When Paula Goldberg was little, her mother would take her along when visiting the Rochester State Hospital — people called it "the mental hospital" — to bring food and other gifts to patients. At the Mayo Clinic, where her mom managed doctors' offices, she'd sit among children with maladies serious enough to seek help at the famed center.
Her mother also was a Yiddish interpreter for patients from elsewhere — whom she then would take on drives, "just to show them the town," Goldberg said. "My mother was an amazing person."
Such exposure to helping the less fortunate kindled in Goldberg a desire to make a difference.
"One of the goals in my life is to help others," she said. "As a child, I knew this."
Today, Goldberg oversees PACER Center, which she co-founded in 1977 to help parents whose children have physical, mental or emotional disabilities. No longer a Minneapolis storefront with castoff steel desks cajoled from 3M Co., PACER now reaches around the world from its Bloomington headquarters, responding to more than 44,000 requests for assistance annually.
"We say that Paula is like a Venus flytrap — she sees you and latches onto you and sucks you in," said Kathy Graves, who discovered PACER for her son, Sam, when he developed cerebral palsy soon after birth.
Goldberg's vast influence is accompanied by a minuscule ego. She's a master at sidestepping the limelight. At PACER's annual fundraiser galas with their celebrity headliners — this year's featured Crosby, Stills & Nash — she has never appeared on stage, only standing briefly in the audience.
If you weren't paying attention, you might wonder whose grandmother is waving, with her just auburn hair and aura of a particularly comforting matzo ball soup.