 85739 (the office is in the SaddleBrooke Business Center). Or you can make a secure online donation at our website community-outreach.org. Simply click on the “Donate” button and pay using your credit card or your PayPal account (a PayPal account is not required to make a donation).

Since SBCO is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization (tax ID number 86-0843458), all contributions are tax deductible to the fullest extent allowed by law. Contributions are also eligible for the Arizona Tax Credit for Contributions to Charities (AZ Tax Credit Code 20214).

25th Annual SBCO Food Drive Kicks Off on March 6

Nancy McCluskey-Moore

The SaddleBrooke Community Outreach (SBCO) annual Food Drive will this year gather donations of food and money to support the Tri-Community Food Bank (TCFB) based in Mammoth. TCFB serves needy families living in Mammoth, San Manuel, Oracle, and the Dudleyville/Aravaipa area. Donations from SaddleBrooke and SaddleBrooke Ranch helped to provide bimonthly emergency food boxes to 530 households (1,565 people) during 2022. The Food Bank served 477 children and 340 seniors in the past year. On a monthly basis, TCFB serves about 400 households (1,190 people). The rising cost of gasoline, food, and utilities over the past year have created an even greater financial burden for these families.

This year, SBCO will be collecting monetary contributions online or with checks from March 6 through the March 18. Online donations can be made at the SBCO website community-outreach.org.

Checks, made payable to SaddleBrooke Community Outreach, can be delivered to Food Drive unit captains or mailed/hand delivered to the SBCO office at 63675 E. SaddleBrooke Blvd., Suite L, Tucson, AZ 85739 (in the SaddleBrooke Business Complex). Office hours are Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

All monetary donations go directly to grocery purchases and related expenses. SBCO and TCFB are both all-volunteer organizations and are IRS 501(c)(3) and AZ nonprofit charitable organizations, so donations made to these organizations are tax deductible.

On Saturday, March 18, food donations need to be placed at the curb for pickup by 8 a.m. These donations will be taken to the MountainView clubhouse parking lot for sorting, boxing, and delivery to TCFB.

If you live in SaddleBrooke and would like to volunteer for the Food Drive, please contact Andrea Stephens at [email protected]. SaddleBrooke Ranch residents should contact Betty Ryan at [email protected].

Annual Party Celebrates SBCO Scholarship Students

Katerina Frye, who has received SBCO scholarships for undergraduate and graduate school, told pizza party attendees about the difference these scholarships have made in her life.

Nancy McCluskey-Moore

Each December the SaddleBrooke Community Outreach (SBCO) Education Committee invites its college scholarship students and their guests to a pizza party. The event, held at Kids’ Closet in Mammoth, is an opportunity for SBCO to recognize the students’ academic achievements and for the students to visit with their Education Committee liaisons and other students. The timing of the event coincides with the students’ winter break when many come home to visit family for the holidays.

This year, the party was attended by 28 students, more than one-third of students currently under scholarship. More than 70 people, including students’ guests, members of the SBCO Education Committee and board of directors, along with their spouses, joined in the gathering. In attendance was Katerina Frye who received a scholarship while completing her bachelor’s degree in journalism at Johns Hopkins University. She also has received a graduate school scholarship, funded by the SBCO Scholarship Endowment Fund, for a master’s in creative writing at New York University. Katerina spoke eloquently about how support from SBCO has helped her achieve her academic and career goals.

To see photos of the pizza party and learn more about SBCO’s scholarship program, visit community-outreach.org.

SBCO Benefits from SaddleBrooke Ranchers’ Casino Night Party

Friends of Jacqueline and Patrick Fancher raised funds for SBCO with an evening of “just for fun” gambling.

Nancy McCluskey-Moore

Once again, Jacqueline and Patrick Fancher took a chance and hosted a casino night for their SaddleBrooke Ranch neighbors. As with their party in 2022, their goal was to have fun with friends while raising money for SaddleBrooke Community Outreach (SBCO).

Jacqueline and Patrick moved to SaddleBrooke Ranch in October 2020 from Hollister, Calif., and were first inspired to host a fundraiser after attending an SBCO information meeting held at the Ranch. As Jacqueline said, “Giving back adds purpose to my life.”

For this year’s casino night, the Fanchers hired Phoenix-based Diamond Dave’s Casino Events and hosted 40 people. Each guest contributed $20 for $100 in gambling chips, of which 100% was donated to SBCO. Even those who did not gamble donated to the cause. This year, the event raised $3,305.

Patrick and Jacqueline want to thank all of their SaddleBrooke Ranch pals for making this fundraiser a success. Both Jacqueline and Patrick said, “Like last year, we had a good time hosting this fundraiser.” And SBCO thanks the Fanchers for helping to support our efforts to provide local kids with opportunities to succeed.