Report to the Community 2003-2005

Transcription

Report to the Community 2003-2005
REPORT TO THE COMMUNITY 2003–2005
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PENINSULA COMMUNITY FOUNDATION
Established in 1964, Peninsula Community Foundation
stewards more than 650 charitable funds and awards
more than $65 million to 1,500 nonprofit organizations
each year. The Foundation holds $611 million in total
assets and manages a $113 million permanent Endowment for the Community. Hundreds of local residents
have left a legacy to the community through PCF’s
endowment, which grows through community support.
The Foundation enables donors to connect with and
support the causes they care about, and does so
with the entrepreneurial spirit and commitment to
innovation that are hallmarks of the region we serve.
PCF is a 501(c)(3) public charity and its divisions and
initiatives include the Center for Venture Philanthropy,
the Peninsula Nonprofit Center, and the Peninsula
Partnership for Children, Youth and Families. Of
more than 650 community foundations across the
United States, Peninsula Community Foundation is
among the top 20 in assets and annual grantmaking.
For more information, please visit www.pcf.org.
WHY DO YOU WANT TO GIVE BACK? AT
PENINSULA COMMUNITY FOUNDATION,
WE HEAR MANY DIFFERENT ANSWERS
TO THIS QUESTION. BECAUSE EACH ONE
OF US HAS A STORY THAT HAS SHAPED
OUR PERSPECTIVE ON LIFE. WE EACH
HAVE A LENS THAT COLORS OUR WORLD
VIEW, BASED ON OUR HERITAGE, OUR
EXPERIENCES AND OUR DESIRE TO MAKE
A DIFFERENCE. COMMUNITIES ARE BUILT
OF PEOPLE HELPING PEOPLE. FOR FORTY
YEARS, PENINSULA COMMUNITY FOUNDATION HAS CONNECTED PEOPLE, IDEAS
AND RESOURCES FOR THE COMMON GOOD.
THESE ARE YOUR STORIES.
LETTERS FROM THE PRESIDENT & CHAIR OF THE BOARD
WHY? BECAUSE WE SHARE
T H I S C O M M U N I TY.
Dear Friends,
Anniversaries, like birthdays, are cause for great celebration and thoughtful
introspection. In 1964, Peninsula Community Foundation was established
with a small gift in honor of Frances Lilienthal. Now, four decades later,
Peninsula Community Foundation is changing the world. We have granted
more than $460 million back to nonprofits locally, nationally and internationally, and become the philanthropic partner to thousands of families,
individuals, organizations and corporations. These are reasons to celebrate.
Almost 20 years ago, I came to Peninsula Community Foundation as a graduate
student for a semester-long internship. The year was 1986 and the Foundation
had just published its annual report discussing something it was calling
“ v e n t u r e p h i l a n th r o p y.” T h a t o p p o r t u n i t y t o w o r k w i t h B i l l S o m e r v i lle,
PCF President from 1974 to 1990, at what was then a small but already remarkable
foundation, changed my life.
I am not alone in that experience. Peninsula Community Foundation has not only
changed lives, it is changing the world — and this is no simple task. Sometimes
making positive social change requires heroic action, as was the case when
Peninsula Community Foundation’s endowment led the effort to provide
universal health care for San Mateo County’s children. Other times, our work
has been strategic and grounded in collaboration, as is the continued effort to
preserve Silicon Valley’s ecosystem through the Environmental Solutions Forum.
In other cases still, changing the world has simply meant helping a critical
organization survive unexpected tough times.
At Peninsula Community Foundation, service, integrity, partnership, diversity
and innovation are our defining values, and we bring these principals to each
issue and opportunity we address. Along the way we have learned and collaborated
with so many wise partners — donors, foundation colleagues, nonprofits and
community leaders — and we have been honored to serve as teachers and mentors
in the national field of philanthropy.
What’s left? Plenty.
Our community, like our country, faces complex challenges that require shared
attention and action. For all of our collective work, poverty, discrimination,
environmental degradation and illiteracy still present huge barriers. Indeed,
our most important work is yet to come. Peninsula Community Foundation
will be here, continuing to change lives and ensure the health of this community
for generations to come.
Sincerely,
STERLING SPEIRN
President
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Dear Friends,
For over 40 years, Peninsula Community Foundation has been a leader in
addressing the changing needs of this community and galvanizing others to
become involved.
The consistent role that PCF has played is, in part, a tribute to its exceptional
leadership. With the departure of Sterling Speirn, President from 1992 through
2005, we want this report to celebrate his contributions and inspiration, even
as we look ahead to a successor who will build on the legacy and continue the
growth of the Foundation.
On behalf of the staff and Board of the Foundation, and the hundreds of
individuals and organizations that have benefited from Sterling’s vision,
involvement and unflagging commitment, I want to express our collective
gratitude. Sterling, you have meant so much to us. You have touched the lives
of so many in this community, and you have established a lasting standard of
excellence for all those who have worked with you. We will miss you greatly
and we congratulate you on this well deserved next step as President of The
Kellogg Foundation.
Sterling often reminds us that in order to make a difference, all of us must
participate. This report describes how the Foundation has facilitated the
charitable goals of countless local residents, and has played a vital role in
identifying the causes of, and solutions to persistent social concerns. This
level of impact can only be accomplished through the involvement of an entire
community, and we thank you for helping to make it possible.
Sincerely,
HONORABLE PATRICIA BRESEE
Chair, Board of Directors
FOUNDATION GROWTH AND GIVING HISTORY
(Millions Of Dollars)
$611.0
$538.0
Assets
Cumulative Grantmaking
$449.0
Annual Grantmaking
$479.0
$483.4
$443.0
$395.2
$345.5
$303.0
$221.0
$283.4
$220.2
$156.0
$118.0
1998
$64.2
$38.0
$31.0
1999
2000
$63.2
2001
$88.2
$62.0
2002
$49.7
2003
2004
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2005 BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Composed of local leaders from diverse backgrounds, the Board of Directors
p r o v i d e s g u i d a n c e fo r t h e fo u n d a t i o n’s g r a n t m a k i n g a n d c o m m u n i t y
endeavors. These individuals generously invest their time, energy and
expertise to address the changing needs of the Peninsula and Silicon Valley.
HONORABLE
PATRICIA BRESEE (CHAIR)
STEVEN D. ANDERSON, ESQ.
JOHN H. CLINTON, JR.
CARETHA COLEMAN
Retired Commissioner
Attorney
Retired Publisher
Principal
Carr, McClellan, Ingersoll,
Thompson & Horn
San Mateo Times
Coleman Consulting
NYLDA GEMPLE, R.D./L.D.
UMANG GUPTA
Retired Public Health
Administrator
Chairman and CEO
CHARLES “CHIP” HUGGINS
(SECRETARY)
Superior Court of
San Mateo County
Keynote Systems
President/Owner
SUSAN M. HYATT
Community Leader
Sterling Confections
BETSY MATTESON
LINDA R. MEIER
JENNIFER RAISER
RICHARD WILKOLASKI, C.P.A.
Community Leader
Community Leader
President
Partner
Raiser Senior Services
Seiler & Company, LLP
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BOARD EMERITUS
Thomas E. Bailard
Marjorie Bolton
Hugh C. Burroughs
T. Jack Foster, Jr.
Bruce Hinchliffe
Honorable Thomas M. Jenkins
SUSAN FORD DORSEY
BERNADINE CHUCK FONG, PH.D.
President
President
Sand Hill Foundation
Foothill College
Charles B. Johnson
Robert C. Kirkwood
Olivia Martinez, Ed. D.
Karen V.H. Olson
Nancy J. Pedot
Gordon Russell
William L. Schwartz, M.D.
Donald H. Seiler
Warren E. “Ned” Spieker, Jr.
William Wilson III
Rosemary Young
HONORABLE
TERI L. JACKSON
RICK JONES
Superior Court Judge
E. Richard Jones Family
Foundation
San Francisco County
Director
2005 BOARD ADVISORS
Thomas E. Bailard
Richard L. Bennett
Susan Garratt
Elizabeth Obershaw
Gordon Russell
Donald H. Seiler
Burnie E. Sparks, Jr.
Mary P. White
JANE H. WILLIAMS
(TREASURER)
President
Sand Hill Advisors
ALBERT J. HORN, ESQ.
(OF COUNSEL &
CHAIR EMERITUS)
Carr, McClellan, Ingersoll,
Thompson & Horn
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GIVING WITH US
HOW? BY WORKING TOGETHER
AN ENDOWMENT FOR THE COMMUNITY
A permanent charitable resource dedicated to San Mateo County and northern
Santa Clara County, Peninsula Community Foundation’s Endowment for the
Community is used to build our community, not our organization. It allows us
to be flexible, responsive and innovative in our grantmaking, and to consider
the health of our community over the long-term. A donation to the endowment
is a philanthropic wish that will be carried out in perpetuity.
The Endowment for the Community provides vital resources to support local
charitable causes across the region. It is a catalyst to inspire action and
collaboration and, with each grant from this permanent resource, a pressing
need within our community is addressed . In 2003 and 2004, more than
$10 million was awarded from the endowment, which continues to grow from
community support. In 2005, $6 million more will be granted in the areas of
children and families, education, health and human services, the environment,
the arts and strengthening nonprofits. In this way the endowment is re-invested
back into the community from which it came.
2004 TOTAL ASSETS: $611 MILLION
60% Advised Family Foundations
19% PCF Endowment for the Community
8% Chartered Family Foundations
7%
Charitable Remainder Trusts
3% Field of Interest & Scholarship Funds
2% Nonprofit Funds
1%
PCF Operating Funds
2003 AND 2004 TOTAL GRANTMAKING: $137.9 MILLION
17% Supporting Families
16% Higher Education
13% Health & Wellness
12% In School & Out of School
11% Environment
10% Building Community
8% Strengthening Nonprofits
7%
Arts & Culture
4% First Five Years of Life
2% Religion
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PENINSULA COMMUNITY FOUNDATION OFFERS A VARIETY OF GIVING
OPTIONS TO MEET ALL PHILANTHROPIC NEEDS:
Advised Family Foundations
Chartered Family Foundations
Advised Corporate Foundations
Nonprofit Funds
Scholarship Funds
Field of Interest Funds
Legacy Endowment Funds
Charitable Trusts
Charitable Estate
Planning Consultation
Private Family
Foundation Services
THE MANY WAYS TO GIVE
Peninsula Community Foundation provides individuals, families and corporations
with a range of options to personalize and maximize their charitable giving. By
establishing an advised fund or planned gift at PCF you can create a means to support your favorite charitable causes now and into the future. In the process, you
secure the services of our expert staff and our promise to assist you in realizing
a meaningful return on your charitable investment. In 2003 and 2004, more
than $127 million was distributed to nonprofit organizations locally, regionally
and internationally from the more than 650 funds stewarded by the Foundation.
HOW WE LOOK AT PHILANTHROPY
We approach philanthropy with imagination and with your goals in mind.
We connect donors with the causes they care about most, and work with you
to develop the best giving strategy for you and your family. We will work with
you to consider where you would like to focus your giving, what role you and
your family will play in the grantmaking process, the potential tax advantages
of your decisions, and whether you want to create a charitable legacy to carry
forward in perpetuity.
INVESTMENT FLEXIBILITY AND STABILITY
Asset management is a critical part of any giving plan. Peninsula Community
Foundation is an industry leader in providing donor choices with regard to
investment allocation . Donors benefit from economies of scale in both
fees and returns, as well as access to the expertise and prudence of PCF ’s
investment professionals.
OPPORTUNITIES TO CONNECT AND LEARN
From our Strategies in Philanthropy seminars, to intimate salons at private
homes, to site visits and award celebrations, the Foundation and its divisions
offer many opportunities for group learning and community engagement
designed to bring philanthropists and community leaders together. Our guided
Venture Van tours offer two-hour learning journeys focused on issues of
regional concern, such as homelessness, art in the schools or domestic violence.
Contact us to learn more.
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YOU MAKE A DIFFERENCE
It’s not just about giving, but giving in a way that
is effective and rewarding. At Peninsula Community
Fo u n d a t i o n , w e a n a ly z e co m m u n i t y n e e d s a n d
opportunities through a matrix of philanthropic
“lenses,” and we use this same method to help our
clients establish their own charitable giving strategies.
For more than 40 years, our own grantmaking has
been focused and amplified using this approach.
E V E R Y D AY P E N I N S U L A C O M M U N I T Y
FOUNDATION WITNESSES THE COMPLEX
SPECTRUM OF NEED IN OUR COMMUNITY.
EACH OF THE FOLLOWING STORIES
PORTRAYS A DIFFERENT PHILANTHROPIC
LENS. TOGETHER, THEY REPRESENT A BOLD
STRATEGY FOR REALIZING POSITIVE CHANGE.
PERSONAL LENS
inspired by your history, your family
STRATEGIC LENS
CAPACITY BUILDING LENS
supporting smart plans
that improve society
expanding nonprofit or
community capabilities
CRISIS LENS
SYSTEMIC LENS
meeting urgent or
catastrophic needs
starting ripple change
across a system
UPSTREAM LENS
targeting root causes to
redirect future results
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WHY GIVE NOW FOR THE FUTURE?
PERSONAL LENS
“I can’t know what the
NEEDS OF THE FUTURE will be.”
Bernard A. Newcomb
Legacy Society Member and Fundholder
On a recent sunny afternoon, just in from an RV
trip around the United States, Bernie Newcomb
pulled up a chair in his Palo Alto Craftsman-style
home to discuss his partnership with Peninsula
Community Foundation. “I don’t mind being the guy
out front,” he began. “I like to go first.”
A native Oregon i a n a n d c o-fo u n d e r a n d c h i e f
system architect at E * Trade, one of the first online
stock trading co m p a n i e s , B e r n i e l e f t f u l l-t i m e
work in 1997 for a life of philanthropy and travel.
He created the first Chartered Family Foundation
at PCF in 1998 and has been a dedicated supporter
of the Peninsula, Silicon Valley and his home state
to the north for many years.
From building a new 570-seat stadium at his high
school alma mater, to funding vision research at
UC San Francisco, Bernie has been a trailblazer
in both his generosity and approach. His foundation at PCF has made grants totaling nearly
$5.5 million to date, focusing on children and
families, community-building, and vision-related
research — an area of particular significance to
Bernie, who is legally blind.
Bernie Newcomb and Gerry Marshall at home in Palo Alto.
In 2005, Bernie stepped forward as a leader yet
again, by making a $5 million commitment to PCF’s
Endowment for the Community — the first gift
of such magnitude to the endowment since 1998.
“Peninsula Community Foundation’s endowment
will be invested in the community across a broad
range of needs, so I see it as a way to reach diverse
organizations all at once. I am probably not aware
of all the needs out there. This way, I know that
the community endowment will make a difference
on my behalf for many years to come.”
Bernie describes his relationship with PCF as
o n e t h a t a l l o w s h i m t o l e v e r a g e s t a f f t a l e n t s to
help him meet his own philanthropic dreams. “I
needed professional assistance with how best to
channel my giving. I figured PCF could help deliver
gifts in the most needy directions and expose
m e t o n e w i d e a s . I n e v e r w o u l d h a v e fo u n d out
about some of the local organizations doing great
work otherwise,” Bernie says. “I place my trust in
Peninsula Community Foundation’s evaluation
and oversight. PCF has helped monitor progress
and kept projects on track for me and my Board,
both locally and in Oregon.”
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WHY SUPPORT CREATIVITY AND THE ARTS?
STRATEGIC LENS
“I have grown as an artist, while also
BUILDING THIS COMMUNITY.”
Carla Brooke
PCF Artist in Residence
As government support for the arts continues
to decline, Peninsula Community Foundation’s
commitment is greater than ever. Fifteen years ago,
PCF partnered with the National Endowment for
the Arts to champion emerging artists, cultural
diversity, and small arts groups with a modest
E m e r g i n g A r t s F u n d . D u r i n g t h e e a r l y 2 000s ,
matching challenge grants from the David and
Lucile Packard Foundation allowed PCF to establish
the Arts Endowment Fund for Peninsula artists.
In 2005, we expanded our arts funding yet again
with the creation of an Artist Residency Program.
When Sonya Clark-Herrera moved to East Palo
Alto in 2000, sh e fo u n d d i s e n g a g e d t e e n a g e r s
who lacked a positive vision for their futures and
their community. In response, she founded the
East Palo Alto Mural Art Project (MAP). During
the past five years, MAP has created 16 vibrant
murals at local elementary schools and neighborhood organizations. More than 200 teenagers
have participated, and those of legal age earn an
hourly wage while they develop essential skills
and self-esteem. Of the scores of students MAP
has served, only one has left school — a dramatic
contrast to the overall dropout rate in East Palo
Alto, which remains a staggering 65%.
Student artists work on a Mural Art Project piece in East Palo Alto.
According to Clark-Herrera, early support from
PCF ’s Neighborhood Grants Program provided
the guidance, funding and organizational training needed to launch the project. “Money alone
w o u l d n’ t h a v e d o n e w h a t P C F d i d t o k e e p the
program alive,” says Clark-Herrera.
PCF ’s new Artist Residency Program provides
one-time grants of $25,000 to individual artists
w h o s e w o r k d i r e c t l y b e n e f i t s o u r c o m m u n i t y.
Before 2004, Gloria Way and Bay Oak in East Palo
Alto were mired in tension and conflict. Artist Carla
Brooke saw an opportunity to develop her own
work and ignite the fundamental connection
between making art and finding common ground.
With Brooke’s guidance, families from Gloria Way
and Bay Oak have come together to create tiles
a n d m o s a i c s fo r t h e i r n e w c o m m u n i t y g a r d en .
They celebrated with a planting party and are
seeing their plans come to fruition. For Brooke,
the Artist Residency Program has given her the
e s s e n t i a l g i f t of t i m e t o g r o w, e x p e r i m e n t a n d
develop her work. As she points out, being a
“resident artist” also means she is no longer a
visitor to her studio; she is a permanent inhabitant
of a colorful, evolving work of art.
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WHY PREPARE CHILDREN FOR SCHOOL?
SYSTEMIC LENS
“She has started to set aside
QUALITY TIME for herself
and her daughter once a week.”
A Learning Together community
educator observes an
East Menlo Park mother
Peninsula Community Foundation believes that
in order for children to succeed in life, they
m u s t b e p r e p a r e d . Ye t i n c r e a s i n g n u m b e r s of
young children lack the cognitive, emotional and
social skills needed for classroom achievement.
PCF established the Peninsula Partnership for
Children, Youth and Families in 1993 to connect
and empower children, families and schools to
m a k e t h e d i f f e r e n c e fo r k i d s i n t h o s e c r u c i a l
early years from birth to age eight.
In the summer before she entered kindergarten,
Maricela was a frightened four-year old reluctant
to speak or interact with other children. Thanks
to the Peninsula Partnership’s Kickoff to
Kindergarten (KTK) initiative — a summer program
that uses credentialed teachers and bilingual
aides to prepare children who haven’t at tended
p r e s c h o o l fo r k i n d e r g a r t e n — M a r i c e l a g o t t h e
added, early dose of support she needed to blossom
socially and academically. According to her KTK
teacher, Maricela is now a confident first grader
who reads and writes well, and loves to learn.
Since 2001, KTK has served over 4,000 children
like Maricela in eight school districts in San Mateo
County, with proven success developing children’s
school readiness skills.
A Kickoff to Kindergarten student reads a phonics book.
Pa r e n t s , t h e f i r s t t e a c h e r s i n c h i l d r e n’s l i v e s ,
deserve added support as well. One of the ways
the Peninsula Partnership is fulfilling this need
is by leading San Mateo County’s School Readiness
I n i t i a t i v e , L e a r n i n g To g e t h e r , w h i c h b r i n g s
learning home to nearly 200 families in East Palo
A l t o , E a s t M e n l o Pa r k , R e d w o o d C i t y a n d S a n
Mateo. With funding from First 5 San Mateo County,
Learning Together combines curriculum-based
home visits with parent education workshops
a n d t o o l s fo r a t-h o m e r e a d i n g t i m e t o fo s t e r
family bonding and critical early literacy skills.
On the schools front, the Peninsula Partnership
is leading the effort to create the region’s first
community schools — round-the-clock learning
environments that are open to students, families and
neighbors. Community schools not only provide
the highest quality instruction, but also offer a
wide range of support, services and after-school
activities to engage parents and communities in
children’s learning.
The Peninsula Partnership for Children , Youth
and Families is a division of Peninsula Community
Foundation headquartered in San Mateo. Visit
www.pcf.org/peninsula_partnership.
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WHY ENSURE A COLLEGE EDUCATION?
UPSTREAM LENS
“PCF is passionate about college access and
DEVELOPING AND ENHANCING
EXISTING PROGRAMS.”
Stephanie Wick, Executive Director
Foundation for College Education
It’s simple: kids who graduate from college have
more opportunities and higher incomes than those
who do not. Yet only 32% of students who enter
high school leave qualified to attend a four-year
college, and the statistic for minority students is
even lower. Teenagers from low-income, ESL and
immigrant families in particular, must negotiate
a series of difficult obstacles if they are ever to
realize the benefits of a university education. The
barriers to college access go beyond economics,
and work to address them must begin years
before a student’s final year in high school. The
solution lies far upstream from the challenge.
Reaching kids early and sticking with them
through the education system are key factors in
improving college access for all. Over the past
decade, Peninsu l a C o m m u n i t y Fo u n d a t i o n h a s
committed itself to helping motivated students
from low-income families attain college degrees.
By investing nearly $500,000 in the last five
years alone, PCF has helped students enter high
school ready to stick with their coursework and
successfully go on to college.
Foundation for College Education (FCE) began
as a college counseling business. Recognizing
that the socio-economic gap between students
who attend college and those who do not required
systemic change, FCE looked to us for support .
With PCF’s guidance and funding, FCE has delivered
numerous academic and personal support services
to minority students from low-income families on
the Peninsula. Their results to date are convincing:
in 2004 –2005, 100% of students who completed FCE’s
high school program enrolled in college the following fall; 100% have a parent or guardian involved
in the program; and 91% have remained in college.
A strong middle school experience lays groundwork
for high school, and the Peninsula Bridge Program
w o r k s j u s t u p s t r e a m f r o m F C E . I n 1 9 8 9 , t h eir
founder Les DeWitt was volunteering with East Palo
Alto middle school students when he realized there
were no programs to help adolescents transition
into high school. Fifteen years later, the Peninsula
Bridge Program has served more than 1,500 students
through enrichment programs, tutoring and core
subject curriculum at five Peninsula sites. Nearly
100% of the sixth graders who start the program stay
throughout middle school, and program graduates
often return years later as instructors — a true
t e s t a m e n t t o Pe n i n s u l a B r i d g e P r o g r a m ’s l ife
changing influence.
College bound youth in the Foundation for College Education program explore the Wellesley Campus.
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WHY PROVIDE STABILITY THROUGH HARD TIMES?
CRISIS LENS
“The Foundation offered
emergency assistance when
WE DESPERATELY NEEDED IT.”
Michelle Jackson, Executive Director
Shelter Network
Crisis funding is about immediate stability. As a
grantmaker, our focus has always been on operational
effectiveness, careful planning and measurable
outcomes. But careful planning cannot prevent
emergency situations that arise without warning.
When our nonprofit community was threatened
after the technology bubble burst in 2001 — and
more than 127,000 jobs were lost across Silicon Valley
—Peninsula Community Foundation stepped in with
expanded emergency funding to support the organizations assisting those who were hardest hit.
Every year, more than 6,000 people become homeless in San Mateo County. With two-thirds of them
being families with children, the typical homeless
person in our community is a five-year-old child.
Most are situationally homeless — meaning that
they have lost their homes due to emergency circumstances such as unemployment or medical
bills. Founded on a shoestring in 1987, Shelter
Network provides vital services to assist these
families and individuals in crisis return to selfsufficiency. PCF helped Shelter Network at the very
beginning with start-up funding and capacitybuilding grants totaling more than $6 million .
Today, the organ i z a t i o n i s a n a t i o n a l m o d e l i n
“tr ansitional ho u s i n g ,” s e r v i n g 400 h o m e l e s s
A Shelter Network employee advises a new client.
e a c h n i g h t t h r o u g h f i v e 2 4-h o u r p r o g r a m s and
two emergency shelters.
Fair Oaks Community Center was established
in 1974 to provide Redwood City, Portola Valley,
A t h e r t o n a n d t h e u n i n c o r p o r a t e d N o r t h Fa i r
Oaks neighborhood with a resource for both social
services and community activities. When the
economic crisis hit, client requests at Fair Oaks
doubled . PCF ’s emergency grant allowed them
to be more flexible and responsive by meeting
needs as diverse as over-night motel vouchers for
families and children’s school bus passes.
Further south on the Peninsula, Community Service
Agency (CSA) has been providing social services
to Mountain View, Los Altos and Los Altos Hills
residents since 1957. Before the economic downturn,
most CSA clients held low-paying service sector jobs.
But after the market crashed, a new kind of client
appeared: the newly unemployed, younger worker
with a family who hadn’t had time to save for a
rainy day. They arrived at CSA feeling ashamed
and stunned by how quickly their stable lives had
unraveled. Responding again to an urgent need,
P C F i s s u e d a n u n s o l i c i t e d g r a n t t o C S A fo r its
Emergency Assistance Program.
19
WHY INVEST IN STRENGTHENING NONPROFITS?
CAPACITY
BUILDING LENS
DEVELOP
OUR SKILLS AND GROW.”
“We’ve been able to
Mitch Reitman, Development Director
Mid-Peninsula Boys & Girls Club
Peninsula Community Foundation makes connections,
not simply grant s , an d o u r d e c i s io n t o es t ab l i sh
a library and resource center for nonprofits in
1977 reflects this fundamental mission. The
Peninsula Nonprofit Center is located at PCF ’s
San Mateo office and provides reference services,
seminars, training, and strategic leadership programs
to the region’s public sector. The Center also holds
one of the largest funding libraries housed within
a foundation in the western United States.
Life for nonprofits has become more challenging as
needs in the communities they serve have become
increasingly complex. Competition for funds and
volunteers, government-driven legal and accounting
requirements, attrition, and executive transitions are
serious challenges facing 21st century organizations.
Fortunately, the Center has been ahead of the curve
in helping nonprofits to strengthen their leadership,
systems and processes in service of their missions.
The Center has always taken a visionary approach.
Early on, staff realized the impact computers could
have on the field, and in 1982 moved to create the
very first Computer Learning Center for nonprofits
in the country. Today the Center collaborates with
CompassPoint Nonprofit Services and the
Center for Excellence in Nonprofits to provide
t r a i n i n g a n d s u p p o r t f o r t h e n o n p r o f i t s e c tor.
Together, these three organizations offer more
than 50 classes, workshops and special events to
hundreds of nonprofit staff members, executives
and Board members each year.
Mid-Peninsula Boys & Girls Club’s Mitch Reitman
says the Nonprofit Center has made a difference
t o h i s e n t i r e o r g a n i z a t i o n . S e r v i n g l o c a l y o uth
between the ages of 6 and 18 since 1955, the Club’s
mission is to help youth, especially those from disadvantaged circumstances, realize their potential.
Through the years, Club staff have made full use
of the Nonprofit Center, attending grant writing
workshops, borrowing books on management, receiving counsel on their development campaigns, and
searching the database to identify potential funders.
The Nonprofit Center even connected Broadway by
the Bay, a prominent theater group, with funding
from the City of San Mateo to make its programs
accessible to the Boys & Girls Club kids.
T h e P e n i n s u l a N o n p r of i t C e n t e r i s a d i v i s i o n
of Peninsula Community Foundation . Visit
www.pcf.org/nonprofit_center.
Mitch Reitman and Peninsula Nonprofit Center Manager Patti Pace at work in PCF’s Nonprofit Center.
21
WHY LEAVE A LEGACY IN THIS COMMUNITY?
PERSONAL LENS
“We live and work in San Mateo
County. Our first obligation
IS TO THIS COMMUNITY.”
Tom Ford [1921–1998]
Legacy Society Member
To m Fo r d k n e w t h a t i f h e w a n t e d t o l e a v e t h e
world a better place, he could start by looking in
his own backyard.
doing, Tom created a continuous source of income
to numerous nonprofit organizations supporting
San Mateo and northern Santa Clara Counties.
With this simple tenet, Tom exemplified the spirit
of targeted, creative, enduring philanthropy. As one
of Silicon Valley’s preeminent real estate developers,
h e p o s s e s s e d a n i n h e r e n t g i f t f o r l o n g-t e r m ,
l a r g e-s c a l e t h i n k i n g — b u t h e a l w a y s b e g a n b y
looking at the needs in his immediate community,
in the rolling hills along the Peninsula that he
called home.
Tom Ford delighted in let ting his tenants know
that a portion of their rent was going back to the
c o m m u n i t y, a n d t h a t t h e y w e r e i n f a c t w o r k ing
one day per week for that cause. As he made the
rounds at 3000 Sand Hill Road to meet and share
stories with the rainmakers of Silicon Valley, he
never failed to remind them that they also were
investing in the lives of those in need, helping others
through crises, and arming the less fortunate with
skills needed to build for the future.
To m b e g a n h i s p a r t n e r s h i p w i t h P e n i n s u l a
C o m m u n i t y Fo u n d a t i o n i n 1 9 8 5 w i t h a d o n o r
advised fund he e s t a b l i s h e d . H a v i n g a c h i e v e d
significant financial success through hard work
and smart choices, he also recognized the rewards
of giving — and he wanted to maximize the reach
and effectiveness of his philanthropic investments.
Working with PCF gave him and his wife, Susan
Ford Dorsey, the flexibility they needed . In the
late 1990s, Tom donated 25% of his real estate
holdings at 3000 Sand Hill Road in Menlo Park —
the hub of venture funding in Silicon Valley — to PCF’s
permanent Endowment for the Community. In so
The late Tom Ford at his office on Sand Hill Road.
To date, Tom Ford’s gift of real estate is the single
l a r g e s t d o n a t i o n t o P C F ’s E n d o w m e n t f o r t h e
Community and his gift generates approximately
$1 million in grants to local nonprofits each year.
Tom is joined by some 450 donors to the endowment, whose gifts — ranging from $10,000 to eight
figure sums — will channel needed funds back into
this community in perpetuity. Today, seven years
after his passing, our region and its residents
continue to benefit from Tom Ford’s generosity
and foresight, as we will for years to come.
23
WHY PRESERVE OUR NATURAL ENVIRONMENT?
STRATEGIC LENS
“Every organization participating
in the Environmental Solutions Forum
IS STRONGER TODAY.”
LaFrance Associates, LLC
Evaluation Report
Effective organizations provide effective programs.
And with better environmental education programs
in Silicon Valley, more residents – children and
adults alike – will demonstrate environmentally
r e s p o n s i b l e b e h a v i o r s . T h i s i s t h e k e y s t o n e of
the Center for Venture Philanthropy’s third Social
Venture Fund, the Environmental Solutions Forum,
which was launched on Earth Day 2003.
San Mateo County is home to the world’s largest
remaining stretch of wild and undisturbed coastline
adjacent to a major metropolitan area. Silicon Valley
is also one of three California eco-regions identified
by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation and
national environmental groups as facing the
greatest danger of being destroyed by development.
In developing the Environmental Solutions Forum,
the Center for Venture Philanthropy (CVP) engaged
a diverse cohort of 13 nonprofit organizations and
the outdoor departments of Santa Clara and San
Mateo County Offices of Education to participate.
The Center for Venture Philanthropy tackles big
issues — in this case, the need for local environmental
stewardship — and its change-making methods incorporate certain key elements to ensure success. For
example, participating organizations must develop
and implement four-year plans, with quarterly
tracking for progress towards those goals. As with
any venture capital investment , an exit strategy
underlies each plan . Forum members receive
individualized coaching and support from CVP
staff and consultants, participate in peer exchange
a n d t r a i n i n g , a n d r e c e i v e m u l t i-y e a r g r a n t s –
a l l i n t h e s e r v i c e of h e l p i n g t h e m a c h i e v e t h e i r
capacity-building goals.
One Environmental Solutions Forum member,
WildLIFE Associates, employs abused, abandoned
and injured wildlife that cannot be re-released as
“wild teachers” to help students and adults reconnect
to the living world. WildLIFE Associates offers over
1,000 educational programs each year from its 120acre home base in Half Moon Bay. The Environmental
Solutions Forum invested $45,000 to aid the construction of a new onsite wildlife viewing enclosure,
enhance the organization’s website, create a formal
evaluation process and conduct Board outreach.
As a result, a host of new web-based activities are
available and operating revenue is up.
The Center for Venture Philanthropy, headquartered on
Sand Hill Road in Menlo Park, CA, is a division of Peninsula Community Foundation. Visit www.pcf.org/cvp.
WildLIFE Associates inspires children to become environmental stewards.
25
SHAPE THE FUTURE FOR
GENERATIONS TO COME
EIGHT FACTS ABOUT LEAVING A LEGACY
1. Your bequest or gift will make a lasting difference
for future generations.
2. You can support multiple charities and causes
with a single gift.
3. Your family can be involved in continuing your
philanthropic traditions.
4. You can receive valuable tax deductions.
5. You can avoid capital gains taxes on highly appreciated property.
6. Your IRA and retirement plan assets are often the
most tax efficient assets to give.
7. You can benefit the community and increase your
current income with a charitable trust.
8. You don’t have to be wealthy to make a difference.
It’s easier than you think. Call the Philanthropic
Services department to discuss your goals.
A DECISION YOU MAKE TODAY CAN AND
WILL HAVE AN ENDURING IMPACT ON THE
LIVES OF FUTURE GENERATIONS. WE SALUTE
THESE GENEROUS INDIVIDUALS FOR THEIR
CONTRIBUTIONS TO OUR REGION’S FUTURE.
PENINSULA COMMUNITY FOUNDATION LEGACY SOCIETY
Anonymous Donors (25)
Jean W. Cook & Clarence T. Aberg
Paul S. & Wilhemina Achilles
Marian N. Atcheson
Edward A . Badt
Clark A . & Patricia P. Barrett
Leland & Denise Basham
Jane Benson
Viola Bondolfi
Elsa F. Bowker
Margaret Brandon
The Honorable Patricia Bresee
David A . Brewer
Florence D. Brown
Mrs. Ronald L. Campbell
Jack & Margarette Canepa
Edward Cartotto
Rosalind C. Chi
Margaret O. Cleary
Albert E. Cobb
Robert M. Dean & Patricia A . Dean
Leona G. DeLucchi
Jeanne S. Dickey
Mrs. L. Marion Donahue
Sheilah Dorcy
Mary Dysinger
Helen C. Engelbert
Norio & Jeannette Ferrari
Robert O. & Reba B. Fournier
James E. & Dorothy L. Frank
Norman & Natalie Friend
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Ford
William & Susan Garratt
Joseph P. Glynn
Morgan & Adrienne Gunst
Jack & Tomiko Haber
Jan Half
Gregory J. Hartman
Michael J. Homer
Shirley Hort
Lydia Jaffa
Warren T. Jensen
Charles B. & Ann Johnson
Martin & Suzanne Karr
[AS OF JUNE 30, 2005]
Marjory A . Keenan
Mr. & Mrs. George Keller
Linda Dunham & Carol Kerley
Joe W. Kerley
Ernest & Kathryn H. Kingberg
Robert C. Kirkwood
George D. Kneip, III
Gerald & S. Anne Kohs
Ivor Kraft
Henry & Barbara Labrosse
Stephen W. Lamp
Genevieve Elizabeth Landon
Ambassador Bill & Jean Lane
Martha Faull Lane
Mr. L.V. Larsen
Mrs. Phillip G. Lasky
Richard M. & Emmy Lavenstein
Mary Lemmon
Howard & Jane Lewis
Theodore M. & Frances B. Lilienthal
Edmund W. & Jeannik M. Littlefield
Anne Loftus
Charles B. Luce
Torstein J. & Nancy Lund
Anne Marquart
Carol Jenkins & Patrick R . Marshment
The Reverend Ann Martel
Patricia L. McCambridge
Loretta McClurg
Robert F. McCullough
Patricia McKinney
Hays & Charlotte McLellan
Linda R. & Anthony P. Meier
Bruce & Peggie Michael
Agnes C. Michaels
Lauren Barbara Michaels
John Madsen & Tia Millman
Charles & Carol Mink
Heidi Munzinger Shott
Bernard A . Newcomb
Mary Emily Nicewander
Gloria J. Nolan
Dorothy Offutt
Jo Ann Overberg
Charles & Suzanne C. Parsons
Mr. & Mrs. C. Robert Payne
Ray Perin
Allen & Joan Perris
Leonard & Vera Pitts
Lillian E. Poage
Florence A . Rice
Madeline I. Roberts
Louise Rocke
Robert & Patricia Ronald
Elizabeth B. Ross
Ruth S. Ross
Robert Ruggles
Ralph H. & Lenore M. Ruppert
Gordon Russell
James Granucci & Kibbie Ruth
Robert Sawyer
Nancy Scammell
Florette & Bill Schwartz
Donald H. & Ruth F. Seiler
John D. Shott
Carol & Ned Spieker
Douglas & Barbara Spreng
Homer L. & Louise M. Stack
Robert & Jean Steiner
Norman Stiene
Judy Swanson
Susanna Tong
Orlin & Onnolee Trapp
Daniel Ullyot
Cort & Jean Van Rensselaer
Jean Weaver
Shirley Westmyer
Mary E. Wiedersheim
Matilda B. Wilbur
William Wilson III
Jean Wirth
Vera Brown & Adrian Wheeler
Katrina Wollenberg
Robert & Sharon Yoerg
John & Rosemary Young
Mary Lou Zoglin
27
THE PEOPLE BEHIND
OUR MISSION
PENINSULA COMMUNITY FOUNDATION STAFF
EXECUTIVE OFFICE
Sterling Speirn
President
Lianne Araki
Executive Assistant
Larry Diskin
Director of Human Resources
Midori Inahara
Senior Organizational
Associate
Judith Powell
Senior Program Officer
Laura Bradley Davis
Director of Communications
Manuel Santamaria
Program Officer
Gregg DeChirico
Development Officer
FINANCE &
ADMINISTRATION
Bert Feuss
Director of Professional
Services
Eva Franco Angulo
Maintenance Associate
Linda Avlakeotes
Administrative Assistant
Marilyn Merz
Vice President,
Chief Organizational Officer
Vera Bennett
Senior Vice President,
Chief Financial Officer
COMMUNITY PROGRAMS
Judith Brown
Finance Coordinator
Cynthia Cevallos
Program Associate
Justine Choy
Program Officer
Ellen Clear
Vice President,
Community Programs
Roxana Dommer
Education Programs
Manager
Marjorie Fujiki
Senior Program Officer
Carol Guinasso
Senior Program Associate
Frank A . Lalle
Senior Program Officer
Kara Coyle
Controller
Jennifer Dalida
Accounts Payable Associate
Karen Bradley Follette
Senior Director of
Development
Kelly Fry
Communications Associate
Jessica Mansmith
Donor Resources Associate
Ash McNeely
Vice President,
Philanthropic Services
Victoria Mendiola
Director, Donor Resources
Kim Diep
Staff Accountant
Amy Park
Philanthropic Services
Associate
Jessica Jones
Database Administrator
Leigh Stilwell
Senior Program Manager
Kathryn Lee
IT Manager
CENTER FOR VENTURE
PHILANTHROPY
Allan Ocon
Accounting Manager
Katie Behroozi
Manager of Outreach,
Raising A Reader
Lydia Sirotka
Office Manager
Korene Mangelsen
Administrative Assistant
Amy Teeling
Receptionist/Administrative
Assistant
Richard Matgen
Senior Program Officer
Debbie Turner
Grants Payable Associate
Helen Omictin
Program Associate
PHILANTHROPIC SERVICES
Patti Pace
Manager, Peninsula
Nonprofit Center
[AS OF SEPTEMBER 15, 2005]
Erin Baril
Philanthropic Services
Associate
Carol Welsh Gray
Executive Director,
Center for Venture
Philanthropy &
President, Raising A Reader
Jennifer McDonald
Program Manager,
Raising a Reader
Anna Olsen
Director & Chief Operational
Officer, Raising A Reader
Margot Rawlins
Senior Program Manager
Heather Saito
Administrative Assistant
Kurrin Spray
Program Manager,
Center for Venture
Philanthropy &
Production Manager,
Raising A Reader
Amy Voth
Program Associate,
Raising A Reader
PENINSULA PARTNERSHIP
FOR CHILDREN, YOUTH
AND FAMILIES
Lisa Alvarez
Project Associate
Michelle Fries
Manager of Special Projects
Mauricio Palma
Project Manager
Jeanne Cuffey Tatum
Manager of Operations
Erica Wood
Executive Director
Nicole Kanda
Program Associate,
Raising A Reader
Peter Kim
Program Manager
29
PROFESSIONAL ADVISORS COUNCIL
The Professional Advisors Council (PAC) is comprised of local estate planning
attorneys, accountants and financial advisors. Leaders in their professions,
they provide a wealth of expertise in estate, financial and philanthropic
planning. We thank the Council for partnering with us to facilitate philanthropy
and encourage efforts to strengthen the health and well-being of our community.
Laurelle Gutierrez-Lundquist
PAC Co-Chair
Carr, McClellan, Ingersoll,
Thompson & Horn
Jeff Shields
PAC Co-Chair
Offit Hall Capital Management
Robert Snook
PAC Co-Chair
Union Bank of California
Vanessa G. Anderson
VBS Financial Services
Bryon J. Botsford
U.S. Trust Company
Paul Casias
My-Business-Advisor LLP
Vicki Delegeane
Harris myCFO Inc.
Diana L. Dessonville
Bailard, Inc.
Cammie Doder
Kochis Fitz
Francis W. Dubreuil
Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati
Richard L. Ehrman
Thoits, Love, Hershberger, McLean
Frank J. Espina
Elwood Espina Ferrell LLP
William L. Fogarty
Hood and Strong LLP
Penny H. Gallo
DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary
Karen R. Goodfriend
Allied Consulting Group
Robert N. Grant
Grant and Gordon LLP
Linda M. Hayes
Smith Barney, Citicorp
Charlotte K. Ito
Steefel, Levitt & Weiss
Donald M. Keller, Jr.
Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe
Robyn H. Lee
Net Equity Associates
Jacqueline Mayer
Mayer, Moll & Associates
James P. Mitchell
Coblentz, Patch, Duffy & Bass, LLP
30
George F. Montgomery, II
Friedman, McCubbin, Spalding,
Bilter, Roosevelt & Montgomery
Charles H. Packer, Esq.
DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary
Stephen F. Peterson
Sand Hill Advisors
Lawrence M. Russell
Borel Private Bank & Trust Company
David M. Sacarelos
Seiler & Company, LLP
Thomas P. Simmons
Morgan Stanley
Mark L. Vorsatz
Wealth and Tax Advisory Services, Inc.
David J. Waitrovich
Merrill Lynch Private Wealth Services
Mary P. White
White Law
Anne Yamamoto
Frank, Rimerman & Company, LLP
Robyn L. Zorea
Cooley Godward
FOUNDATION VOLUNTEERS
Peninsula Community Foundation is grateful to the many volunteers who
devote their time, energy and creativity to support the work we do. We offer
thanks to the volunteers listed below who have given so generously of
themselves in order to enrich the community we share.
ART COMMITTEES
Patricia Bresse
Robert Buelteman
Susan Cashion
Dale Djerassi
Bubba Gong
Lynn Steiner
Jeanne Cuffey Tatum
Marianne Villanueva
Jane Williams
FAITHS COMMITTEE
Ben Ahmad
Tessa Rouverol Callejo
Landon R . Williams
Rabbi Jay Miller
Reverend Bob Moran
Jonathan Staples
David Mineta
Padmadharini
Maria Fernandez
Caretha Coleman
Olivia G. Martinez
Alejandro Vilchez
Carol Young-Holt
OFFICE &
NONPROFIT CENTER
Joan Doherty
Victoria Guinasso
PCF HEALTH FUND
COMMITTEE
Josefina R . Enriquez, M.D.
Mary Giammona, M.D.
James L. Hutchinson, M.D.
Ross A . Jaffe, M.D.
Linda R . Meier
Gordon Russell
Ann Marie Silvestri, D.D.S
PCF SAFETY NET FUND
COMMITTEE
SCHOLARSHIP
COMMITTEES
Patricia Bresee
Susan Ford Dorsey
Nylda Gemple
Gordon Russell
William Schwartz
Thomas Arnold
Edward A . Badt
Jim Bennett
Vera Bennett
Helen P. Bohte
Judith T. Brown
Barbara Coyle
Kara A . Coyle
Lawrence Coyle
Eleanor Williams Curry
Larry Dawson
Tom Ellerhorst
Valerie U. Dohrenwend
Frank Dunkel
Francesca Eastman
Joseph G. Finegold
Sydney M. Finegold, M.D.
Anita Fisher
Susan Ford Dorsey
Michelle Fries
Naomi Green
Nancy Grippo
Guy B. Gugliotta
Carol Guinasso
James Hamilton
Karen Hutchinson
Arnold Kaufman
Barbara Keller
Miki Kokka
Jean Leonard
Matthew Mintz
David Negrin
Vera Pitts
TEACHERS FUND
COMMITTEE
Linda Bauld
Jin Choo
William Dean
Kathy Dewar
Sandra Hall
Christy Halstead
Morris Houck
Liz Jordan
Barbara Moyce-Smith
Karen Olson
Cristina Trujillo
NEIGHBORHOODS
COMMITTEE
Susan Alvaro
Gloria Brown
John H. Clinton
Nattie Fong
Janet Hofmann
Bonnie Miller
Jennifer Raiser
Alicia Santamaria
Manuel Santamaria
Margot Rawlins
Clara Rice
Heather Saito
Laura Savage
Cecil G. Short
Milt Siegel
Ann Marie Silvestri
Leigh M. Stilwell
Howard Sussman
Mildred Swann
Edward Tang
Debbie Turner
Susan Wilde
Caroline Zlotnick
Joyce Estes
Lucy Cormack
Judyth Pearce
31
AUDITED FINANCIAL REPORT
DECEMBER 31,
2004
2003
ASSETS
Cash and cash equivalents
11,421,577
6,762,888
551,329,430
487,909,271
Contributions and grants receivable
1,804,319
2,138,457
Program loans receivable
2,526,231
910,800
17,690,667
15,892,857
939,346
1,110,553
23,653,483
22,255,639
1,204,991
1,043,910
$ 610,570,044
$ 538,024,375
482,331
523,009
13,844,228
18,695,297
222,784
275,382
8,376,857
8,012,802
23,653,483
22,255,639
3,727,026
2,589,965
50,306,709
52,352,094
541,317,382
469,003,604
Temporarily restricted
3,350,673
3,781,321
Permanently restricted
15,595,280
12,887,356
560,263,335
485,672,281
$ 610,570,044
$ 538,024,375
Investments, at market
Charitable remainder trusts:
Trusteed assets
Future interests receivable, net of present value at
December 31, 2004 and 2003 of estimated future annuity
payments of $3,158,528 and $2,350,865, respectively
Trusteed assets held for others
Other assets
TOTAL ASSETS
LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS
LIABILITIES:
Accounts payable and accrued expenses
Grants payable
Charitable remainder trusts:
Trust beneficiary distributions payable
Annuity payment liability to beneficiaries, at net present value
Liability for trusteed assets held for others
Funds held as agency endowments
TOTAL LIABILITIES
NET ASSETS:
Unrestricted
TOTAL NET ASSETS
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS
The Foundation’s capacity to serve the community is tied directly to it ability to preserve and enhance its financial assets. To ensure that
the goals of the Foundation continue to be met, the Board of Directors has developed investment policies and guidelines that provide for
prudent asset management. An investment committee, composed of Board members and volunteers knowledgeable in the investment
field, oversees the investment activities of the Foundation. The committee receives periodic performance evaluations from an outside
consultant. Please contact Vera Bennett, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, to request a complete copy of the Foundation’s
investment policies and guidelines.
32
STATEMENT OF ACTIVITIES
Year Ended December 31, 2004
(with comparative totals for the
year ended December 31, 2003)
2004
UNRESTRICTED
2003
TEMPORARILY PERMANENTLY
RESTRICTED
RESTRICTED
TOTAL
TOTAL
SUPPORT, REVENUES
AND GAINS
Donations and bequests
130,203,491
Federal and state awards
1,924,690
Investment income, net of
custodial, advisor and
management fees in
2004 of $897,959
10,505,840
Net realized and unrealized gains
(losses) on investments
23,673,111
Net realized and unrealized gains
(losses) on donated securities
9,164
Change in net value of
charitable remainder trusts
Other income, net
Release of restrictions
TOTAL SUPPORT,
REVENUES AND GAINS
1,407,351
21,426
131,610,842 106,053,825
1,924,690
3,387,548
1,468
10,507,308
8,026,377
6,842
23,701,379
38,594,309
9,164
114,467
1,262,211
2,096,922
165,580
$ 168,578,798
(6,164,355)
1,376,678
1,239,920
2,096,922
1,280,136
(165,580)
$ 1,377,664
$ 1,270,521 $ 171,226,983 $ 152,417,760
GRANTS AND OPERATING
EXPENSES
Grants Awarded
88,172,371
88,172,371
49,692,603
General and administrative
1,739,587
1,739,587
1,819,646
Development
1,256,862
1,256,862
943,414
Programs
5,467,109
5,462,109
4,815,074
8,463,558
8,463,558
7,578,134
$ 96,635,929
$ 96,635,929
$ 57,270,737
74,591,054
95,147,023
OPERATING EXPENSES:
TOTAL OPERATING EXPENSES
TOTAL GRANTS AND
OPERATING EXPENSES
CHANGE IN NET ASSETS
Net Assets, beginning of year
as originally stated
Reclassification of restrictions
71,942,869
1,377,664
1,270,521
469,003,604
3,781,321
12,887,356
(1,808,312)
1,437,403
370,909
485,672,281 390,525,258
Net Assets, beginning of
year as restated
469,374,513
1,973,009
14,324,759
485,672,281
Net Assets, end of year
541,317,382
3,350,673
15,595,280
560,263,335
485,672,281
33
2003–2005 ENDOWMENT GRANTS
Hundreds of local residents have left a legacy locally through Peninsula
Community Foundation’s Endowment for the Community. The following
grants are made possible thanks to their foresight and generosity over the
last 40 years. Grants are listed under the Foundation’s eight focus areas.
ARTS & CULTURE
PORTFOLIO
$1,023,039
Art in Action $6,000 Support for a
Strategic Planning Project.
Arts Council Silicon Valley $20,000
General operating support in 2003
and 2004.
Arts Council Silicon Valley $2,500
Sponsorship of the 2004 Silicon
Va l l e y A r t s a n d B u s i n e s s A w a r d s
(ABBY) luncheon.
Auxiliary to the San Mateo Performing
Arts Center $10,000 Support to repair
and refurbish worn seats at the San
Mateo Performing Arts Center.
Bread & Roses $12,000 Support for
free, high-quality art performances for
children, teens, adults, and elders who
live in institutions or are otherwise
isolated from society in San Mateo
and northern Santa Clara counties.
B u r l i n g a m e A r t S o c i e t y $ 2 ,700
Support in 2003, 2004 and 2005 for
the annual Spring Art Show.
C a l i f o r n i a B a c h S o c i e t y $4,000
Support for a Peninsula performance
of Mozart’s Requiem in 2003 and of
Heinrich Shutz’s Cantiones Sacrae in
2005 in Palo Alto.
C i t y A r t s o f S a n M a t e o $4,000
Support for the 2004 and 2005
Central Park Music Series.
City of Foster City $6,000 Sponsorship of the Summer Concert Series
and other city-sponsored activities in
2003, 2004 and 2005.
Community School of Music & Arts
$50,000 General operating support.
Djerassi Resident Artists Program
$20,500 Support for a Peninsula artist’s
residency in 2003, 2004 and 2005.
Drawbridge $20,300 Support for three
weekly art programs for homeless
children in San Mateo County.
Fiesta Gardens International School
$2,000 Support for an artist residency
program.
Foothill College $4,000 Support for the
Dallas Black Dance Residency Program,
which included performances for
2000 mid-Peninsula K–12 students, a
master class for advanced students of
dance and a public performance.
34
Foundation for the Fine & Performing
Arts $2,000 Support for the annual
district-wide concert.
Grantmakers in the Arts $200 Support
for annual membership.
Hidden Villa $3,000 Support for a
Plein Air Painting Day during which
painters from local art guilds spend
the day painting and socializing with
visitors who watch the progress of
the painters.
Hillbarn Theatre $10,000 Support for
a capital campaign feasibility study.
Hillbarn Theatre $7,500 Support
for the Summer Theater Arts
Conservancy Program.
Hillbarn Theatre $6,000 Support to
work with a development consultant
to build Hillbarn Theatre’s major
donor program.
Historical Society of South San
Francisco, Inc. $8,450 Support to
purchase a computer and hire a parttime staff person to create a database.
Kate Connell & Oscar Melara $2,000
Support through Coastal Arts League
as fiscal sponsor to enable two artists
to create murals depicting the work
experience of local people from
diverse communities during the last
century for display on SamTrans buses
and at the Coastal Arts League Gallery
in Half Moon Bay.
KCSM TV & Radio $5,000 Support for
the production and performance of a
play entitled, “The Sunny Side of the
Street: The Life of Dorothy Fields.”
Lyle Gomes $9,706 Support through
ARTshare as fiscal sponsor for multiple
exhibitions of Imagining Eden:
Connecting Landscapes, a collection
of landscape photographs.
M a g n i f i c a t $1,500 S u p p o r t fo r a
concert of music by the 17th century
composer Barbara Strozzi at the First
Lutheran Church in Palo Alto.
Mid-Peninsula Housing Services
Corporation $18,500 Support for the
Moonridge Art Project, an afterschool
a r t p r o g r a m f o r c h i l d r e n o f l o wincome, Spanish-speaking families.
Northern California Grantmakers
$5,000 S u p p o r t t o s t r e n g t h e n t h e
Arts Loan Fund that helps nonprofit
arts organizations experiencing cash
flow problems.
2003–2005 ENDOWMENT GRANTS
P a c i f i c a P e r f o r m a n c e s $10,0 0 0
Support for administrative salaries.
Communications and Marketing
Director in 2003 and 2004.
Pacifica Performances $600 Support
for a Labor Day concert in Pacifica.
San Mateo County Historical
Association $4,250 Support for the
Annual History Makers dinner in
2003 and 2004.
Pa l o A l t o A r t C e n t e r $18,000
Support for the Cultural Kaleidoscope
Program in the 2003–2004 and
2004–2005 school years.
Pa r k w a y H e i g h t s M i d d l e S c h o o l
$24,266 Support for the music program.
Pe n i n s u l a B a l l e t T h e a t r e $5,000
Support for Board of Directors training.
Peninsula Girls Chorus $7,500 Support
for the tuition assistance program.
Peninsula Symphony Association
$10,600 Support for concerts in 2003
and 2004.
Peninsula Symphony Association
$8,500 Support to develop fundraising
and marketing plans.
Sanchez Art Center $25,000 Support
for the Arts Education and Programs
Initiative.
Sequoia Adult School $500 Support
for transportation costs for older
adults living in retirement homes and
convalescent hospitals, or attending
adult day care facilities and senior
c e n t e r s , t o a t t e n d S a n Fr a n c i s c o
Symphony’s open rehearsal.
Silicon Valley Art Museum $3,075
Support for two half-day facilitated
workshops that will include planning,
preparation and facilitation of sessions
and agreements for collaboration in
operations of the Manor House Gallery.
Performing Arts Workshop $10,000
Support for the Artists-in-Schools
program in San Mateo County during
the 2003–2004 school year.
T h e a t r e Wo r k s $ 10 0 , 2 50 G e n e r a l
operating support in 2003 and 2004.
Redwood City Parks, Recreation and
Community Services Department
$2,500 Support for “Art for your Heart”
program at the Community Wellness
Festival in September 2004.
Z o h a r D a n c e C o m p a n y $ 3 0 , 50 0
Support in 2003 and 2004 for
IndepenDANCE, a series of weekly
dance classes for at-risk children at
schools and community centers in
San Mateo County.
Valerie Lapin Ganley $5,000 Support
Ragazzi, The Peninsula Boys Chorus through Working Partnerships USA
$13,000 S u p p o r t f o r t h e F l e x i b l e as fiscal sponsor to edit footage from
“The Immigrant Workers Freedom Ride,”
Tuition Assistance Program.
a half-hour video that documents a 12Ragazzi, The Peninsula Boys Chorus day bus tour by immigrant workers.
$5,000 Support to enable the executive
director to participate in the Executive Young at Heart $5,000 Support for
Program for Nonprofit Leaders in the programs at senior citizen convalescent
Arts in the Stanford Graduate School and residential facilities in northern
Santa Clara county.
of Business.
San Francisco Opera Association
$40,000 Support in 2003 and 2004
to enable students from San Mateo
and northern Santa Clara counties to
participate in the Opera’s educational
programs.
San Francisco Shakespeare Festival
$7,500 Support for Free Shakespeare in
the Park in San Mateo’s Central Park.
San Mateo County ARTshare $10,000
General operating support.
San Mateo County ARTshare $3,625
Support for the second annual Kidz
Arts Day, a hands-on art experience
for children and their parents.
San Mateo County Historical
Association $138,000 Support for a
ARTIST RESIDENCY
PROGRAM $76,439
The Ar tist Residency program offers
support to individual artists living in
San Mateo County and Northern Santa
Clara County (Palo Alto, Mountain View,
Los Altos and Los Altos Hills) to create
their own work in a community setting
and to work with community members
in the production of art. The Residency
seeks to foster long-term and meaningful
interaction between an individual artist
and an ongoing group of participants
through workshops and classes. From
January 2003 through June 2005, the
following individuals received PCF
Artist Residency grants:
Carla Brooke $24,939 Support for the Gary D. Beswick $5,000 Support for
creation and installation of mosaic t w o C h a m b e r M u s i c C o n c e r t s ,
and tile art inspired by children of “ C o n c e r t o s ” i n M a r c h 2 0 0 5 a n d
families living in a Peninsula Habitat “American Elegies” in May 2005 at the
for Humanity housing development Burlingame United Methodist Church.
in East Palo Alto.
H a r l e y G a b e r $5,000 S u p p o r t t o
Carla Brooke $500 Honorarium in produce a new abstract of Die Plage,
appreciation for the artist’s attendance an installation about German hisa n d e x h i b i t i o n of w o r k a t P C F ’s tory from 1918 through 1945 to be
Garden Party.
presented in lectures at four Peninsula Senior Centers.
Marianne Thomas $25,000 Support
to enable children at Mid-Peninsula H a r r i e t e E s t e l B e r m a n $4 ,6 0 0
Boys and Girls Club in San Mateo to Support to develop an experimental
learn the art of seeing through the use documentary video partially based
of digital and film cameras.
on 200 teacups constructed from
consumer recycled tin containers.
Marianne Thomas $500 Honorarium
in appreciation for the artist’s atten- Heidi Patterson $600 Support for
dance and exhibition of work at PCF’s an Instructor at the Susan Hayward
Garden Party.
S c h o o l o f Da n c i n g t o a t t e n d t h e
American Academy of Ballet Teachers
Michael Turner $25,000 Support to
Intensive two-day workshop focusing
provide musical enrichment and
on very young children.
educational programming to youth
at Phoenix Academy in East Palo Alto, Janis Mat tox $3,000 Support for
and for composing original music to the performance of “Solombra,” an
be performed at a community concert o r i g i n a l m u s i c a l c o m p o s i t i o n fo r
with Perfect Harmony.
soprano, violin, cello, enhanced
piano and virtual acoustics at the
Michael Turner $500 Honorarium
Sanchez Concert Hall.
i n a p p r e c i a t i o n f o r t h e a r t i s t ’s
attendance and performance at PCF’s J u n g H a e K i m $5,000 S u p p o r t t o
Garden Party.
record a CD of Early English Keyboard
music for solo harpsichord.
PENINSULA ARTISTS FUND
Kathryn Dunlevie $3,970 Support
$105,093
The Peninsula Artists Fund is dedicated to create an installation of six larget o t h e p r o d u c t i o n a n d e x h i b i t i o n o r s c a l e p h o t o g r a p h y-b a s e d m i x e d
performance of new work by artists living media paintings in a Palo Alto gallery.
and working in San Mateo County
and northern Santa Clara County. All
m e d i a a r e e l i g i b l e , i n c l u ding visual
arts, performing arts, literary arts and
horticultural arts.
Amy Da-Peng King $2,300 Support to
travel to China and attend a 3-month
course on Chinese brush painting at
the National Academy of Fine Arts.
A t s u r o R i l e y $5 ,000 S u p p o r t t o
c o m p l e t e a b o o k-l e n g t h w o r k o f
poetry entitled “Romey’s Order.”
Beth Grossman $3,000 Support for
mixed-media found-object assemblages
examining relationships between men
and women as they reconcile the myth
of the middle class dream to the reality
of everyday life.
Donna McCraney $3,850 Support for
six workshops on Central African
Dance and song for adults and children,
culminating in performances at the
East Palo Alto Senior Center and the
Mexican Heritage Plaza in San Jose.
Dot ti Cichon $5,000 Support for
Urban Entomology, a project to create
l a r g e-s c a l e m i x e d m e d i a i m a g e s
juxtaposing insects with indications
of human interference with nature,
such as rust and debris.
Duke Collins $4,000 Support to create
a mural of a portion of Michaelangelo’s
“David” on the back entrance wall of
the Redwood City Art Center.
Ellen Silva $5,000 Support to design
and paint two science murals at JFK
Elementary School in Daly City.
Keith Lee $4,795 Support for studio
t i m e a n d t o u s e a Po l a r o i d 2 0 x 2 4
camera to create work exploring the
theme of the human body.
L a u r e n M a y e r $4,000 S u p p o r t t o
create a musical about California
history for fourth grade students.
Lee Knight, Jr. $2,900 Support for
the five poets of Team Palo Alto 2004
to travel to Big Sur and St. Louis for
regional and national Poetry Slam
competitions and to perform locally
after the competitions.
Leigh Ann Windell $600 Support for
the co-director of the Susan Hayward
School of Dancing to at tend the
American Academy of Ballet Teachers
Intensive two-day workshop focusing
on very young children.
M a u r o D i N u c c i $ 5 ,000 S u p p o r t
for post-production expenses for
a 90-minute documentary film, The
Gypsies of Rajastan.
M a x i n e S o l o m o n $4 , 253 S u p p o r t
for an exhibition of paintings and
drawings at the Mountain View Center
for Performing Arts and in public
areas of Mountain View City Hall.
Maya Adam $4,800 Support to
complete a documentary video about
the world of professional ballet.
Meredith Hagedorn $5,000 Support
to produce No Exit by Jean-Paul Sartre
at the Pear Avenue Theatre.
Nurit Jugend $3,475 Support for
an exhibition of paintings and the
performance of an original musical
composition for piano.
Patricia Page $3,150 Support to write
a memoir, “Pieces” that expresses in
literary form the artist’s experience
of the year following her son’s suicide.
Ric Louchard $5,000 Support for three
outdoor performances of an original
composition by a Saxophone Quintet.
Stuart Givot $600 Support to conduct
a weekly two-hour watercolor lesson
for up to 10 older adults at the Fair
Oaks Senior Center.
Virginia Iglesias $5,000 Support
to develop and choreograph music
and rehearse for an Alma Flamenca
Performance at Stanford’s Dinkelspiel
Auditorium.
Western Ballet $1,200 Support for
the artistic director’s attendance at
American Ballet Theatre’s Teacher
Workshop in Costa Mesa.
EMERGING ARTS FUND
$110,985
The Emerging Arts Fund supports the
production of cultural work in San Mateo
County and northern Santa Clara County
that is of high artistic quality and deeply
reflective of culturally diverse communities.
Groups or individuals must produce
works that are of high artistic quality,
and that are deeply reflective of
culturally diverse, inner-city, rural or
tribal or immigrant communities. The
program seeks to support organizations
and individuals who consistently
demonstrate ar tistic excellence and
increasing professionalism.
Ajani Husbands / Taurean Brown
$6,000 S u p p o r t f o r t h e E n i g m a
Creative Expression Series, a 10-week
writing workshop for 30 to 35 ethnically
diverse high school students from
East Palo Alto and Menlo Park.
Art in Action $6,000 Support for five
displays of artwork by students in
kindergarten through grade six at four
public libraries and Kepler’s Books.
A z a h a r Da n c e Fo u n d a t i o n $3,500
Support for a Flamenco Dance
Performance by ten students of four
to five Bay Area Flamenco teachers at
the Cubberley Theatre in Palo Alto.
A z a h a r Da n c e Fo u n d a t i o n $2,500
Support to bring 10 lecture/video/
demonstration sessions of flamenco
and flamenco-jazz fusion dance, with
one or two dancers and a guitarist
into local middle and high schools.
Belle Haven/Menlo Park Collaborative
$5,280 Support for a three part dance
series, in which 255 students from
Belle Haven School would receive
instruction in African dance and
drumming, Mexican Dance and
Pacific Island dance.
Chi Chen $6,000 Support to transcribe
older Chinese songs for cello, and
to compose five new pieces, record
them, and conduct two performances
and three lecture demonstrations at
schools in the Mountain View-Los
Altos High School District, Community
School of Music and Arts and Avalon
Arts and Yoga.
Daly City Peninsula Partnership
Collaborative $4,350 Support for
Mexican and Filipino dance classes
for 120 fourth through sixth grade
students at eight Daly City elementary
schools.
Eastside College Preparatory School
$6,000 Support for 14 drama students
and nine photography students at
Eastside College Preparatory High
School to interview and photograph
r e s i d e n t s of E a s t Pa l o A l t o fo r a
student performance and exhibition
of photographs at Eastside’s Theatre
and the Mountain View Center for
Performing Arts, inspired by the book
and play “Crowns.”
Greg Orduyan $5,000 Support for the
installation and exhibition of mosaics
and paintings at San Mateo Medical
Center by two immigrant artists of
Armenian descent.
Hidden Villa $3,970 Partial support
for three evenings of multicultural
storytelling and songs from Native
American, African American and
Asian cultures.
Kate Connell & Oscar Melara $6,000
Support to create murals depicting
the work experience of local people
from diverse communities during the
last century for display on SamTrans
buses and at the Coastal Arts League
Gallery in Half Moon Bay.
Mark Wieser $6,000 Support to enable
80 culturally diverse fourth and fifth
grade students at John Gill School
in Redwood City to use digital video
technology to create, develop a n d
present stories based on their life
experiences during the school year,
culminating in a film festival.
Peninsula Youth Orchestra $6,000
Support for an educational and
multicultural concert by more than
300 emerging young musicians from
t h e Pe n i n s u l a Yo u t h O r c h e s t r a ’s
Preparatory Division that features
music from around the world, as well
as an original composition combining
national anthems into a single work.
Perfect Harmony Ensemble $6,000
G e n e r a l o p e r a t i n g s u p p o r t fo r a n
East Palo Alto-based music program
focusing on Jazz, Blues and Gospel
music, including enrichment, instruction and performance for 60 students at
the School of Wisdom and Knowledge,
50 students in after-school programs
and 40 participants at Project WeHope.
Pescadero Foundation $6,000 Support
to conduct videotaped oral history
interviews with six community elders,
to be edited into a 50 to 60 minute
documentary.
Piacere Ensemble $5,385 Support to
enable Piacere Ensemble to compose
songs from poems written by 22
students from 4th and 5th grades at
Castro School to be performed with
the students.
2003 –2005 ENDOWMENT GRANTS
35
Raices de Mexico $3,000 Support to
produce five performances featuring
30 children performing dances from
México, India and Hawaii to audiences
at Costaño School in East Palo Alto, John
Gill School in Redwood City, Mountain
View Center for the Performing Arts
and the Palo Alto Art Center.
Sally Rayn $6,000 Support for an
after-school class for 40 fourth through
eighth grade students to study Mexican
murals and to draw, paint, mix colors,
design and create a mural at Selby
Lane School.
Sarah E. Kremer $6,000 Support for
65 youth to receive mask-making or
sacred space/altar box-making classes
at Hillcrest School, County Juvenile
Probation Girls’ Program, Youth and
Family Enrichment Services, Women’s
Recovery Association/Tracey’s Place
of H o p e a n d A d o l e s c e nt Services
through Children and Family Services
with an exhibition at the Pacific Art
League in Palo Alto.
S t a n f o r d J a z z Wo r k s h o p $ 6,0 0 0
S u p p o r t fo r a c o n c e r t combining
jazz and traditional Indian music
at Dinkelspiel Auditorium on the
S t a n fo r d U n i v e r s i t y c a mpus. The
project includes a preconcert talk and
free interactive afternoon program
for children age 13 and under.
World Council for Arts and Culture
$6,000 Support to present a performance artist and mask maker and to
conduct performances and lecture
demonstrations at Capuchino High
School and Community School of
Music and Arts.
FIRST FIVE YEARS
PORTOLIO
$2,370,754
Action Alliance for Children $8,000
Support for an invitational strategy
session about the importance of
s o c i a l /e m o t i o n a l d e v e l o p m e n t i n
preschoolers. Additional support for
two special issues of the Children’s
A d v o c a t e a n d fo r t h e n ewspaper’s
Spanish language pages.
Bay Area Early Childhood Funders
$9,000 Three years of membership
support to provide staffing and
resource support for meetings involving
early childhood funders.
Bayshore Child Care Services
$60,500 Capital support for “Our Second
H o m e ,” a n e a r l y c h i l d h ood family
support center designed to assist
families, teachers and caregivers.
Child Care Coordinating Council
of San Mateo County, Inc. $100,000
General operating support in 2003
and 2004.
Child Care Coordinating Council
of San Mateo County, Inc. $10,000
Support for the 2003 Family Forum
focusing on children’s fitness and
health, and the 2004 Family Forum
focusing on fatherhood.
36
Child Care Coordinating Council
of San Mateo County, Inc. $10,000
Support for a researcher to survey
local land use policies and planning
procedures related to child care in
San Mateo County, and to produce
a summary report.
Child Care Coordinating Council
of San Mateo County, Inc. $6,500
Support for the annual Leadership
Awards events in 2004 and 2005.
Child Development Policy Institute
Education Fund $10,000 Support for
public opinion polling and related
activities for the Preschool for All project.
C h i l d h o o d M a t t e r s , I n c . $37,500
Support for Childhood Matters and
Nuestros Niños Radio Shows.
City of Menlo Park $78,060 Support for
Belle Haven/Menlo Park Collaborative
programs in 2005–2006.
Coastside Parents Nursery $2,500
General operating support.
Community Education Center $18,050
To support the food program, the parent
education series and the increase in
workers compensation insurance in
fiscal year 2003–2004.
Community Education Center $17,000
General operating support for fiscal
year 2004–2005.
Family Connections $30,000 Support
to create a resource tool to standardize
the curriculum for preschool children
and salary support for two teachers
and the Education Coordinator.
Family Connections $5,000 Support
to pay for the consultant’s fee associated with the organization’s executive
director transition.
Joy of Sports Foundation $20,000
Support to expand the Bay Area Star
Power for Preschoolers program in
San Mateo and northern Santa Clara
counties.
K I D P OW E R $10,000 S u p p o r t fo r
staff training on how to incorporate
KIDPOWER’s children’s safety skill
training into the Head Start programs
in San Mateo County.
Pa l C a r e , I n c . $9,000 S u p p o r t fo r
board and staff training in relation to
the capital campaign and to update
campaign materials.
Palo Alto Community Child Care
$25,000 Support to convert the outdated
accounting system.
Palo Alto Community Child Care
$ 15 , 5 0 0 S u p p o r t f o r t h e C h i l d
Development Subsidy Program.
Parents Leadership Institute $9,270
Support for two leadership training
programs, involving 45 preschool and
after-school care teachers, 25 Spanishspeaking parents, and a total of 24
weekly classes.
Peninsula Community Foundation
$620,000 General operating support
for the Peninsula Partnership for
Children, Youth & Families in 2003,
2004 and 2005.
2003 –2005 ENDOWMENT GRANTS
Peninsula Community Foundation
$90,000 Support for the Peninsula
Pa r t n e r s h i p ’s C h i l d r e n’s R e p o r t
Initiative in 2003, 2004 and 2005.
Peninsula Community Foundation
$165,000 Support in 2003 and 2004 for
the Center for Venture Philanthropy’s
Raising A Reader® expansion into
Santa Clara County.
Peninsula Community Foundation
$54,000 Support for the Peninsula
Partnership to produce Kinder Kits
that include books and basic supplies
for creative projects for four and five
year-old children at 60 San Mateo
County elementary schools.
Peninsula Community Foundation
$110,155 Support for School Readiness
I n i t i a t i v e , a p r o j e c t of Pe n i n s u l a
Partnership.
Peninsula Community Foundation
$38,900 Support for the Center for
Venture Philanthropy’s Raising A Reader®.
Sequoia District Adult School $23,250
Support to improve the quality of the
early child care and child development
experiences of the preschool-a g e
children of the adult school students.
HEALTH & WELLNESS
PORTFOLIO
$2,506,713
Adolescent Counseling Serv i c e s
$25,000 Support to provide on-site
individual and group counseling to
students at five secondary schools in
Palo Alto and Menlo-Atherton High
School and their families.
Adolescent Counseling Serv i c e s
$10,000 S u p p o r t fo r a n e x e c u t i v e
director transition plan that w i l l
include executive coaching, staff and
board retreats, professional development and a consultant.
African American Community
Health Advisory Committee $10,000
Peninsula Community Foundation Support to launch the “Build i n g
$5,000 Support for the Peninsula Part- a Healthy Body and Soul Through
nership’s Healthy Kids for School P h y s i c a l A c t i v i t y ” p r o g r a m t h a t
focuses on increasing physical activity
Initiative.
and nutrition education.
Peninsula Community Foundation
$ 3,000 S u p p o r t t o p a y s u b s t i t u t e A l z h e i m e r ’s A s s o c i a t i o n $17,000
teachers’ fees to enable preschool Support to continue “Memories In
and elementary teachers to attend the The Making,” a fine arts program for
San Mateo County School Readiness people with Alzheimers and related
Assessment Forum, sponsored by the disorders, at three facilities in San
Peninsula Partnership for Children, Mateo County.
Youth and Families.
Peninsula Family YMCA $100,000
Capital support for furnishings, a
play structure and a van to be used at
a new child care facility in South San
Francisco.
Redwood City Library Foundation
$60,000 Support for the Traveling
Storytime program.
San Mateo County Health Services
Agency $450,000 General operating
support for the Prenatal to Three
Initiative in 2003, 2004 and 2005.
San Mateo County Health Services
Agency $26,000 Support for strategic
planning to assess the Prenatal to Three
Initative and its future funding options.
San Mateo County Library $35,819
Continued support for Reach Out and
Read’s expansion to San Mateo County,
including funding for Spanish and
English preschool books.
San Mateo County Office of Education
$60,000 Support for Early Childhood
Language Development Institute
programs.
San Mateo Parents’ Nursery School
$20,000 Support in 2003 to renovate an
outdoor art area and in 2005 to renovate
the exterior classroom patio space.
San Mateo-Foster City School District
$ 28,150 S u p p o r t f o r p r o f e s s i o n a l
development for preschool and
kindergarten teachers.
Sequoia Children’s Center $10,000
Interim operating support while
focusing leadership efforts on
improving organizational sustainability.
Asian and Pacific Islander Wellness
Center $25,000 Support for the OHANA
HIV Care Services Program in San
Mateo County.
Blind Babies Foundation $22,500
Support for the Off To A Good Start
Program, an early intervention
program, in San Mateo County.
Coastside Adult Day Health Center
$10,000 General operating support
for programs serving Alzheimers and
Dementia patients living along the
coastside of San Mateo County.
Coastside Family Medical Center
$5,000 Support for the Just For Teens
clinic that will expand and improve
existing services and wellness for
adolescents and teens on the Coast.
Coastside Health Committee
$2,500 Support for the production of
Coastside on the Move!, a communitybased fair that addresses health
related issues and the benefits of
incorporating movement and exercise
into daily life.
Community Breast Health Project
$6,200 Support to improve access to
care for medically underserved women.
Community Health Awareness
Council $50,000 Support in 2004
and 2005 for the Village Program at
Castro, Slater and Landels Elementary
Schools in Mountain View.
Daly City Youth Health Center $72,937
Support for sustainability planning,
implementation and evaluation.
Daly City Youth Health Center $11,750
General operating support in 2004
a n d s u p p o r t fo r s t i p e n d s fo r t h e
Mentoring and Peer Health Education
Training programs in 2005.
E l C a m i n o H o s p i t a l Fo u n d a t i o n
$27,860 Support for Mountain View
RotaCare clinic’s new women services
program that will offer free gynecological
services to low-income, uninsured
women in northern Santa Clara County.
El Centro de Libertad, Freedom Center
$50,000 Support for the Adolescent
treatment Program that provides substance abuse treatment and prevention
services for low-income, high-risk
San Mateo County adolescents.
Exhale $5,000 Support to expand
outreach activities to the Spanishspeaking community on the Peninsula.
Family & Children Services $100,000
Support in 2003 and 2004 for mental
health services in northern Santa Clara
and southern San Mateo counties.
Free at Last $130,000 General operating
support in 2003 and 2004 to sustain
key services and to build the organization’s development capacity.
F u nd e r s C o n c e r n e d A bout AIDS
$1,000 General operating support.
G l a u c o m a R e s e a r c h Foundation
$17,000 Support for one year’s printing
costs for an issue of “Gleams”, an
informational and educational newsletter for people with glaucoma.
G r a n t m a k e r s i n H e a l t h $11,0 0 0
Annual membership support in 2003,
2004 and 2005 and support for Grantmakers In Health’s Annual Meeting
“Agents of Change: Health Philanthropy’s
Role in Transforming Systems” in
San Francisco.
H.E.L.P. for Kids $6,080 Support for
an innovative exercise and health education program for middle school students
in the Redwood City School District.
Hospital Consortium of San Mateo
County $10,000 Support for the 2004
Community Assessment Project of
the Healthy Community Collaborative
of San Mateo County.
Jewish Family and Children’s Services
$100,000 Support for the Early Childhood Mental Health Project at the
Redwood City Child Development
Program, Skyline College’s preschool
program and the San Mateo County
Early Head Start/Head Start program.
Latina Breast Cancer Agency $10,000
Support to expand Mujeres Cuidando
Mujeres into San Mateo County, a
program that provides ongoing breast
health education and free clinical exams
a n d m a m m o g r a m s t o l o w-i n c o m e
medically underserved Latina women.
Legal Aid Society of San Mateo County
$5,000 Support for the collaborating
agencies of the Preemie Project to
attend Zero to Three’s National Training Institute.
Mission Hospice, Inc. of San Mateo
County $10,000 Support for community
out-reach and program development
to increase access to hospice care among
the African American community in
San Mateo County.
Mental Health Association of San Mateo
County $50,000 Matching grant for the
Belmont Apartments capital project.
Mental Health Association of San Mateo
C o u n t y $6,240 S u p p o r t t o e n g a g e
Groundspring.org in a fund development project.
N A M I S a n M a t e o C o u n t y $10,000
Support to expand operations and
services to people with mental illness
and their families in San Mateo County.
planning and development.
Ravenswood Family Health Center
$12,000 Support for an MBA student
summer intern in 2003 and for
medical students working on summer
projects at the clinic in 2004.
Redwood City 2020 $78,000 Support
for the salary of a Director for the
Teen Resource and Wellness Center at
Sequoia High School.
Samaritan House $70,000 Support for
the Free Clinic of San Mateo.
Samaritan House $20,500 Support to
purchase medical equipment.
aimed at preventing adolescent pregnancy,
HIV and STDs through school-based
curricula, parent involvement and
youth development.
University of California San Francisco
$26,000 Support for a school-based
mental health program by the UCSF
Center on Deafness for deaf students
in San Mateo County.
Women’s Recovery Association $50,000
Support to participate in Pathways
to Recovery, a Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation initiative that teaches
substance abuse treatment organizations
to use process improvement techniques
to improve treatment access and
client retention.
San Mateo County Health Services
National Center for Equine Facilitated
A g e n c y $ 50,0 0 0 S u p p o r t f o r t h e
Therapy $3,500 Support for the proSupplemental Meals on Wheels Program. Women’s Recovery Association $11,000
duction and printing of a new set
Support for the New Directions Program
of informational brochures and a San Mateo County Health Services
Agency $2,500 Support for the Healthy fo r w o m e n i n l o n g-t e r m c h e m i c a l
presentation folder.
Communities Summit: Ending Health dependency recovery.
Okizu Foundation $8,000 Support to
Disparities.
HEALTH FUND
enable children living in San Mateo
and northern Santa Clara counties San Mateo County Health Services $382,581
who are affected by pediatric cancer A g e n c y $2,200 S u p p o r t t o p r o v i d e Peninsula Community Foundation’s
incentives to physicians and dentists Health Fund aimed to increase and
to attend Camp Okizu.
to participate in the evaluation of the improve the accessibility and affordPacifica Collaborative $29,715 Support
San Mateo Children’s Health Initiative. a b i l i t y o f h e a l t h c a r e t o m e d i c a l l y
to continue the on-site case management
underserved and uninsured populations
program at Sunset Ridge Elementary San Mateo County Health Services
throughout San Mateo County and in
School and support for the Pacifica Agency $2,000 Support to analyze data
northern Santa Clara County. Launched
about 0 to 18 year-olds collected in
Collaborative Coordinator position.
with a 1994 grant from Blue Cross of
the First Five Family Survey.
California, the Fund was supported by
Pathways Hospice Foundation $5,000
Support to foster senior staff leadership San Mateo Medical Center $40,000 Peninsula Community Foundation’s
Support for a pilot project to provide Community Endowment and private
development.
dental care for low-income residents donors concerned about the availability
Peninsula Community Foundation
of San Mateo County through a program of quality health care for low-income
$50,300 Support for the Children’s
involving diagnosis, screening, and trans- Peninsula residents. In March 2004, in
Health Initiative Fund.
portation to University of the Pacific an effort to improve the Foundation’s
Peninsula Community Foundation School of Dentistry in San Francisco. responsiveness to community needs, PCF
$22,000 S u p p o r t fo r Pe n i n s u l a
Santa Clara Family Health Foundation decided to end the annual Health Fund
Community Foundation’s Health Fund.
$85,000 Support for the Healthy Kids Request for Proposals and integrate the
Health Fund grants into PCF’s broader
Peninsula Stroke Association $7,000 Program in northern Santa Clara County,
Health & Wellness portfolio. This decision
Support for the Community Health a program of Santa Clara’s Children’s
H e a l t h I n i t i a t i v e w h i c h p r o v i d e s reflects the importance of health grantEducation Program.
health insurance to indigent children. making in PCF ’s overall Community
Peninsula Volunteers, Inc. $10,000
Endowment investments. From its incepSupport to expand community edu- Sequoia Hospital Foundation $500 tion in 1995 to 2003, the Health Fund
cation and outreach for the Rosener Support for fall prevention services awarded 96 grants, totaling $3,172,575.
House Dementia Services Program in to identified low-income seniors.
In 2003 and spring of 2004, the following
Menlo Park.
Sonrisas Community Dental Clinic o r g a n i z a t i o n s r e c e i v e d P C F H e a l t h
Planned Parenthood Golden Gate $ 75,000 S u p p o r t fo r t h e e x e c u t i v e Fund grants:
$10,000 Support to implement the director position.
California Health Initiatives, Inc.
Corporate “Re-Invention” Project.
Sonrisas Community Dental Clinic $25,000 Support for health insurance
Prevent Blindness, Northern California $10,000 S u p p o r t f o r m a n a g e m e n t outreach, enrollment and retention
$25,000 S u p p o r t t o p r o v i d e 1 0–1 5 consulting services related to strategic a s s i s t a n c e t a r g e t i n g u n d e r s e r v e d
glaucoma screening sessions for 250 and operational planning and Board Filipino-American, Chinese and other
Asian communities in northern San
development.
adults in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Mateo County.
P u b l i c H e a l t h I n s t i t u t e $40,000 Stamp Out Stigma $18,000 Operating
Support for Bay Area Regional Health support in 2003 and 2004 for educational Coastside Adult Day Health Center
activities, a part-time position and $6,250 Support for the Family Caregiver
Inequities Initiative.
program that serves older adults and
volunteer stipends and travel costs.
Ravenswood Family Health Center
provides respite care for their family
$337,750 General operating support Stanford Geriatric Education Center caregivers.
while the clinic pursues long-term $2,000 Support for a two-day regional
support from San Mateo County and conference for health and service Coastside RotaCare Clinic $5,000
providers: “Improving the Health of General operating support to honor
other sources.
Older Women of Color: Identifying Josefina Enriquez for nine years of
Ravenswood Family Health Center
service as a member of the Peninsula
Issues & Developing Strategies.”
$18,100 Support for dental services for
Community Foundation Health Fund
uninsured adults and children with St. Helena Hospital Foundation $1,000 Advisory Committee.
Gift to the Sally Jones Memorial
significant dental needs.
Community Breast Health Project
Garden Fund.
Ravenswood Family Health Center
$10,000 Support for breast cancer
$10,000 Support to hire a consultant Teen Pregnancy Coalition of San screening and breast education for
to write a five-year business plan as Mateo County $150,000 Support in uninsured and underinsured women
part of the clinic’s permanent facility 2003, 2004 and 2005 for core programs under age 40.
2003 –2005 ENDOWMENT GRANTS
37
Community Breast Health Project
$5,000 General operating support to
honor Linda Meier for nine years of
service as a member of the Peninsula
Community Foundation Health Fund
Advisory Committee.
Daly City Youth Health Center $5,000
General operating support to honor
Mary Giammona for nine years of
service as a member of the Peninsula
Community Foundation Health Fund
Advisory Committee.
El Concilio of San Mateo County
$50,000 Support for “Nuestro Canto de
Salud,” a chronic disease management
program targeting underserved
Latinos/Latinas.
Fred Finch Youth Center $35,000
Support to add a full-time therapist
who will enable the agency to launch
a one-year pilot program to provide
quality intensive mental health services
to 20 uninsured youth and their families.
Mission Hospice, Inc. of San Mateo
County $25,000 Support to fill the gap
between the cost of end of life services
and reimbursement from public and
private health programs.
Mission Hospice, Inc. of San Mateo
C o u n t y $5,000 G e n e r a l o p e r a t i n g
support to honor James Hutchinson
for nine years of service as a member
of the Peninsula Community Foundation
Health Fund Advisory Committee.
Pacifica Collaborative $25,131 Support
to provide dental services for uninsured
students at Sunset Ridge Elementary
School in Pacifica as well as enrolling
u n i n s u r e d c h i l d r e n i n M e d i-C a l ,
Healthy Families and Healthy Kids
insurance programs.
P e n i n s u l a Fa m i l y Y M C A $25, 450
Support for Project FOCYS’ affordable
mental health services for low-income
monolingual (Spanish-speaking) county
residents and efforts to enroll eligible
families in available health insurance
programs.
Ravenswood Family Health Center
$50,000 S u p p o r t fo r d e ntal health
services for low-income residents of
southern San Mateo County.
Ravenswood Family Health Center
$5,000 General operating support to
honor Ross Jaffe for nine years of
service as a member of the Peninsula
Community Foundation Health Fund
Advisory Committee.
Ravenswood Family Health Center
$5,000 General operating support to
honor Gordon Russell for nine years of
service as a member of the Peninsula
Community Foundation Health Fund
Advisory Committee.
Tr a i n i n g a n d H e a l t h E d u c a t i o n
Center for Youth $25,750 Continued
support to conduct the Life Skills Program for at-risk youth at Peninsula High
School and in summer health classes.
Fair Oaks Community Center $3,000
Support for the 30th Anniversary
Celebration.
COMMUNITY BUILDING
PORTFOLIO
$1,892,881
Hands on Bay Area $50,000 General
operating support during the merger
of Community Impact and Hands on
San Francisco to become Hands on
Bay Area.
Advocate Initiatives for Grassroots
Access $6,800 Support for a community
resource mapping project of the
Pacific Islander community.
Joint Venture: Silicon Valley Network
$7,500 Support for the annual publication of the Index of Silicon Valley.
American Leadership Forum Silicon
Valley $20,000 Support in 2003, 2004
and 2005 for the Annual Exemplary
Leader Event.
Asian Law Caucus $10,000 Support for
the Access and Democracy Project to
increase Chinese monolingual voter
access and awareness in San Mateo
County.
Association of Fundraising Professionals
– Golden Gate Chapter $2,500 Support
for the 2004 National Philanthropy
Day Luncheon.
Burlingame Police Department $750
Support for a police officer working
with Tongan youth in Central San Mateo
County to travel to Tonga to experience
and learn about the Tongan culture.
Burlingame Public Library $10,000
Support for clean-up operations and
restoration of water damaged books
and media.
Center for Civic Partnerships $2,000
Support for the “Healthy Cities and
Smart Growth: Planning for Healthier
Communities” conference.
City of Redwood City $20,000 Support
in 2003 and 2004 for the development
of a skills-building training for its
Community Builders program.
Commission on the Status of Women
$6,000 Support for the annual Women’s
Hall of Fame dinner in 2003, 2004
and 2005.
Community Development Institute
$4,000 Support for the Juneteenth
Festival in 2004 and 2005.
Community Foundations of America
$5,000 Support to co-sponsor the HNW
Wealth+Values follow-up research study.
C o u n t y of S a n M a t e o $4,881
Support for consultative services to
develop a logic model for the CARON
(Community Action to Reclaim Our
Neighborhood) project managed by
the Sheriff’s Department.
Crown Sphira Productions $1,000
Support the production of a video for
interfaith forums.
Samaritan House $70,000 Support
for staff and supply costs at the Free
Clinic of San Mateo.
Daly City Fire Department $10,000
Support for the purchase of Fireblast
training aids.
San Mateo Medical Center Foundation
$5,000 Support to honor Ann Marie
Silvestri for five years of service as a
member of the Peninsula Community
Foundation Health Fund Advisory
Committee.
Entrepreneurs Foundation $2,500
Sponsorship support for the Entreprenuers Foundation’s CEO Summit.
38
Exhibit at Redwood City Library.
Fair Oaks Community Center $5,000
Support for Long Walk to Freedom
2003 –2005 ENDOWMENT GRANTS
Kainga Tonga U.S.A . $5,000 Support
for The Kingdom of Tongan National
Week celebration.
KC E T $2,500 S u p p o r t t o f i l m a n d
produce the California Connected
Circle of Advisors meeting held at
KQED in San Francisco.
League of Women Voters Education
Fund $15,000 Support for the Smart
Voter project in 2003 and 2004.
Mid-Peninsula Community Media
Center $9,970 Support for candidate
forums on three college campuses.
Northern California Grantmakers
$1,000 Support for the annual Social
Venture Partners (SVP) conference
held in San Francisco.
Nuestra Casa $25,000 Support for the
Adult English as a Second Language
Program and Parent Leadership Institute.
Nuestra Casa $3,000 Support to implement a pilot summer Spanish program
for community advocates in EPA .
O n e E a s t Pa l o A l t o $5,000 G e n e r a l
operating support.
Pacific Islander Community Center
$10,000 Support for program planning
and to conduct outreach community
meetings.
Pacific News Service $5,000 Support
for a multilingual poll of California’s
Asian communities to assess: (1) the
impact of the Tsunami on their lives
and communities and; (2) the role
of ethnic media in mobilizing the
community’s awareness and support
for the region.
Pacifica School District $5,000 Support
for a communications training for
elected officials and the senior staff
in the City of Pacifica and the Pacifica
School District in order to engender a
common language to address issues.
Peninsula Clergy Network $76,000
General operating support for the Peninsula Clergy Network in 2003 and 2004.
Peninsula Community Foundation
$175,613 Operating support for PCF’s
Community Conference Rooms in
2004 and 2005.
Peninsula Conflict Resolution Center
$206,000 Support in 2004 and 2005
for development and execution of the
Civic Engagement and Community
Building Initiative, designed to strengthen individuals and communities
by increasing the opportunities for
community voices to be heard.
Peninsula Conflict Resolution Center
$40,000 Support to work with clergy
and law enforcement to promote
election-related dialogue and civic
participation efforts in the county.
The grant also supports coordination
and further development of parent
involvement programs at community
school sites.
Peninsula Conflict Resolution Center
$30,360 Support for a collaborative
effort to decrease gang activity and
improve safety on North Amphlett
Boulevard in San Mateo.
Peninsula Conflict Resolution Center
$10,000 Support for costs related to a
potential capital campaign.
Peninsula Conflict Resolution Center
$3,000 Support for the first annual
benefit breakfast.
Peninsula Interfaith Action $120,000
Support in 2003 and 2004 for PIA’s
w o r k t o i n c r e a s e d e v e l o p m e n t of
h o u s i n g fo r w o r k i n g a n d s e r v i c e
sector families.
Peninsula Library System $250 Support
for the rededication of the Martin
Luther King, Jr. Center in San Mateo.
Peninsula Partnership for Children,
Youth & Families $10,000 Support
for an evaluation of the Community
Leadership Training Program.
Pescadero Community Church $1,000
S u p p o r t fo r L a S a l a , a c o m m u n i t y
meeting place.
Philanthropy for Active Civic
E n g a g e m e n t $10,000 S u p p o r t fo r
annual membership.
Phoenix Academy $3,000 Support for
the Sixth Annual Collard Greens
Cultural Festival in East Palo Alto.
PolicyLink $645 Support for registration
fees to enable Peninsula residents to
attend the Second National Summit
on Equitable Development, Social
Justice and Smart Growth.
Public Allies Silicon Valley $10,000
Support for leadership development
of young people, to bolster civic
engagement and increase the capacity
of local nonprofits.
Redwood City Parks, Recreation and
Community Services Department
$5,000 Support to bring youth, seniors
and people with disabilities together
through a community garden project.
San Mateo Police Department
$10,000 Support to expand outreach
and training efforts for the Tongan
Interfaith Initiative.
San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office
$50,000 Support for the Community
Alliance to Reclaim our Neighborhood (CARON).
San Mateo Public Library Foundation $50,000 Support for the capital
campaign for the Cultural Spotlight
space of the new San Mateo Public Library.
Shule Mandela Academy $2,000
Support for the annual Collard Greens
Cultural Festival.
Skyline College $5,600 Support to community by coming together to learn N o r t h C e n t r a l N e i g h b o r h o o d Congregational Church of San Mateo
bring “NCCJ Presents: Horizon Line,” traditional handicrafts and leadership Association $3,000 Support to create $4,500 Support for a second series
a one-man play dedicated to fight- skills.
activities to bring all of the community of three parenting seminars to be
ing bias, bigotry and racism, to the
together to build a stronger association. offered to the San Mateo community.
Asociacion Comunitaria de Moonridge
college community.
$6,000 S u p p o r t t o h o l d l e a d e r s h i p N o r t h W h i s m a n N e i g h b o r h o o d East Palo Alto Grocery Store Action
The Civic Engagement Project for classes for the residents and to continue Association $4,100 Support to hold a Team $5,000 Support to organize the
Children and Families $50,000 Support work on “Jardin de la Amistad” at clean-up and recycle day.
residents of East Palo Alto to lobby for
for the Children and Families Commis- Moonridge Housing.
a grocery store in their community.
Organizacion de Padres Unidos de
sions in San Mateo County and seven
Bayshore Villa/Trailer Rancho Home- Fair Oaks $5,800 Support to purchase First Tongan United Methodist Church
other counties to continue their work
owners $6,000 Support to provide and install a community bulletin board o f S a n B r u n o $5 ,000 S u p p o r t fo r
building civic engagement.
translation and interpreting services for at Fair Oaks Elementary School.
collaborative efforts aimed at providing
the Spanish-speaking residents and
s u p p o r t a n d e d u c a t i o n t o To n g a n
ONE EAST PALO ALTO
Original Daly City Protective
other community building activities.
parents and their teenage children at
$576,224
Association $6,000 Support for a
The One East Palo Alto Neighborhood Central Neighborhood Association: p r o j e c t t o p r e s e r v e t h e h i s t o r y of risk for delinquent behaviors.
Improvement Initiaitve (OEPA) is a multi- Belmont $2,800 Support to install a the neighborhood’s activism which Islamic Networks, Inc. $5,000 Support
year, community-wide, resident-driven water meter and irrigation system at protected its working class commu- to develop materials for interactive
initiative to revitalize East Palo Alto the Turreted Kiosk, a neighborhood/ nity from transit-related demolition.
presentations about Islam and the
suppor ted by a multi-million dollar community fixture for 80 years.
Muslim community and for training
Palo Alto Park Neighborhood
g r a n t f r o m T h e W i l l i a m and Flora
of Muslim volunteers for presentations
Committee for a Coastside Dog Park A s s o c i a t i o n $ 6,0 0 0 O p e r a t i o n a l
H e w l e t t Fo u n d a t i o n . I n 2 0 0 3 , O E PA
to congregants of religious institutions.
$6,000 Support to establish a perma- support for the block club.
incorporated as a independent nonprofit
nent dog park on the Coastside.
Jerusalem Baptist Church $4,000
organization in order to provide ongoing
Pescadero Emergency Preparedness
Support to bring awareness of comsupport to the revitalization efforts. From Community in Action Team $6,000 $6,000 Support for group activities
munity justice issues to various
January 2003 to June 2005, Peninsula S u p p o r t t o e d u c a t e C a s t r o S c h o o l to help prepare the community for
African American pastors and lay
Community Foundation made the fol- Service Area residents by providing emergencies and disasters.
people on the Peninsula.
lowing grants from funds it raised from childcare training classes.
Pillar Ridge Homeowners Association
individual donors in support of OEPA .
Mid-Peninsula Hispanic Outreach
E a s t Pa l o A l t o M u r a l A r t P r o j e c t $6,000 Support to continue programs
Ministry $10,000 Support in 2003
Bay Area Community Resources $118,250 $6,000 Support for a youth community- that bring the residents of the Pillar
and 2005 for the School of Music
S u p p o r t fo r B a y A r e a Community based mural project in East Palo Alto.
Ridge mobile home community together.
Project that provides piano, guitar,
R e s o u r c e s a n d t h r e e o t h e r y o u t hFair Oaks Beautification Association Project Play/Pacificans Care $2,750 drum, and voice lessons for underserving organizations in the OEPA
$ 6 , 0 0 0 S u p p o r t f o r p l a y g r o u n d Support to hold a maintenance day for served Hispanic youth ages 12 years
Youth Collaborative to provide youth
maintenance.
the community playground.
and older in San Mateo.
leadership development services.
Friends of Cordilleras Creek $5,991 S i l v e r s p o t C o o p e r a t i v e N u r s e r y N e w C r e a t i o n H o m e M i n i s t r i e s
East Palo Alto Senior Center $38,475
S u p p o r t fo r a c t i v i t i e s t o a d d r e s s School $5,923 Support to purchase $5,000 Support for the expansion of
Support to strengthen existing services
restoration and prevent flooding of furniture for a start-up cooperative three ten-week classes on parenting
and for technical assistance to help the
the Cordilleras Creek.
nursery school.
offered to young mothers, ages 13–21,
organization diversify its board and
in East Palo Alto.
client base in response to the changing Homework Club of School House South Coast Collaborative $6,000
Station Apartments $5,560 Support Support for La Sala where Spanish- New Vision United Methodist Church
demographics of the community.
for a summer recreation program for speaking residents can learn computer $3,500 S u p p o r t fo r t h e e x p a n s i o n
Nuestra Casa $125,000 Support in 2003
youth who live in Daly City.
skills while developing cross cultural of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Day
for child literacy efforts and in 2004
connections to the English-speaking celebration in the north Peninsula.
for parents to gain skills to support La Honda Fire Brigade $2,701 Supresidents.
port to train and certify instructors to
their children’s academic success.
Peninsula Interfaith Action $10,000
provide CPR and Automatic External South San Francisco Friends of the Support in 2003 and 2004 for the
One East Palo Alto $249,499 Support
Debrillator training and to expand the Library $5,573 Support to install two Religious Properties Project, an effort
in 2003 and 2004 for faciliation and
number of local trained residents.
benches and a picnic table outside to encourage faith-based congregations
consulting services for One East Palo
of the library to increase pride in to collaborate with nonprofit developers
Alto organizations, and for evaluation, Lideres Comunitarios de Pescadero
the appearance of the library while to build affordable housing on excess
t e c h n i c a l a s s i s t a n c e a n d O E PA’s $6,000 Support to start literacy classes
providing patrons a place to sit.
land owned by the congregations.
for
the
agricultural
workers
of
Pescadero.
administrative costs.
South Skyline Emergency Prepared- Realm of Blessing Ministries $2,000
Opportunities Industrialization Center Lideres Comunitarios de Pescadero
ness $3,000 Support to purchase of S u p p o r t fo r t h e e x p a n s i o n of t h e
West $45,000 Support to help 15 out-of- $5,646 Support to hold classes and
emergency preparedness supplies youth ministries program’s community
school youth to reach their educational trainings on the topic of childcare.
and equipment.
outreach efforts.
and career goals by providing the Loma Mar Volunteer Fire Department
right skills and attitudes for success $6,000 Support to continue training Vallemar Conservators $6,000 Support St. Elizabeth Seton School $5,000
for forest and creek restoration, and Support for the athletic program for
in life.
residents and providing the tools and
neighborhood outreach and education. junior high students.
facilities for disaster preparedness.
NEIGHBORHOOD GRANTS
St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church
$163,088
M a d i s o n A v e n u e N e i g h b o r h o o d PENINSULA FAITHS
$5,000 Startup support for a new boys
P e n i n s u l a C o m m u n i t y Fo undation’s Association $2,244 Support for the PARTNERSHIP $76,300
Neighborhood Grants Program is designed to d e v e l o p m e n t o f a m o b i l e p u p p e t T h e P e n i n s u l a FA I T H S P a r t n e r s h i p club in the Cesar Chavez/Green Oaks
help groups of residents and neighborhood theatre for Spanish-speaking children provides grants to boost the effective- neighborhood in East Palo Alto.
ness of congregations improving social, Stanford Hospital & Clinics $5,000
organizations improve their neighborhoods to learn positive life lessons.
economic and environmental conditions Support to continue building a formal
as well as develop and increase involvement
Madres de Even Start y John Gill
in local neighborhoods. Grants range in coalition of faith-based congregations,
of community members in neighborhood
$6,000 Support for Spanish-speaking
size from $500 to $5,000 and are awarded each of which will participate in the
projects. Grants ranging in size from $500
mothers to continue to build their
to congregations or faith-based organi- Partners in Caring Program, which helps
to $6,000 are awarded to neighborhood
leadership skills and to hold arts and
zations with promising ideas about ways seniors to continue living independently.
group applicants with the most promising
crafts classes for children at John Gill
to promote leadership and community
i d e a s f o r e n g a g i n g t h e i r community
Elementary School.
development in San Mateo and northern Yaseen Foundation $2,300 Support for
through their neighborhood projects.
the development and implementation
M a n o-A-M a n o $12,000 S u p p o r t i n Santa Clara counties.
Alma Juvenil Mexicana $6,000 Support
of two open houses and three forums
2004 and 2005 to organize a commuChurch of the Good Shepherd $5,000 for community awareness and dialogue
to continue Mexican folkloric dance
nity building fair at Taft Elementary
Support for the youth coordinator for between the Muslim community and
classes for 30 youth at the Moonridge
School in Redwood City.
the TRUST Leadership Program.
and Main Street housing complexes
churches and congregations from other
in Half Moon Bay while parents foster
faith traditions.
2003 –2005 ENDOWMENT GRANTS
39
ENVIRONMENT
PORTFOLIO
$768,584
Acterra $10,000 Capital support to
reestablish Acterra’s native plant nursery on land adjacent to Foothill Park.
California State Parks Foundation
$ 50 ,7 50 S u p p o r t f o r t h e c a p i t a l
campaign for the Marine Education
Center at Año Nuevo State Reserve.
California State Parks Foundation
$5,750 S u p p o r t fo r t h e E a r t h Da y
Restoration and Cleanup programs.
CoEvolution Institute $5,750 Support
to expand the BugMobile and the Habitat Improvement programs in San Mateo
and northern Santa Clara counties.
County of San Mateo $2,500 Support
to co-sponsor the San Mateo County
Agricultural Summit.
Environmental Volunteers $6,855
Support to enable low-income students
to participate in SNAKE Camp in 2003
and 2004.
Exploring New Horizons Outdoor
School $16,000 Support to enable 80
c h i l d r e n f r o m C a s t r o Elementary
School in Mountain View to attend a
week-long environmental education
experience in 2003 and 2004.
Generating Renewable Ideas for
Development Alternatives $13,500
Support to help implement the Solar
Affordable Housing Program in San Mateo
and northern Santa Clara counties.
Golden Gate Biosphere Reserve Association $750 General operating support.
Green Foothills Foundation $4,000
Support for the 2003–2004 Environmental Forum Series targeted to participants in San Mateo and northern
Santa Clara counties.
Green Foothills Foundation $10,000
Support for environmental forums, an
expanded set of hikes, a targeted new
membership solicitation campaign and
expansion of the Conservation Council
Program Breakfast.
Greenbelt Alliance $2,000 Support to
conduct a board retreat and strategic
planning work.
Half Moon Bay Open Space Trust
$6,500 Support to hire a grantwriter,
conduct fundraising activities and for
land stewardship activities.
John F. Kennedy Middle School $3,750
Support to build a composting garden
to teach 6th to 8th grade students about
composting food waste and gardening.
M a r i n e S c i e n c e I n s t i t u t e $5,000
Support for a series of training workshops for the Board of Trustees.
Peninsula Community Foundation
$20,000 Support to jointly fund, with
other Bay Area community foundations,
a design process for an environmental
education evaluation plan to serve the
Bay Area.
40
Peninsula Community Foundation
$212,250 Support for the Environmental
Solutions Forum.
Riekes Center for Human Enhancement
$19,700 Support in 2003 and 2005 for
scholarships for low-income youth to
attend the Nature Explorers Day Camp.
San Bruno Mountain Watch $21,500
Support to save endangered species
habitat on San Bruno Mountain, to
expand environmental education programs, organize community members
and to enhance the organization’s
library and archives.
San Mateo County Parks & Recreation
Foundation $14,000 Support for the
Mirada Surf capital campaign.
San Mateo County Parks & Recreation
Fo u n d a t i o n $10,000 S u p p o r t fo r
efforts to establish dedicated public
funds for San Mateo County Parks.
Save San Francisco Bay Association
$1,500 Support for the production
costs associated with the design and
format of a newspaper ad to publicize
a forum on the clean-up of toxic waste
at the Moffett Field wetlands.
Save San Francisco Bay Association
$20,000 Support to help design and
implement a planned giving program.
•Santa Clara County Office of
Education, Outdoor Education
(Walden West)
•Santa Clara Valley
Audubon Society
•Save Our Shores
•Save San Francisco Bay Association
•Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition
•Sustainable Conservation
•The Natural Step
•WildLIFE Associates
•Youth Science Institute
IN SCHOOL &
OUT OF SCHOOL
PORTFOLIO
$5,647,032
Borel Middle School $3,112 Support
for a two-day Peer Helping training.
Boys & Girls Club of North San Mateo
County 38,500 Support for Project
Learn that engages low-income and
underserved youth in learning activities,
encourages them to succeed in school
and promotes lifelong learning.
Boys & Girls Club of the Peninsula
$50,000 Support for the Ravenswood
Sports League that focuses on developing youth life skills.
Building Futures Now $1,940 Support
for a family field trip to the Tech
Museum of Innovation in San Jose.
Adelante Spanish Immersion School
$53,426 Support for the Family-School
Partnership program in 2003 and 2004.
Businesses United in Invest i n g ,
Lending and Development $43,000
Support in 2003 for the expansion of
BUILD’s Business Boot Camp and for
general operating support in 2005.
Adelante Spanish Immersion School
$2,940 Support for two curriculum
specialists and the principal to attend
training opportunities.
Cabrillo Unified School District
$222,000 Support for Cabrillo Unified
School District’s Every Child a Reader
and Writer initiative in 2003 and 2004.
American Association of University
Women $1,400 Scholarship support
for two eighth grade girls to attend
the science and math summer camp at
Stanford University.
Challenge Learning Center $10,000
S u p p o r t t o p a y fo r t w o o v e r n i g h t
training retreats that teach groups of
high school students advanced leadership,
public speaking and facilitation skills.
Aragon High School $21,400 Support Charles Armstrong School $10,000
in 2004 and 2005 for the First Step Support for public school teacher training.
Summer Institute, an intensive one-week
C h i l d r e n’s B o o k P r o j e c t $ 9, 400
program that provides supplemental
General operating support.
instruction, tutoring and participation
Tuolumne River Preservation Trust
in health and fitness activities for Children’s Empowerment, Inc. $65,000
$10,000 Support for educational outin-coming ninth grade students who Support in 2003 and 2004 for programs
reach and involvement of communities,
are at risk for underachievement.
at Jefferson High School that assist
municipal water customers and water
disadvantaged students to successfully
Asian
American
Recovery
Services,
Inc.
purchasing agencies throughout the
complete high school and continue
$171,728 Support in 2002, 2004 and 2005
San Francisco Peninsula.
their post-secondary education or
for Project STAY SAFE, a transition
Vida Verde Nature Education $10,000
career opportunities.
program that guides incoming ninth
Support in 2004 for expenses to be
graders at Westmoor and Jefferson Children’s Health Council $38,500
incurred moving to a new site and
high schools in Daly City.
S u p p o r t t o of f e r S c h o o l s A t t u n e d
general operating support.
intensive training for the faculty at
Aspire Public Schools $50,000 Salary
Vida Verde Nature Education $5,000
East Palo Alto High School.
support for teachers at East Palo Alto
Support in 2003 for transportation
High School.
C i p r i a n i A f t e r-S c h o o l C a r e , I n c .
costs for 400 students from under$10,000 Support to strengthen several
resourced schools to travel to Vida B a y A r e a C o m m u n i t y R e s o u r c e s
c o m p o n e n t s of t h e o u t-of-s c h o o l
$110,000
Support
for
New
Perspectives’s
Verde Nature Center for a two-day
time program.
educational enrichment and youth
environmental experience.
development program in East Palo City of East Palo Alto $8,000 Support
WildLIFE Associates $22,279 Support
Alto in 2003, 2004 and 2005.
for the first and second Annual College
to purchase a van to transport educaFair in 2003 and 2004.
Bay Area Partnership $5,000 Support
tors and animals to school programs.
for an after-school program in the City of San Carlos $11,000 ProgramWorld Wildlife Fund $11,750 Support
Ravenswood City School District to matic and fund development support in
for World Wildlife Fund’s California
develop and implement a sustain- 2003 and 2005 for the “San Carlos Healthy
Marine Office and its conservation
ability plan.
Cities Project” that provides tutoring and
activities that impact San Mateo and
mentoring to at-risk elementary students.
B a y s h o r e S c h o o l D i s t r i c t $ 2 ,500
Santa Clara counties.
Support for staff development for City of South San Francisco $12,600
ENVIRONMENTAL
teachers and supervisors to continue Support for the pilot after-school
SOLUTIONS FORUM
the Tech Media Club.
program “Literacy by Third Grade” at
$200,000
Sunshine Gardens Elementary School.
Belmont-Redwood Shores School
•Acterra
District $10,000 Support for the after- Cleo Eulau Center $33,208 Support for
•Children’s Discovery Museum
school homework center at Nesbit School. Selby Lane Resiliency Consultation Program
•Coyote Point Museum for
& Teacher Training Workshop series.
Environmental Education
Beneficent, Inc. $49,944 Support to
•Environmental Volunteers
launch the pilot Bookshare.org program Coalition for Excellence in Science
fo r m i d d l e a n d h i g h s c h o o l c l a s s- Education $5,000 Support to refurbish
•Hidden Villa Farm and
Wilderness Preserve
rooms in the Bay Area to enable visually elementary school science kits.
impaired students the opportunity to
•San Mateo County Office of
C o a s t s i d e C h i l d r e n’s P r o g r a m s
Education, Outdoor Education
gain access to textbooks and other books
$100,000 Support in 2003 and 2004 to
(SMOE)
in a digital format not previously
enhance youth services with a focus
available.
on creating healthy habits.
Sustainable San Mateo County $7,500
Support for the salary of a part-time
Indicators Project Coordinator.
2003 –2005 ENDOWMENT GRANTS
Collective Roots Garden Project
$5,000 Support for the Collective
Roots Garden Project’s continued
work at East Palo Alto Charter School.
College Track $50,000 Support for
the Academic Affairs and Student
Life Programs.
Comite Gran Fiesta $2,000 Support for
La Gran Fiesta dinner celebration
honoring the accomplishments of Coastside Latino high school graduates.
C o m m u n i t y Da y S c h o o l $9,425
Support for the implementation of
the CoAction curriculum.
C o u n t y of S a n M a t e o P r o b a t i o n
Department $1,250 Support to purchase
a new computer printer and related
m a t e r i a l s fo r t h e A c c e lerated Resource Center’s literary magazine,
“Bay Area Wrap Up.”
Crestmoor Elementary School $9,180
Support for computer software and a
projector for special education students
at Crestmoor Elementary School.
Cunha Intermediate School $120,945
Support in 2003 and 2004 for a Bilingual
Community Outreach Coordinator and a
Bilingual Teacher Development Program.
Each One Reach One $41,000 Support
in 2003, 2004 and 2005 for a diversion
program serving San Mateo County
teenagers at greatest risk of continued
contact with the criminal justice system.
East Palo Alto Mural Art Project
$35,000 Support in 2003 and 2004 for
the Teen Mural Program , History
T h r o u g h A r t P r o g r a m , Public Art
Consulting Project and for organizational effectiveness.
Eastside College Preparatory School
$100,000 Capital campaign support.
Educational Democracy For Youth
$5,000 Support to implement programs
at Menlo-Atherton High School.
El Camino High School $500 Support
to fund tickets for students who cannot
afford to attend the Safe and Sober
Graduation event and for refreshments and activities.
Environmental Traveling Companions
$20,000 Support to expand the wilderness program to include low-income
youth and youth with disabilities.
Facing History and Ourselves $43,000
Support to expand the citizenship
education program to additional teachers and their students on the Peninsula.
Facing History and Ourselves $1,000
Support for the Choosing to Participate exhibit.
Fair Oaks Elementary School
$149,000 Support in 2003, 2004 and
2005 for programs designed to improve
students’ academic performance.
Families on Track $65,000 Support for
an Advocate who provides case management for the middle school students.
Fiesta Gardens International School
$200 Support to off-set registration
fees for teachers to at tend the
Supporting Our Sons (SOS) workshop.
Fiesta Gardens International School
$6,000 Support for Amigos, a schoolbased mentoring program for third,
fourth and fifth grade students.
Foothill College $20,000 Support for
the Krause Center for Innovation’s
Earn While You Learn Program.
Fo u n d a t i o n C o n s o r t i um $40,000
Support for annual membership in
2003, 2004 and 2005.
Foundation for a College Education
$30,000 General operating support
to sustain the organization during a
period of leadership change and core
program enhancements.
Friends for Youth $10,000 Support for
Friends for Youth’s 25th Anniversary
Celebration.
Friends for Youth $8,750 Support to
recruit and train mentors and to provide
expense reimbursment for mentor/
mentee activities.
Fr i e n d s of t h e M i l l b r a e L i b r a r y
$5,810 Support for the after-school
supervisor’s salary for the Homework
Center at Millbrae Library.
G a y-S t r a i g h t A l l i a n c e N e t w o r k
$10,000 Support to expand leadership
development opportunities and local
programming in schools in San Mateo
and northern Santa Clara counties.
Girls’ Club of the Mid-Peninsula
$100,000 Support in 2003 and 2004
f o r t h e a f t e r-s c h o o l a n d s u m m e r
program for at-risk girls and young
women ages 6–16 in East Palo Alto and
eastern Menlo Park.
G i r l s I n c., of S a n M a t e o C o u n t y
$10,000 Support for the Will Power/
Won’t Power Program.
Grantmakers for Education $4,050
Support for annual membership in
2003, 2004 and 2005.
Hiller Aviation Museum $5,000 Support
for the Scientific Education Community
Outreach Program that provides K–12
students an opportunity to learn the
history and future of aviation and its
impact on society.
Homework Central $30,000 Support
for staffing, tutor training and parent
leadership training.
Homework Central $19,625 Support
for a new executive director’s salary
and for board development training.
Jefferson Union High School District
$130,200 Support in 2003 and 2004 for
student literacy improvement plans
in a consortium of five school districts
in northern San Mateo County.
Jefferson Union High School District
$20,000 Support in 2003 and 2004 for
the dropout recovery program for high
risk out-of-school youth ages 16–22.
John F. Kennedy Middle School $500
Support to defray the cost of repairing
sewing machines to be used in projects
at the Mathematics Academy.
Junior Achievement of the Bay Area
$22,500 Support in 2003 and 2004 to
sustain Junior Achievement programs
in three school districts in San Mateo
County.
for the Summer Youth Project, which
supports academic and recreational
enrichment activities at sites in San
Mateo and northern Santa Clara counties.
Just Read $25,000 Partial salary support
of a full-time Program Coordinator for
the Just Read Center in Mountain View.
Notre Dame de Namur University
$6,000 Support for the new Reading
Certificate and Education Specialist
(Special Education) programs.
Kenneth N. Slater Elementary School
$5,000 Support for PACT’s Arts Focus
Program.
O r i o n S c h o o l $1,78 8 S u p p o r t t o
upgrade the kitchen facility at Orion
School to reduce fire hazards.
Latina Literature Project $14,900
Support to continue the program
throughout San Mateo County high
schools and Hillcrest Juvenile Hall.
Outward Bound West $12,500 Support
i n 2 0 0 3 a n d 2 0 0 4 t o e n a b l e l o wincome youth from the Peninsula to
participate in the Pinnacle Program.
Legacy Foundation $10,500 Support
for the school- and community-based
prevention programs for children
and their families whose lives are
impacted by addiction.
Pacific News Service $90,000 Support
in 2003 and 2004 to grow and strengthen Pacific News Service’s Youth Writing
Programs on the Peninsula.
Mid-Peninsula Boys & Girls Club,
Inc. $130,335 Support in 2003 and
2004 for core programming and general operating expenses for the San
Mateo and Turnbull sites.
Mid-Peninsula Boys & Girls Club,
Inc. $10,000 Support for a feasibility
study to explore the possiblity of a
merger of Boys & Girls Clubs of North
San Mateo County and Mid-Peninsula
Boys & Girls Club.
Mid-Peninsula Boys & Girls Club,
Inc. $10,000 Support to develop an
implementation plan to unify the
Mid-Peninsula Boys & Girls Club and
the Boys & Girls Club of North San
Mateo County.
Mid-Peninsula Boys & Girls Club,
Inc. $4,980 Support for the Birthday
Angels program.
Millbrae School District $20,000
Support in 2003 and 2004 for
developing and implementing project
WING (Writing Instruction Needed for
Growth), a comprehensive, research-based
writing program.
MK Level Playing Field Institute
$8,200 Support for the Summer Math
& Science Honors Academy.
M o u n t a i n Vi e w-L o s A l t o s U n i o n
High School District $1,500 Support
for the Committee for Education on
AD/HD to host a series of talks and
workshops with Dr. Sam Goldstein.
M o u n t a i n Vi e w-W h i s m a n S c h o o l
District $10,000 Support for a program assistant from Public Allies to
work with after-school programs at
Crittenden and Graham middle schools,
in collaboration with the City of Mountain View and local community agencies.
Newton Center, Inc. $4,000 Support
for technical assistance regarding
fund development.
North Star Academy $10,000 Support
to offer 19 teachers training and staff
development to design and implement
differentiated instruction in their
classrooms.
Northern California Grantmakers
$21,000 Support in 2003, 2004 and 2005
Pacifica School Volunteers $80,000
Support in 2003 and 2004 to provide
trained volunteers to public schools
for one-on-one work with children
to help them with reading, math and
other subjects.
Parents Helping Parents, Inc. $4,500
Support for the Kids Helping Kids
Program, which offers support groups
for children ages 4–13 and teens who
have a parent or other caregiver who
is suffering from a serious or lifethreatening illness.
Partners in School Innovation $5,000
Support for the new executive director
to attend the Stanford Graduate School
of Business Executive Program for
Nonprofit Leaders.
Peninsula Bridge Program $100,000
Support in 2003 and 2004 for Menlo
Bridge teachers to attend the Teacher
Collaboration Center and to teach in
the summer program.
Peninsula Bridge Program $5,000
Support to provide scholarships to four
economically disadvantaged eighth grade
students to participate in the summer
program at Woodside Priory School.
Peninsula Community Foundation
$2,950 Support for registration fees
to enable 10 Peninsula Partnership
collaborative coordinators to attend the
Families Support America Conference.
Peninsula Conflict Resolution Center
$249,000 Support in 2003, 2004 and
2005 for the KLEAR (Kids Learning
Empathy and Respect) program to
address and eliminate hate motivated
speech and behaviors.
Peninsula Conflict Resolution Center
$29,900 Support to evaluate the KLEAR
Program in the San Mateo Union High
School District.
Pe n i n s u l a Fa m i l y Y M C A $50,000
Support for tutoring, mentoring, recreation and camp for children of agricultural
workers living in Moonridge and Main
Street communities of Half Moon Bay.
P e n i n s u l a N e w Te a c h e r P r o j e c t
$81,000 Support for the Peninsula
New Administrator Project.
2003 –2005 ENDOWMENT GRANTS
41
Performing Arts Workshop $10,000
Support for the Artists in Schools
Demonstration project that includes eight
15-week performing arts and creative
writing residencies for 200 children
and two professional development
workshops for 20 classroom teachers.
Ravenswood City School District
$10,000 Support for the Ravenswood
Teacher Incentive Project, designed
to increase teacher morale within
the district.
Ravenswood City School District
$6,000 Support for a seven-day Summer
Professional Development Institute
Training entitled, “Quality Instruction:
The Key to Preparing Children for
Academic Success.”
Redwood City Friends of Literacy
$60,000 Support for Project READ
programs at Fair Oaks and Selby Lane
schools.
San Mateo Union High School District
$2,500 Support to bring a French author
and illustrator to the high school
French classes in the district.
San Mateo Youth Foundation, Inc.
$10,000 Continued support for the Peer
Tutoring Program at Borel Middle
School and expansion of the program
to serve the children living at First
Step For Families.
San Mateo Youth Foundation, Inc.
$10,000 Support to provide mentoring
and other college preparatory services
to academically gifted, low-income high
school students in San Mateo.
San Mateo-Foster City Community
Education Foundation $10,000 Support
for an executive director and an expanded
solicitation and marketing campaign.
San Mateo-Foster City School District
$28,150 Support for professional development for Early Learning Center
teachers and kindergarten teachers.
South Coast Collaborative $2,600
Support to hire a grantwriter to research,
write and submit an application for 21st
Century Community Learning Center
Program funding.
Stanford University $90,000 Support
for the Ravenswood English track of
the Ravenswood Tutors program at
Green Oaks Academy.
Stanford University $65,377 Support
for the School of Education’s model
project to prepare tutors of English
language learners.
Stanford University School of Education
$5,000 Support to co-sponsor the “Cosby on
Campus:Educators’ Conference–Inspiring
Innovation.”
Summit Preparatory High School $2,415
Support for registration fees to enable
five educators to attend the Association
of Supervision and Curriculum Development Conference on Differentiating
Instruction.
YMCA of the Mid-Peninsula $40,000
Support for the Citizen Schools afterschool program at McKinley Institute
of Technology in Redwood City.
YMCA of the Mid-Peninsula $10,000
Support for the implementation of the
Developmental Assets Plan for the
staff, board, volunteers and members.
Youth Community Service $8,000
Support for the Annual Summer of
Service Camp.
Youth Horizons $74,736 Support in
2003 and 2005 for the MindfulnessBased Stress Reduction Program
(incorporating meditation, yoga and
other self-awareness practices) conducted
with incarcerated youth at Hillcrest
Juvenile Hall and Camp Glenwood for Boys.
Youth Lead $5,000 General operating
support for the Emerging Leaders
Program.
Youth United For Community Action
Redwood City School District $3,205
$35,000 Support for the Higher LearnS u p p o r t t o e n a b l e t h r e e Redwood
School-Force $5,000 Support for the Supporting Our Sons $1,000 Support ing Program in which youth in East
City School District Board members
“ S a v e t h e M u s i c ” c o m m u n i t y m u s i c for the Boyhood Advocacy Training Palo Alto create positive community
and the Superintendent to attend the
festival to support schools in the Belmont- for Teachers Summer Institue.
change and develop productive life
Progress Seminar.
Redwood Shores School District.
skills through community organizing
Teach for America $5,000 Support for the
Redwood City School District $850
around environmental issues.
Search Institute $7,500 Support for East Palo Alto corps members program.
Support for the Sequoia Awards.
the 2003 Healthy Communities-Healthy
Teach for America $5,000 Support for PRINCIPALS FUND
Redwood High School $3,305 Support Youth Conference, “Unleashing the Power
recruitment, training, support and $497,500
for graduation expenses for Redwood of Diversity.”
professional development of one The Principals Fund makes unrestricted
High School’s Class of 2003.
Sequoia Union High School District corps member in the Redwood City annual grants of up to $10,000 to all
public high school principals in San Mateo
Resource Area for Teachers $45,000 $60,000 Support in 2003 and 2004 for Elementary District.
and northern Santa Clara counties. The
Support in 2003 and 2004 for public the RISE (Realizing Intellect through
Tech Museum of Innovation $100,000
Foundation initiated this grants program
s c h o o l t e a c h e r s i n S a n Mateo and Self-Empowerment) youth developSupport in 2003 and 2004 to expand
in 1999 in response to principals’ lack of
northern Santa Clara counties who m e n t p r o g r a m a t M e n l o-A t h e r t o n
the Tech Challenge to reach traditionally
unrestricted, discretionary funds to support
purchase materials at RAFT for use in High School.
underserved groups of students.
needs at their schools. In 2003 and 2004,
their classrooms.
Sequoia Union High School District
The Harry Bridges Project $10,000 30 high schools received funds.
R o t a r y C l u b o f S a n M a t e o $ 5 0 0 $20,950 Support for the Teacher Literacy
Support for The Harry Bridges Project
Support to sponsor youth and volunteers Academy, designed to serve low-achievto perform a Chautauqua presentation, TEACHERS FUND
from Friends for Youth to at tend a ing and English Language students
“From Wharf Rats to Lords of the Docks” $458,430
community event.
and their teachers in the Sequoia
for high school students studying The Teachers Fund provides grants of up
Union High School District and its
Sacred Heart Schools $2,000 Gift in
20th-century American history in all to $5,000 directly to teachers championing
feeder districts.
change in their classrooms. Established in
memory of Mrs. Lorraine Horn.
22 high schools in San Mateo County.
1989, Teachers Fund grants have provided
Sequoia Union High School District
S a n B r u n o Pa r k S c h o o l D i s t r i c t
The Survivor Project $10,000 Support funding for computers, software, science
$7,000 Support for 350 middle and
$10,000 Support to purchase books for
for the implementation of the Essence equipment, books, art supplies, curriculum
high school students to at tend the
the Open Court Reading Program.
of Acceptance program at Sequoia High packages, field trip costs, guest speakers
Facing History and Ourselves “Choosing
School and Woodside High School.
and teacher professional development. From
San Mateo County Health Services to Participate” exhibit in San Francisco.
Agency $2,000 Support for a group of
University of California Cooperative January 2003 through June 2005, a total
Sequoia Union High School District
community leaders to meet with a
Extension $50,000 Support to hire an of $458,430 in grants was awarded to
$5,000 Support to develop a manual
Harvard professor to discuss theories
environmental science educator and teachers representing 100 schools in San
fo r t r a i n i n g p a r e n t s t o f a c i l i t a t e
on lethal school violence.
curriculum consultant for the Elkus Mateo and northern Santa Clara counties.
“Building the 40 Assets,” an eight-session
Ranch Program.
San Mateo County Jobs for Youth parenting series and to train 10–12
PCF SCHOOL EXCURSION FUND
$6,000 Support for a pilot program ethnically diverse parents as facilitators. Woodside High School $49,445 Support $70,000
to enable more effective job training
in 2003, 2004 and 2005 for the KLEAR This program, funded by a donor of the
Skatepark for Pacifica $30,000 Support
and placement.
(Kids Learning Empathy and Respect) Foundation who cares deeply about edufor construction of a skatepark in Pacifica.
Program.
cation and local schools, provided more
San Mateo County Jobs for Youth $350
Skyline College $10,000 Support for
Support for the Annual Breakfast.
Woodside High School $3,000 Support than 90 grants to 48 different schools
Jump Start program that assists at-risk
totaling $70,000 for field trips from
for the Youth Achievement Program.
San Mateo County Library $43,845 San Mateo County high school students.
September 2003 through June 2005. The
Support for the Quest Learning Center
Y E S R e a d i n g $35,000 S u p p o r t t o program hopes to provide children with
Skyline College $5,775 Support for
at the East Palo Alto Library.
sponsor 35 students for one year of experiences that they would not otherwise
Skyline’s first annual college conference
tutoring at Belle Haven Elementary School. have. Schools receiving grants are selected
San Mateo County Office of Education focusing on low-income area high
$60,858 Support for the novice teacher school students.
Y E S R e a d i n g $35,000 S u p p o r t t o based on the number of its students who
training component of Gene Connection.
expand the program to other schools. are members of low-income families.
South Coast Children’s Services, Inc.
San Mateo Union High School District $1,155 Support for a premier showing YMCA of the Mid-Peninsula $150,000
$50,000 Support for the School Advocates of Safe and Drug Free Schools and Capital support for the construction
Program in San Mateo Union High Communities program, a video docu- o f a n e w s t a t e-o f-t h e-a r t Y M C A
School District.
mentary produced by the youth of facility in East Palo Alto.
Project Horizons.
42
2003 –2005 ENDOWMENT GRANTS
SUPPORTING FAMILIES
PORTFOLIO
$4,678,022
Asian Pacific Islander Legal Outreach
$10,000 Support to continue legal services
for immigration, naturalization and
d o m e s t i c v i o l e n c e t o l o w-i n c o m e
communities in San Mateo County.
A s s i s t a n c e L e a g u e of S a n M a t e o
County $9,500 Support for Operation
School Bell which provides clothes
for low-income children.
Community Gatepath of Northern
California $1,355 Support for registration fees to enable the executive
director to participate in the Independent Sector conferences in 2003 and 2004.
Family Service Agency of San Mateo
County $300 Support for registration
fees to enable the executive director to
participate in the Independent Sector
conference in 2003.
Community Learning Center $50,000
Support for Community Learning
Center’s adult education programs.
Family Support Center of the MidPeninsula $11,000 General operating
support.
Community Overcoming Relationship
Abuse (CORA) $62,750 Support for
strategic restructuring activities that
will facilitate a merger between Sor
Juana Ines and Center for Domestic
Violence Prevention.
Family Support Center of the Mid- L e g a l A i d S o c i e t y of S a n M a t e o
Peninsula $3,000 Emergency assistance County $72,000 Support for the Family
to purchase supplies to enable the Advocacy Program with Lucile Packard
Connect Family Resource Center to Children’s Hospital.
continue its programs after a fire.
Lesley Foundation $4,500 Support for
Foundation Consortium $10,000 a strategic planning workshop for the
S u p p o r t f o r “ P i l o t s t o P o l i c y,” a board of directors and management staff.
conference to inspire a redesign of
Lytton Gardens $20,000 Support for
the child welfare services system.
Caring Connections, an intergeneraGrantmakers for Children, Youth & tional volunteer program that provides
Families, Inc. $6,000 Support for annual one-on-one visits, enrichment activities
membership in 2003, 2004 and 2005. and community contact for 500 lowincome seniors.
Housing Leadership Council of San
Mateo County $8,000 Interim salary Mission Hospice, Inc. of San Mateo
support for the executive director.
County $1,000 Support in memory of
Marjorie Bolton.
Housing Leadership Council of San
Mateo County $1,000 Support for con- Non-Profit Housing Association of
vening city and county elected officials, Northern California $30,000 Support
planning commissioners and housing for an Inclusionary Housing Initiative,
and redevelopment agency staff at the with funds earmarked in part for local
partners advocating for inclusionary
Housing Leadership Breakfast.
zoning policies in San Mateo and
Housing Leadership Council of San
northern Santa Clara counties.
Mateo County $1,000 Support for the
Ombudsman Services of San Mateo
third annual policy conference.
C o u n t y $ 80,000 S u p p o r t i n 2 0 0 3
Housing Nachos $75,000 Support to
and 2004 for the dementia specialist
Peninsual Conflict Resolution Center
t o fo c u s o n n i n e r e s i d e n t i a l c a r e
as fiscal sponsor for work to increase
facilities that accept residents with
civic engagement supporting more
dementia and train staff and volunteers
development of all levels of housing
on handling complaints from such
in San Mateo County.
residents.
Human Investment Project $70,000
Ombudsman Services of San Mateo
Support in 2003 and 2004 for salary
County $25,000 General operating support
support of a housing counselor for
for programs serving Alzheimers and
the Homesharing Program.
dementia patients living in San Mateo
Human Investment Project $6,000 County.
Support for a property development and
Opportunities Industrialization Center
management analyst summer intern.
West $120,000 Support in 2003 and
Immigrant Legal Resource Center 2004 for MiMe’s Cafe, the vocational
$35,000 Support in 2003 and 2004 for training restaurant in downtown
immigration law technical assistance, Redwood City.
including training, access to the ILRC
Opportunities Industrialization Center
Attorney of the Day system, case review
West $50,000 Support for the job demeetings and provider convenings in an
velopment program to secure jobs for
effort to provide more effective immiOICW graduates.
gration services in San Mateo County.
Opportunities Industrialization Center
InnVision $10,000 Support to hire a
West $40,000 Support for a long-term
consultant to facilitate merger with
sustainability study.
another agency.
Opportunities Industrialization Center
Interfaith Network for Community
West $5,000 Support for the Breakfast
Help $5,000 Salary support for a partof Champions in 2005.
time administrative assistant.
Opportunities Industrialization Center
International Institute of San Francisco
West $3,000 Support for the executive
$67,550 Support for the San Mateo County
director to attend the Center for ExcelImmigration and Citizenship Program.
lence in Nonprofit’s Leaders Institute.
Jean Weingarten Peninsula Oral
Palo Alto Housing Corporation $25,000
School for the Deaf $6,250 Support to
Support for the Single Room Occupancy
enable four students to continue their
(SRO) Resident Support Services Program
auditory oral education with daily
at Alma Place and Barker Hotel, a 26-unit
speech therapy during the summer
residential hotel.
school program.
PARCA $66,000 Support in 2003 and
Jeena $15,500 Support for the Summer
2004 for the Family Support Services
Camp Program that serves children
program.
with disabilities.
Bay Area Advisory Group to End
Homelessness $3,000 Support for ef- Community Overcoming Relationship
forts by the Bay Area Advisory Group Abuse (CORA) $49,100 Support for a
to End Homelessness to re-engage bilingual Spanish-speaking attorney.
philanthropy in this issue.
Community Overcoming Relationship
C a m p K e s e m , H i l l e l a t S t a n fo r d Abuse (CORA) $2,500 Support for the
$20,500 Support in 2003, 2004 and annual breakfast.
2005 for Camp Kesem, a one-week
overnight summer camp for children Community Working Group, Inc.
$62,500 Capital support for the Opporwho have a parent with cancer.
tunity Center of the Mid-Peninsula, a
Center for Venture Philanthropy mixed-use facility that will provide
$300,000 Seed support for the Center’s 89 affordable housing units and day
fourth Social Venture Fund: Fostering service centers for the homeless
the Future.
families and adults.
Charles & Helen Schwab Foundation
$10,000 Support to contract with a consultant to conduct an assessment of
Peninsula Interfaith Action’s Religious
Properties Project.
Child Advocates of Santa Clara & San
Mateo Counties $30,000 Support to
expand the Infant-Toddler Program
in San Mateo County.
Christmas Bureau of Palo Alto $6,000
Support in 2003 and 2004 to provide
holiday funds to low-income families
in East Palo Alto and eastern Menlo
Pa r k w h o s e c h i l d r e n a t t e n d Pa l o
Alto schools through the Voluntary
Transfer Program.
City of Menlo Park $29,478 Salary
support for the Belle Haven Family
Services Manager who serves as the
leader for the Belle Haven/Menlo Park
Peninsula Partnership Collaborative.
Coalition of Community Foundations
for Youth $500 Support for annual
membership in 2005.
Coastside Opportunity Center $18,000
Salary support for an interim executive
director for six months.
Community Association for Rehabilitation $129,000 Support in 2003 and
2004 for the Employment Services
Program’s job placement, coaching and
job development activities for clients
with developmental disabilities.
Community Gatepath of Northern
California $75,000 Support for a fulltime development director to help
diversify the organization’s funding base.
Community Gatepath of Northern
California $6,000 Support to hire an
MBA student summer intern.
Community Gatepath of Northern
C a l i fo r n i a $2,500 S u p p ort for the
annual spring gala.
Community Working Group, Inc.
$50,000 Support for furnishings for
the Opportunity Center of the MidPeninsula.
Corporation for Supportive Housing
$65,000 General operating support for
the Menlo Park office.
Ecumenical Hunger Program $75,000
Support to defray the costs of renovations and relocation.
Edgewood Center for Children &
Families $160,000 Support in 2004
and 2005 to sustain existing client
services and expand the capacity to
provide culturally and linguistically
appropriate services to Asian and
Pacific Islander kinship families.
Edgewood Center for Children &
Families $51,000 General operating
support in 2003.
Families on Track $3,500 Support to
expand the Families on Track facility.
Family & Children Services $300
Support for registration fees to enable
the executive director to participate
in the Independent Sector conference
in 2003.
Family Connections $4,000 Support for
tuition assistance to enable families to
attend the parent participation program.
Family Giving Tree $5,000 Support
for the Holiday Program that provides
gifts to low-income children.
Family Service Agency of San Mateo
County $20,000 Support for Familia
Sana, a comprehensive child abuse
treatment and prevention program.
Family Service Agency of San Mateo
County $5,000 Support for a community needs assessment to identify
current services gaps and future programming for counseling and child
abuse treatment services.
KARA $10,000 Support for the Youth &
Family Services Expansion Project.
Landlord & Tenant Information &
Referral Collaborative $39,095 Support
for an information and referral
coordinator’s salary and operating
expenses for the Landlord and Tenant
Information and Referral Collaborative.
2003–2005 ENDOWMENT GRANTS
43
Peninsula Community Foundation
$10,000 Support for the Center For
Venture Philanthopy to conduct a
study to determine the effect of the
Assets for All Alliance IDA program
on graduating participants’ efforts to
move up the economic ladder.
Peninsula Community Foundation
$2,500 Support for the Holiday Fund.
Peninsula Habitat for Humanity
$80,000 Support for organizational
development, including salary support
for a program director and an administrative director.
Pescadero Community Church $25,000
General support for assistance provided
to low-income agricultural workers
and their families.
Pescadero Community Church $7,500
Support for relocation assistance for
seven displaced families of agricultural
workers in Pescadero.
Police Chiefs & Sheriff Association of
San Mateo County $4,400 Support in
2003 and 2004 to defray the cost of
special trainings for faith leaders and
law enforcement to address the issues
of child abuse and domestic violence.
Project HIRED $20,000 Support for
salary of an employment specialist for
HIRED Direct, a program that serves
people with disabilities.
Public Health Institute $5,000 Support for the National Convening on
Youth Permanence in San Francisco.
Puente de la Costa Sur $50,000 Support
for the executive director’s salary.
Rebuilding Together – Peninsula
$120,000 Support in 2003 and 2004 for
a full-tme development & marketing
director.
Recording for the Blind & Dyslexic
$25,000 Support to empower youth
through the Tools to Succeed progam.
Samaritan House $25,000 Support for
a capital campaign feasibility study.
Samaritan House $500 Support in
appreciation for Executive Director
K i t t y L o p e z ’s p r e s e n t a tion to the
Foundation’s Distribution Committee.
San Francisco Adult Day Services
Network $6,000 Support for the Quality
of Care Initiative at Coastside and Senior
Focus adult day health care centers.
San Mateo Association of Community
Organizations for Reform Now $10,000
Support for an outreach program for
the Earned Income Tax Credit that
will include opening three tax preparation
sites in San Mateo County.
San Mateo County Commission on
Aging $2,500 Support for the continuation
a n d e x p a n s i o n of t h e C ommission
on Aging’s Help at Home community
resource book that is targeted to reach
monolingual members of the Chinese
and Latino communities.
Second Harvest Food Bank $80,000
Support to increase visibility among
clients, agencies and donors in San
Mateo County.
44
Second Harvest Food Bank $20,500
Support for the Family Harvest program
for San Mateo County.
Self-Help for the Elderly $250 Support
in appreciation for Registrar of Voters
Warren Slocum’s presentation to the
Foundation’s Distribution Committee.
Senior Coastsiders $36,000 Support
for nutrition programs.
Sensory Access Foundation $30,000
Support for the Employment Preparation,
Job Development and Placement Program.
Shalom Bayit $8,370 Support to launch
the Peninsula/Silicon Valley project
to provide a support group and crisis
intervention services for Jewish battered women, and to improve outreach
and education on the Peninsula.
Shelter Network $160,200 Capital
support for the First Step for Families
reconstruction project in San Mateo
which will provide emergency and transitional housing for homeless families.
Shelter Network $75,000 Support for
the emergency shelter and transitional housing at Maple Street Shelter
in Redwood City.
Shelter Network $10,000 Support for
the conversion and customization of
the Blackbaud accounting database.
Shelter Network $5,000 Support for
the Children’s Program that offers
academic support and enrichment
for the children staying in Shelter
Network’s facilities.
Shelter Network $3,000 Support for
the annual breakfast in 2003.
Society of St . Vincent de Paul of
Santa Clara County $112,000 Support
in 2003 and 2004 for operating costs
and community outreach for the St.
Joseph Day Worker Service Center in
Mountain View.
South Coast Collaborative $117,166
Support in 2003 and 2004 for a leadership transition to sustain the South
Coast Collaborative.
Springboard Forward $180,000 Support
in 2003, 2004 and 2005 for workforce development efforts aimed at
enabling individuals to advance out of
low-wage jobs.
Support Network for Battered Women
$10,000 Support for the Children’s
Program that serves victims of domestic violence living in northern
Santa Clara County.
Supporters of Doelger Senior Center,
Inc. $51,449 Support for the Daly City
Adult Community Connecting Education,
Service and Support (ACCESS) project.
Via Rehabilitation Services $30,000
Support for a respite weekend at
Camp Costanoan.
Whole Access $10,000 Support for
consulting services from CompassPoint Nonprofit Services to assist
with executive transition issues.
Youth and Family Assistance $9,500
S u p p o r t fo r c o s t s a s s o c i a t e d w i t h
t h e m e r g e r of Yo u t h a n d Fa m i l y
Assistance and Family and Community
Enrichment Services.
Youth and Family Enrichment Services
$30,000 Support to hire a volunteer
coordinator to implement a strategy
for recruiting, training and supporting
the agency’s volunteers.
•AIDS Community Research
Consortium
•AIDS Prevention Action Network
•Bread of Life EPA
•Catholic Worker
Hospitality House
•Center for Independence
of the Disabled
•Coastside Adult Day
Health Center
•Coastside Opportunity Center
•Coastside RotaCare Clinic
Youth and Family Enrichment Services
$8,000 Support for the annual breakfast
in 2004 and 2005.
•Community Education Center
PCF EMERGENCY FUND
$207,300
The Emergency Fund makes grants to
community-based nonprofit organizations
that, in turn, provide small grants to
families and individuals to help meet
urgent needs for which other resources
are not available. Emergency needs may
include shelter, eviction prevention, preventing utility shutoffs, hunger, prescription
medication and transportation. From
January 2003 through June 2005, the
following organizations received Emergency
Fund grants:
•Community Services Agency
•Cañada College
•Coastside Opportunity Center
•Community Service Center
of Daly City
•Community Services Agency
•El Concilio of San Mateo County
•Fair Oaks Community Center
•Family Support Center of the
Mid-Peninsula
St. Vincent de Paul Society of San
Mateo County $10,000 Support for
Eviction Prevention Program that
provides temporary rental assistance
and emergency motel vouchers to lowincome families and individuals.
•InnVision
St. Vincent de Paul Society of San
Mateo County $2,300 Support for staff
to attend a managing professional
and personal stress workshop.
•North Peninsula Neighborhood
Services Center
Start Up $15,000 Support to develop
intensive support services that will enable
local businesses to profit and grow.
Start Up $10,000 Support for LEAP, an
adult education and training initiative for low-income individuals who
live in East Palo Alto or East Menlo
Park/Belle Haven.
•St. Vincent de Paul Society
of San Mateo County
2003–2005 ENDOWMENT GRANTS
SAFETY NET FUND
$817,309
P e n i n s u l a C o m m u n i t y Fo u n d a t i o n
established the Safety Net Fund in 2002
to provide timely and flexible assistance
to organizations delivering food, shelter,
health services and other basic needs.
The Fund is an effort to assist local safety
net organizations faced simultaneously
with declining revenues during an economic downturn and increased client
demand. From January 2003 through
June 2005, the following organizations
received Safety Net Fund grants:
•Interfaith Network for
Community Help
•Legal Aid Society of
San Mateo County
•Community Gatepath of
Northern California
•Daly City Community Services
•Daly City Youth Health Center
•DayTop Village Inc.
•Deaf Counseling, Advocacy &
Referral Agency
•El Camino Hospital Foundation
•Family Support Center of the
Mid-Peninsula
•The Daly City Food Pantry at
Hillside Church of God
•InnVision
•Mental Health Association
of San Mateo County
•New Start Furniture Fund
•North Peninsula Neighborhood
Services Center
•Pacifica Resource Center
•Peninsula Family YMCA
•Pescadero Community Church
•Planned Parenthood Golden Gate
•Project Ninety, Inc.
•Ravenswood Family
Health Center
•Samaritan House
•Second Harvest Food Bank
•Pacifica Resource Center
•Service League of
San Mateo County
•Samaritan House
•Shelter Network
•Service League of San Mateo
County
•Sitike Counseling Center
•Society of St. Vincent de Paul
of Santa Clara County
•Society of St. Vincent de Paul
of Santa Clara County
•Sonrisas Community
Dental Clinic
•Springboard Forward
•St. Vincent de Paul Society
of San Mateo County
•Urban Ministry of Palo Alto
•Youth and Family Assistance
SOUTH ASIA DISASTER
RELIEF FUND
On December 27, 2004, within 24 hours
of the Sumatra earthquake and resulting
tsunami, Peninsula Community Foundation
(PCF) set up the South Asia Disaster
Relief Fund to provide emergency relief
to the millions affected by the earthquake
and tsunami in South Asia. The South
Asia Disaster Relief Fund has raised
more than $454,000 to date from more
than 300 individuals, families, and
businesses within our community network.
The Fund released grants in equal distributions to these five organizations
i n s u p p o r t o f t s u n a m i r elief: CARE,
Give2Asia, OXFAM America, Red Cross
a n d t h e U n i t e d N a t i o n s C h i l d r e n’s
Fund (UNICEF). Each agency has an
existing structure in place in the affected
area; a history of managing disaster
relief operations; an active donation
process so that monies move quickly and
responsibly to support this disaster relief
operation; as well as a close relationship
and long-time grant history with PCF.
STRENGTHENING
NONPROFITS
PORTFOLIO
$1,788,629
Association of Fundraising Professionals
– Golden Gate Chapter $3,000 Support
for the Fundraising Day Conference.
BBB Wise Giving Alliance $1,000 Support
for annual membership in 2003.
California Association of Nonprofits
$2,000 Support to subsidize scholarships
for Peninsula-area nonprofit leaders
to attend the Annual CAN Conference.
CompuMentor $90,000 Support to
develop effective technology security
audit tools, training and sustainable
support needed to establish critical
technology infrastructure for Peninsula nonprofits.
Council on Foundations $110,000
Support for annual membership in
2003, 2004 and 2005.
Grantmakers for Effective Organizations $15,000 Support for annual
membership in 2003, 2004 and 2005.
Independent Sector $40,000 Support
for the National Panel on the Nonprofit Sector that recommended to the
Senate Finance Committee actions
that could be taken by the nonprofit
sector, by Congress and by regulators
to improve oversight and governance
of nonprofits.
Independent Sector $37,500 Support
for annual membership in 2003, 2004
and 2005.
The Foundation Center $5,000 Support
in 2003 and 2004 for the library and
learning center that provide important
services and resources to nonprofit
organizations and projects.
THRIVE $140,079 Salary support for a
part-time program manager and general operating support in 2003, 2004
and 2005.
T H R I V E $525 S u p p o r t fo r a n n u a l
membership in 2003, 2004 and 2005.
Vo l u n t e e r C e n t e r of S a n M a t e o
C o u n t y $85,000 S u p p o r t fo r t h e
BoardNet program.
AUTOMATED TECHNICAL
& MANAGEMENT ASSISTANCE
$1,534,629
League of California Community Foun- P e n i n s u l a C o m m u n i t y Fo u n d a t i o n
dations $45,000 Support for annual established the Automated Technical &
membership in 2003, 2004 and 2005. Management Assistance Fund in 1998.
Net Impact $1,500 Support for the Nonprofit organizations that receive a
Service Corp to provide business- grant from PCF’s Distribution Committee
consulting skills to nonprofit organi- are eligible for an additional $2,000
zations in the Peninsula region on a award to suppor t inter nal capacitybuilding efforts such as board or staff
pro bono basis.
training, to contract with a consultant
Nonprofit Finance Fund, San Francisco
or in support of specific fundraising
Bay Area Program $40,000 Support for
efforts. From January 2003 through June
NFF to provide Peninsula nonprofits
2005, 78 organizations received grants
with its Financial Literacy and Advisory
totaling $214,000.
Program which includes nonprofit
business analysis, capital systems PCF’S 40TH YEAR
replacement services, capacity building CELEBRATION GRANTS
consultation services and a three- To kick-off the Foundation’s celebration of
part workshop series.
its 40th year of service to the community,
Non-profit Technology Enterprise
Network $1,000 Support for the N-TEN’s
2005 Bay Area Conference.
Center for Excellence in Nonprofits
$8,000 Support for an all-day “Governance Summit” featuring Harvard
University’s Dick Chait.
Nonprofits United Worker’s Compensation Group $40,000 Support for the
establishment of a 501(n) workers’
compensation risk pool.
Center for Excellence in Nonprofits
$600 Support for annual membership
in 2003, 2004 and 2005.
Northern California Grantmakers
$50,000 Support for the Vision and
Priorities plan in 2003 and 2004.
Center for Excellence in Nonprofits
$500 Support for the annual Nonprofit
Leader of the Year celebration.
Northern California Grantmakers
$45,000 Support for annual membership in 2003, 2004 and 2005.
Community Foundation Silicon Valley
$ 2 , 5 0 0 S u p p o r t f o r t h e Ve n t u r e
Philanthropy Conference held at
Stanford University.
Northern California Grantmakers
$2,000 Support for The Public Charity’s
Guide to the California Initiative
Process, focusing on regulations that
apply to public foundations and non
profit organizations.
CompuMentor $90,000 Support for
the integrated delivery of technology
products, services and training to
the fifteen environmental education
agencies participating in PCF’s Environmental Solutions Forum.
Taproot Foundation $112,000 Support
in 2003, 2004 and 2005 for Taproot
Foundation’s Service Grant program
to enable participation by nonprofit
organizations based in San Mateo and
northern Santa Clara counties.
Independent Sector $17,500 Support
for annual conferences in 2003, 2004
and 2005.
California Budget Project $500 Support
in appreciation for Executive Director
Jean Ross’ presentation to the Foundation’s Distribution Committee.
CompassPoint Nonprofit Services
$99,000 Support to underwrite the
Peninsula Workshop Series and the
Peninsula/Silicon Valley Funders Fair
in 2003, 2004 and 2005.
Silicon Valley Council of Nonprofits
$40,000 General operating support in
2003 and 2004.
Oshkosh Area Community Foundation
$100 Support for the Program Officers
Network annual membership in 2005.
Peninsula Community Foundation
$410,325 Operating support for the
Peninsula Nonprofit Center in 2003,
2004 and 2005.
PCF President Sterling Speirn selected to
give away $40,000 in surprise funding
to 10 area nonprofits. The grants, which
were to be used at the discretion of the
organizations to help cover critical operation costs and support under-funded
programs, spanned PCF ’s eight grantmaking portfolios and the geographic
region served by PCF’s Endowment.
The following are the recipients
of the gift:
•Coastside Children’s Programs
•Community Services Agency
•CompassPoint
Nonprofit Services
•Daly City Youth Health Center
•Foundation for a
College Education
•Pacific Art League
•Peninsula Interfaith Action
•Samaritan House
•San Bruno Mountain Watch
•San Mateo County Health
Services Agency’s Prenatal
to Three Initiative
2003–2005 ENDOWMENT GRANTS
45
2003–2005 FUNDS
Peninsula Community Foundation is honored to facilitate the charitable
activities of more than 650 individuals, families, corporations and organizations. The following list includes funds held between January 1, 2003
and June 30, 2005.
ADVISED FAMILY
FOUNDATIONS
Bretall Family Fund
Maura Scott Davison Memorial Fund
R.H. Foster Fund
Brizzolara Foundation
Dawson Family Fund
T. Jack & Pat Foster Fund
Abbo Family Fund
Brock Foundation
The Charles de Limur Charitable Fund
Fourth Street Fund
Clarence T. Aberg Jr. Family Fund
Dean Family Fund
Dorothy L. and James E. Frank Fund
Acorn Fund
William R. and Wendyce H.
Brody Fund
DeGolia Fund
Frye Family Fund
Agora Foundation
Brugler Family Fund
Jennifer DeGolia Fund
Edeltraud Fritsch Frykberg Fund
Alderwood Fund
Judith Koch Buchanan Fund
DeMartini Family Fund
Jack & Kiyo Fujiki Memorial Fund
Shirley & David Allen Fund
Buckley/Horowitz Fund
Deméré Family Fund
The Galante Norton Foundation
American Federation of State,
County and Municipal
Employees Fund
The Bullock Family Foundation
John and Susan Diekman Fund
Gallo Family Fund
The Burlinson Family Fund
James V. and June P. Diller Foundation
Garnett Fund
Kendra E. Burroughs Memorial Fund
Dr. Charles Foundation
Linda & Hugh Burroughs Fund
Driscoll Family Fund
“Gift of Israel” Educational
Travel Fund
“Cache” Fund
Dunn Giving Fund
Gillespie Foundation
The Campbell Family Fund
Alana L. Dupont Fine Arts
Education Fund
Glover Family Foundation
Grace Foundation
Marc L. Andreessen Fund
Animal Assistance Fund
Anonymous Funds (30)
Mona and Robert Armistead Fund
Atherton Improvement Fund
Dylan Lawrence Cappel
Memorial Fund
John and Marjorie Babbage
Educational Fund
Carano Family Fund
Fred J. Early, Jr. & Elizabeth E.
Janopaul Fund
Cardinal Duval Family Fund
East Avenue Sparrows Fund
Gregory Family Fund
Carpenter Family Fund
Eaton-Yara Fund
Greig Family Foundation
Everett Carpenter Fund
Education Venture Fund
Mary Wiese Gundelach Fund
Carter-Watkins Foundation
Meri & Joe Ehrlich Family Fund
H.O.P.E. Fund
John & Susan Carver Fund
The Eichner-Dominguez Family Fund
Haley Family Foundation
Cascade Fund
Elidar Fund
Hamilton Family Fund
John and Nancy Cassidy Family
Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. Richard Elkus Fund
Hammond Family Fund
Helen and Richard Elkus, Jr.
Family Foundation
Noble and Lorraine Hancock
Family Fund
Alan & Lorna Bagley Fund
Bailard Family Fund
Edward and Gladys Baker
Foundation
Banatao Family Fund
The Roger & Martha Barry Family
Foundation
Paul and Beth Bartlett Family
Foundation
Kai Ning Chang & Nai-June Chang
Charitable Fund
Goral-Scharf Fund
Grassroots Fund
Elliott/Blank Family Foundation
Robert N. Chang Charitable Fund
Hanna Family Foundation
Donald & Janice Elliott Fund
Channels Fund
Ellis Family Fund
The Stephen E. and Susan C.
Hansen Fund
Beckstrom Family Fund
Wen Ming Chen Fund
Susan Ellis and Mark Linton Fund
Hayes-Roth Family Fund
Robert and JoAnna Behl
Charitable Fund
Children’s Fund
Heaven’s Helping Hand Fund
Joseph S. Choy Memorial Fund
Alison F. Engel & Peter E. Engel
Charitable Fund
Bennett/Malloy Fund
Ciesinski Family Fund
Charlotte & Gary Ernst Fund
Bernadett Family Fund
Hellman Family Fund
Clay Family Fund
Evergreen Foundation
Bernini Fund
Cleo Fund
Robert and Martha Falkenberg Fund
Sarah Page Herrick
Foundation Fund
Robert P. & Katherine W.
Berryman Fund
Clinton Family Fund
The Fanlo Fund
Herscher Family Charitable Fund
Phyllis & Andrew S.
Berwick Jr. Fund
Community Mentoring Fund
M.W. Farino Foundation
Hilleary Family Fund
Cornfield Foundation
Carl H. Feldman Fund
The Sara and Russell Hirsch Fund
Margaret Costello Family Fund
Fenner Foundation
Pete & Mary Hodgson Fund
Cotter Charitable Foundation
Feuer Family Fund
George H. and Ann M. Hogle Fund
Coxe Fund
Fire Safety/Bar Retrofit Fund
Nancy Hood Fund
The Cozadd/Hoffman Family Fund
Fischgrund Family Fund
Albert J. and Lorraine C. Horn Fund
George & Susan Crow Fund
Fitzpatrick Family Fund
Shirley Hort Fund
James Culligan Memorial Fund
Flaxman Philanthropic Fund
Rod J. Howard & Emiko Higashi Fund
Daisy Foundation
Margaret Foley Fund
Chip and Pam Huggins Family Fund
Danner Family Fund
Dean and Ellen Forbes Fund
Humanitas Fund
The Joseph A.L. Davidson
Memorial Fund
Chris Ford Fund
Alice Wolcott Hungate Fund
Janet E. Baumgartner Foundation
The Joachim & Marie Beck
Family Fund
Big Guy and Rodi Rodi Family Fund
George Blondino Youth Baseball Fund
Ray Bloom Memorial Fund
Blue House Fund
Jane and Theodore Blumberg Fund
Andrea K. Boehmer Fund
Thomas Winckler Borden and
Barbara Seal Borden Family Fund
Patricia Bresee Fund
46
2003–2005 FUNDS
Heidrich Fund
Hunter Fund
Elly I-Chun Lin Fund
Pierre and Pamela Omidyar Fund
G. Thompson and Wende Hutton Fund
Onward & Upward Initiative Fund
Inspired Philanthropy Fund
James Linenberger Intern
Trust Fund
Jaffe Family Foundation
Linnaeus Thomson Fund
Oskouy Family Foundation
Robert & Elizabeth Janopaul Fund
Lipson Family Fund
Owl Fund
Jarve Family Fund
Littlefield-Coggshall Fund
George & Joan Parker Family Fund
Jeremiah Foundation
Dr. Charles I. and Julia V. Lobel Fund
Pavlov Family Fund
Alma R. and Thomas R. Johnson
Family Fund
Loehmann Fund
Payne Family Fund
Lowney Family Fund
Pegasus Family Foundation
John R. and Phyllis H. Johnson
Family Fund
Luce Family Fund
Lund Foundation
Peninsula Christian Life
Fellowship Fund
Shane A. Johnson Fund
Connie and Bob Lurie Fund
Ronald L. Perkins & Carol Bruce Fund
Rick and Sally Jones Family Fund
Grant Lyddon Foundation
Peterhans Family Fund
Suzanne Jovin Memorial Fund
Mackenzie Family Fund
Peters Family Fund
JSMGJ Fund
Madden Fund
Gail Wells Petty Memorial Fund
Juarez Children’s Education
Program Fund
Magnussen Family Foundation
PH Foundation
Maidenherren Fund
Leonard and Vera Pitts Fund
Markkula Foundation Fund
Pivotal Fund
Mason & Poda Family Fund
Matthew and Allie Fund
Jay & Clare Plank Family
Advised Fund
Mayer Daniel Fund
Plunkett and Kuhr Family Fund
Shennan Family Fund
Michael and Sarah Mayer Family Fund
Alison and Jeffrey Poetsch Fund
Sheriff’s Youth Program Fund
John P. and Charlene D.
McCaskey Foundation
Myrtle Potter Fund
The Shevell Family Foundation
Todd B. Keleher Family Fund
Powar Family Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Shoor Fund
Kellogg-Ferguson Fund
McCrae Fund
Praisner Family Foundation
The Silk Family Fund
Kelly Family Fund
McIntyre Family Fund
Gloria and Will Price Fund
Singleton Family Fund
Charles W. King, Jr. Donor
Advised Fund
Mee Family Fund
The Purcell Family Fund
Sitter Family Fund
Linda R. & Anthony P. Meier Fund
Purple Monkey Fund
Skanderup Family Fund
Melamid Fund
Radiant Recovery Fund
Mendelsohn Family Fund
John A. Raiser Fund
Howard P. Smith and Rhonda J.
Smith Fund
Dale and Helen Mersereau Fund
Raiser Family Foundation
Michael & Kathryn Koehler Fund
Meyer Family Fund
Raiser-Bacon Family Fund
Komisar/Dunn Fund
Millennium Fund
Rava Family Fund
Koogle Foundation
Miller Family Fund
Peggy Rawls Family Fund
John A. Kriewall & Elizabeth A.
Haehl Family Foundation
Misty Foundation
Re:Fund
MM Foundation
Reback Family Fund
Catherine M. Kruttschnitt Fund
Mohr Family Foundation
Recht Family Fund
Jennifer Salyer Lambird
Memorial Fund
J. Mario Molina Advised Family
Foundation
Red Husky Foundation
The Lamrock Fund
Morgan Family Fund
Dr. Landucci Foundation
John P. & Tashia F. Morgridge Fund
Robert C. and Janie Pace
Rempel Fund
Ambassador Bill & Jean Lane Fund
Esther Moskovitz Charitable Fund
Reve Foundation
Madeline and Isaac Stein Family Fund
Melvin B. & Joan F. Lane Fund
Murphy & Hill Fund
Ridgeview Fund
Steiner Family Foundation
Chris Larsen Fund
Myeloma Research Fund
Ring Family Foundation
G. Stewart Foundation
John W. & Linda C. Larson Fund
Gib and Susan Myers Fund
Rippleeffect Foundation
Stewart-Thomas Fund
Las Hermanas Fund
Debbie Mytels Fund
J.H. Robbins Foundation Fund
Stone Soup Fund
Richard & Emmy Lou Lavenstein Fund
Nehemiah Fund
Rogers Fund
Stokes Fund
Leda Fund
Neukermans Family Fund
Stovall Family Fund
James Lee Memorial Fund
New Beginning Fund
Robert and Patricia Ronald
Family Foundation
Legallet Family Foundation
Bernard A. Newcomb Fund
Sunshine RFBF Fund
Mary Lemmon Fund
Paul and Antje Newhagen Foundation
Roshan Cultural Heritage
Institute Fund
F.H. Levinson Fund
Novent Fund
Steven Rosston & Louisa La Farge
Family Fund
Sycamore Fund
Levinthal/Schlein Family Fund
Noyce Fund
Ruskin Family Memorial Foundation
Noella and Ricardo Levy
Charitable Fund
Oak Meadow Fund
Gordon Russell Fund
Oakstone Fund
Marion & Harry Lewenstein Fund
Russo Fund
O’Brien Family Fund
Howard R. Kahn Fund
Howard and Barbara Kalt Fund
Kashnow Fund
Kaspick/Termohlen Family Fund
Barry Leonard Katz Memorial Fund
Kaufman/Clement Fund
Bob and Edie Kirkwood Fund
Kitch Family Fund
Justin & Marlo Kitch Family
Foundation
Orr Family Fund
Ann and William Regan Fund
San Francisco and Bay Area
Education Fund
San Mateo County Bar
Association Funds
Sand Hill Foundation
Sapling Fund
Schauer Family Fund
Schaupp Family Fund
Scheinman Family Fund
H.M. and L. Schneider Family Fund
Schwartz/Nachman Family &
Friends Education Fund
Edwin A. Seipp, Jr. Fund
Self Starters Fund
Neil & Chantal Selvin Fund
Shackleton Family Fund
Amit Shah Family Fund
Krishnan Shah Family Fund
Shahinian Family Fund
Michael and Carol Shealy Foundation
Joan and Uli Spannagel Fund
Spence Family Fund
Spencer Family Fund
Carol & Ned Spieker Fund
Tod & Catherine Spieker Fund
Spreng Family Fund
Sri Venkateswara Fund
Srinija Srinivasan Fund
Star Hill Fund
Stark Family Fund
Starview Foundation
Strauss Hawkins Fund
Robert A. Swanson Memorial Fund
Talarico/Mills Fund
Tang Family Fund
Tanklage Fund
TBD Foundation
2003–2005 FUNDS
47
Thinking Fund
Jean A. Cartotto Fund
Handspring Foundation
Homer L. Stack Fund
Tiemann Family Fund
Margaret Olstad Cleary Charitable
Remainder Unitrust
Homestead Foundation
Keynote Community Fund
Robert and Jean Steiner
Endowment Fund
Lavenstein and Company Fund
Walt Whitman Fund
Legacy Fund
Jean Wirth Endowment Fund
Maxygen Foundation
FIELD OF INTEREST FUNDS
Carey H. Timbrell Foundation
Tiphane Foundation
Toth/Sheridan Fund
Townshend/Lamarre Foundation
Trapp Charitable Fund
Albert E. Cobb Charitable
Remainder Unitrust
Coxhead Family 1997 Charitable
Remainder Unitrust
The Sheilah Dorcy 1999 Charitable
Remainder Unitrust
Mayfield Fund Foundation
Assets for All Alliance
Orchard Commercial Foundation
Casey M. Turturici Memorial Fund
Helen C. Engelbert Charitable
Remainder Unitrust
Sand Hill Advisors, Inc.
Charitable Fund
Automated Technical & Management
Assistance Program
James S. and Karen A. Tyler
Foundation
R. and R. Fournier 1996
Charitable Remainder Unitrust
Symyx Technologies Community Fund
Nancy Tuck Fund
Turner-Gilliland Family Fund
Sheena and Vijay Vaidyanathan Fund Frank 1997 Charitable
Remainder Trust N
Van Rensselaer Family Fund
Frank 2002 Charitable Trust
Vartanian Family Foundation
Janard Charitable Trust
Veeder Crest Foundation
Therese Z. Jordan Unitrust
Verbeck Family Foundation
Keller 2000 Charitable
Wachtel Family Fund
Remainder Unitrust
Wagonfeld Family Fund
Robert C. Kirkwood Charitable
Wai Family Fund
Remainder Unitrust
The David and Maria Waitrovich Fund The Lager Family Fund
Florence D. Brown
Distribution Fund
Yahoo! Employee Foundation
Cabrillo Unified School
District Fund
LEGACY ENDOWMENT FUNDS
Charitable Real Estate Fund
Paul S. Achilles Fund
Child Care Facilities
Expansion Fund
Administrative Endowment Fund
Yung C. Chi and Rosalind C. Chi Fund Children’s Health Initiative
Community Endowment Fund
Patricia Ann and Robert Millard
Dean Fund
Leona G. DeLucchi Fund
Director’s Endowment Fund
Community Leadership
Training Program
Community Schools Funds
East Palo Alto Community
Resource Center Fund
EE Collaborative Fund
Ambassador Bill Lane and Jean Lane F.M. and N.S. Donahoe Fund
Charitable Trusts
Emergency Grant Fund
Mary Dysinger Fund
Charles B. Luce Charitable
Emergency Grants to
Webb Family Fund
Early Literacy Endowment Fund
Lead Annuity Trust
Individuals Fund
David G. and Jill R. Weed Fund
Norio & Jeannette Ferrari Fund
Lund Family 1998 Charitable
Emerging
Arts Endowment Fund
Welch Family Fund
The Joseph P. Glynn Endowment Fund
Remainder Unitrust
Environmental
Solutions Forum
Western Association of Venture
Morgan A. Gunst Memorial Fund
Marianne Mannia Charitable
Eucalyptus Foundation Reading
Capitalists Fund
U. S. Harkson Fund
Remainder Unitrust
Recovery Fund
Weyl Hariton Fund
Warren T. Jensen Endowment
Oliver McComas Trust
FAITHS
Initiative Fund
Robert C. Wheeler Fund
Suzanne and Martin Karr
Hays McLellan Trust
Family
Housing
& Homeless Funds
Walt Whitman Fund
Educational Fund
Lorraine R. McLellan Trust
Fostering
the
Future
James H. Whittam Charitable Fund
Joe W. Kerley Fund
Raymond J. Perin Charitable
Fund For Women
Williams Family Fund
Kathryn H. Kingberg Memorial Fund
Remainder Trust
Etta
Haber Memorial Fund
G.W. Williams Foundation
Houston Spencer Landon and
Pooled Income Fund
Holiday
Fund
Genevieve
Elizabeth
Landon
Elissa and Gary T. Williams Fund
Ruppert Charitable Remainder Trust
Charitable Fund
Home
Visiting
Improvement
Wilson Family Foundation
Katrina M. Wollenberg Charitable
Project Fund
Ambassador Bill and Jean Lane
Remainder Unitrust
Pat & Bill Wilson Fund
Endowment Fund
Kickoff to Kindergarten Fund
Wilson-Dalzell Family Foundation
CHARTERED FAMILY
Lilienthal Fund
The Kathleen Kilcare Fund for the
Wind River Fund
FOUNDATIONS
Community Advisory Committee
The Anne Loftus Endowment Fund
Winedot Fund
for Special Education
Frank Levinson Family Foundation
Anne Marquart Endowment Fund
Winograd-Hutner Family Fund
LaderaLand Fund
Bernard A . Newcomb Foundation
Bruce and Peggie Michael Fund
Paul J. Wonner Fund
Georgia McDaniel Book Fund
The Star Hill Fund
Agnes C. Michaels Endowment Fund
Wu/Krause Family Fund
Neighborhood Grants Program Fund
Peter and Nora Stent
Newcomb Family Endowment Fund
Family
Foundation
Wythes Family Foundation
One East Palo Alto Project
Mary Emily Nicewander
Regranting Fund
Geoffrey and Amy Yang Family Fund Donald B. and Carol F. Tanklage
Endowment Fund
Family Foundation
Organizational
Capacity
John and Rosemary Young Fund
Gloria Nolan Fund
Grants Initiative
ADVISED CORPORATE
Youstra Family Foundation
PCF Arts Endowment Fund
PCF Artist Residency Fund
FOUNDATIONS
Wiley Austin Yu Fund
Ray Perin Endowment Fund
PCF One East Palo Alto
Applied Materials Civic Venture Fund
Wu Chen Lew Zurinaga Fund
RASwanson Family Endowment Fund
Operational Fund
Argonaut Foundation
Florence A . Rice Fund
Peninsula Artists Fund
CHARITABLE
The Atelier Avocado Fund for
REMAINDER TRUSTS
Ralph Hale Ruppert and Lenore
Peninsula Community Health Fund
Women and Children
M. Ruppert Fund in Memory of
Peninsula Partnership ELOA Fund
W.L. Butler Construction Fund
Nellie Hale Ruppert and Amanda
Peninsula Partnership for Children,
Miller Edwards
E.J. De La Rosa & Co., Inc.
The Brandon Charitable
Youth and Families
Charitable Foundation
Gordon Russell Endowment Fund
Remainder Unitrust
Peninsula Partnership
Greater Bay Bancorp
Sand Hill Endowment Fund
Florence D. Brown Charitable
Parenting Newsletter
Foundation School Fund
Remainder Fund
Wang Family Fund
Wang/Chang Fund
48
2003 – 2005 FUNDS
Preschool for All
Junior League of Palo Alto•
Mid Peninsula Fund
Beating The Odds Fund III
Beating the Odds Fund V
Raising a Reader® Venture Fund
Junior League of Palo Alto•
Mid Peninsula, Inc.
Endowment Fund
Ravenswood Education Foundation
Margrit Kumin Trust
Crain Scholarship Fund
REDF Fund
Kumin-Hospice of the Valley Fund
Safety Net Fund
Kumin-Pets in Need Fund
Curry Award for Girls and
Young Women
School Excursion Fund
Kumin-Rebuilding Together
Peninsula Fund
Principals’ Fund
Proposition Ten Fund
School Readiness
Teachers’ Fund
VIA Fund
NONPROFIT &
DESIGNATED FUNDS
Adolescent Counseling Services
Endowment Fund
Beating the Odds Fund IV
Beating the Odds Fund VI
FEI Scholarship Fund
Dr. Mary Finegold Scholarship Fund
The La Honda-Pescadero Unified
School District Endowment Fund
Bobette Bibo Gugliotta Memorial
Scholarship Fund
Leadership Scholarship/
Education Fund
Dr. James Hutchinson and
Evelyn Ribbs-Hutchinson
Scholarship Fund
League of California Community
Foundations Fund
Kilmartin Educational Fund
Martha Lopez Educational Fund
Kumin Scholars Fund
The John Lyddon Scholarship Fund/
The Bridge School
Mr. & Mrs. Sze Lee Memorial Fund
BALit Fund
Bridge School Endowment Fund
MAP Sustainable Energy Fund
James A. McCavitt and Annie LePors
McCavitt Scholarship Fund
Bridge School General Fund
The Tim Mulligan Scholarship
Fund/The Bridge School
The Mervin G. Morris
Scholarship Fund
Dorothy & Edward Muschner
Endowment Fund
Peninsula Regent
Charitable Foundation
Oljato Fund
The Reverend John Wesley Rice, Jr.
Memorial Scholarship Fund
Arastra Fund
David Briggs Scholarship Fund/
The Bridge School
Burlingame Aquatic
Center Foundation
C.A.R. Endowment Fund
PARCA-Project REACH Fund
Child Advocacy Council
Endowment Fund
Patterson Educational Fund
Ralph Hale & Martha L. Ruppert
Educational Fund
Child Care Facility-Redwood City
Peninsula AIDS Memorial Grove
at Huddart Park
Citizen Schools Project Fund
San Mateo County Science Fair
Scholarship Fund
Project H.O.T. Fund
Computers in our Future Fund
Sand Hill Scholars Fund
Dibble Marriage Enhancement Fund
Ravenswood Family
Health Center Fund
Students Rising Above
Roger and Jean Hunt Duncan Fund
Redwood Institute Fund
Students Rising Above
Continuing Education
East Palo Alto Recreation
Services Fund
The Elliott Roberts Scholarship
Fund/The Bridge School
Students Rising Above Program
Julia M. Farrell Memorial Fund
Marie Russell Memorial Fund
Hua Chien Tang
Memorial Scholarship
Jennifer Fitzsimmons Memorial
Scholarship Fund/
The Bridge School
Samaritan House Agency Fund
Bob Whitmore Scholarship Fund
Samaritan House Designated Fund
Woodlake Fund
Thomas W. Ford Award Fund
The San Carlos Charter Learning
Center Fund
The Tim Foster Scholarship Fund/
The Bridge School
Lucile Sanigar Fund
Frank Diabetes Research Institute
Friends for Youth, Inc. Fund
Garfield School Fund
Sequoia Awards
Scholarship Endowment
Sheriff’s Emergency
Services Foundation
Garfield Charter School Trust Fund
of San Mateo County
Silver Giving Foundation Fund
Girls Club of the Mid
Peninsula Fund
The Superior Court Community
Outreach Fund
Gretchen Gould Fine Arts
Memorial Fund
Peter N. Verdos Memorial Fund
Mary Elizabeth Griffin Annual
Children’s Award Fund
South Asia Disaster Relief Fund
Veterans Industry Resource Room
SCHOLARSHIP FUNDS
HAND Endowment Fund
Southern University Scholarship Fund
Hospitality House Fund
Clara Crook Scholarship Fund
Friends of Huddart & Wunderlich
Parks Fund
Hannie and Edward Badt Fund
The Larry Johnson Scholarship
Fund/The Bridge School
The Virginia Johnson Financial Aid
Endowment/Girls’ Middle School
Hazel Reed Baumeister
Scholarship Fund
Beating The Odds Fund I
Beating The Odds Fund II
2003–2005 FUNDS
49
2003 –2005 DONATIONS
Peninsula Community Foundation is grateful to the following individuals,
organizations, corporations and government agencies, which made donations of $500 or more to PCF between January 1, 2003 and June 30, 2005.
INDIVIDUALS
Edward & Alison Abbo
Richard E. & Marilynn Abrams
Frank W. Adams & Susan C. Bryan
Lee & Emma Addams
James & Sharon Aguilera
Bruce B. & Janet Allen
Heath L. & Eleanor Allen
R. Spencer & Ellen Allen
Ted & Darci Allrich
Claire Ames
Raul & Norma Amezcua
Philip Anderlini
Alan & Marlene Anderson
Steve & Ruth Anderson
Steven D. & Patricia Anderson
William D. & Shirley Anderson
Colleen Anderson-Caballero
Marc Andreessen
George & Barbara Andreini
Melvin & Carla Anisman
Nissa Anklesaria
Anonymous (171)
David J. & JoAnne Arata
Polly Arenberg
Robert A . & Mona Armistead
Florence Armstrong
Whitney Armstrong
Irwin & Nancy Aronson
Jonathan Aronson
Lewis Aronson
Raphael & Dorothea Aronson
Louis Artiaco
Brooke Atherton
A . Augustin
Greg & Anne Avis
Dan Azizuddin
Edward Badt
G. Geoffrey Baehr
Alan Bagley
Thomas E. & Terri Bailard
Scott Baker
Anne Baldwin
Stephen & Meshel Baldwin
Diosdado & Maria Banatao
Marlo Banks
Arthur L. & Ruth Barker
Richard Barndt
50
2003–2005 DONATIONS
LaVerna Barnes
Sarah Baroody
Robert C. Barrett &
Linda E. Atkinson
Roger & Martha Barry
Paul & Elizabeth Bartlett
Michael S. & Barbara Barton
Robert M. & Anne Bass
William P. & Bobbi Batchelder
Gino & Mary Battagin
Janet Baumgartner
David T. & Diana Beatson
Thomas Beck
Loren A . & Elaine Beckley
Scott & Phyllis Bedford
Peter Bedrossian
Robert & JoAnna Behl
Stephen Bellamy & Laurel Leone
Greg Benchwick
Kathleen Bennett & Thomas Malloy
James & Vera Bennett
Ronald J. & Susan Benveniste
Eric S. & Sandra Bergan
David & Linda Berger
Faustino & Mary Martha Bernadett
Mem Dryan Bernstein
Theodore & Lorri Bernstein
Susan Berry
Jeffrey & Jane Bertani
Phyllis & Andrew S. Berwick, Jr.
Janice & Fred H. Betke, Jr.
Tito J. & Cameron Bianchi
Barbara Krimsky Binder
William D. & Barbara Binder
Jane Bingham
Ray Bingham
Charles Black
Elizabeth L. Blair & Kenneth Fenyo
Theresa Bloebaum
Terence & Margaret Boardman
Andrea Boehmer
Edward M. & Linda Bohnert
Treve Bonser & Cynthia Ma
Howard & Nancy Boone
John M. & Dagny Borcich
Eric & Susan Boyd
Andrew Braccia
Charles Bracher
John Bracken
Mark & Jenny Brandemuehl
Chester Brandon
Germaine Brennan
Patricia Bresee
Graeme & Norah Bretall
Louis & Margaret Brizzolara
Arthur & Sophie Brody
Janice Brody
William R. & Wendyce Brody
Sam B. & Kelly Bronfman
Elizabeth Brookes
Emmet & Faye Brophy
Allan Brown
Constance Brown &
Elizabeth Mikles
Morris & Denise Halet Brown
Denny Brown & Ann Oglesby
Elmer Brown
Robert W. & Irene Brown
Steven & Michele Brown
Hubert & Gisela Brugger
Bruce & Cameron Brugler
Roy & Katherine Bukstein
Henry & Terri Bullock
Jeanie Bunker
Kimberly Burgess
Jan S.J. Burks
Elizabeth Burnham
Hugh & Linda Burroughs
Eric K. Butler &
Suzanne L. Rocca-Butler
Jeff Byron
J. Peter & Caroll Cahill
Michael & Barbara Calbert
Patricia Call
Kenneth M. & Kathy Camet
Kathleen Cammarata
Norman Campbell
Willard H. & Catherine Campbell
Steven Candito
Carolyn Canning-White
Fran Cannon
Lawrence W. & Barbara Cappel
Tony & Debbie Cappel
Stuart K. & Josefina Card
Adele Carney
Mary Beth Caro
William S. & Linda Carvell
Robert L. & Carol Castaneda
Stephen M. & Jennifer Champion
Ruth Kan Tai Chan &
Mary Lantai Tsai
Anurag & Donna Chandra
Kai-Ning & Nai-June Chang
Shaw-Wei Chen & Man-Huei Shieh
Susan Chen
Frederick R. & Margaret Chilton
Raymond & Linda Chin
Joseph & Audrey Ching
Richard Chino
Jackie Chow
Dickson Chu
Roozbeh Chubak
Camille Cicinelli
Sharon Cioffi
Henrietta Clark
Nicholas Clark
Terry & Anne Clark
Landon & Lavini Clay
Margaret Cleary
Nina & John H. Clinton, Jr.
Greg Cochran
James & Alice Cochran
Peter M. & Angela Coffee
Robert L. & Susan Coffman
Thomas A . & Kristi Cohen
Gregory G. & M. Monica Coleman
Kenneth & Caretha Coleman
Michael J. G. & Ruth Coleman
Ann Collins
Carol Collins
Laura Collins
Richard Collyer &
Mary Lou Collyer
Donald & Mary Catherine Coluzzi
George E. Comstock & Anne Hillman
Michael D. & Elizabeth Connor
Juanita Contreras
Robert Cook
Scott D. Cook & H. Signe Ostby
Tom & Mary Cooper
Elizabeth Coughlin
Edwin & Nidhi Covarrubias
Mary Cox
Stuart Coxhead
Mr. Bruce Cozadd &
Ms. Sharon Hoffman
Linda Craig
Phillip S. & Kathleen Creger
Peter Cross
George & Susan Crow
Robert Crow
Erika Crowley
Robyn Cummins
David Currie
Pamela Cuthburt
Reese T. & Kathleen Cutler
Andrea Cutright
Alan Dachs
Rune Dahl & Sharlene Gee
James & Frances Dalton
Bang C. & Susan Dang
Andrew M. Daniels &
Dana Gleason
Jill Darcey
Robert E. & Margaret Davenport
David F. & Kornelia Davidson
Duncan & Jean Davidson
Mark & Joyce Davidson
Christine Dawson
Stephane P. & Alison De Bord
Edward De La Rosa
Charles de Limur
Donald A . & Mary Jane Dean
Rick & Kerry Parker DeBenedetti
Thomas DeBoni &
Micheline LeBlanc
Susan Decker
Paul C. & Leeann Deemer
Clay & Carol Del Secco
Linda & James DeMartini, III
Laura Denhaan
Richard L. & Carole DeProspo
Kaisa Detristan
Scott C. & Lisa Dettmer
Norman R. & Kathryn DeWitt
Bill & Sue Dickey
John & Susan Diekman
James V. & June Diller
William O. & Patricia Dillingham
Robert & Mary Dodge
Michael & Sandra Dodson
Patrick G. & Frances Doherty
Frank Dominguez & Lora Eichner
Edward D’Onofrio
Benjamin Doty
Daniel G. Dougherty &
Jennifer Redmond
Toby Douglas
Ross & Kelly Dove
William A . & Margaret Drake
John W. & Alison Draper
Derek Dukes
Jennifer Dulski
Cambria Dunaway
Leslie Dunlap
Pierre Dupont
Julianne Eager
Charles Eddie
Gloria Jeneal Eddie
Philip Edington
Barbara Egyud
Joseph & Meri Ehrlich
Thomas & Ellen Ehrlich
Randall Eike
Helen & Richard Elkus, Jr.
Charles L. & Patricia Ellingson
Donald & Janice Elliott
Sylvia Elliott
Anthony T. & Jane Ellis
Eleanore Ellis
Beatrice Elpern
Robert L. & Dan Emery
Peter E. Engel & Alison F. Engel
Helen Engelbert
Alain C. & Rosemary Enthoven
Frank J. Espina
Christopher & Carol Espinosa
James Esposto & Gail Peters
Petro & Mary Estakhri
Frederika Evans
Stephanie Evans
James & Dorothy Fadiman
Linda & Robert L. Falkenberg, III
Ignacio Fanlo
Gary S. & Karen Fanton
Jeffrey T. Fanton & Andrea W. Chow
Michael J. & Allison Farey
Carol Farmer
Michael & Debby Fatjo
Veronica Faussner
L. B. & Karen Fauver
Nicholas L. & Jeffie Feakins
Carl Feldman
Craig E. Uhrich & Joan E. Ferguson
Ernest R. Ferraro & Sharon L. Crowe
Stephen R. & Charlotte Ferree
Michael & Margaret Feuer
William Fidelholtz
Samuel & Jodi Figler
David Filo & Angela Buenning
Joseph G. Finegold
Sydney M. & Gloria Finegold
Herbert & Alice Fischgrund
Kenneth & Sherrilyn Fisher
Lisa Fitts
Mark & Rina Flaharty
Valory Flaner
Don & Carole Flaxman
Michael S. Fleice & Elizabeth J. Yasek
Alexis Flint
Katherine Flint
Susan & Robert B. Flint, Jr.
Margaret Flintroy
Julie Fong
David M. & Patricia Forbes
Dean & Ellen Forbes
Claire Ford
John & Laura Foster
Thomas M. & Cynthia Foster
Terry & Sharon Forte
Gregory A . Fowler &
Julie B. Lovins
Robert Thomas Franceschini
James E. & Dorothy Frank
Jay Frank
Marina Fraser
Jeffrey & Fumie Friedl
Jim Fruchterman
Larry & Louise Frye
Virginia Fryer
Gary J. & Eileen Fujii
Paul A . & Chris Furlong
Michael Gaebler
Lee Gallagher
Gregory & Penny Gallo
Brett Gardner
Bradley & Kristen Garlinghouse
William & Susan Garratt
Ned & Robin Quist Gates
S. Murray & Maxine Gaylord
Charles & Sara Z. Geber
Dan Geiger
Herbert & Nylda Gemple
Robert R. & Bonnie Gerlach
Claire Gerwulf
Gloria Getty
Jean Gildersleeve
Mary Anne Gillespie
Mark S. & Elizabeth Giovanetti
Walter Girdlestone
Michael Glembourtt & Phyllis Ponte
E. Alexander & Anne Glover
Chris Glud
Richard Godwin
Lola Coleman Goheen
David Goldberg
Jane Goldberg
Rosalie Goldberger
John & Marcia Goldman
Isy Goldwasser
Benita Goodwin
Jesse D. & Stephanie Gossett
Jeff Grainger & Maren Monsen
James Granucci & Kibbie Ruth
Mark & Nicole Gray
Ellen Greene
Peter B. & Ann Gregory
D. Wylie & Janet Greig
Cornelia Griffin
Michael Grishaver
Carole Groom
Charles L. & Julie Gruder
Rosalind Grymes-Friedland
Mary Gundelach
Umang & Ruth Gupta
Tuan Ha & Thuy Ha Ngoc
Robert J. & Harriet Haber
Joseph Haggerty
Richard T. & Barbara Haiduck
Ralph W. & Patricia Haines
Per Hakansson
Tim Haley & Ethna C. McGourty
Jan Half
Howard Halff
Christopher Hall & Sandra L. Sarro
John R. Hall & Michelle Atno-Hall
Andrew C. & Nancy Hall
Stephen Hall
John & Carol Hamilton
Peter R. & Dorothy Hammond
Jason Hancock
Stephen E. & Susan Hansen
Frank R. & Judy Hardy
Samuel R. & Pauline Harman
Gordon & Elizabeth Harper
Celia Hartman
Dr. & Mrs. Harry Hartzell
Nathan & Claudia Hau
Wallace R. & Alexandra Hawley
Roy G. & Janet Hayter
Jeannette & A . Grant Heidrich, III
Matthew Heist
Stephen Heitel
Robert & Renee Hellman
Stacey Hendrix
Howard Herbert
Matthew K. Herndon &
Cathy S. Somerton
Bret & Penelope Herscher
Douglas & Carolen Herst
Sylvan & Marjorie Heumann
Michael Hexner
Jennifer Hickerson
Thomas C. & Ann Hill
H. Langdon & Charmian Hilleary
Elaine A . Hilp
Schyrl Hinrichs
Kelly Hirano
Russell Hirsch
Carolyn Hitchcock
Karen Ho
William D. Hobi & Soojung Ko
Lex Hobson
Havi Cohen Hoffman
Olga Hoffman
William W. & Janet Hofmann
Thomas P. Hogan & Pamela Pearson
George H. & Ann Hogle
Matthew J. & Michele Holcomb
Craig Holland
John E. & Deborah Hollister
Barbara Lucas Holman
Pallavi Homan
Nancy Hood
Chad & January Hooker
Albert J. & Lorraine Horn
Elizabeth Horn
Mark Horowitz & Jody Buckley
Shirley Hort
John Hourigan
Rod J. Howard & Emiko Higashi
Goang-Tay Hsu & Jung Fei Lin
2003–2005 DONATIONS
51
Albert L. & Angela Hu
Mark D. & Michele Hudak
Richard J. & Susan Huetteman
John S. & Leslie Huey
Chip & Pam Huggins
Mark E. & Jennifer Hull
Janet G. Hunt
Lorelle Hunt
Gordon Hunter
Hillard G. & Honor Huntington
Kamran Husain & Ila Kriplani
G. Thompson & Wende Hutton
Gordon W. & Beverly Hutton
Lori Innes
Karen Irvin
Milt Iverson
Jeremy & Christina Isenberg
Matt & Margaret Jacobson
Lydia Jaffa
Ross A . & Eve Jaffe
Naveen Jamal
Mary Anne & Richard E. James, III
Robert & Elizabeth Janopaul
John W. & Jacque Jarve
Kathleen & Robert Jaunich, II
Janice Jedkins
Thomas M. & Anne Jenkins
James Jensen
Ronald L. & Gladys Jensen
Richard A . & Rita Jenson
Mon H. & Sally Jew
Jenny Jirousek
Steve Jobs & Laurene Powell
Ryan Johanson
Christopher D. & Leslie Johnson
Craig G. & Lucia Johnson
Gregg A . & Barbara Johnson
John R. & Phyllis Johnson
William & Johna Johnson
Virginia Johnson
Anna Jones
Sarah Anna & Robertson C. Jones, Jr.
Frank Jordan
John T. & Natalie Jordan
Joan Jovan
Thomas Jovin & Donna Jovin
Campbell C. Judge &
Kimberly A . Ellis
David Julian
Edwin J. & Particia Kahl
Mary Ann Kaisel
Anthony & Lella Kakis
David L. & Nancy Kalkbrenner
Stanley A . & Teresa Kangas
Kathryn Karrels
Richard A . & Marcia Kashnow
Michael A . & Christine Kasman
Scott Kaspick & Susan Termohlen
Martin & Lee Katz
Cameron & Reina Kauffman
K. Kawamura
52
2003–2005 DONATIONS
Jerry A . & Kathleen Keener
Diane Keitz
Jo Ann & Donald M. Keller, Sr.
George & Addie Keller
Gina & Richard R. Kelley, Jr.
Ann R. Kempees &
Madeline I. Roberts
Dorothy Kennedy
Duncan & Katherine Kennedy
Tom Kenny & Debby Kramer
Arthur H. & Susan Kern
Robert S. & Cheryl Kernan
Christine Kerrigan
Floyd & Barbara Kessler
Omar Khan
Ann Kim
Carl & Joan King
Ernest Kingberg
Eric W. & Robin Magyar Kirchner
Harold E. & Patricia Kirkbride
Knud J. & Leslie Kirkegaard
Robert C. & Edith Kirkwood
James & Christine Kitch
Justin & Marlo Kitch
A .F. Klase
Amy Klein
Rick Klein
Michael J. & Miyoung Kleine
Mary Kneip
H. James & Barbara Knuppe
Theodore Ko
Drew Altman & Pamela Koch
Michael & Kathryn Koehler
Bill & Gay Krause
Jeff Krause & Debbie Wu
Larry C. & Patricia Krebs
John A . Kriewall &
Elizabeth A . Haehl
Jayaprakash & Rani Krishnamoorthy
David Kruckemyer
Catherine Kruttschnitt
Vishwanath & Poonam Arora
Kuruganti
Mark & Patricia Kvamme
Kathy Kwan
Wynnette LaBrosse
Stephen Lalli
Bert Lamar
Peggy Lamaysou
Christopher Lambert
Jane Land
Albert O.J. Landucci
Ambassador & Mrs. L.W. Lane, Jr.
Melvin B. & Joan Lane
Annie & James G. Laplante, Jr.
John W. & Linda Larson
Richard M. & Emmy Lavenstein
Brenda Law
Merle Lawrence
John Lazlo & Robin Raborn
Gabriele LeCompte
Chong & Reiko Takahashi Lee
Michael Lee
Randall J. Lee & Ann T. Amaza Lee
Doris Legallet
Joe Legallet
Jok P. & Kirsten Legallet
Jon & Bette Legallet
Mary Marguerite Legallet
Paul & Sharon Legallet
Robert P. & Mary Legallet
Suzanne Legallet
Ray Lehmkuhl
Mary Lemmon
Helen Leong
Robert Levenson
Frank Levinson
Michael Levinthal & Kathy Schlein
Morris Lewenstein
Joe Lewis
Mary Lewis
Timothy Lewis
Jeffrey & Evelyn Liebgold
Kian-Tat Lim
John R. & Ann Lindner
Mark A . Linton & Susan Ellis
James F. & Judith Lipman
Mark Lipshaw
Jan & Janyce Lipson
Edmund & Jeannik Littlefield
Roy Liu
Thomas H. & Ann Livermore
Charles I. & Julia Lobel
Peter Loeb
Scott J. & Marilyn Loftesness
Robin Loomis
James L. & Gail Lopes
Harry A . & Carol Louchheim
John C. & Janet Loustaunou
John Lowney
Alex Lu & Jie Hong
Douglas M. Lusk &
Kathy S. Kawakami
James F. & Sarah Lutz
Tom & Shirley Lyons
Jason & Sara Maas
Joe R. & Claudia MacFarland
Douglas & Shawn Mackenzie
Martin & Donna Mackowski
J. Thomas Madden
Greg & Sherry Madding
George & Marjorie Mader
Rajeev Madhavan
Philip R. & Keven Madvig
Ernest A . & Lynne Maggioncalda
Bernard Magnussen, Jr.
Bernard & Sandra Magnussen
Ryan Magnussen
Gadi & Marlene Maier
Donald G. & Katherine Malik
Joseph & Kathryn Malkin
Matthew R. & Cheryl Mamiya
Brian Mandarich
David Mandelbrot
Christopher & Jane Manning
Gertrude Gally Margah
George D. & Judith Markison
Christopher R. & Susan Martin
Tom & Olivia Martinez
Michael Massaro
N. Matheny
Shirley & Duncan L. Matteson, Sr.
Betsy & Duncan L. Matteson, Jr.
Paul & Susan Matteucci
Michael L. & Sarah Mayer
D.N. & Winifred Maytum
Diane McEwen
Micaela McCallum
John P. & Charlene McCaskey
James McCavitt
Robert R. & Joan McCowan
Richard & Emma McCrae
Edward D. & Jane McCrary
William J. & June McDonald
Eric McDonnell
Kenneth S. McElvain & Alisa Yaffa
Douglas McElwain
Howard & Sheryl McGinnis
Michael McGrady
Ryan & Katherine McIntyre
Beverly McKee
Michael L. & Julia Mee
Prashant Mehta
Rakesh Mehta
Anthony P. & Linda R. Meier
Barbara J. Meislin
Juliet Melamid
Andrew J. & Judith Ann Mendelsohn
Wallace D. & Patricia Mersereau
Bailey & G. Christian Meyer, III
William Meyers
William J. Michaelis & Dinah J. Verby
John Miguel
Arjay & Frances Miller
Charles R. & Geraldine Miller
Stephanie & James E. Milligan, Sr.
David B. Mills & Sally A . Talarico
Mr. & Mrs. John L. Minck
Donna Minkler
James & Janet Mitchell
Scott G. & Kathleen Mitic
Stuart S. & Susanne Miyake
Perry Mizota & Jill Goldsmith
Joseph Molina
Cynthia Molstad
J. Kelly Monaghan & Marilyn Voelke
Margaret Mongauza
Joseph Montoya & Susan Crockett
William & Ann Moon
Linda Moore
Mae Moore
Patricia Moore
Bette Moorman
Dennis Morgan
James C. & Rebecca Q. Morgan
Robert C. & Jennifer Morrill
Nancy Morrison
Robert Lee Mullen
John Mumford
Stephen Munich
Timothy P. Murphy & Martha G. Hill
Alexander Musil
John E. & Mary Mustain, II
Susan & F. Gibson Myers, Jr.
Jonathan & Kirsten Myers
Bruce Naegel
Jim & Harriet Nakano
David Nakayama
Horace & Elizabeth Nash
Ashwin Navin
Farzad Nazem & Noosheen Hashemi
Armand & Eliane Neukermans
Bernard Newcomb
Merrill & Alicia Newman
Robert G. & Joanne Newsom
George & Ruth Ann Nieman
Isao & Patricia Nojima
Margaret Nongauza
James & Kathleen Noonan
John Norheim
Joan Norton
Kenneth S. Norton &
Suzanne M. Galante
Peter & Kay Nosler
David & Elizabeth Obershaw
Robert G. & Sue O’Donnell
Stephen N. & Adrienn Oesterle
David T. Offen & Gail C. Nyhan
Brian L. Okamoto &
Lisa J. Yanagihara
Dennis & Catherine
Collins O’Leary
James P. & Margaret O’Leary
Judith Olson
Richard & Karen Olson
Pierre & Pamela Omidyar
Anthony & Luisa Oriti
Susan P. & Franklin M. Orr, Jr.
Eddie & Amy Orton
Raymond & Natha Ostby
John & Lydia Oyler
William & Marcia Pade
Martha & Robert Page, Jr.
Lisa Palma
Peter P. & Deanna Pan
Maxine & Frank C. Parcell, Jr.
David Parker
George & Joan Parker
Henry & Pauline Parker
Stan & Melinda Parry
Suzanne Parsons
Yael Pasternak
Ashvinkumar P. & Anjana Patel
Richard D. & Antoinette Paterson
Bill & Dianne Patterson
Jane & Boyd C. Paulson, Jr.
Martha Pearsall
Shirley & B.D. Pearson, Jr.
Francesca Peck
Barbara Penaluna
Ronald Perkins & Carol Bruce
Kenneth G. & Penny Perluss
Richard Petit
Dave & Nancy Petrone
Darren D. & Alicia Phelan
John & Donna Phillips
Kevin Phillips
Rocky Picasso
Benjamin Pierce
Lawrence & Melissa Pines
Paul D. & Joanne Pinsky
Vera Pitts
John Plut
Christopher Poda & Nancy Mason
Jeff & Alison Poetsch
Peter & Dorothy Polash
L. Stephen Polito
Jennifer Polverari
Patrick & Kimberly Popovits
Todd Porch
Myrtle Potter
William L. & Paula Powar
David Price
Patti Price
Willis & Gloria Price
Donald E. & Sandra Pugh
Stephen & Carolyn Purcell
Judy Putnam
Guy Quan & Alyce Yamamoto-Quan
Thomas J. & Christina Quiggle
Ellen Rabin
Margie Rademan
Ronald Radetich
Kathleen Rafael
Madhusudan Ramanna
Walter & Mary Griffin Ramseur
Marvin S. & Denis Rappaport
William Ratto
Richard P. Rava & Elisa T. Neipp
Jerry Rawls
Howard Reagin & Adele Heinz
Gary & Katherine Reback
J. Richard & Karen Recht
Subash Reddy & Ira Dass
Erik J. & Melinda Reed
Judilee Reed
Douglas L. & Susan Reeves
Ann Reilly
Colleen Reilly
John E. & Shirley Reiter
Kenny Rice
David A . & Carla Riemer
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Riffle
Richard Riley
Roger Sears & Linda Y. Rindt
Dorian Rinella
William T. & Connie Ring
Jeanie & Stewart Ritchie, III
Scott & Elisabeth Roberts
Teresa L. Roberts
Charles W. & Nancy Robertson
Billy T. & Dana Robinson
Justin Rockwell
Michael Rodenbaugh
Kimberly Rodrigues
Leslie Roe
Tracy & Cynthia Rogers
Christopher & Elizabeth Rognier
Dennis & Theres Rohan
Benjamin B. & Ellen Ron
Pam Ronald
Paul & Ellen Rosenberg
Daniel & Linda Rosensweig
Elizabeth Ross
Gregory L. & Barbara Rosston
John W. & Barbara Rosston
Barry & Marilyn Rothman
Ray & Meredith Rothrock
Jonathan Rubinstein
Eric & Melinda Ruchames
Victoria Rundorff
Earl W. & Rosalinda Rupp
Robert B. & Deborah Ruskin
Jay Rusmore
David A . & Susan Russell
Gordon Russell
Joann Russell
Pamela Ryan
Pasha Sadri
Joyce Sakai
A . Joseph & Carol Ann Salais
Donna Samsel
Judy Sanchez
Nicola Sandars
John Sander
Tim & Jacqueline Sanders
Larry Sanford
John & Christine Sanguinetti
Jo Anne Sarro
Sandra Sarro
David C. & Elizabeth Sartain
Dale & Joy Saunders
Robert & Ellen Sawyer
Joyce Saydah
William Scandling
Paul D. & Jackie Schaeffer
Paul D. & Mary Schaller
Robert & Kathryn Schauer &
Michael Schauer
John R. & Arlene Schaupp
Klaus Schauser &
Martina Michenfelder
Justin Scheck
Frances Tracy Schilling
Jessie Schilling
Ronald V. & Lila Schmidt
Joan Schoepke
David E. & Jerilyn Schricker
Nancy Schwartz
Peter Schwartz & Dana Nachman
William & Florette Schwartz
Byron A . & Stephanie Scordelis
Andrew Scott
Aaron Sears
Lynn Segal
Anna Seibert
Alan & Lynn Seigerman
Donald H. & Ruth Seiler
Ann & Edwin A . Seipp, Jr.
Greg F. & Bonnie Semans
Gregory R. & Nancy Serrurier
Kenneth A . Shannon &
Elizabeth Corden
James G. & Janna Shennan
Matthew Shieman
Stephen & Susan Shortell
Heidi Shott
Hoshang D. & Vera Shroff
Robert D. & Nancy Shurtleff
Jay & Pauline Siedenburg
Stephen J. Wolf & Catherine Siegel
Conrad & Gail Siegel
Edward A . & Merry Sierecki
Jeffery L. & Naomi Silk
Jon Silver
Sean Simon
Diane Simpson
Gary E. & Sharon Simpson
Christine Singh
Dennis & Charlot Singleton
B. Lois Sitter
Dean W. & Dorothy Skanderup
Dana Sketchley
Adrienne Skinner
Adair St. M. & Pamela Slater
Stafford Smiley & Dorothy
Smiley Siegele
Charles Smith
Howard P. & Rhonda Smith
Kevin Smith
Lozano Smith
Brad Snedecor &
Mary K. O’Shaughnessy
Sue So
Marion Softky
Henry H. & Sonia Sohn
Lawrence J. & Carolyn Solari
Chris & Shauna Somerville
Morton & Alyce Spector
Sterling Speirn
Shirley Spencer
Ned & Carol Spieker
Douglas & Barbara Spreng
Srinija Srinivasan
Shelley Stafford
Theodore & Eva B. Stahl
Maria Starr
Walter Starr
Noel Staunton
Warren & Judy Stearns
Isaac & Madeline Stein
2003–2005 DONATIONS
53
Marrilyn Stein
James W. & Nina Steiner
Paul D. & Ruth Steiner
Robert L. & Deborah Stern
Andrew M. & Bonnie Sterngold
Damon Stevens
Ted & Junko Stevens
Rosemary Stevenson
Geraldine Stewart
Scott Stingel & Carole L. Wong
Henry Stinton
Robert Stone
Daniel & Katherine Suter
Talise Sutherland
Christopher Szeto
Shannon & Edward J. Tague, III
Glenn K. & Arleen Takayama
Edward Tang
Don & Carole Tanklage
Robert Taylor
Jennifer Terukina
Marc Tessier-Lavigne &
Mary A . Hynes
Albert C. Tetzlaff &
Margaret Dale Area
Kenneth Thomas
Annette Thompson
Herbert S. Thomson &
Sylvia A . Brownrigg
Stefani Thornton
Helena Thorp
Curtis Tibbals
Guy Tiphane
Wendy Tokuda-Hall
Janie Tom
Michael Topper & Kimberly Freitas
Anne Toth
Ronald & Wanda Touchatt
Orlin & Onnolee Trapp
Gregory C. & Catherine Trindle
Vuhao Truong
Helen Tsang
Beverly Tseng
Mike & Ellen Turbow
Howard Turner
Jane Turrel & Nancy Craig
Michael E. & Peggy Turturici
Pam Ulmer
Kathryn Uros
Hilary Valentine
Mark & Katherine Valentine
Naoka Dalla Valle
George Chien Van & Wai Wang Ling
Robert & Joyce Van Reis
C. Gerron & Judith Vartan
Perry H. & Linda Vartanian
Milton Venetos
George Vera
John Verhulp
Manoj Verma
Joseph R. & Kelly Vitorino
Gene & Susan Vlahos
54
2003–2005 DONATIONS
Patricia Volan
Alan & Cathleen Wachtel
William J. & Linda Wagner
Gilbert & Mabel Wai
David J. & Maria Waitrovich
Mark Walker
Valerie Walker
James G. & Marilyn Wallace
Sandra & Robert K. Wallace, Jr.
Robert K. Wallace, Jr.
Emil & Patricia McCleary Wang
Tung-Ho Wang
Patricia Wanzer
Kristin Wardein
Marian M. Warden
Willard W. & Virginia Warden
Linda Ware
John B. & Judith Warner
Francis Warren
Frank T. & Cynthia Watkins
Jacqueline Watson
Don Way
Sharralyn Weasler
Mimi Webb
David G. & Jill Weed
Jeffrey Weiner
Scott T. Weingaertner &
Annabelle J. Kim
Melvin & Marilyn Weiss
Catherine Weitnauer
Gloria Welsh
Philip C. Wennblom
Alexander Wert & Laura Reed
Gary W. & Kristin Wheeler
Stuart G. & Carleen Whittelsey
Brayton Wilbur
Matilda Wilbur
Don & Annette Wild
Henry & Abigail Homans Wilder
Bruce S. & Ann Willard
Carrie Williams
Craig C. & Jane Williams
Jeffery Williams
Donald J. & Marlene Wilson
Mark G. Wilson & Deborah C. Dalzell
Terry & Carol Hutner Winograd
Alexander Winske
Frederick & Eleanor Winston
Barbara Winter
Bernard & Beverly Wolfe
Brian R. Wong & Lai C. Chiu
Kimmie Wong
Kenneth & Patricia Woodrow
Richard H. B. & Marcy Woodrow
Daniel Woods
Richard S. & Mary Woodward
Leslie & W. Wraith, III
Gregory Wrenn
Timothy C. & Tricia Wright
Lucienne Wurr
Amy Yabut
Ron Yara & Margaret Eaton
Madhu & Radhika Yarlagadda
Elliot Yasnovsky
Joyce Yee
Paul G. & Cynthia Yock
Eric A . & Jean Young
Loretta Young
Richard Young
Verna Young
Gideon Yu
Kay Yu
Marco Zagha & Kimberly E. Hudson
Jeremy Zawodny
G.C. & Ann Ziman
CORPORATIONS
A . Roberts Company
Administrative Services
Adobe Systems, Inc.
ALZA Corporation
American Express Foundation
Angus & Rudin, Inc.
Applied Materials Foundation
Association of Commercial
Real Estate Managers
AT&T Foundation
AWIN Management
Bank of America Matching Gifts
Bay Partners IV
Birkenstock Education Committee
Blue Puppy Solutions, Inc.
Blue Shield of California Foundation
Borel Estate Company
Borel Private Bank & Trust Company
BP IV
Buxton Consulting
C & J Cox Corporation
Calpine Foundation
Career Consociates Inc.
Carr, McClellan, Ingersoll,
Thompson & Horn
Charles Scwab & Co.
CIBC World Markets Corp
Citibank Corporate Contributions
Citigroup Business Services
Citigroup Foundation
CJW Architecture
Clorox Company Foundation
Coastside Scavenger Co., Inc.
Concar Enterprises, Inc.
CPP, Inc.
Credit Suisse First Boston
D & B Trenching
David Evans and Associates, Inc.
Demzell Services Company
Dodge & Cox
DW Investment
Fidelity Investments Charitable
Gift Fund
First American Title
Guaranty Company
Fisher Investments, Inc.
Forrest Faulknor & Sons
Gap Foundation Gift
Match Program
Goldman Sachs Management, Inc.
Greco Petersen Construction, Inc.
Homestead Technologies, Inc.
HP Employee Charitable
Giving Program
Imagine That, Inc.
Intrinsyx Technologies Corporation
Iziz Dezigns, Inc.
J.P. Morgan Chase Foundation
K.J. Woods Construction, Inc.
Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, Inc.
Kaspick and Company
Kazan McClain Edises Abrams
Fernandez Lyons & Farrise
Foundation
Kilos, Inc.
KLA Tencor Foundation
LaFollette & Associates, Inc.
Law Offices of Mark D. Hudak
Legacy Venture Management, LLC
Mattman, Inc.
Merrill Lynch
Mervyn’s
Microsoft Corporation
Mineral Acquisition Partners, Inc.
myCFO Foundation
Nick’s Restaurant Seabreeze Motel
O’Connor Construction
Management, Inc.
Oracle Corporation
Orchard Commercial
Pacific Gas & Electric Company
Paradise Valley Spas
Personal Lines Insurance
Brokerage, Inc.
Pickerrell Construction
Plank ‘N Cline, Realtors
Plumbers & Steamfitters
Local No. 467
Political Designs
Portola Farms, Inc.
Pretzer Partnership
Prospect Management Co., II LLC
Putnam Buick, Pontiac,
GMC Truck
R & K Schauer
Raiser Organization
Raphel Aronson Real Estate
Richard Delucchi Company
Rogers Trucks & Equipment, Inc.
San Mateo Credit Union
Sand Hill Advisors
Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., LLC
SAP Labs
Seiler & Company, LLP
Sequoia Healthcare District
Silicon Valley Realtors
Charitable Foundation
Sitxmann, Morris & Lavis, Inc.
Sobrato Development Companies
Society for Human Resource
Management
Sodexho, Inc. and Affiliates
Stone Yamashita Partners
Stonebridge Partners
Summit Associates
Sun Microsystems Foundation
Susie Lee Tong Enterprises, Inc.
Symyx Technologies, Inc.
Tanklage Properties
Taylor Fresh Foods, Inc.
Ted Stevens Attorney
The Advisory Group of
San Francisco, LLC
Thomas McGovern, Inc.
Tiburon, Inc.
Toyota Motor Sales
Tuf-Wear Manufacturing, Inc.
Tyler Financial, Inc
Visa International Employee
Giving Campaign
Vision Service Plan
W.L. Butler Constuction, Inc.
Walnut Ridge Partners, L.P.
Washington Mutual Foundation
Wells Fargo Bank
Wetblue Associates, Inc
Yahoo! Inc.
Zook Search, Inc.
FOUNDATIONS
American Endowment Foundation
Antioch Independence Fund
Bear Gulch Foundation
Bella Vista Foundation
Blue Oak Foundation
Bohannon Foundation
Bowman Family Foundation
Sophie and Arthur Brody
Foundation
Julia Burke Foundation
CAJ Price Foundation
California Community Foundation
The California Endowment
California HealthCare Foundation
Robert N. Chang Charitable
Foundation
The Commonwealth Fund
Community Foundation for
Monterey County
The Community Foundation of
Mendocino County, Inc.
Community Foundation of
Santa Cruz County
Community Foundation
of the Napa Valley
The Community Foundation
Serving Riverside & San
Bernardino Counties
Community Foundation
Silicon Valley
Community Foundation
Sonoma County
Coyote Foundation
The S.E. Cross Charitable Trust
Diller Family Foundation
East Bay Community Foundation
Richard Eaton Foundation, Inc.
El Dorado Community Foundation
Fenton Family Foundation
Filippi Foundation
Fremont Group Foundation
Fresno Regional Foundation
The Fuller Foundation
Wallace Alexander Gerbode
Foundation
Glendale Community Foundation
J.W. & H.M. Goodman Family
Charitable Foundation
Hand Foundation
E. F. Harris Family Foundation
Hawley Family Charitable
Foundation
William Randolph Hearst
Foundation
The William and Flora Hewlett
Foundation
HFT Foundation
Humboldt Area Foundation
The Javitch Foundation
Charles and Ann Johnson
Foundation
Franklin & Catherine Johnson
Foundation
Jones Family Foundation
Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation
G.M. & A .M. Keller Foundation
Kern County Community
Foundation
Labuda Family Foundation
Eugene M. Lang Foundation
Llagas Foundation
Marin Community Foundation
Markkula Foundation
Michael E. Marks Family
Foundation
Mellam Family Foundation
Moldaw Family Foundation
Montrose Educational Foundation
Gordon and Betty Moore
Foundation
Morgan Family Foundation
National Philanthropic Trust
North Valley Community
Foundation
Orange County Community
Foundation
The Raymond K. & Natha Ostby
Foundation
The David and Lucile Packard
Foundation
Pasadena Foundation
The Praisner Family Foundation
The Pura Vida Foundation
Rathmann Family Foundation
Red Husky Foundation
Redwood City Kiwanis Foundation
Redwood City Rotary Foundation
Rey-Vaden Family Foundation
Jerry Rice 127 Foundation
Rotary Club of Menlo Park
Foundation
Sacramento Regional Foundation
Saint Francis Foundation
San Diego Foundation
The San Francisco Foundation
San Luis Obispo County
Community Foundation
Sand Hill Foundation
Santa Barbara Foundation
Scandling Family Foundation
Semel Charitable Foundation
Shasta Regional Community
Foundation
SMCMP Foundation
Solano Community Foundation
Sonora Area Foundation
The Sprenger.Lang Foundation
St. Paul Foundation
The Stephenson Foundation
Harold W. Sweatt Foundation
Tosa Foundation
Truckee Tahoe Community
Foundation
Peter Uccelli Foundation
Ventura County Community
Foundation
Wakerly Family Foundation
Whitaker Foundation
G. W. Williams Foundation
Hans & Elizabeth Wolf Foundation
Woodlawn Foundation
Yellow Chair Foundation
GOVERNMENT &
ORGANIZATIONS
American Legion Post Unit 238
Astraea National Lesbian
Action Foundation
Belmont Rotary Club
Boy Scouts of America,
Pacific Skyline Council
Bridge School
Burlingame Aquatic Club
Carnegie Foundation for the
Advancement of Teaching
Child Care Coordinating Council
of San Mateo
City of Half Moon Bay
Community Association
for Rehabilitation
Council on Foundations
County of San Mateo
Crystal Springs Uplands School
DARE America
Daughters of Penelope
E.O.S. Chapter 1
Entrepreneurs Foundation
Episcopal Church Women
of St. Peter’s
Explorer Post 810
First 5 Santa Clara County
Friends Of Children
With Special Needs
The German Marshall Fund
of the United States
Half Moon Bay Lions Club
Independent Power Human
Resources Association
Junior League of Palo Alto
Mid-Peninsula
La Honda Pescadero
Educational Foundation
Leveraging Investment
in Creativity
Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital
Lucile Packard Foundation
for Children’s Health
Menlo Park Presbyterian Church
Mounted Patrol Troops of
San Mateo County
NFL Alumni Charities
Ocean Shore School, PTA , Inc.
Optimist Volunteers For Youth, Inc.
Pacifica Garden Club
Palo Alto Rotary Endowment Fund
Peninsula Health Care District
Peninsula Sunrise Rotary Club
Plumbers & Steamfitters
Local No. 467
Redwood City Friends of Literacy
Redwood City Lodge No 1991
BPO Elks
Redwood City Sequoia Awards
Rotary Club of Palo Alto
Rotary District 5150
Rotary Service, Inc.
San Mateo City Employees
Federal Credit Union
San Mateo County Deputy
Sheriff’s Association
San Mateo County Office
of Education
San Mateo County Sheriff’s
Air Squadron
San Mateo County Sheriff’s
Reserve Association
Santa Clara County Office
of Education
Sequoia Awards
Simba Inc., Chapter #9
South Bayside Waste
Management Authority
Spanish Soccer League
St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church
St. Dunstan School
St. Peter’s Episcopal Church
St. Peter’s Men’s Club
Theta Delta Xi Gamma Chapter
Tim McHenry Retirement Fund
Town of Atherton
Transcribing Mariners
UCLA Foundation
United Way of the Bay Area
United Way Silicon Valley
CORRECTIONS/DISCLAIMER
Every effort has been made to ensure
the accuracy and completeness of
these lists. We sincerely regret any
errors or omissions and request
that you contact the Foundation
with corrections.
2003–2005 DONATIONS
55
HOW TO APPLY FOR A GRANT
Since 1964, Peninsula Community Foundation has granted more than $450 million
back to the nonprofit community. In 2004, the Foundation made grants totaling
$88 million, including more than $6 million in grants from our permanent
Endowment for the Community.
WHAT ARE THE FOUNDATION’S FOCUS AREAS?
Peninsula Community Foundation utilizes a community-driven, responsive approach
to grantmaking supported by PCF staff and Board of Directors. The Foundation’s
grantmaking is organized into eight areas:
• Arts & Culture
• Community Building
• Environment
• Health & Wellness
• In School & Out of School
• The First Five Years
• Supporting Families
• Strengthening Nonprofits
WHO CAN APPLY FOR FUNDING FROM THE COMMUNITY ENDOWMENT?
Nonprofit organizations with current Internal Revenue Service Section 501(c)(3)
tax-exempt status, or comparable status, are eligible to apply. Programs must serve
the residents of San Mateo and/or northern Santa Clara counties (Palo Alto, Mountain
View, Los Altos or Los Altos Hills).
HOW ARE GRANTS FROM THE COMMUNITY ENDOWMENT MADE?
Pe n i n s u l a C o m m u n i t y Fo u n d a t i o n i s g o v e r n e d b y a B o a r d of D i r e c t o r s , w h i c h
appoints a Distribution Committee. The Distribution Committee works with staff
to evaluate proposals and award grants from the Foundation’s endowment funds.
WHAT SPECIAL FUNDS DOES PENINSULA COMMUNITY FOUNDATION ADMINISTER?
PCF also administers a group of focused funds, including the Neighborhood Grants
Program, Emerging Arts Fund, Peninsula Artists Fund, Artist Residency, Peninsula
FAITHS Partnership, Teachers Fund, and PCF Emergency Fund. Each of these funds
has a separate application process. Visit www.pcf.org for more information or to
download the appropriate application.
We w e l c o m e y o u r c o m m e n t s , q u e s t i o n s , i n q u i r i e s a n d g r a n t a p p l i c a t i o n s .
To learn more about PCF ’s community grantmaking and to obtain a copy of our PCF
Community Endowment Application Guidelines, please visit the Community Grants
section of www.pcf.org or call the Foundation at 650.358.9369.
H OW TO MAKE A DONATION
START WITH PENINSULA COMMUNITY FOUNDATION
You have dreams? We can help. Hundreds of people turn to Peninsula Community
Fo u n d a t i o n a n n u a l l y fo r a s s i s t a n c e i n g i v i n g b a c k r e g i o n a l l y, n a t i o n a l l y a n d
internationally. Whether you want to make a donation today to meet urgent local
needs or you want to establish a family or corporate giving fund, we have the means
for you to make a difference right away.
MANY OPTIONS FOR GIVING
Peninsula Community Foundation staff have many years of experience working
with donors to create their charitable legacies. We can accept gifts of cash, publicly
traded securities, founders’ or other restricted stock, real estate, limited partnerships,
life insurance, private foundation distributions and dissolutions, tax deferred savings
plans and life in s u r a n c e . D o n o r s a l s o r e g u l a r l y i n c l u d e Pe n i n s u l a C o m m u n i t y
Foundation in their estate plans through living trusts, wills and charitable trusts.
To learn more, please visit the Giving With Us section of www.pcf.org or call us.
HOW TO REACH US
Peninsula Community Foundation
1700 South El Camino Real, Suite 300
San Mateo, CA 94402-3049
Tel 650.358.9369
Fax 650.358.9817
Center for Venture Philanthropy
2730 Sand Hill Road, Suite 250
Menlo Park, CA 94025-7069
Tel 650.854.5566
Fax 650.926.9314
Peninsula Partnership for
Children Youth & Families
1700 South El Camino Real, Suite 100
San Mateo, CA 94402-3049
Tel 650.358.9369
Fax 650.358.0141
Peninsula Nonprofit Center
1700 South El Camino Real, Suite 300
San Mateo, CA 94402-3049
Tel 650.358.9369
Fax 650.358.3950
WWW.PCF.ORG
Special thanks to all the members of
Peninsula Community Foundation’s staff
for their contributions to this report and
for their dedication to our community.
Editorial Ash McNeely, Kelly Fry,
Laura Bradley Davis, Kaarin Knudson
Photography Terry Lorant
Design MOD/Michael Osborne Design
Printing ColorGraphics
©Peninsula Community Foundation 2005
REPORT TO THE COMMUNITY 2003–2005
BECAUSE WE SHARE
THIS COMMUNITY.
1700 South El Camino Real, Suite 300
San Mateo, California 94402-3049
Tel 650.358.9369
Fax 650.358.9817
Web www.pcf.org
PLEASE PASS THIS BOOK ALONG TO YOUR FAMILY AND FRIENDS.
PRINTED USING RECYCLED MATERIALS.