In the landscape of social services, the concept of "care" often focuses exclusively on the recipient. However, the emotional architecture required to sustain long-term support for individuals facing life-threatening illnesses, isolation, or profound loss is immense. For the volunteers at Shanti—a San Francisco-based organization dedicated to mitigating the effects of loneliness and isolation—the act of service is not a solitary endeavor. It is a profound, communal commitment that requires its own ecosystem of support.
At the heart of this ecosystem lies the Peer Support Volunteer (PSV) support group: a sanctuary where those who give so much of themselves are provided a space to replenish, process, and connect.
The Weight and Wonder of Service: Main Facts
Shanti’s Peer Support Volunteers serve as the bedrock of the organization’s mission. They provide non-clinical, emotional, and practical support to clients facing the most challenging chapters of their lives. Yet, the nature of this work—witnessing medical crises, navigating the complexities of chronic illness, and standing beside clients through their final days—carries an inherent emotional weight.
The organization recognizes that volunteer burnout is not merely a risk but an inevitability without adequate infrastructure. To combat this, Shanti facilitates dedicated support groups for its volunteers. These gatherings serve three primary functions:
- Emotional Processing: A clinical and communal space to debrief on the emotional toll of client interactions.
- Professional Development: A forum to share strategies, brainstorm solutions to complex client needs, and maintain professional boundaries.
- Community Building: A mechanism to combat the isolation that can inadvertently affect the volunteer, fostering a culture of mutual care.
The necessity of these groups is rooted in the "language of the heart"—a phrase coined by long-time facilitator Jerry Francone. It is a space where the shared experience of altruism creates bonds that transcend typical social interactions.
The Chronology of Commitment: A Nine-Year Legacy
The history of Shanti’s support groups is not merely a record of meetings; it is a timeline of evolving human connection. While Shanti has provided various forms of volunteer support throughout its decades of operation, the specific model of localized, intimate support groups has proven to be the most enduring.
A primary case study in this model is the Wednesday night support group, hosted in the Castro district. For nine years, Jerry Francone has served as a facilitator, providing a consistent, stable environment for volunteers to gather. Six years ago, this leadership role expanded to include Josh Weinstein as a co-facilitator.
A Timeline of the Model:
- Initial Training: Every volunteer begins with the Shanti Peer Support Volunteer Training. This is where the initial seeds of community are sown, creating a cohort of peers who share the same foundational philosophy.
- The Facilitation Phase: Following training, volunteers are placed with clients. The support group becomes the secondary "home," a place where the training is put into practice through real-world scenarios.
- The Sustained Partnership: The collaboration between facilitators like Francone and Weinstein demonstrates the importance of continuity. Over years, these groups have evolved from simple check-ins to deep-seated support systems where members process the loss of clients, celebrate personal milestones, and maintain the stamina required for long-term service.
Supporting Data: The Science of Volunteer Retention
The efficacy of support groups in social service organizations is backed by broader psychological research regarding "compassion fatigue" and "vicarious trauma." According to studies on volunteerism in hospice and palliative care settings, volunteers who engage in consistent, facilitated group debriefing report significantly lower rates of burnout and higher levels of self-efficacy.
At Shanti, the metrics for success aren’t just in the number of clients served, but in the retention and mental health of the volunteers themselves.
- Sustainability: By providing a space to process the death of a client, Shanti prevents the cumulative grief that often leads to volunteer attrition.
- Social Capital: The transition from professional colleagues to friends—often characterized by post-group gatherings, holiday parties, and potlucks—increases the social capital of the organization. When volunteers feel a sense of belonging, their commitment to the organization’s mission deepens.
- The Human Connection Factor: Shanti’s internal data suggests that the most effective volunteers are those who feel "held" by the organization. The support group acts as the "holder," ensuring that the cycle of compassion remains unbroken.
Official Perspectives: The Philosophy of the Heart
When discussing the role of the support group, the perspective of those on the ground is the most telling. Jerry Francone, whose nine-year tenure as a facilitator provides him with a unique vantage point, describes the experience not as a chore, but as a privilege.

"Support group has become, for me, a community of people who share the language of the heart in the purest way possible," Francone notes.
This philosophy underscores the official stance of Shanti: that human connection is a two-way street. The organization does not view volunteers as "units of labor," but as essential participants in a human-centric movement. The facilitators play a critical role in this, serving as the stewards of the group’s emotional safety. They ensure that the space remains inclusive, that the confidentiality of clients is maintained, and that the conversation remains balanced between the gravity of their work and the necessity of humor, joy, and celebration.
Implications: Building a Sustainable Future for Social Care
The model employed by Shanti has significant implications for the broader non-profit sector. As social services face increasing demand—driven by an aging population and a growing crisis of loneliness—the challenge is not just recruiting volunteers, but keeping them.
1. Re-framing Volunteerism as a Shared Burden
The traditional model of volunteerism often places the volunteer on an island. Shanti’s model suggests that organizations must shift toward "communal volunteerism," where the burden of service is distributed among a group of peers rather than resting on the shoulders of the individual.
2. The Role of Non-Clinical Support
The success of Shanti’s support groups suggests that there is a critical need for spaces that are neither strictly clinical (like therapy) nor purely social. This "middle space"—where personal experience meets professional practice—is where the most significant growth and healing occur for the volunteer.
3. The Power of Consistency
The nine-year history of the Wednesday night group proves that consistency is a form of care. By providing a stable, recurring space, Shanti allows volunteers to move beyond the superficial and into the transformative.
How to Get Involved
The work of Shanti is ongoing, and the need for dedicated Peer Support Volunteers is constant. For those interested in joining a community that values both the service to others and the well-being of the volunteer, the path is clear.
Prospective volunteers are invited to:
- Visit the Shanti Volunteer Webpage: Explore the various roles available and the specific training requirements that serve as the entry point to this community.
- Engage with Volunteer Services: Reach out via email at [email protected] to speak with a coordinator.
As Jerry Francone and his fellow facilitators have proven, being a Shanti volunteer is more than just a task. It is an entry into a community of people who have committed themselves to the most essential human act: being there for someone else when they need it most. Whether through the tears of a goodbye or the laughter of a potluck, the Peer Support Volunteer community remains a testament to the idea that we are stronger when we face the challenges of life together.
In an increasingly fragmented world, Shanti’s commitment to building human connection—within their own ranks and with the people they serve—remains a beacon of hope and a blueprint for a more compassionate future.
