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Services provided by Allentown's Community Exchange
-- including gardening, cleaning, cooking and transportation -- have allowed 79-year-old Joan Stevenson to stay in her home and out of assisted living. "I'm enriched by it, not only from the services I receive but by being able to contribute," said Stevenson, who earns time dollars by writing for the Community Exchange newsletter, hosting Community Exchange meetings at her house and helping other members with their resumes and job searches. Time banks are labor intensive and can be difficult to keep going. Most of the successful ones eventually get a paid staff, either by raising grant money or affiliating with a larger organization. Lehigh Valley Hospital & Health Network, the Allentown region's largest employer, pays the small staff of Community Exchange. Manager Laura Gutierrez said time banks are worth the effort.
"Since the economy has been poor, people need to be a little more creative about using resources within a community that might not have been considered resources in the past," she said. Which is exactly what Villacreses did to salvage her wedding plans. The 28-year-old, who is fluent in English and Spanish and earns time dollars as a medical interpreter and by offering rides and pet-sitting, thought she would have to scale back when her fiance's hours at work were cut in half. Then fellow Community Exchange members suggested she use time dollars to pay for services that would typically cost hundreds of dollars. On the big day, the bride sat at her dining room table while a complete stranger, Marilyn Shive, did her makeup. "Show me which colors you tend to like," said Shive, a Community Exchange member who sells beauty products. As Shive applied foundation and eyeliner, another member of Community Exchange delivered the cake. Others brought food and decorated the sanctuary and reception hall. During the service, time bankers took photos and played the organ. In all, the wedding cost about 200 time dollars. By spending her time wisely, Villacreses figures she saved about $2,000.
[Associated
Press;
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