Our Story
Doing. Being. Becoming. Belonging.
These are tenets of occupational therapy and of the Center for Community Connection.
When C4CC founders, mental health occupational therapists Darren Peters, Dr. MaryBeth Gallagher, and Dr. Antoine Bailliard, and psychiatric dietitian Brittany Kern, worked together in a hospital psychiatric department in central North Carolina, they saw a revolving door of patients living in poverty, disproportionately people of color, struggling with getting basic needs met, without a network of support, and facing injustices at every turn. Darren and MaryBeth hailed from the UK and Ireland, respectively, where healthcare is universal and OT is central in addressing mental illness.
This team of OTs and a dietician began to imagine the potential for a different kind of mental health care that is accessible, equitable, just and community-based. An organization that takes whole-person-needs into consideration and cultivates a sense of belonging. They envisioned a place where people experiencing mental distress feel cared for, listened to, supported, and empowered.
The founding team was then joined by Alexa Adamo Valverde, a social innovation strategist, nonprofit expert, and mental health counselor, and the idea grew to become a nonprofit organization. The Center for Community Connection was founded in the state of North Carolina in September 2023.
C4CC provides community-based holistic mental health care, therapeutic workshops and farm-based experiences, and systems-level advocacy for youth (ages 12 to 26). We are an innovative, holistic, person- and occupational therapy-centered, community-based solution to what has been called the "youth mental health crisis" in our nation.
Turning the traditional medical model on its head, we are creating a replicable, farm-based, strengths-focused organization to cultivate connection and belonging, joy and resilience. Youth who've experienced a range of mental health challenges (from anxiety or depression to a first episode of psychosis) take the lead on decisions about their mental health and well-being. We operate primarily from a 40-acre farm in Chatham County, North Carolina, where there is much opportunity for: