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San
Ramon Woman Helps Rebuild Lives
By
Suzanne Pardington STAFF WRITER
SAN
RAMON - In the past five years, Karen Justice-Guard has
kicked her drug and alcohol habit, left her husband, gotten
off welfare and started her own business.
Now she's helping other women do the same thing.
Justice-Guard, 40, founded a nonprofit organization, Safe
Havens for Little People, one year ago, with a vision
of helping abused women on welfare from the moment they
decide they want to turn their lives around and become
self-sufficient. "I've been driven because I want to show
the other side," she says. "No matter what you've been
through, you have to pull yourself up."
As part of the training program, Safe Havens is teaming
up with The Savoy restaurant in San Ramon to prepare women
for the working world. Owner Sam Vassiliou and his staff
members will teach clients food preparation, customer
service, dining room and sales skills, along with "life
skills" such as confidence and self-esteem.
"I
am helping people to help me," Vassiliou says.
For the past 15 years, the restaurant industry has had
a profound shortage of workers, he says.
"We
have some of the finest culinary institutes in the world,
but we don't seem to get the output fast enough," he says.
Safe Havens participants will skip the step of cooking
or restaurant school and go straight to on-the-job training,
he says.
Justice-Guard knows what it's like to be broken financially
and spiritually. Five years ago, she had a house next
to a golf course, a fancy car and her own restaurant.
But financial and marriage problems piled up, and she
checked out of life by sticking a needle in her arm, she
said. She went on an alcoholic binge for two weeks before
she realized that she needed to get her life together.
She took her two children to Lake Tahoe, where she drove
a junky car without a rear defroster, cleaned houses for
a living, went on welfare, took college classes and attended
Alcoholics Anonymous meetings. She was so embarrassed about
using food stamps, she wore a disguise and bought groceries
in a different town each day.
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