A culture of caring

Joy Ovadek Lives in: Bedford Hills Works in: White Plains Job title: Director of administration Company: Combe Inc. Accolade of interest: Joy has given Sri Lankan women crash courses in computers.

Joy Ovadek”™s name is befitting of her life and labor.

With a career that spans 30 years at international health and beauty aids company Combe Inc. in White Plains, it”™s the volunteer time she”™s logged ”“ and the lives she”™s touched ”“ that have helped color her corporate trajectory.

“It sounds cliché, but I honestly always felt like I needed to give back because we have so much and I just wanted to pay it forward,” said Combe”™s director of administration.

In 2009, Ovadek was named Volunteer of the Year by Richmond Community Services, a Mount Kisco-based nonprofit organization servicing people with developmental disabilities. She has just been named to the board of directors of the Richmond Community Services Foundation.

Ovadek”™s personal culture reflects that of her company”™s.

“Every year, we”™d go to a Y-camp in Greenwich to have a family event Mr. (Ivan) Combe would set up,” Ovadek said. “They then sold the property, so Mr. Combe actually bought property up in Putnam Valley so the camp could relocate and now it”™s Camp Combe. Every year, we go up there and do some improvements as a company.”

Ovadek also leads the Making Strides Against Breast Cancer initiative at her 150-person, Westchester Avenue office and has gotten colleagues involved in jeans days and bake sales.

Her foray into Richmond”™s work with developmentally disabled people came when she heard of a volunteer opportunity to teach nurses aides from Sri Lanka and India to use computers.

“I taught them how to use the Internet, email and we”™d go online to newspapers from their home communities to give them a sense of comfort and familiarity,” she said. “These were women that were so scared to use a computer because they thought they”™d cause damage. I told them, ”˜That will only happen if you throw it out the window.”™”

Ovadek got even further involved in the organization when she took a developmentally disabled student studying for his GED under her wing.

“He has so many difficulties in life, yet he has so many goals and desires, it”™s incredible.”

One of Ovadek”™s first tasks at hand following her board appointment is serving as a co-chairperson of the organization”™s annual FunFest for Richmond residents at 919 North Broadway in Yonkers.

Each year, there is a wine-tasting and silent auction, as well as a golf outing in the fall.

“We try to pull as many people in as we can from the community in different aspects of events,” she said. “I”™m hoping to find my niche and utilize my contacts to open doors that weren”™t opened before.”