JWB CEO Beth Houghton Named to Tampa Bay Thrives Board of Directors

Beth A. Houghton has been named to the Board of Directors for Tampa Bay Thrives (TBT), a nonprofit that envisions an emotionally healthy community where mental health is a priority and all thrive together. Established in 2019, TBT brings together community leaders from across the Tampa Bay region to devise strategic solutions centered on behavioral health navigation, access to care, and stigma reduction.

Ms. Houghton serves as the Chief Executive Officer for the Juvenile Welfare Board of Pinellas County (JWB), a mission-driven organization with an 80-year history of strengthening the lives of children and families. In her CEO role, Ms. Houghton oversees an annual impact budget of $133 million and serves as the nexus between the JWB Governing Board and day-to-day operations. This includes administering accountability systems and measurements to safeguard the community’s investments, advocating for children’s issues and underserved families, and overseeing the funding of high-quality programs that served more than 77,000 children and families last year. She also directs the implementation of life-changing strategic initiatives and campaigns that benefit tens of thousands annually, including JWB’s Children’s Mental Health Initiative aimed at fostering prevention, early intervention, and treatment with a focus on children ages 4 to 11.

“Beth is a strong leader and advocate in the children’s mental health space,” stated Carrie Zeisse, President and CEO of Tampa Bay Thrives. “Her breadth of knowledge and wealth of experience as JWB’s CEO will bring a fresh perspective and expertise to the table. We are thrilled to have Beth join our Board.”

Since 2018, JWB’s Children’s Mental Health Initiative has successfully integrated behavioral health and support services within pediatric practices, built capacity for pediatricians to feel equipped and comfortable identifying and treating low-to-moderate mental health conditions, and focused on public awareness and family engagement outreach to normalize conversations about mental health and wellness. Last year alone, the initiative screened 17,000 children for early detection and intervention, resulting in 8,000 behavioral health visits within pediatric settings, and engaged 7,500 through community events focused on mental wellbeing.

“Under Beth’s leadership, JWB continues the important work of promoting children’s mental health and wellness by reducing stigma, fostering healthy connections, and getting further upstream towards prevention,” added Zeisse.

Ms. Houghton’s prior experience includes serving as CEO of the St. Petersburg Free Clinic and Chief Financial Officer and General Counsel of All Children’s Health System. She graduated with honors from Stetson College of Law, Tulane University Graduate School of Business, and Newcomb College of Tulane. She is licensed to practice law in Florida and served as Chairman of the Board for Signature Bank in St. Petersburg. In addition, Ms. Houghton is the Immediate Past Chair of the Hospital Board of H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute, prior Board President for Great Explorations Houghton-Wagman Children’s Museum, was named a Boss for Babies by the Florida Children’s Movement, and has taken numerous mission trips to rural Honduras.

Pinellas County Peacemakers Program Teaches Youth Peaceful Alternatives to Conflict

Community Action Stops Abuse, or CASA, offers the Peacemakers Program to area schools and other youth programs to teach kids about peaceful alternatives to conflict.

“We go into the schools and we teach kids what it looks like to be in a healthy relationship,” said CASA CEO Lariana Forsythe. “So it’s age appropriate, we start with pre-schoolers and kindergarteners and we talk about healthy boundaries.”

The social-emotional curriculum covers, among other topics: personal safety, diversity, dating violence, self esteem and self expression.

“Conflict resolution, empathy building, fostering respect for yourself and others,” said Riley Redington, the Peacemakers Program manager at CASA. “Then as it gets a little bit older, then we get more into the dating violence, healthy relationships.”

“It’s important for us to get in early and make sure that they understand what a healthy relationship looks like and what can they do, what steps can they take if they’re uncomfortable in a situation,” she added.

Foster mother Karen Bowen has mentored more than 300 kids in the last 15 years and said a lot of them were teenage girls interested in dating. The foster parent certified by the Children’s Home Network said she’s glad programs like this are available in schools and she works to reinforce similar safety measures at home.

“Looking out for cues, red flags, if you don’t feel safe you call, you let me know, you text me that safe word,” Bowen says to her foster children. “You have to teach people how to treat you.”

The Peacemakers Program works to teach kids that self worth — one exercise uses actual red and green flags as an interactive learning activity.

“If it’s wanting access to all your social media accounts, Instagram, wanting your passwords, wanting to control what you post would that be a green flag or a red flag and then those prompts can really spark some discussion about what the teens themselves have experienced,” said Redington.

The Peacemakers hope teens take empowerment out of the classrooms and into all of their relationships.

“I hope that moving forward, they value their feelings; their emotional wellbeing and themselves,” said Redington.

Bowen, who started her own foundation, Nekkts Step Hope Foundation, said she’s grateful teens have access to such sessions and she will work to continue such conversations in the home.

“That program can go into school and they have this whole conversation, now they’re home and they can sit with me and we can talk about it,” she said.

The Peacemakers Program is funded by the Juvenile Welfare Board.

See the article as originally published at https://baynews9.com/fl/tampa/news/2025/02/19/pinellas-peacemakers-program

Community Leaders “Inspired” and “Informed” by JWB Children’s Summit

On Friday, February 14th, JWB hosted the annual Children’s Summit at St. Petersburg College with the theme “For the Love of Kids.” More than 200 community leaders, key influencers, and child advocates gathered to celebrate JWB’s impact and shared commitment to the children of Pinellas County. 

JWB Board Chair Judge Patrice Moore welcomed attendees, recognized board members, and shared briefly what JWB means to her. CEO Beth Houghton followed with highlights from 2024, noting that JWB-funded programs served nearly 80,000 children and families and partnered with dozens of organizations in initiatives and campaigns. 

Attendees then viewed the FY2024 Annual Report Video showcasing JWB’s investments, including 12 new programs aligned with strategic goals, expanded funding to stabilize the workforce, and increased outreach to families. The video also highlighted JWB’s rapid response to emergent needs, such as funding gaps and hurricane relief, as well as the strength of its partnerships in driving positive outcomes for kids. 

Beth and St. Petersburg College President Dr. Tonjua Williams then led an interactive Kahoot! game, testing attendees on key topics from the video. The top scorers included Jesse Turtle (SPC Foundation), Hunter Parkinson (6th Judicial Court), and JWB Board member PCS Superintendent Kevin Hendrick. 

To conclude, attendees shared words describing their reactions to what they learned from the summit, forming a word cloud that included “informed, educated, inspired, and hopeful.”  

Each guest also received a children’s book to give away in honor of International Give a Book Day, thanks to Brianna Ray and Elicia Hinson, who curated several age-appropriate selections. A Grade Level Reading resource table, set up by Brianna, provided additional books and information. 

JWB extends gratitude to the Pinellas County School Board, government officials, partner agencies, board members, staff, and volunteers who contributed to this successful event. 

To view our 2024 Annual Report Video, click here

To view more event photos, click here

100 Advocates for Mental Health and Substance Abuse Treatment Join Forces at the Florida Capital

Mental health and substance abuse continues to be a serious concern in Florida. Data published last month in Forbes puts the state among the top in the country when it comes to the percent of adults who have a mental health disorder, but can’t afford a doctor.

Melanie Brown-Woofter, the president and CEO of the Florida Behavioral Health Association, says mental health touches everything.

“We know that one in 5 of us will have a mental health disorder, and that almost every family has been touched by substance use in our state and in our nation,” she said. “It is something that we have to work towards. It literally takes a village — everything from crisis care to residential to recovery supports. All of those pieces have to fit together.”

As mental health and substance abuse treatment providers gathered at the Capitol Wednesday to mark Behavioral Health Awareness Day, Brown-Woofter gave thanks to state leaders for doing more to remove the stigma from addiction and mental illness.

“We’re able to normalize the conversation, so that people can talk about their mental health or their substance use disorder, and it becomes commonplace,” she said. “Many years ago, there was such stigma that if the conversation began, people would turn their head or leave the room. Or they had to whisper, they couldn’t talk about it.”

But there’s plenty of work left to do. Data published last month by Forbes shows Florida has the fourth-highest percentage of adults who have a mental health disorder but can’t see a doctor due to cost …

…and the seventh highest percentage of adults with a mental illness who do not receive any treatment.

(The Worst States For Mental Health Care 2025; Jan. 2, 2025)

Copyright 2025 WFSU

Read the article as originally published at https://www.wqcs.org/wqcs-news/2025-02-13/100-advocates-for-mental-health-and-substance-abuse-treatment-join-forces-at-the-florida-capital