City Lifestyle

Want to start a publication?

Learn More

Featured Article

Helping Hand-Me-Downs

Foster Mom Helps Families Go From Surviving To Thriving

Thirteen years ago, Stephanie Suljak says she saw a need, well, another need. She already had been serving as a foster parent for several years, and had adopted two children.

But then she started talking to social workers to find out where gaps in services to families existed, and what she could do to fill them. What she discovered turned into her founding her own social service agency that today serves more than 5,000 kids a year. She and her family, along with a few hundred volunteers a year, do it all out of an Ellisville-based warehouse that’s less than 2,000-square-feet in size.

“We aren’t just working for babies. With ‘Helping Hand-Me-Downs,’ we’re working for their siblings and their families,” Stephanie says. She learned the gap existed when moms and babies in need left the hospital. Now she provides car seats, cribs, diapers and coats, all gently used, among other things, to families in need.

“It is stuff we would give to, or put on, or own children,” she says.

Stephanie says becoming a foster mom changed everything for her and her husband and two children. “That’s what made me want to give back.”

Today she has four children, ages 25, 22, 14 and 11.

Her husband, whom she says is her “largest funder and biggest fan,” owns and operates two construction companies, Trinity Pools and Sealing St. Louis. “He even drives our shuttle.”

Last year, Helping Hand-Me-Downs joined forces with Dear MAMA to serve families in North St. Louis and North St. Louis County. “What an amazing way to love your neighbor. Throughout the year, we packed the shuttle to the gills with toys, books, clothing and baby gear and headed to various places to pass items out directly to families in need," Stephanie states.

More partnerships were formed with other agencies. “We went from getting a few referrals a year to pages and pages of requests. One teacher came into the office and got clothing for every child in her class, while a principal sent us a request for 60 coats.”

She says the need increased dramatically from 2022 to 2023, so much so that Helping Hand-Me-Downs served nearly 1,000 more children. “Although we're excited to be able to meet the need, we're saddened that the need increased that much. Families who've never had to ask for help were finding themselves needing clothing and other necessities,” she says. “The community showed up for sure. Each time we needed clothing to fill an order, the bins would overflow for weeks.”

She says she couldn’t do any of it without her volunteers. “They tirelessly empty bins and sort clothing, toys and other random items with such kindness and compassion. It can be very overwhelming and unrewarding at times, but these wonderful people show up week after week to help serve the community.”

In addition to immediate needs of clothing, food and household items, Helping Hand-Me-Downs assists families with finding housing and securing jobs. They also have a coaching program that supports families by giving them tools to navigate life in a healthier manner and offers a safe place to engage in transformative conversations.

“The program’s intention is for families to go from surviving to thriving as stability is created,” Stephanie states.

HelpingHandMeDowns.org

“We went from getting a few referrals a year to pages and pages of requests. One teacher got clothing for every child in her class."