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DARTS is 50 years old!
I am honored to sit in the leadership chair for DARTS, and fortunate that all who came before me are still available to supply their wise counsel and insights.
Dick Graham was the first DARTS President, and he remains connected to our work and mission. I caught up with him this week, just after his scheduled volunteer time as a DARTS Learning Buddy at a local elementary school.
As Dick reflected on the early years, he used the word “community” repeatedly. He rejects the title of “founder” because it was a community effort to increase mobility for those who did not drive. In all ways, community involvement is what formed DARTS.
While Dick was creatively sourcing used airport limousines and hiring our second President, Mark Hoisser, as a driver, I was turning 12 years old.
The 1960s impacted my generation. My friends had siblings serving in Viet Nam; I witnessed peace marches; I saw how terrible it was when Martin Luther King Jr. was shot and knew President Nixon because he interrupted our favorite TV shows with impossibly long speeches.
My 1974 memories include President Nixon resigning, my surprise birthday party pulling my friends from their beds to bring them to my house for breakfast, and starting junior high to realize that midi-skirts had replaced the oh-so-short mini skirts on the Manitowoc fashion scene. People entering adulthood during this time looked to fix the world’s wrongs. As a tween, I learned from my parents and grandparents to quietly lend a hand where the community needed help. I waited tables at the hospital auxiliary pie and ice cream social and babysat. More than anything, I adored spending time working with my grandparents.
Reflecting back, 1974 seems to be the time that my approach to learning and leadership solidified. I am a person who learns from what has come before me. That makes me more likely to make a series of small adjustments rather than sweepingly holistic changes. I am not necessarily brave, but I will fight for what I believe is right.
I found DARTS when I was helping my dad as his Alzheimer’s progressed. My sister and I were trying our best to balance his desire to live at home (and continue to drive!) while his ability to do so declined. DARTS provided a service which I now know is caregiver coaching. At the time, I just knew DARTS was helping me find the resources we needed to better help dad.
When then-President Mark invited me to join the DARTS Board of Directors, I was glad to have an opportunity to support the organization that I had grown to respect. The more I learned, the more I became convinced that all communities need a DARTS. We only grow old once, so having an expert point out the resources available improves our odds that we will age successfully.
I have been DARTS President for nearly nine years. When I began, our board chair, Lance Lemieux, pointed out that community partnerships and building team were the most critical components of my job description. I am so proud of the DARTS team – those here today and those who paved our way. Their balance of “smart and heart” make us strong advocates for the right to age well. Their understanding that we are better together helps us to build strong relationships with our volunteers, clients, partners, and funders.
DARTS is the community’s organization, like it was in 1974. Our services have adapted to 21st century needs and at our core, we continue to value our personal connections. Thank you for your role in fulfilling our mission to create connections that enrich aging.
Ann Bailey became President at DARTS in 2015 and served on the DARTS Board 2010-2015. Ann discovered DARTS services when her father’s Alzheimer’s disease advanced to a point where it began to take a toll on the family. Prior to joining DARTS, she led technology teams at Target Corporation. Ann holds a Bachelor of Science in Business degree from the University of Minnesota Carlson School of Management.
Ann and her husband, Randy, live in Apple Valley and engage in various community building activities, supporting Eastview Community Foundation, Aquatennial Ambassador Organization, and Rick’s Bike Sale. Ann serves on the boards for Minnesota Leadership Council on Aging and the River Heights Chamber of Commerce. She is an active member of South Robert Street Business Association, Fairview Hospital Auxiliary, Dakota County Regional Chamber of Commerce, and Burnsville Chamber of Commerce. She provides aging services perspectives to several steering committees including the University of Minnesota 10,000 Family Studies and Fairview Ridges Healthy Communities.
In her free time, Ann enjoys traveling and typically two trips a year are states drawn at random. She also enjoys cooking and has a small garden to provide recipe ingredients.
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