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It is with sadness that we announce our founder, Sarah C. Shuptrine, passed away on April 19, 2008. Sarah committed her career to improving the well-being of families and children. Her passion and dedication are evident in the millions of lives her work touched. We extend our deepest sympathies to Sarah's family, and we join them in mourning her loss.
Obituary
Sarah Cardwell Shuptrine passed away suddenly Saturday, April
19, 2008. Services will be held Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. at Shandon United
Methodist Church.
Burial will be private. The family will receive friends from 6-8 p.m. Monday at
Dunbar Funeral Home, Devine Street Chapel, and also at the church following the
service.
Born
February 28, 1943, in Bandera,
Texas, Sarah was the daughter of
the late Weldon and Chylas Cardwell. She founded the Southern Institute on
Children and Families. During her seventeen years as President and Chief
Executive Officer (1990-2007), she provided leadership for all initiatives of
the Southern Institute and directed the Covering Kids and Covering Kids &
Families national initiatives, the Southern Business Leadership Council, the
Southern Regional Initiative on Child Care and public benefits access
improvement projects. Prior to founding the Southern Institute in 1990, Sarah
was President and CEO of Sarah Shuptrine and Associates, a private sector
consulting firm specializing in public policy analysis and problem solving. She
was the author and co-author of numerous reports on improving access to public
benefits, identification and removal of public program eligibility barriers and
implementation of effective outreach.
During
the administration of South Carolina Governor Richard W. Riley, Sarah held the
positions of chief policy advisor for Health and Human Services and staff
director of the South Carolina Children’s Coordinating Cabinet. She also led
numerous collaborative endeavors that resulted in actions to improve access to
health and social benefits for lower-income children and families, including
the Work Group for the Southern Regional Task Force on Infant Mortality, which
was the catalyst for the 1986 federal Medicaid Infant Mortality Amendment and
the Southern Regional Task Force on Child Care. She served on the National
Commission on Children and was Co-Chair of the Commission’s working groups on
collaboration, coordination and family support programs. She also served on the
Carnegie Task Force on Meeting the Needs of Young Children and the National
Advisory Committee for the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s national program,
State Coverage Initiatives. She was a member of Shandon United
Methodist Church.
Surviving
are her husband, F. Kelly Shuptrine; daughters and sons-in-law, Brenda and Jim
Curl of Charlotte, N.C. and Gina and Mark Marriner of Columbia; grandchildren,
Zack and Brad Curl of Charlotte, Rachel, Sarah, Matthew and Luke Marriner of
Columbia who all adored and loved “Sazie” with all of their hearts.
In
lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the Southern Institute on Children
and Families, 500 Taylor Street,
Suite 202, Columbia, SC 29201.
“Words
could not express the deep void we shall all have without her incredible
presence in our lives. She was a tremendous inspiration to her friends and
family and will be greatly missed.”
Please
sign online guest book at www.dunbarfunerals.com.
View TheState.Com article Tate, Ishmael (2008, April 21).
Children’s advocate Shuptrine dies at 65. The State.Com. Retreived April 21, 2008 from http://www.thestate.com/local/story/381839.html.
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