Campaign for the Community

Finding relief through counseling

Pam Coniglio.

When Pam Coniglio needed someone to turn to when her husband was severely injured in a workplace accident, Catholic Charities was there. Photo: Douglas Levere

Published October 22, 2015 This content is archived.

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“I needed someone to talk with, openly and honestly, about what we were going through. I didn’t have to hold back. ”
Pam Coniglio, School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Supports Catholic Charities

Over the next few weeks the UB Reporter will be telling the personal stories of fellow UB employees who have been helped by donations to the Campaign for the Community, as well as details about what gifts to the campaign can specifically support. This week's story talks about Pam Coniglio's support of Catholic Charities.

Pam Coniglio’s husband, Tony, was a veteran mill worker in Buffalo who 12 years ago became 100 percent disabled following a workplace accident.

I needed someone to talk with, openly and honestly, about what we were going through. I didn’t have to hold back. Pam Coniglio, School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences Helped by Catholic Charities

Finding relief through counseling

The accident happened in an instant and its consequences were immediate. But because of Catholic Charites, a United Way agency, Pam Coniglio, coordinator of Introductory Pharmacy Practice Experiences (IPPE) in the School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, says she had the resources that helped her “hold things together.”

She was working at the time at a private elementary school, but Tony’s income was the family’s principal means of support.

“Everything happened at once,” she says. “Tony couldn’t work and the financial issues that followed that lost income hung over our heads.”

Coniglio says she knew counseling would help, but didn’t think at first that it was an option.

“Having Catholic Charities and their counseling service available to us without the expense of having to pay for that therapy was such a relief,” she says. “It kept me sane.”

Catholic Charities is a comprehensive human services agency that has been serving Western New Yorkers without regard to religion since 1923.

Coniglio says everyone in her home was scared, but Catholic Charities helped lift much of that fear. The recovery would be long, but the family wasn’t going to make the journey alone.

“I needed someone to talk with, openly and honestly, about what we were going through,” she says. “I didn’t have to hold back. Catholic Charities gave me the outlet that I needed.”

She says Tony’s injury changed their family’s life so much, yet it doesn’t take a lot to help others like her that need United Way services.

“The amount of your donation doesn’t have to be big, but what amounts to a cup of coffee a week for you could be a donation that allows someone in need to get the assistance they need,” she says. “You never know when you might need help. But when I did, the services were available to help my family.”

To donate to the campaign, visit the campaign website.