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New Community Arts Fund Launches at Newby Hall

March 18, 2015 5:00 pm Published by

High Sheriff of North Yorkshire, Tom Ramsden, together with Lord Lieutenant Barry Dodd CBE, hosted the launch of the Arts for Change fund at the idyllic setting of Newby Hall on the evening of Thursday, 12 March.

The Arts for Change fund was established by Tom Ramsden in his year as High Sheriff of North Yorkshire to support the use of arts or other cultural activity to enrich and change the lives of those in need. The fund will open for applications in summer 2015 and it will be available to groups, charities or individuals and will support artistic activity that is for the benefit of the community.

To inspire donations to the fund and demonstrate the powerful effects of the arts on local lives, Two Ridings Community Foundation worked with Tom Ramsden and its co-president, Barry Dodd to host the launch at Newby Hall with generous sponsorship from JM Finn & Co, Saffery Champness and Wrigley’s Solicitors.

With almost 200 guests in attendance, including the Mayor of Ripon, the evening featured a performance from members of the Hands and Voices choir, a fully inclusive singing and signing community choir based in York that inspires people with disabilities to communicate through creativity. On the night, the room was filled with the spirit of creativity as the walls were lined with artwork from residents of The Beacon, a supported housing scheme for homeless veterans in Catterick.

Donations to the Arts for Change fund will help support arts activities in North Yorkshire and empower communities to initiate projects of their own. Everyone can support the Arts for Change fund to make a difference to lives in North Yorkshire.

Donations to the Arts for Change fund can be made online by visiting www.trcf.org.uk or by cheque made payable to Arts for Change sent to Two Ridings Community Foundation, Primrose Hill, Buttercrambe Rd.

Phi Mu Delta video game tournament raises over $500 for St. Jude

March 18, 2015 5:00 pm Published by

Phi Mu Delta video game tournament raises over $500 for St. Phi Mu Delta video game tournament raises over $500 for St.

On any other Saturday night, college students would just be playing video games in their dorms for no reason at all.

The Student Union Ballroom was abuzz Saturday night as Phi Mu Delta put on a Super Smash Bros. and FIFA video game tournament in an effort to help raise money and awareness for St.

Participants of the tournament paid five dollars to enter and play in either the Super Smash Bros., or FIFA video game gauntlet.

The tournament was certainly a success and showed how just a video game tournament can help spread much needed awareness.

How to Donate Complex Assets

March 18, 2015 5:00 pm Published by

“The aging baby boomers have grown their businesses and many are looking to sell” and give part of their interests to charity, says Karla D’Alleva Valas, managing director of the complex asset group at Fidelity Charitable, a large donor-advised fund. In the first half of 2014, donations of complex assets to Fidelity Charitable more than doubled, to $100 million, compared with the same period a year earlier.

Depending on the type of asset, the easiest route to donate illiquid property is through a donor-advised fund or a community foundation that has expertise in accepting donations of complex assets, including handling the legal review of documents and IRS reporting. “We receive the asset, do the compliance and get it sold,” says Bryan Clontz, president of Jacksonville, Fla., consulting firm Charitable Solutions, which is the administrator of the Dechomai Foundation, a donor-advised fund. Say you have $12 million in shares in a small business that you own and you want to donate $4 million worth of the shares to a donor-advised fund. For the year of the donation, you will get a charitable tax deduction for the shares’ fair market value. The donor-advised fund sells the donated shares you have given it, and you direct how the proceeds will be distributed to your favorite charities.

The donor still gets the tax break based on the fair market value at the time of the donation, but it becomes the charity’s problem to manage and sell the property. A donor can generally deduct the full fair market value of the artwork if the charity uses it for its charitable purpose, such as a museum exhibiting a donated painting.

Comcast Donates $360000 to Twin Cities Nonprofits in 2014 Through Foundation Grants and …

March 18, 2015 5:00 pm Published by

Comcast Donates $360,000 to Twin Cities Nonprofits in 2014 Through Foundation Grants and Community Investment – Yahoo Finance UK Comcast Donates $360,000 to Twin Cities Nonprofits in 2014 Through Foundation Grants and Community Investment

Grants help expand digital literacy, promote community service and build youth leadership skills

Press Release: Comcast 1 hour 0 minutes ago nonprofits and community organzations through its Comcast Foundation and The Comcast Foundation was pleased to award grants to eight nonprofit grants support programs aimed at the Comcast Foundation’s three primary The eight local organizations receiving Comcast Foundation grants in Comcast also responds to community needs About the Comcast Foundation
The Comcast Foundation was The Foundation has three community investment Since its inception, the Comcast Foundation has

Voya Foundation Announces First Quarter 2015 Grant Recipients

March 18, 2015 5:00 pm Published by

NEW YORK, March 19, 2015 /PRNewswire/ –Voya Financial, Inc. Youthlink (Minneapolis) Voya has partnered with YouthLink in support of the organization’s Financial Literacy for Homeless Youth program, which provides homeless, transition-age youth with a financial literacy curriculum taught by Voya Financial employees. Clarifi (Coatesville, Pennsylvania) Clarifi is a nonprofit devoted to improving financial literacy through educational programming, regardless of economic status. Cristo Rey New York High School (New York) Voya will sponsor Cristo Rey’s Summer Academy and Business Boot Camp, a three-week program that prepares incoming students for success in the Cristo Rey school system. WJCT Public Broadcasting (Jacksonville, Florida) For the past 15 years, PBS’ Ready to Learn educational workshop has used electronic media to help millions of young children learn basic reading and math skills. Voya’s grant to WJCT will build out this national program at the local level in Jacksonville. Connecticut Science Center (Hartford, Connecticut) The Connecticut Science Center’s Women in Science lecture and program series is designed to raise the profile of women in science and to promote science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) careers among young girls. Chester County Futures (Exton, Pennsylvania) Chester County Futures’ Passport to College program provides motivated, disadvantaged Chester County youth with real-world learning and student advisors. Medgar Evers College (Brooklyn, New York) The Elite Scholars program provides scholarships and educational materials to the most qualified Medgar Evers College (MEC) students studying business, finance and related fields. People’s Light (Malvern, Pennsylvania) Voya’s funding will support the People’s Light Arts Discovery program, which is designed to complement curriculum at local schools. The program uses theater arts to enhance literacy and language arts skills for a diverse set of students from Bucks, Chester, Delaware, Montgomery and Philadelphia Counties in Pennsylvania.

The Meemic Foundation Reminds Educators to Apply for Grants Before March 31 Deadline

March 18, 2015 5:00 pm Published by

AUBURN HILLS, Mich., MADISON, Wis. and WARRENVILLE, Ill., March 19, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — The Meemic Foundation, a non-profit organization created by Meemic Insurance Company, is reminding educators from across the state to apply for a grant of up to $1,000 prior to the March 31 deadline. Any employee of a public, private, charter or parochial school, from pre-school to post-secondary education, may apply for a Meemic Foundation grant in the states of Michigan, Wisconsin and Illinois.

“The school year may be drawing to a close, but educators are still welcome to apply for grants to fund things like spring classroom projects, field trips or even professional development opportunities for educators,” said Pamela Harlin, Spokesperson for The Meemic Foundation. “We were able to provide funding to many schools across Michigan, Wisconsin and Illinois with grants for a variety of educational initiatives for the 2014-15 school year.

About Meemic Insurance Company
Meemic Insurance Company (www.meemic.com) provides personal lines insurance products solely and exclusively to teachers and other educational employees in Michigan, Wisconsin and Illinois. For more than 65 years, Meemic remains a Michigan-based, teacher-founded company, proud partner of the educational community, committed to offering the finest possible protection, products and services at preferred rates. Best of all, by choosing Meemic, you’re also supporting fellow educators through The Meemic Foundation for the Future of Education, which provides exclusive educational grants for teachers.

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Foundation makes online plea to preserve railroad station

March 18, 2015 5:00 pm Published by

Sidney Davis | Trib Total Media – Sam Jampetro is a member of the Coraopolis Community Development Foundation who have started an Indiegogo campaign to raise $75,000 to repair the roof of the Coraopolis train station. Sidney Davis | Trib Total Media – Sam Jampetro is a member of the Coraopolis Community Development Foundation who have started an Indiegogo campaign to raise $75,000 to repair the roof of the Coraopolis train station. Sidney Davis | Trib Total Media – The Coraopolis Community Development Foundation have started an Indiegogo campaign to raise $75,000 to repair the roof of the Coraopolis train station. Sidney Davis | Trib Total Media – The Coraopolis Community Development Foundation have started an Indiegogo campaign to raise $75,000 to repair the roof of the Coraopolis train station. Sidney Davis | Trib Total Media – The Coraopolis Community Development Foundation have started an Indiegogo campaign to raise $75,000 to repair the roof of the Coraopolis train station.

To help

To view details about the Indiegogo campaign to raise money toward the train station’s renovation, and a video about the station, go to indiegogo.com/projects/coraopolis-train-station-project.

After nearly 40 years of seeing the Coraopolis Railroad Station deteriorate, the latest group of owners is starting an online financing campaign to raise $75,000 to restore the roof and kick-start its renovation.

Members of the Coraopolis Community Development Foundation have turned to the online fundraising site Indiegogo to raise money for the roof project.

aI’d like to see us get off to a stronger start,a said Sam Jampetro, director of the Coraopolis Community Development Foundation.

In 2006, Jampetro, his wife and three other couples bought the property as the Coraopolis Community Development Foundation, aiming to restore it for a cafA and reading room where artifacts of Coraopolis history can be displayed.

Coraopolis resident Chris Rolinson, an assistant professor of photography and photojournalism at Point Park University, did a pro-bono video of the train station project that appears on the Indiegogo website.

Jampetro, pastor of the Anglican Charis247 Community Church in Coraopolis, said what will make the difference between current and past efforts to develop the property will likely be asheer persistence.a

Chippewa Valley Educational Foundation Taste Fest supports teacher mini-grant program

March 18, 2015 5:00 pm Published by

Chippewa Valley Educational Foundation Taste Fest supports teacher mini-grant program – Life – Voice News Guests can also participate in silent and live auctions at the event, as well as a fishbowl raffle.

“More than 200 items will be up for auction, including a grand prize drawing,” Chippewa Valley Director of School and Community Relations Diane Blain said.

Auction items will include golf packages such as Dearborn TPC, overnight stays, custom art pieces, spa packages, jewelry, and a game of kickball for a classroom with Macomb County Executive Mark Hackel and Macomb County Sheriff Anthony Wickersham.

The Chippewa Valley Educational Foundation is a non-profit organization designed to raise funds and encourage community and business partnerships to support education in the district.

“We seek community partnerships in things like supporting our Taste Fest, supporting our high school scholarship program and in helping with programs like LEGO Robotics,” Blain said.

The Taste Fest event is designed to benefit the foundation’s mission of providing additional educational opportunities to the over 16,000 students attending the Chippewa Valley School District. Specifically, the majority of the money raised from the event will benefit a teacher mini-grant project that the foundation sponsors, said Chippewa Valley Educational Foundation President Tim Tomlinson.

“Obviously one of the primary donations out of the funds raised is for the mini-grant program for teachers and educators in the district, to assist in providing the best education they can to students,” Tomlinson said.

Blain said that the foundation hopes to raise about $26,000 for the annual teacher mini-grant program. Guests can also participate in silent and live auctions at the event, as well as a fishbowl raffle.

“More than 200 items will be up for auction, including a grand prize drawing,” Chippewa Valley Director of School and Community Relations Diane Blain said.

Auction items will include golf packages such as Dearborn TPC, overnight stays, custom art pieces, spa packages, jewelry, and a game of kickball for a classroom with Macomb County Executive Mark Hackel and Macomb County Sheriff Anthony Wickersham.

The Chippewa Valley Educational Foundation is a non-profit organization designed to raise funds and encourage community and business partnerships to support education in the district.

“We seek community partnerships in things like supporting our Taste Fest, supporting our high school scholarship program and in helping with programs like LEGO Robotics,” Blain said.

The Taste Fest event is designed to benefit the foundation’s mission of providing additional educational opportunities to the over 16,000 students attending the Chippewa Valley School District. Specifically, the majority of the money raised from the event will benefit a teacher mini-grant project that the foundation sponsors, said Chippewa Valley Educational Foundation President Tim Tomlinson.

“Obviously one of the primary donations out of the funds raised is for the mini-grant program for teachers and educators in the district, to assist in providing the best education they can to students,” Tomlinson said.

Blain said that the foundation hopes to raise about $26,000 for the annual teacher mini-grant program.

“The annual Taste Fest benefits our teacher mini-grant program, which provides funds for new and innovative classroom learning.

Financial Services Industry Supports 20 Years of Pro Bono Financial Planning

March 18, 2015 5:00 pm Published by

ATLANTA, Ga., March 19, 2015 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — via PRWEB – In its 20th year of supporting the delivery of pro bono financial planning, the Foundation for Financial Planning is pleased to reflect on 20 years of uninterrupted service to the underserved.

The Foundation for Financial Planning meets its mission daily by connecting financial planners with underserved populations and has helped provide more than 350,000 people with pro bono financial planning. The Foundation has provided more than $5.7 million in grants to local, regional and national nonprofits in support of pro bono financial planning, including providing financial planning resources free of charge to the military and has connected more than 13,000 financial planners with volunteer opportunities.


John Converse Townsend, a Forbes contributor, shares what can the private sector do for a social enterprise. He encourages social enterprises to reach out to corporations for help to scale up their businesses.




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