Thornton Academy Postscripts Alumni Magazine Fall 2015 | Page 4

Helping People Find a Compass Phillip Saperia ’64 has devoted his life to decades of work in community relations and nonprofit service, much of it in New York City. Phillip Saperia’s office looks out on the art deco façade of the Woolworth Building and the glossy polyhedron tower of One World Trade Center. On the bookshelf, titles such as Madness in the Streets, Recovering Life, and Leading Change say a lot about how this Class of ’64 alum has devoted his life. When Phillip was recently awarded a 2015 Leadership Award for Advocacy, this alum was introduced as “A leading force for change since arriving at The Coalition of Behavioral Health Agencies” where he has been Executive Director since 1994. As Director, Phillip manages an umbrella organization that supports over 130 member agencies that, in turn, serve nearly half a million people throughout all of New York City’s buroughs, as well as down state Long Island and Westchester, Rockland, and Orange counties. While Phillip and his staff provide advocacy, policy analysis, policy development, training, and media relations services to the member agencies, the agencies, in turn, provide treatment and support services for people suffering with the often intertwined conditions of mental illness and substance addiction. When Phillip was still a newly-appointed Director, a social worker showed him how they provided on- 4 the-spot services to the homeless. Phillip remembers, “He took me to Central Park on the Upper West Side, pointed to a clump of grass and dirt in a corner, and said, ‘That’s one of ours.’ I didn’t know what he was pointing at or what he meant. Then the social worker walked over and left a sandwich in a paper bag about twenty feet from the mound. It was for the person who was living under the ground there.” That was one of the many days when Phillip learned how hard member agencies in The Coalition were working to identify and engage people in trouble and earn their trust. “Recovery isn’t always a straight line. It’s about taking one step at a time,” Phillip said. “You entice them to come out, build their trust, and then maybe they will come to a dropin center, take a shower, and get new clothes. Once that happens, those who are suffering can create bonds and develop a social life. Shelters are dangerous places, but they can also be places where friendships develop, where those in need can meet people who can care about them and look out for them.” Phillip’s passion for supporting the work of The Coalition is clear. “The staff who are working in shelters, working in treatment centers, they are not paid lots of money. They