Photo caption: Salvation Army Captains Steve and Daylene Staneart are thrilled to be back at The Salvation Army’s San Bernardino Adult Rehabilitation Center (ARC).
Each year, thousands of ARC graduates transform their lives, reunite with families, and bring hope to communities across the country. Services are offered on a charitable basis, generally at no cost, and without the need for insurance.
SAN BERNARDINO, CALIF. — Salvation Army Captains Steve and Daylene Staneart are thrilled to be back in San Bernardino after a five-year absence. Captains Staneart served in San Bernardino in 2020, serving in the same role as Administrators of The Salvation Army’s San Bernardino Adult Rehabilitation Center (ARC).
“We get a front row seat as God takes a man who has lost all to his addiction. We get to see as his brain clears from the fog and he can think again, then as his heart clears and he can love again. There is nothing quite like giving a father back to his children or a son back to his mother who had lost all hope.” Captain Steve said.
The Salvation Army operates the largest and most successful network of Adult Rehabilitation Centers (ARCs) in the nation. For over 100 years, The Salvation Army has provided spiritual, emotional, and social assistance to individuals who have struggled to cope with life’s challenges.
The Salvation Army’s 80+ ARCs are primarily funded by the sale of donated goods in thrift stores. Each year, thousands of ARC graduates transform their lives, reunite with families, and bring hope to communities across the country. Services are offered on a charitable basis, generally at no cost, and without the need for insurance.
The Staneart’s have been with The Salvation Army since 1998, serving in such diverse places as Montana, Utah, Idaho, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and, of course, San Bernardino. They have run churches, food banks, housing programs, daycares, meal programs, and a host of other ministries in The Salvation Army.
In addition, they have worked for medical nonprofits, Habitat for Humanity, various churches and even Campus Crusade for Christ, beginning their vocational ministry right here at the old Campus Crusade Headquarters at Arrowhead.
Of all the ministries they have led, their absolute favorite is The Salvation Army’s Adult Rehabilitation Center (ARC) said Captain Steve.
The Stanearts’ grew up in Oregon, moving to California for the first time when Captain Steve joined the Navy in 1984. They have been married for 41 years, have three grown daughters and eight grandchildren.
When not at the ARC, Captain Steve enjoys hiking and playing piano. Captain Daylene reads, crochets, and designs tiny houses. Together they enjoy live theatre and traveling.
Captain Daylene added, “The Salvation Army Thrift Stores across the West have a consistent goal, as the stores help fund Adult Rehabilitation Centers (ARCs), which provide housing, life skills training, and support for adults seeking a fresh start.”
Photo caption: Salvation Army Captains Steve and Daylene Staneart are thrilled to be back at The Salvation Army’s San Bernardino Adult Rehabilitation Center. The men’s rehab is primarily funded by the sale of donated goods in thrift stores.
RSVP to Meet the Captians. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/meet-the-captians-of-the-adult-rehabilitation-center-tickets-1618826807559?aff=oddtdtcreator
The Salvation Army operates the largest and most successful network of Adult Rehabilitation Centers (ARCs) in the nation. For over 100 years, The Salvation Army has provided spiritual, emotional, and social assistance to individuals who have struggled to cope with life’s challenges. The Salvation Army’s 80+ ARCs are primarily funded by the sale of donated goods in thrift stores. Each year, thousands of ARC graduates transform their lives, reunite with families, and bring hope to communities across the country. Services are offered on a charitable basis, generally at no cost, and without the need for insurance. For more information, visit http://sanbernardinoarc.salvationarmy.org.
Photo Caption: Davis Ashly, Rudy Salcido, Cornelius Bryant, Angel Cariel, and Randy Robinson have completed an eight-session course covering life skills, leadership and etiquette to men at The Salvation Army San Bernardino Corps’ Adult Rehabilitation Center (ARC).
“I’ve gotten feedback from the students and without exception, they all say that this is a course that should be offered again,” said Major Martha Sheppard, Co-director of The Salvation Army ARC.
SAN BERNARDINO, CALIF. — Cornelius Bryant, “The Renaissance Man,” has started teaching a second eight-session course covering life skills, leadership and etiquette to men at The Salvation Army Adult Rehabilitation Center (ARC). The weekly evening classes last eight weeks, with a break for Thanksgiving.
Bryant’s students volunteer for the course. “At first,” says Bryant, “they are a bit shy and don’t know what to expect. But I work at getting to know each of them to start drawing them out, getting them to open up and contribute to our conversations. By week three, my students are turning into teachers.”
The Salvation Army’s Adult Rehabilitation Centers are 180-day residential work-therapy programs that provide spiritual, social, and emotional assistance to people who are recovering from alcohol or substance abuse issues and need a stable, supportive environment while they learn the skills and routines, they need to find gainful employment and permanent housing.
About 120 program participants are 21 to 65 years old and must have passed a drug test and breathalyzer when they arrive. They need to perform a work therapy assignment for up to eight hours a day, six days a week to help them establish a good work ethic.
Individual schedules can be adjusted to meet participant needs. The program also requires attending counseling sessions, educational classes, and worship services.
Major Donald Sheppard and his wife, Major Martha, supervise the San Bernardino ARC, and Martha Sheppard had this to say about Bryant’s class: “I’ve gotten feedback from the students, and without exception, they all say that this is a course that should be offered again.”
Major Sheppard collected written feedback from the students, who at this writing have completed six of the eight weeks. Major Sheppard notes that they are all great workers who have what it takes to get and hold a job. The problem is their attitude and ability to solve problems.
“Bryant’s classes are teaching them a new mindset with the core lesson that the outer man is a reflection of the inner man, and it is the inner man that needs a new direction,” says Major Sheppard.
Bryant’s curriculum covers communication skills, social skills, proper hygiene, personal grooming, proper attire, bathroom etiquette, accountability, consideration for others and dining etiquette.
All nine skills smooth participants’ rough edges and add to their self-confidence and ability to present an agreeable appearance and manner. This improves the ability to create the friendly, productive relationships essential to getting and holding a job and reuniting with family members.
Bryant says, “I founded this program to encourage, empower and equip people to accept responsibility for their actions and make positive changes from the inside out that will transform themselves and others.”
Major Sheppard collected written feedback from the students, all of it positive. Due to their upbringing and life experience up to now, their approach to communicating with their peers has tended to be confrontational, which typically results in defensiveness and hostility. With the lessons from Bryant’s curriculum, they learn tact and a more collaborative approach.
One of the lessons taught is dining skills. Upon completion, graduates will be treated to a special dinner and given a certificate of completion that can be added to their résumé.
The San Bernardino ARC has programs for men only, and the Pasadena and Anaheim locations serve women. For more information about The Salvation Army Adult Rehabilitation Program call (909) 889-9605.
Photo Caption: Graduates family and Salvation ARC Officers join to celebrate the men’s graduation from the eight-session course covering life skills, leadership and etiquette.
About The Renaissance Man
The Renaissance Man School of Life Skills, Leadership, and Etiquette was founded by Cornelius Bryant to encourage, empower, and equip people to accept responsibility for their actions and make positive changes from the inside out that will transform themselves and others.
These changes are brought about by teaching a combination of life skills, leadership skills, etiquette, good manners, respectful behavior, realistic goal setting, strategic planning and proper work ethic.
Research has shown that improvements in these areas lead to increased positive interactions within the family structure as well as society at large. Classes are provided for grades 6 through 12 and