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The
FUTURE Foundation of Sacramento
Sacramento
Business Journal Article
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
Future Foundation “can
influence the future by doing it one student at a time,” said Miller, president
of Loss Recovery Inc., a securities litigation, arbitration, and mediation consulting
firm. Numerous mentoring programs of all types exist across the region and nation.
Less common are mentoring programs that link community business leaders with
high school students. Even more unusual are programs that guarantee admission
to and payment for college.
Future Foundation is a bare-bones operation, with no paid staff or office. Its
board members serve as the students’ mentors.
Mentors and their students keep in touch by e-mail, phone calls and visits. Students
share grades and college prep course information, ambitions and everything from
family relationship issues to athletic performance and weight.
Wright wants to help the student he’s mentoring, Jessica Payne, 16, of Roseville,
with her physical, mental and emotional well-being.
Wright talks to her about his business, struggles related to the economy and
his responsibilities to his workers, to give her a realistic understanding of
a career, setbacks and persistence. “I just want to prepare her for life outside
of high school,” he said.
Napear, who has been teamed up with 10th-grader Raul Villafuerte since the fall,
gets asked to do a lot in the community. But this, he said, “is the most rewarding,
most feel-good thing I’ve ever been involved with.”
The mentors’ enthusiasm is not lost on their students. Miller, for instance, has made an impression on Rubalcaba.
“He’s a successful man,” Rubalcaba said. “I want to be successful like him.” He also doesn’t want to disappoint his mentor.
Payne is a self-motivated, straight-A student, said her mom, Marie. But even so, the program has “meant everything” for the family, the single mother said, adding that she doesn’t think she would have been able to pay for her daughter’s college education.
Jessica Payne said she’s more confident as a result of getting through the long, intimidating selection process and being picked. She’s also pushing herself even harder at school. She hopes she can motivate other young people to have faith and persevere.
For an organization to help students get into college and also pay for it is “fantastic,” said Billy Downing, Western regional director for The Edge College and Career Network LLC, a for-profit company that counsels students preparing for college.
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