Text PATHWAYS (space) followed by $10 to 27138
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Text PATHWAYS (space) followed by $10 to 27138
Tags: Text to Donate
Pathways serves more than 900 students, with several in-school and off-campus programs, including career fairs and field trips. Participating schools in San Francisco include Balboa High School, Benjamin Franklin Middle School, Downtown High School, Enola Maxwell Middle School for the Arts, Francisco Middle School, Galileo Academy of Science and Technology, George Washington High School, Gloria R. Davis College Preparatory Academy, Ida B. Wells High School, Independence High School, International Studies Academy, Lowell High School, Mission High School, Phillip and Sala Burton Academic High School, Phoenix Continuation High School. Roosevelt Middle School, Thurgood Marshall High School and Wallenberg High School.
Pathways for Kids also works with after-school programs such as the Excelsior Boys and Girls Club, Hunters Point Boys’ and Girls’ Club, Mayor’s Youth Employment and Education Program, Visitation Valley Boys & Girls Club and Western Addition Beacon Center.
Pathways’ sponsors include U.S. Bank, Wells Fargo Bank and the Weingeroff Family. Pathways’ annual auction/dinner, held in November, raises much of the organization’s money for the year.
Past mentors who have worked with Pathways for Kids include former Mayors Frank Jordan and Willie Brown. Mayor Gavin Newsom is honorary chairman of the board.
Tags: Balboa High School, Benjamin Franklin Middle School, Downtown High School, Enola Maxwell Middle School for the Arts, Francisco Middle School, Galileo Academy of Science and Technology, George Washington High School, Gloria R. Davis College Preparatory Academy, Ida B. Wells High School, Independence High School, International Studies Academy, Lowell High School, Mission High School, Phillip and Sala Burton Academic High School, Phoenix Continuation High School. Roosevelt Middle School, Thurgood Marshall High School and Wallenberg High School.
By Betty Lynne Leary
Forty years after the Summer of Love rocked the San Francisco area with its celebrations of the hippie counterculture, Peter Dwares ’69 finds himself as much in love with this city as when he arrived shortly after the famed, free love gathering. For this attorney-turned-real estate developer, the Bay Area still offers the perfect environment for a free-wheeling lifestyle that includes love for his work, his family and friends, and for the communities around him.
After working as a securities lawyer in D.C., Dwares traveled to San Francisco for an interview and never looked back. In the mid-‘70s he bagan dabbling in real estate, and by the mid-‘80s discovered that he enjoyed it enough to go full time.
“I’m motivated by doing deals, “Dwares says. “I buy older shopping centers and fix them up. They are privately held in states all over the country”.
Dwares lives and works in the heart of San Francisco in a four-story building he purchased, gutted and remodeled. Wraparound windows highlight views from the Bay Bridge to the city’s thriving financial district. His success in business stems from a discipline he learned back in law school.
“I got serious about school at WCL. Law school molded and disciplined me,” he says. “When I was practicing law, I felt I could go against anyone. There was no intellectual superior to me.” Dwares parlayed his self-confidence and hard work into the highly successful Dwares Group, Incorporated, which seeks to improve communities through investment. Communities are not simply rehabbed buildings however, and Dwares takes an active role in supporting the people within the community.
The American Institute for Public Service recognized Dwares earlier this year with the 2007 Jefferson Award. The Jefferson Awards are a prestigious national recognition system honoring community and public service in America, on both local and national levels. Dwares was honored for his Pathways for Kids organizations, which matches disadvantaged, inner-city youth with mentors with the goal of breaking the cycle of poverty.
“Many kids don’t have role models to teach them how to choose a good career or how to make or invest money,” Dwares explains. His organization gives kids the chance to meet, work with, and learn from a variety of professionals including doctors, plumbers, electricians and chefs. With in-school and off-campus programs, career fairs and field trips, kids learn the ins and outs of establishing a promising career.
Dwares also served for many years on the board of Adopt a Special Kid (AASK), which finds families willing to adopt children with special needs. For more than 20 years, he has hosted Uncle Nathan’s Day, a festive annual event for AASK families with food, gifts and entertainment held during the December holidays.
“I think it was Plato who said, ‘We do this for the good we feel out of it’ and that’s OK!” Dwares says laughing. “I feel great on Uncle Nathan’s Day, and I feel great knowing we’ve counseled 8,000 kids in eights years through Pathways for Kids.”
Dwares cannot point to any one part of his life that he finds the most satisfying.
“The balance gives me the greatest satisfaction,” he says. “Whether I’m doing a deal, giving back to the community, or having great parties, these three together make a great life.”
Tags: Peter Dwares
Pathways for Kids is a San Francisco based non-profit organization founded in 1998. Pathway’s mission is to connect at risk, economically disadvantaged youth with volunteer mentors or “Coaches”, who have achieved success in a wide variety of businesses and professions, to inspire academic achievement and career awareness. Many of our kids have no idea what opportunities exist and if they do, don’t believe they have a chance to achieve them. Pathways is committed to changing that perception.
Pathways’ career mentoring programs encourage young people to cultivate professional skills, pursue higher education and to choose successful and meaningful careers. Pathways sends hundreds of volunteer professionals into San Francisco classrooms. These classroom “Coaches” represent a broad spectrum of disciplines including accounting, advertising, broadcasting, education, government, high tech, green business, real estate, the arts, nursing, sales, social services and more.
Pathways’ programs are comprised of three primary segments: Coaches in Classroom, Coaches in the Workplace and Career Fairs. These programs have been built with a strong commitment from local business, community and host school partnerships. To date, the organization has provided mentoring services to thousands of San Francisco’s youth.
Tags: mentoring programs