Lund Family Center welcomes Clinical Coordinator for Residential Services and Teen Pregnancy Prevention Coordinator

In early November, Lund Family Center welcomed Susan Onderwyzer as Clinical

Coordinator for Residential Services at Lund Family Center. Onderwyzer has

a Masters in Social Work from Adelphi University and is a Board Certified

Diplomate in clinical social work; dually licensed as both a clinical social

worker and alcohol and drug abuse counselor. She anticipates award of her

Ed.D from UVM in May, 2011. Most recently, Onderwyzer worked in the

forensic field with both male and female offenders as the Program Services

Executive at the Vermont Department of Corrections, where her

responsibilities broadly included oversight of correctional programs in

Education, Vocational Services, Risk Reduction, Women’s Services, Sex

Offender Treatment, and Risk Assessment. Prior to that, Onderwyzer held

positions ranging from Director of the Employee Assistance Program for

Vermont State Employees, to Clinical Director at Maple Leaf Farm, as well as

direct clinical practice since 1984.



Sarah E. Hoffert recently began her position as Lund Teen Pregnancy

Prevention Outreach Specialist. Hoffert comes to Lund with a wealth of

knowledge in sexual health, higher education, non-profit management, outdoor

leadership, and women and girls' issues. She has a M.Ed in Higher Education

and Student Affairs Administration from the University of Vermont and a

Bahcelors degree in Family Sociology and minors in Women's Studies, Language

and Culture of the Deaf Community, and Dance from Otterbein University in

Westerville, OH. She also maintains a Certificate in Nonprofit Management

from Champlain and Marlboro Colleges. Hoffert was the sole national

recipient of the EmpowHer Fellowship for 2007-2008 awarded by ACPA (College

Student Affairs International) Standing Committee for Women (SCW), and

she is currently serving as SCW's Program Chair for the 2011 conference in

Baltimore. Hoffert’s research interests involve sexual health needs during

natural disaster response, identity development of twins and multiples in

college (inspired by her own relationship with her identical twin sister),

and women and girls' leadership. When she is not at work Sarah enjoys

taking tap dance classes at the Flynn, volunteering with Vermont Cares as a

HIV tester, and learning how to become a better caretaker for her foster

pup, Russell.



Lund Family Center staff and Board members are excited about the incredible

skills and talents these two women bring to the organization and the

positive impact they will help make in the lives of hundreds of women,

children and families.



About Lund Family Center:

Commemorating 120 years of strengthening families in 2010, Lund Family

Center annually serves more than 4,000 children and family members. Lund’s

work focuses on three goals: strengthening families, reducing child abuse

and neglect, and helping to create new families through adoption. Its

mission is to help children thrive by serving families with children, pregnant

or parenting teens and young adults, and adoptive families.