By: Inga Oberst/Troy
UniversityABBEVILLE – Tammy
Evans has a better idea of where to turn for help with food, utilities
and other necessities thanks to Brian Duhaime, a Troy University
community counseling graduate student from Enterprise. Duhaime and his
Dothan Campus classmates recently spent two days at the WestPoint
Stevens plant in Abbeville offering advice and referrals to workers, who
will be displaced when the plant closes its doors later this year.
Students in TROY’s crisis response
management and vocational counseling classes met one-on-one with the
textile workers to discuss their options. The students volunteered in
conjunction with the Henry County Family Service Center and Living
Waters, a non-profit, faith-based counseling provider.
TROY school counseling major Lisa Tolar
of Dothan helped to organize the effort.
“We are here to let people know about the
resources available and that the community wants to help,” Tolar said.
“We want them to know they are not alone.”
Evans was grateful for the free advice.
Her husband, Fred, will also lose his job. They have two small children
at home.
“This really helped me,” Evans said. “We
are having trouble with our bills. It is sending me in the right
direction.”
School counseling major Ruthie Boykin of
Ozark said the opportunity to use what she has learned in the classroom
will make her a better counselor.
“I am learning how to listen,” Boykin
emphasized.
Troy University offers master’s degrees
in counseling and psychology with concentrations in community,
corrections, rehabilitation, substance abuse and school counseling, in
addition to school psychometry. Education specialist degrees in school
counseling and school psychology are also available.
Over a two-day period, the students met
with 150 employees of the mill. Dr. Ginger Mayer, interim counseling and
psychology department chair, said volunteering helps the future
counselors develop empathy, while they refine their intake and referral
skills.
“They have done a really good job.” Mayer
said. “The people here have been complementing us on the caring attitude
and the professionalism of our students.”
As the roar of spinning machines drifted
into the conference room, community counseling major Beth Gunter of
Daleville offered hope to Verna Brown, a 34-year veteran of the plant.
“It is very helpful,” Brown said. “It is
encouraging that somebody cares about what is going on. It makes you
feel a little better.”
For
more information about counseling and psychology programs offered by
Troy University, contact the Dothan Campus at 334-983-6556 or visit
www.troy.edu.
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Photo by: Inga Oberst/Troy
UniversityTroy
University community counseling major Brian Duhaime of Enterprise provides
WestPoint Stevens employee Tammy Evans with the names of agencies that may be
able to help with food, utilities and other living expenses. Evans, her husband
and approximately 600 other textile workers will lose their jobs in the coming
months as the Abbeville plant closes its doors. |
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