Senior Reach program outcomes for older adults referred for care management and mental health services through a Gatekeeper model were examined in this study and compared with the Spokane Gatekeeper model. The two programs were compared for seniors served on service variables and outcome ratings for isolation, depression, and functioning. Approximately 41% of seniors served by both programs were referred by nontraditional sources: community gatekeepers. Findings indicate that individuals served by the Senior Reach program demonstrated significant improvement in reduction of isolators (such as social isolation), improved functioning, increased optimism about the future, increased positive activities with others, decreased emotional disturbance, and improvements on the Geriatric Depression Scale. Additional program comparisons and findings are discussed. Findings for the Senior Reach program demonstrate that the gatekeeper approach to training community partners is effective in finding at-risk seniors and meeting their needs, resulting in positive impacts on their lives. Older adults confront numerous challenges that can seriously impact their mental health. Issues such as retirement, death of a loved one, changes in health, relocation, and adjusting to other life changes are examples of the conditions and life circumstances that older adults experience (Raschko, 1991). Although there are services that could help seniors in those circumstances, many do not seek assistance (Florio, Jensen, Hendryx, Raschko, & Mathieson, 1998). Seniors may fear the stigma attached to asking for help (Raschko, 1991), systems may be confusing, services may not be coordinated, funding may be lacking, or services may be fragmented (Bartels et al., 2004). In 1978, the Spokane Mental Health, Elder Services Division decided on two strategies to overcome these barriers, one of which was to develop a community network of trained persons called "Gatekeepers" who could make referrals for elders they identified as at-risk. The Gatekeeper model (see Florio et al., 1996, for a complete description) was created to bring at-risk older adults to the attention of professionals who could provide outreach through a care management program. In 2006, Jefferson Center for Mental Health, The Mental Health Center Serving Boulder and Broomfield Counties, and the Seniors' Resource Center partnered to create a program modeled after the Spokane Gatekeeper program. Previous studies of the Gatekeeper model had identified the need for mental health services for these at-risk older adults and the need for more research on this model. The new program incorporated those components and was named Senior Reach. THE SENIOR REACH PROGRAM Like the Spokane Gatekeeper model, the mission of Senior Reach is to support the well-being and independence of seniors by educating the community on how to identify and refer isolated, at-risk older adults who may benefit from a model of care management. Additionally, Senior Reach addresses the need for mental health treatment and information and referral assistance. Central to the Senior Reach program was the objective to implement the Gatekeeper model with fidelity to the Spokane, Washington program that had sought to improve several key outcomes of seniors' lives. Further, replicating the outcomes of the Spokane program could benefit and inform the implementation of the Gatekeeper model in other similar areas. Two mental health centers and a senior center collaborated to develop and implement Senior Reach. Together, they represent a five-county ( Jefferson, Gilpin, Clear Creek, Boulder, and Broomfield), contiguous area all near the metropolitan area of Denver, Colorado, representing urban, suburban, and rural communities where 8%-20% of the older adults are estimated to have depressive symptoms (U.S. Surgeon General, 1999), and where approximately 53% of older adults identified with severe needs and poverty did not receive care (TriWest Group, 2003). …