Mauro sets goals for Women’s Support Services

SHARON — Normally when a new head of a nonprofit agency moves here from another part of the country, he or she needs some time to get to know the community. 

That won’t be necessary for Betsey Mauro, the new executive director of Women’s Support Services (WSS).

Mauro is recently arrived from Michigan, where she was for the past seven years the dean of the Center for Congregational Leadership. She is an ordained Congregational minister with a master’s degree in divinity from Earlham School of Religion and a doctorate in ministry from the Princeton Theological Seminary. 

In addition to a career dedicated to the care of others within the church community, she also worked at Susan B. Anthony in Torrington many years ago, as coordinator of sexual assault services for the agency (which provides crisis and support services for victims of domestic violence and sexual assault). 

“I grew up in West Cornwall,” Mauro said in a recent interview in the cozy living room of the house in Sharon that is home to WSS, an agency that “provides intervention, advocacy and education in its mission to end domestic violence” in northwest Connecticut and nearby towns in Massachusetts and New York. 

Mauro is the daughter of Cilla (Hart) Mauro and the niece of Phil Hart, who is an active participant in the community and was until recently the chairman of the Region One Board of Education. 

In addition to summers and vacations with family on Cherry Hill in West Cornwall (“I used to work at the Deck Restaurant in summers,” she recalled), Mauro lived in Morris, Conn., and graduated from Wamogo (the high school that serves the towns of Warren, Morris and Goshen). 

She is happy to return to the Northwest Corner, and she is joined by her husband, Paul, who hails from Maine originally.

“We met in the pit when we were both in the orchestra for a high school production of ‘The Music Man’ in Maine,” she said cheerfully. She was at the Rockland Congregational Church in those years, before her move to the Midwest. Paul played the valve trombone; Mauro played the flute and piccolo (which she learned in Morris in elementary school).

The couple are living in Morris now, in the home where Mauro grew up; her mother is living at Geer in North Canaan. 

“I wanted to be able to spend more time with her, so that was a motivating factor in our return here,” she said. 

They also have a daughter who lives in Boston, where she is a digital archivist for churches of the Congregational tradition in Massachusetts. A July 2014 article in the New York Times described the work she’s doing in uncovering “hidden histories” of life in early America that can be found in church records. 

“Being closer to her was another factor in our return,” Mauro said. 

Strong recommendations

For WSS, the decision to bring Mauro back to the Northwest Corner was made easy by the recommendations she received from co-workers. According to a press release from WSS Board Chairperson Maria Horn, Mauro was “effusively praised by colleagues, supervisors and board members  for her intelligence, knowledge, warmth, collegiality, organizational abilities and values-driven approach.” In addition she was cited for her “substantial experience in personnel management, fiscal management, fundraising, community outreach, strategic planning and communication.”

Mauro said that much of her work at WSS as its executive director will be administrative. Direct services to clients are being overseen by Program Manager Maggie Ianello. 

“As executive director, I’ll be more involved with management, strategic sustainability, community awareness.”

WSS’s mission is important to her, however. Through her work at Susan B. Anthony and also through her early years working as a geologist out West, she has seen and experienced what it’s like to be a woman living in a predominantly male environment. 

“Women’s empowerment and health, the ability to be self-determining, the ability to thrive, these are all important to me.

“I won’t be making changes to the services we provide. But I will help us continue to advance our mission as we look to the future, and to continue to empower women and create awareness in our community.”

She plans to do a lot of outreach, meeting members of the community but also doing team building with WSS staff members and volunteers. 

“People may have questions about my religious background,” she volunteered. “I’m progressive, and my master’s degree is in humanity, and it’s from Earlham, the only Quaker seminary in the world. 

“We know we all operate with value and belief systems, whether or not we name those systems, and we know that they shape our decisions. 

“So I hope what I can bring to the table is an openness and acceptance but also an ability to bring an aspect of chaplaincy, to not be afraid of exploring deep values — particularly where they are creating a barrier for people who are trying to be free of domestic violence and abuse.

“We often hear of women who go to their clergy and are told that the Bible says they have to stay, even if there is abuse.

“And that’s just not true. 

“In our world today, religion is very polarizing, and people can be nervous about it.  I want people to know we are open, accepting and non-coercive.”

Mauro is at the WSS offices but will also be out meeting and greeting visitors to the annual Trade Secrets Rare Plant and Garden Antiques Sale fundraiser for the nonprofit on May 14 and 15. To learn more about WSS, go to www.wssdv.org.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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