Alice Reid Endowment Fund
for the Ithaca Ballet
Alice Reid
1922-2011
Alice passed away on Sunday, May 1, 2011, a few hours after the Ithaca Ballet's season finale of "The Sleeping Beauty" at the State Theatre. Alice was the founder and executive director of the Ithaca Ballet, founded in 1961. Contributions in memory of Alice Reid can be made to the Community Foundation toward the creation of the Alice Reid Endowment Fund for the Ithaca Ballet. |
Spotlight Grants
A group of local fourth graders dressed in period dress from the 1890's are experiencing a day in the classroom from 1892 during their visit to the Eight Square School House, the oldest school in Tompkins County, built in 1827.
They are on a field trip as part of the highly successful, curriculum-based "Kids Discover The Trail" program. This is a collaborative program between the Ithaca City School District, the Ithaca Public Education Initiative and the Discovery Trail. Organized visits to eight of our cherished educational institutions by children from pre-K to fifth grade offer "learning across diverse fields including art, science, botany, history, literature, nature, ornithology and paleontology," as well as a strong social component building bridges among children from different schools. In 2010, a $10,000 grant to the TCSD Foundation from the Community Foundation's Tompkins, Today and Tomorrow Fund supported expansion of this program to the Trumansburg School District to support the Trumansburg Kids Explore & Discover (TKED) program. The program gained immediate support from teachers and resulted in a smooth expansion. The Community Foundation is interested in exploring the possibilities of continued expansion of this pioneering program to other school districts within Tompkins County. A recent $10,000 grant to the Discovery Trail from the Community Foundation's Tompkins, Today and Tomorrow Fund will allow for a feasibility study to be carried out determining capacity and potential for this expansion. Results of the study are anticipated later this year.
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ANNUAL CELEBRATION
Connected Forever, Forever Connected.
Annual Meeting
Monday, May 16, 2011
Hangar Theatre
The keynote address by:
Robert H. Frank
Economics, Johnson Graduate School of Management
Cornell University
Cal Walker & John Simon performing "Bridges" May 16, 2011 |
The Children & Youth Fund Field of Interest Fund is part of the Community Foundation. The Fund's mission is to promote healthy development of children and youth in ways that complement existing services.
The Community Foundation of Tompkins County and the Tompkins County Youth Services Department co-hosted a special Nurse Recognition and Children's Health Forum at TST BOCES earlier in May.
As funders of local programs, we invited participants to share their ideas about specific actions and funding that would make a positive difference in the healthy development of our community's children and youth. |
Giving for results
There is more to philanthropy-much more-than just giving money away
Excerpted from The Economist
May 12th 2011 | from the print edition
WHETHER America's famed philanthropic tradition is all it is cracked up to be will become much clearer during the next few years. Superficially, that tradition has emerged from the global financial crisis in remarkably good shape. In the past year some 69 of America's billionaires and billionaire families have promised to give away at least half of their fortunes by signing the Giving Pledge championed by Bill Gates and Warren Buffett, two of the world's richest men. Among them is 27-year-old Mark Zuckerberg, a founder of Facebook, proof that America's giving gene has passed to the next generation.
The question is, will all that giving, by the billionaires and the thousands more Americans with far smaller amounts of money, actually do any good? There is rather a depressing history of well-intentioned donations often doing nothing to alleviate society's problems, and sometimes even making matters worse. As Mr Buffett has said many times, "making money is far easier than giving it away effectively." Moreover, the need to give effectively, to maximise the bang for every charitable buck, is about to become even greater, as many of the organisations that receive their funds from private philanthropy or the public sector begin to feel the effects of America's fiscal problems. Spending cuts will cause a crisis in the social sector that "will have an impact on almost every non-profit [organisation] in America, whether or not it receives government funds," writes Mario Morino, a veteran philanthropist, in "Leap of Reason", one of three new books that address the same thorny question of how to not merely give, but to give well.
As evinced by his subtitle, "Managing to Outcomes in an Era of Scarcity", Mr Morino focuses on delivering results, as do the other authors, with their emphasis on smart giving and changing the world. The books draw examples from the many years the authors have spent promoting better philanthropy, and are all worth reading. Only Mr Morino is actually in the process of giving away a fortune he earned for himself, which makes him less prone to wrapping his iron fist in a velvet glove than the other authors, who are all professional philanthrocrats of different kinds. Joel Fleishman raised a fortune for Duke University and ran the American arm of the Atlantic Philanthropies; Thomas Tierney gave up his role as boss of Bain to found Bridgespan, a consulting firm for non-profits; the three authors of "Do More Than Give" work for FSG, another consultancy.
For Mr Buffett, the main reason why giving is harder to do than making money is that in business "you go after the low-hanging fruit", whereas in philanthropy you are trying to tackle problems that are inherently difficult, such as how to educate demotivated urban kids or end rural poverty. But all three books make the case that the ineffectiveness of much philanthropy is actually the fault of the philanthropist. They applaud the motives for giving, but all make the point that people too often let their philanthropy be guided by their hearts alone. "Deciding what you will do to make change happen is a choice that requires both your head and your heart", write Messrs Fleishman and Tierney in the best chapter in "Give Smart", entitled "What Am I Accountable For?" The biggest problem for philanthropists, they argue, may be that "they are essentially accountable to no one but themselves." To avoid being tempted into a self-deluded belief in their own success, philanthropists should create systems that force them to hear what may at times be unpleasant truths about the ineffectiveness of their work, and to be constantly challenged to improve.
Of the six practices of effective philanthropists described in "Do More Than Give", two stand out as being unusual. To achieve real change-what the authors, Leslie Crutchfield, John Kania and Mark Kramer, call "catalytic philanthropy"-the best course may be to engage in political advocacy to change government policy, they argue. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is doing this a lot more than most, on issues ranging from education reform to international aid. But the advice also works at a local level, as the book illustrates through the story of how the Tow Foundation improved juvenile justice policy in Connecticut. Their second sound piece of advice is that philanthropists should work together more often. This seems obvious, but as the authors rightly ask, "Why don't more foundations actively collaborate with their peers?"
For Mr Morino, a pioneer of "venture philanthropy", in which the donor works closely to build up the non-profits he supports, one of the key lessons is for philanthropists and non-profits to be clear about the outcomes they are trying to achieve- and to measure properly the progress they are making towards those goals. He is the first to admit that measuring the right thing is not easy, and he has wasted money by measuring the wrong things. Yet far too many philanthropists and non-profits shy away from setting goals and measuring progress. As a result they condemn themselves to ineffectiveness. This must change if philanthropy and the non-profit sector it helps to fund is to achieve the "quantum leap" in effectiveness that he believes is an urgent priority. As he says, "the time to dramatically improve our collective impact is now, when we are needed most." |
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A Message from Our Director,
George Ferrari
It is time for another Community Foundation celebration and you are invited. On Monday, June 13 from 6:30-8:00pm at the Ulysses Philomathic Library in Trumansburg we will be announcing and celebrating the 2011 Howland Foundation grant awards of $52,020. The Howland Foundation employs the Community Foundation to solicit, review and recommend grants in the areas of aging services and youth services in Tompkins County as well as for animal welfare and environmental preservation in both Tompkins and Broome counties. Join us to learn about the amazing array of effective programs gaining support to improve the quality of life in our communities. The awards will also include over $25,000 of additional grants from a variety of donor advised and field of interest funds of the Community Foundation.
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Who We Are
Community foundations are non for profit organizations founded and staffed by people who are dedicated to seeking out what is needed in our community and what is valuable about Tompkins County and to helping those valuable assets grow important results. We understand our community's needs and help you to turn your charitable passions into results oriented philanthropy. We show donors how to make your gifts go further and accomplish more.
Contact George Ferrari, Community Foundation of Tompkins County, Executive Director or call 607-272-9333 if you would like to explore ways for the Community Foundation to assist you in making your philanthropic dreams a reality for Tompkins County.
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Board Member
of the Month
Max Brown
Max Brown is an associate with the firm, Integrated Business Ventures, mergers and acquisitions specialists centered in Ithaca. Max brings previous experience to the Community Foundation as a development professional specializing in planned giving. He has always believed passionately in the importance of community support through volunteerism and philanthropy, as well as through community support of local businesses and professionals. He has volunteered his time to the community both locally and abroad where he spent several years overseas in Mongolia serving in the United State Peace Corps. Max lives in Trumansburg with his wife Nansa and their three children.
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Upcoming Events |
May 18, 2011
Wednesday 5-6pm
Listening-Learning Session
Ulysses Town Hall
June 13, 2011
Monday 6:30pm
Howland Awards Ceremony
Ulysses Philomathic Library
June 2011
Rosen Library Fund
Grant Awards Announcement
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Listening-Learning Sessions
These sessions help inform us about the challenges being faced by our local nonprofits in this current economic environment. Themes which emerged from the meetings in prior years informed our grant-making through the end of 2010.
We are now bringing Listening-Learning opportunities to our local towns throughout Tompkins County to learn about the most pressing issues being faced by our communities.
By focusing charitable resources, we seek to make the greatest impact possible, ensuring that Tompkins County's future remains bright. |
Meet the Board
Board Chair
Mariette Geldenhuys
Vice Board Chair
Mickie Sanders-Jauquet
Secretary Kim Rothman
Treasurer David Squires
Immediate Past Chair
Tommy Bruce
Members
Jacki Barr
Mary Berens
Max Brown
Tom Colbert
Caroline Cox
Jennifer Gabriel
Anthony Hopson
Linda Madeo
Robin Masson
Alan Mathios
Lauren Merkley
Nina Miller
Ed Morton
John Rogers
Carol Travis
Amy Yale-Loehr
Incorporating Board
Jeff Furman
Howard Hartnett
Bill Myers
Robert Swieringa
John Semmler
Diane Shafer
Executive Director George Ferrari, Jr. Program Officer Janet Cotraccia Executive Assistant Amy LeViere |
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