ADAMH, the Alcohol, Drug and Mental Health Board of Franklin County, recently named new officers to the ADAMH Board of Trustees’ Executive Committee. The new officers include: Jill D. Steuer, Ph.D, - Chair; Ronald Rotaru, - Vice Chair; Dona England-Afek - Secretary; and Dennis Lieb - Treasurer.
Jill D. Steuer, Ph.D., R.N., is a Senior Research Nurse at Grant Medical Center. Dr. Steuer earned her undergraduate and graduate degrees from The Ohio State University and is currently a member of Temple Beth Shalom. In addition to serving on the ADAMH Board of Trustees, she also is on the Board of Directors for the American Heart Association and has worked with the American Cancer Society’s Committee on Diversity.
Ronald Rotaru is currently executive director for the Accountancy Board of Ohio, a position he has held since 1999. Prior to the Accountancy Board, Rotaru has held several notable positions, such as deputy director for the Ohio Department of Commerce. In the past, he has also been on the boards for the House of Hope for Alcoholics and Directions for Youth & Families, both ADAMH-funded organizations.
Dona England-Afek serves asthe executive director of the Columbus Center for Human Services, Inc., an organization she helped co-found and serves as president and Chair of the Board. She is also owner and operator of the England Accounting & Financial Management Company. England-Afek is active with the following local organizations: Ohio Health Care Association, Ohio Providers Resource Association, the Franklin County Providers Council and Women Outreach for Women.
Dennis Lieb, now retired, worked at the Defense Supply Center of Columbus (DSCC) as supervisor of quality assurance and a quality program analyst. He earned a Bachelor’s degree in business from The Ohio State University in 1961 and attended Capital University Franklin Law School from 1966-1968. Lieb has also participated in the ADAMH Consumer and Family Advisory Council, a voluntary group of individuals who are either in recovery from alcoholism, drug addiction or mental illness or have recovering family members and he participated as an instructor in the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI) Family-to-Family Education Program.
ADAMH is Franklin County’s authority for planning, funding and evaluating mental health, alcohol and drug abuse prevention and treatment services. ADAMH-funded services are provided by a local network of more than 40 not-for-profit providers and offered on a sliding-fee scale, making them affordable for any county resident, regardless of income.
Press Contacts
Alisha Wilkes or Aimee Shadwick
Phone: (614) 222-3767
For media inquiries regarding mental illness and substance abuse in the Franklin County and Columbus community, please call the community experts: The ADAMH Board of Franklin County.
To schedule an interview with one of our spokespeople or to discuss potential stories, please contact the ADAMH Public Affairs Department at (614) 222.3767.
Normal ADAMH Board business hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. For an emergency that occurs after normal business hours, please call (614) 565.9784 and you will be connected with an ADAMH Public Affairs staff member as soon as possible.
Aimee Shadwick
Public Affairs Manager
Alisha Wilkes
Community Relations Specialist