Join Cheri & David in helping Family Service!
Please consider making a donation to help us reach our fundraising goals as Celebrity Champions!
Help us bring hope to those who are struggling with mental health challenges.
The Mission of Family Service of Roanoke Valley is to support individuals and families as they journey toward lives of emotional wellness, healthy relationships, and a future filled with hope.
Help Us Bring Hope to Those in Need!
We’re excited to support Family Service of Roanoke Valley in their mission to foster emotional wellness, healthy relationships, and a hopeful future for individuals and families in our community. Their vital services include counseling, youth development, healthy relationship groups, public guardianship, personal affairs management, and more.
By donating to our Celebrity Champion Duo, you’re contributing to a cause that helps over 2,000 people in the Roanoke Valley who are facing mental health challenges. Your support will enable Family Service of Roanoke Valley to continue offering these essential services and make a real difference in people’s lives.
Every donation counts and will bring hope and healing to those who need it most. We encourage you to consider giving generously to this worthy cause and help us make a positive impact in our community.
Thank you for your support!
(Please note that donations are non-refundable.)
Want to attend the event on Thursday, September 12th from 6-9PM at the Hidden Valley Country Club to sit with us?
Here is the link to purchase tickets ($125 each).
https://fsrv.networkforgood.com/events/74675-tenth...
Dr. Cheri Hartman recently retired from Carilion Clinic as the Grants Director for the Psychiatry Department of Carilion Clinic where she directed grants management for Project Back on Track, an Adolescent Community Reinforcement Approach training and replication, Positive Action Toward Health (PATH) childhood obesity prevention and wellness promotion coalition project. She is now a Consultant for Carilion Clinic and also is a faculty member of the VTC School of Medicine. Previously, Dr. Hartman was the Director of Youth Development for Family Service of Roanoke Valley and even began the Teen Outreach Program® (TOP®)! She and her husband, Dr. David Hartman, volunteer for numerous community service organizations. Dr. Hartman is currently the Community Impact Chair for the United Way of Roanoke Valley and is a past president of the Kiwanis Club of Roanoke.
Dr. Hartman holds a B.A. in Psychology from Gettysburg College and a Ph.D. in Educational Psychology from Temple University.
Dr. David Hartman was admitted in 1972 to the Temple University School of Medicine in Philadelphia, the first time in modern medical education that a sightless person was admitted into a medical school. Dave graduated from medical school in 1976 and completed his psychiatric residency training program at the University of Pennsylvania. Opportunities resulted such as an autobiography, White Coat, White Cane, and a movie called "Journey from Darkness."
Following a brief stay on the faculty of the U of Pennsylvania, Dave entered private practice in Roanoke, VA where he has been in practice for 42 years. He now serves on the faculty of the Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine as an Associate Professor and serves patients in Carilion's office-based addiction treatment program and in the Adult Outpatient Psychiatry division at Carilion Clinic. Dave has a particular passion for the treatment of addiction, having been sub-boarded in Addiction Psychiatry and Addiction Medicine and waivered as a buprenorphine provider for the past fifteen years. Dave led the creation of the office-based opioid treatment program at Carilion Clinic and champions integrating comprehensive and compassionate care for his patients. Dave is a Distinguished Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association, a fellow with the American Society of Addiction Medicine and is a member of the honorary medical society of Alpha Omega Alpha. Dave has served his community in a number of roles including past-Chairman of Mental Health America of the Roanoke Valley and completed a term of office on the Virginia State Board of Mental Health , Mental Retardation and Substance Abuse Services. David has been a national consultant on the inclusion of the disabled in health care careers. He has served as Chairman of the Board of New Vision improving information accessibility to the visually impaired and currently serves on the Board of the Kiwanis Club of Roanoke. He is married to Dr. Cheri W Hartman. His hobbies include reading, playing the guitar, swimming, and playing with the grandkids.