Dance the Night Away and Support Second Chance Last Opportunity

Dance the Night Away and Support Second Chance Last Opportunity

You’re invited to attend Second Chance Last Opportunity’s (SCLO) 28th anniversary party, “Git It In Your Soul,” on Saturday, May 27, at the Sarasota Bayfront Community Center, 655 N Tamiami Trail, from 6-9 pm. Refreshments and music for dancing provided by DJ Al.

Celebrate with SCLO staff and volunteers, meet SCLO’s board members and learn more about our mission and vision. CEO and Founder, Dr. April Glasco, will present, “What will SCLO look like in the next five years?” Our goal is to invite potential volunteers, board members, donors, and community partners to learn more about us.

Tickets cost $50.  Reserve your place at https://secondchancelastopportunity.org/events/

Further information is available by calling 941-360-8660.

 

You’re invited to attend Second Chance Last Opportunity’s 28th anniversary party “ Git It In Your Soul” this event is held on Saturday, May 27 at the Sarasota Bayfront from 6-9.

SCLO have invited you to attend and to celebrate with SCLO staff, and volunteers, to give you the opportunity to meet SCLO’s board members and to learn more about SCLO mission and vision . A presentation from our CEO , April Glasco will be presented, “what SCLO looks like in the next five years” Although, it’s our charity fundraiser event.

Our goal is to invite potential volunteers, board members and donors, and Community partners as our guest to join and learn how to make connection, conversation and  community engagement with SCLO to support the purpose, vision, mission and cause of helping people served by SCLO.

 

Tickets are available.

We asked that you RSVP your seat (s) to attend SCLO anniversary party with a cause to serve.

Help SCLO Expand our Emergency Crisis Center

 

Our goal is to expand the SCLO Emergency Crisis Center, at 1933 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Way, by adding on to the existing building. This will make us much more efficient. We will have additional storage space on an upper mezzanine or loft space, with access by stairs, which will be safe and easy to climb.

Under the new space, we will have more square footage to store more items and conduct SCLO emergency food distributions. The building will be air-conditioned and have a walk-in refrigerator.

The total cost is $250,000.

Starting date is March 3, 2023
Groundbreaking is October 20, 2023
Ribbon Cutting is August 1, 2024.

 

You can help right now by making a one-time donation online. You are just one click away!

Donate Here:

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From abuse to empowerment: how a Sarasota nonprofit founder helps vulnerable residents

Originally Published on March 8, 2023 by Melissa Pérez-Carrillo at the Sarasota Herald-Tribune

 

On the corner of 1933 Dr. Martin Luther King Way, there’s a little purple building buzzing with activity. The occasional driver will honk or wave. Volunteers shuffle to prepare food and groceries. Clients arrive looking for counseling.

April Glasco waits with a smile and a watchful eye.

Second Chance Last Opportunity offers emergency food and meal distribution, counseling, clothing, after-school youth programs, and more. Glasco opened the nonprofit in 1995, following two abusive relationships and experiencing homelessness for five years.

She calls herself the first client because it was her second chance at life, and she knew it was her last opportunity.

“I was becoming what I needed to be, but it still was tough,” Glasco said. “It’s a tough, tough journey.”

CEO and founder of Second Chance Last Opportunity April Glasco speaks to Ashley Wingate. Wingate showed up at Second Chance Last Opportunity hoping to get some food for herself and her dog, and a pair of shoes. While talking to Glasco, Wingate agreed to start a job training program at Second Chance Last Opportunity.

The Pastor’s Daughter

Glasco, her three brothers, and her parents moved to Florida from New Jersey in 1975 when she was 11 years old.

Her mother, Carrie Lee Jones, had just been diagnosed with cancer and needed to live in a warm climate.

The move was uncomfortable, and the experience was ostracizing. As a pastor’s daughter, she was often called a wallflower because she didn’t drink, smoke or fit in at school. She traveled in a camper and performed with a gospel group called the Voices of Joy while attending school. They would go up and down the East Coast – sometimes with multiple live performances a day.

“I didn’t have any friends,” Glasco said. “My life was more or less traveling, singing, and going to school.”

Being under the shadow of her parents, she got married when she was 18 years old in hopes of getting away from the sheltered life she knew. She married someone in the church – someone she thought she could trust, but her whole life changed when the relationship became abusive.

CEO and founder of Second Chance Last Opportunity April Glasco speaks with Marcos Steiner. Steiner was hoping to get some help from Glasco's organization and was happy leave with some food and clothing.

A mother’s love saves

“My whole life was hell,” Glasco said. “I thought I found love, but I put myself in a situation that I had to pray about how to get out of.”

There were so many red flags, but she didn’t have the tools to identify them. She felt trapped. Her life was threatened on multiple occasions. There were times when she didn’t have food, diapers, or formula for her kids, but her mom always tried to help.

She decided to become a corrections officer at the Manatee County Sheriff’s Office to learn how to defend herself and her four daughters from the abuse.

She decided the relationship was over when her mom, weakened by disease, gathered up all her strength, picked up April, and brought her back to her house.

Her mom passed away in 1999 from breast cancer, ending her more than 20-year fight with the disease.

It took her nine years to get out of the relationship, and at 27 years old, she and her daughters experienced homelessness for five years.

After regaining her footing, she got married again, but it wasn’t to the person she thought it was. While in another relationship that turned abusive, she managed to complete her bachelor’s degree in human development and master’s degree in mental health counseling.

Following her graduation, she was able to get out of the relationship with the support of her counselor and earn a doctorate in relationship counseling.

While talking on the phone, CEO and founder of Second Chance Last Opportunity, April Glasco waves to a passing car on Dr. Martin Luther King Way in Sarasota. The organization Glasco started in 1995 offers life-management and parenting skills training, counseling, mentoring, HIV-AIDS education and counseling, summer/after-school youth programs, food, clothing and shelter referrals, and meals/food distributions.

Passing down knowledge

The same skills she learned to get out of two abusive relationships are taught in classes at SCLO. Tara Lewis was a single mom with two daughters in one of those classes.

Lewis was diagnosed with epilepsy in 2010 brought on by PTSD following an abusive relationship.

“I learned very quickly that stress can really affect you physically and mentally,” Lewis said.

She had to move in with her parents in 2011 with her daughters and grandchildren. Between medical bills and providing food for eight people, Lewis was struggling.

In 2017, she faced the prospect of having no food for Thanksgiving. Through SCLO, she’s been able to have a Thanksgiving meal every year since.

Lewis started taking empowerment classes through SCLO, where she learned budgeting skills by writing out monthly expenses and planning.

Through the classes, she has developed a community of friends who knew the struggle. They would share tips and offer advice to one another.

Growing to supply the need

SCLO has impacted more than 5,275 people in 2022 alone. Glasco credits the growth to the expanding number of volunteers and full-time employees.

Arlene Skversky started volunteering in April 2020, just months into the pandemic. She said that SCLO has grown tremendously with the pandemic leaving gaps in vulnerable communities. People were hungry, and the lines were growing with clients coming from Parrish and North Port.

Even with the increase in demand, Glasco hasn’t watered down her attention to the community’s needs. All clients who visit the facility check-in, and if a client hasn’t visited SCLO in a while, she’ll give them a call.

She knows who’s sick, who’s struggling with addiction, who’s in an abusive relationship, who’s acting out, or who’s hungry.

“It’s wonderful what they do,” Skversky said.  “How she does it? It’s magical. I don’t think she sleeps.”

Family friend Frank Bristol, who has known the family for more than 30 years, said it’s through the heart she got from her mother and a strong constitution from her father. Bristol was right beside Glasco painting SCLO’s first building in 1995. It was a promise he made to Glasco’s mother on her deathbed.

“Her mom was the same way – always trying to help somebody,” Bristol said. “But you wouldn’t believe what she’s been through. She’s the strongest person I’ve ever met in my life.”