PDF - Camp Harbor View

Transcription

PDF - Camp Harbor View
CAMP
HARBOR VIEW
ANNUAL REPORT 2015
In the pages that follow, we’d like to introduce you to some incredible
members of the Camp Harbor View (CHV) family. For nine remarkable years now, we have
welcomed campers from all corners of the city and watched as they came to know one other as
well as themselves. This is at the heart of the CHV experience—a transformation that begins
the moment they step onto the island and begin the process of seeing themselves and the world
around them in new and profound ways.
We are pleased to share uniquely personal stories about what it means to be a member of
the Camp Harbor View family. You’ll hear about the deep and lasting impact CHV has had
on campers’ lives; how staffers strive every day to “give back,” and a grateful parent’s heartfelt
testimony about the transformative effect the program has had on her child’s life.
Credits: Photography by © Michael Casey | Design by Three Bean Press | Written by Lyn Chamberlin
In 2015, we were faced with a variety of obstacles due to the closing of the Long Island
Bridge. Despite these challenges, we were committed to preserving the Camp Harbor View
experience. The campers were our focus and our priority, and it was clear that they were yours
as well. With your help, we not only conquered those obstacles, but, we are happy to say, CHV
emerged stronger than ever.
Your generosity has been and continues to be the sustenance of Camp Harbor View. Because
of you, CHV has become a significant year-round presence in the lives of many Boston families.
We are deeply grateful, as always, for your support. Thank you, once again, for making Camp
Harbor View a part of your story.
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Alex | Age 14 | Roslindale
Camper 2015
F
For Alex, behavioral issues made fitting in and
making friends difficult. He was bullied at school
and constantly teased on the bus. Naturally, he
was fearful when he boarded the Camp Harbor
View bus for the first time. But something amazing
happened: instead of being met with cruelty and
aggression, Alex found a busload of kids who
were talkative and friendly. They weren’t taunting
or making fun of him. “It was amazing to see his
reaction when he got home that very first night,”
says his mother, “and to see how he was the next
day on the bus. It was heart warming.”
Surrounded by other kids his own age, Alex felt
he could be himself for the first time. Slowly, he
began to understand that everyone faces adversity
and that overcoming it is one of the biggest hurdles
in life. The camp’s climbing wall was emblematic
of what he learned. Smiling, he remembers the first
time he tried to scale the wall’s steep incline. “I was
really scared,” he recalls. “I didn’t want to do it. But
with everyone cheering me on from below, telling
me I could do it, I did it. It was an amazing feeling,
and now I know I can do anything.”
Alex made it to the top that day and has
challenged himself ever since. He is no longer the
nervous boy who was afraid to get on the bus. Alex
has learned that everyone experiences difficulties
in life, but you can overcome them with the right
attitude, support and hard work. Camp is “a dream
come true,” says Alex. It’s the place, he says, that’s
taught him that every challenge that we confront in
life just makes us stronger and better equipped to
achieve the things we were meant to do.
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“
Camp is a great opportunity to
learn how to be a community, how
to work as a team and to support
people. That’s how this camp makes
you feel. It’s a safe haven.
”
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Ivan | Age 22 | Dorchester
Camper 2008 | LIT 2009-2011
Staff 2012-2015
E
“Every camper is a flower,” says Ivan, “And it’s
our job to water each and every one.”
Ivan has come a long way from the shy 13 year
old who arrived at camp. Once uncertain and timid,
he is now the camp staffer who dreams of writing
music and walks along the water’s edge listening
to music. Music is his passion, and he’s studying
audio engineering at the New England Institute of
Art. But it wasn’t easy in the beginning. He didn’t
like being around other people and lacked the
confidence to do the things he dreamed of. As he
puts it, “I didn’t think I had enough in me to actually
do what I wanted to do.”
Ivan was faced with tragedy when he lost loved
ones to violence, and he fervently believes that
without camp, his life would have taken a very
different turn. “I love camp and want to say it’s a
huge percentage of why I am who I am and why I
do what I do and [the way] I act. Every single part
about me came from here.”
Today, Ivan wears a blue shirt as a dedicated
staff member and is determined to repay all that
camp has given to him. He relishes encouraging
young campers, inspiring them to try new things,
to push their own boundaries and to express
themselves in new and profound ways. He says
with pride, “As soon as I put the blue shirt on, I
have to do everything that those blue shirts did for
me—maybe a little bit more. I want to uplift [the
campers] to the highest degree.”
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“
Camp helped me open up and find
different ways to express myself,
and who it is I’m supposed to be.
”
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“ ”
These kids do something
to you. I love the camp,
and I love the kids.
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Evelyna | Age 25 | Fall River
Staff 2012-2015
with campers Dion & Xavier
E
Evelyna, a Team Leader, is affectionately known
as “the kid whisperer.” The campers talk to her, open
up to her, tell her things they feel they can’t share with
anyone else. “I’m in love with them,” she said. “I don’t
know what it is, but the kids like me. I have a big heart,
so talking to some of these kids—hearing their story
and finding out what they are going through—you
just feel for them, and your heart aches for them.” She
knew right away that camp was something special;
she’d never seen anything like it. She describes it as a
“magical island,” a place that gives inner-city kids and
troubled youth a sense of hope.
She treasures her job at camp, largely because of the
impact she can have on those around her. Like Dion
(pictured left), who, when he tragically lost a parent
during the July session, had to leave camp to be with
his family. He returned in August, and Evelyna kept
her eye on him, paying special attention to how he
interacted with others and ensuring he didn’t spend too
much time alone. Thanks to Evelyna and the extra time
she spent with him, Dion soon began to smile more, to
find comfort in the day-to-day activities of camp and
pleasure in the company of people who cared about him.
Another of her “boys” was Xavier (right), whom
she remembers as a stone-faced kid who wouldn’t
let anyone in. Her daily high fives and “how are you
doings?” went unacknowledged every time. Yet she
refused to give up, trying again day after day. It took
a few weeks, but one day her high five was returned,
and, in the days that followed, it was clear that Evelyna
had broken through. Xavier asked her to help him pass
the swim test so that he could hang out with his friends
in the deep end of the pool. He passed. Evelyna was
bursting with pride.
“I want to make kids smile, give kids faith that even
though we grew up in a bad neighborhood, one that
not many people make it out of, they can go on and do
amazing things. This place actually gives them hope,
and I know that I can make a difference in these kids.
If that’s the way I can make a difference in the world,
that’s enough for me.”
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“ ”
In the off-season, camp is
what I dreamed of. It was
always in my mind.
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Mariana | Age 23 | Dorchester
Camper 2007 | LIT 2008-2011
Staff 2012-2015
I
In 2007, Mariana started camp “under protest.”
Her mother made her go, and she went, kicking and
screaming. A self-described “angry child with a lot of
issues,” Mariana had no place to put her rage or any
outlet for her emotional turbulence. She was 14 when
she came to camp, and she became an LIT the next
summer. “I was being tested over and over in my life
back then,” says Mariana, “and there’s no way I would
have gotten through any of it without camp. Camp gave
me something to look forward to every day during the
summer, and, in the off-season, it was what I dreamed
of. It was always in my mind.”
Mariana had forged a close bond with the late
Mayor Thomas Menino, co-founder of Camp Harbor
View and one of the city’s greatest advocates for
Boston’s youth. She took his passing hard. “I wanted
the Mayor to see that I was no longer that angry 14
year old, how much I’ve grown, and, now, how much
I want to give back to his city. It’s all about paying it
forward. If I can help even one kid out in the same way
that camp helped me, I will be very grateful. I want to
give back to the kids who don’t get the opportunity to
come to Camp Harbor View, the kids who are still on
the streets of the city of Boston.”
Because of the camp staff and their faith in her,
Mariana will soon begin her career as a Boston police
officer. “This camp is a blessing,” said Mariana, choking
up. “People always say that it is life changing and that
sounds clichéd. But I’m here to say that they’re right.
Camp made everything possible. Without camp, I don’t
know where I would be. It’s that simple.”
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“ ”
The staff at camp was there
for me. They saved me.
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“Camp helped me open up and find
different ways to express myself, and
who it is I’m supposed to be.”
Alejandro | Age 17 | Hyde Park
Camper 2010-2012
LIT 2013 & 2015
A
Alejandro started coming to camp when he was
12, and he’s loved it ever since. Over the years he
has made a lot of new friends, and when he had the
chance to become an LIT, he jumped at it. “I enjoy
making other people happy,” he says, “and making
sure they’re having a good time. Just being good to
others is something I really enjoy.”
Unfortunately, towards the end of his first session
as an LIT, things became difficult at home. Over the
next few years, Alejandro endured many hardships,
including the death of several friends and family
members, and he battled depression. Camp and the
happiness he felt there seemed out of reach, so he was
overjoyed when he began to hear from fellow staffers.
“I kept thinking of camp, because it was like
family to me. They cared so much, knew what I
needed and were willing to be there for me. One day,
he got a call from camp. “They said, ‘We want you
back.’ That meant the world to me after being away
for so long. It meant everything. I never would have
gotten better without camp. There’s no way I can
thank them enough.”
The best medicine, he says, was being able to focus
on other people and to inspire them to make changes
in their lives. He believes that making people happy is
the most powerful medicine there is. Grateful for the
chance to inspire younger campers, Alejandro is eager
to pass on the powerful, transformative lessons he has
learned. And there is no doubt he will.
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Ayjah & Brianna | Age 20 | Roxbury
Campers 2008-2009
LITs 2010-2012
“Camp helped me open up and find
You comeways
here thinking
that these
different
to express
myself, and
people are only going to be in your
who
it aissummer,
I’m supposed
to be.”
life for
and the reality
“
is they’re in your life forever.
F
For sisters Ayjah and Brianna, camp is family,
and this family means everything to them. They
rely on the ever-expanding network of staffers and
campers they have come to know and love over
the years—people who are there for each other no
matter what. The girls weren’t so sure about camp at
first, but it didn’t take long for them to be captivated,
and to quickly realize what a “magical place” it was.
“Camp had a huge impact on us,” says Ayjah. “The
people we met when we were 13 are now our best
friends. You come here thinking that these people
are only going to be in your life for a summer, and
the reality is they’re in your life forever.”
Ayjah and Brianna say that whenever they
needed something, their camp family was there.
A few years ago, their mother lost her job just as
the girls were starting college. “It’s hard to afford
college. Camp gave us scholarships so that we were
able to further our education, so we could grow—
not only as individuals, but also as strong young
women. We are able to make the best of what we
have because of what camp has provided for us.”
Camp has given them deep and abiding
friendships and joy in abundance. They call it their
unfailing support system. Every summer they tell
young campers what being a member of the camp
family means: No matter what choices you make in life,
you will always be family, and we will always love you.
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”
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Needs Addressed by CHV Social Work Staff
Couch to 5K Fall Program
Breakdown of Needs Addressed
This program for parents and
Emotional Issues
kids met once a week
Peer Relations
throughout the fall, gradually
building their strength,
Behavioral Issues
conditioning and endurance. The
Crisis Intervention
program concluded with a
Family Issues
celebratory 5K, the Jingle Bell Run, in
Conflict Resolution
Somerville on December 20th.
School-Related Issues
Resource Assistance
Health & Wellness
Medical Issues
40 Year
One students
(ages 15)
2015
FACTS
ABOUT
CAMP
HARBOR
VIEW
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16 Year
Two students
(ages 16)
In 2015, the
Leaders in Training
(LIT) program
served:
14 Year
Three students
(ages 17/18)
In 2015,
$156,000
Breakdown of Needs Addressed
Emotional Issues
Peer Relations
Behavioral Issues
Crisis Intervention
Family Issues
Conflict Resolution
School-Related Issues
Resource Assistance
Health & Wellness
Medical Issues
Each staff member has
a daily supply of five Leadership
Pins with which to reward campers
whose actions embody one of the
six leadership values—Fun, Respect,
Responsibility, Character,
Courage and Community.
One of the six leadership values is chosen
to focus on daily. Leadership Pins
are scarce, and therefore valuable.
Approximately 10,000 pins are
awarded each summer.
23% of campers and/or families received direct
social service intervention throughout the year.
was gifted to 43 applicants with a college
scholarship ranging in amounts from $500
up to $10,000.
EMC brought the 2nd annual STEM Fair
to CHV, introducing and encouraging
campers to pursue training and careers
in science, technology, engineering
and math.
1st, 2nd and 3rd Year LITs who are high school
juniors and seniors participated in the SAT
preparation course, Let’s Get Ready (LGR). In
addition to preparing the LITs for the actual
examination, LGR also offered college admission
counseling and related support to help youth gain
admission to college.
Partners Healthcare held their 4th
annual career fair this summer, which
exposed campers to career
opportunities in science, medicine
and the healthcare field.
The 2015 Holiday Gift
Assistance Program, supported
by CHV donors and a dedicated
team from Fidelity, provided
holiday gifts for 247 youth and
104 families.
Campers and staff traveled
to CHV aboard the
Provincetown II ferry and
enjoyed organic, locally
sourced breakfasts and
dinners catered by City
Fresh on the boat each day.
Lunch was served family style
2015 Operating Expenses
Personnel & Program
General & Administrative
Transportation
Facilities
Insurance
60%
21%
10%
5%
4%
Neighborhood summer camp enrollment numbers:
Dorchester336
2015 Roxbury116
Operating Expenses
Hyde
Personnel &Park
Program
60%111
Mattapan92
General
& Administrative
21%
Roslindale55
Transportation
10%
Jamaica Plain
28
Facilities
5%
South End
24
Insurance
4% 20
South Boston
West Roxbury
20
Boston/Downtown19
East Boston
19
Chelsea13
Charlestown10
Allston/Brighton10
in Menino Hall on the island.
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Ca
ew
m
arb
p H or Vi
Beach Ball
GALA
On June 14, 2015, Camp Harbor View’s
community of supporters celebrated the 8th
annual Beach Ball gala at Boston’s Black
Falcon Warehouse. A new venue, beautiful
sunset and an outpouring of support for
Boston’s youth made it one of the most
memorable nights in Camp Harbor View’s
history. A record $5.5 million was raised
through event sponsorships and the on-site
special appeal.
Guests were welcomed by co-chairs Joe
Tucci and Jack Connors, followed by remarks
from both Governor Charlie Baker and Mayor
Marty Walsh. Bryan Rafanelli and his team
transformed the Warehouse into a glowing,
elegant scene in which guests mingled and
dined. MAX Ultimate Food, Martignetti
Companies and Beach Ball Lead Sponsor, The
Sheehan Family Companies, provided the fare
and cocktails enjoyed by all.
Guests viewed a special tribute video to
Camp Harbor View co-founder, the late Mayor
Tom Menino. Menino’s vision to create a safe
haven for Boston’s youth to experience joy, learn
about themselves and life’s opportunities, and to
benefit from a positive support system continues
to inspire Camp Harbor View’s growth.
The legendary Beach Boys capped the
evening, performing their greatest hits while
guests danced into the night.
Camp Harbor View would like to thank
the many supporters who helped make our
2015 programs possible. Your commitment
to our kids is remarkable and its impact is
profound.
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“This camp has enriched thousands of lives.
They’ve given inner-city kids incredible
opportunities. I want to thank everyone for
working to keep Camp Harbor View open.
This commitment is inspiring. It shows that if
you truly believe in your cause, you can find a
way to make it happen.”
–Mayor Marty Walsh
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2015 Donor List
The following is a list of donors who have made generous commitments in
support of Camp Harbor View.
2015 Donations & Pledge Payments
Includes outright gifts & event sponsorships
made in 2015, as well as payments towards
multi-year commitments.
$1M & above
Partners HealthCare
2015
Donor list
CAMP
HARBOR
VIEW
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$100,000 & above
Adage Capital Management
Bank of America
The Baupost Group, LLC
Holly & David Bruce
City of Boston, Mayor Marty Walsh
Cummings Foundation
EMC Corporation
Highland Street Foundation
Kelly Family Foundation
Michele & Howard Kessler, Kessler
Family Foundation
Seth A. & Beth S. Klarman
Linde Family Foundation
William A. O’Malley
Pricewaterhouse Coopers
Red & Blue Foundation
Bob & Laura Reynolds
Elaine & Gerald Schuster
The Sheehan Family Companies,
Gerald Sheehan, CEO
Roberta & Stephen R. Weiner Family
Foundation; Melissa Weiner Janfaza &
Andrew Janfaza; Rita & Adam J. Weiner
$50,000-$99,999
Anonymous
AT&T
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts
The Boston Foundation
Joseph E. Corcoran
Jane & Brian Crowley
The Dagres Family Charitable Foundation
Eversource Energy
The Hassenfeld Family Foundation
Linda & Jay Hooley
Carolyn* & Peter S. Lynch
James G. Martin Memorial Trust
Massachusetts General Hospital
*Deceased
Donna & Thomas May
Red Sox Foundation
Donna & Fred Seigel
Steward Health Care System LLC
Charlotte & Herbert S. Wagner III
Yawkey Foundation
$25,000-$49,999
Joe & Kristen Almeida
Anonymous
Anonymous
Michelle & Robert Atchinson
Joshua & Anita Bekenstein Charitable Fund
Boathouse Group Inc.
Boston Civic Enhancement Foundation,
Joseph F. Fallon, Trustee
Brigham and Women’s Hospital
Frederick H. Chicos
Citibank
Citizens Bank
Richard & Ann Marie Connolly
Paul & Sandy Edgerley
First Data
Rob & Karen Hale
The Herb Chambers Companies
HGST, a Western Digital Company
Hill Holliday
HP Hood
Jacobson Family Foundation
John Hancock Financial
Rick & Nancy Kelleher
Robert K. Kraft
Liberty Mutual Insurance
Kathy & Peter Markell
Carl J. Martignetti
The McCarthy Family Foundation
David McGrath
Rich & Helene Monaghan
MFS Management
New Balance Foundation
The New England Council
Normandy Real Estate Partners
Rosemary & Jim Phalen
Richard F. Powers III
Shari Redstone
Margaret Reynolds & William J. McKee, Jr.
Tom & Kathy Ryan
Fred Salvucci Corporation
SBLI
S&F Concrete Contractors, Inc.
Shields Health Care Group
State Street Corporation
Jean C. Tempel
Mr. & Mrs. Henricus Termeer
Joseph & Maureen Tucci
UG2, LLC
Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc.
Walmart Foundation
Rita & Adam J. Weiner
Werner Family Foundation
The Rhonda S. Zinner Foundation
$10,000-$24,999
ADP
American Cleaning Co. Inc
American Express
The Angell Pension Group, Inc.
Anonymous
The Baker Committee
George & Barbara Beal
BNY Mellon
Boston Bruins Charitable Foundation, Inc.
Jack Burns
William Byrnes
Cape Cod Healthcare
Carney Family Charitable Foundation
ChengFwa Industrial Co., Ltd.
The Cleary Family Foundation
Connaughton Charitable Fund at the
Boston Foundation
Linda & Michael Corcoran
William J. Cotter & Family
Kerrie & James Coughlin
Andy & Janice Crowley
Bob & Rita Davis
Bob DeLeo, Speaker of the House
Deloitte & Touche
John H. Dix Trust
Dunkin Brands
Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate
Ernst & Young
Chuck & Lora Farkas
First Republic Bank
Foxconn eMS, Inc.
The Geraghty Family
Ellen R. Gordon
Richard Grande
Tina & Charles Grant
Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce
Maria & Peter Handrinos
Hasbro Children’s Fund
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
IBM
Irwin Chafetz Family Charitable Trust
Mary & James Judge
KPMG LLP
The Lagasse Group, LLC
Lexington Insurance Company | AIG
Ron Logue & Kathleen McGillycuddy
Luther Family Foundation
Tom & June Martin
MassMutual Financial Group
Janice & Bill McCall
The Meelia Family Foundation
Paul & Sandra Montrone
The Morningside Foundation
John C. & Eunice B. Morrison
Charitable Foundation
Natixis Global Asset Management
The Norman Knight Charitable Foundation
Oracle
Selwyn & Laura Oskowitz
Perspecta Trust
PGA Tour Charities
Mr. & Mrs. David Porter
Kathy Z. & George Putnam, III
Dorothy & John Remondi
Steven Samuels, Samuels & Associates
Peter & Catherine Smyth
Staples, Inc.
David & Lisa Torchiana
TRANSWESTERN | RBJ
James & Anne Ward
Suzy & Jack Welch
Kristin & Tobias Welo
Willis
Winston Flowers
$5,000-$9,999
ACBEL/ISM
Advantage Resourcing
Anonymous
Arnold Industries, LLC
Atlas Box & Crating Co., Inc.
Cynthia & Ted Berenson
Jon Biotti
Amy & Joshua Boger
Boston Mutual Life Insurance Co.
Boston Properties
James Boylan
Breckinridge Capital Advisors
Brookfield Financial Properties
Maryann Carroll
Mary & Brian Carty
Celestica
Joseph & Lauren Clair
Charles & Gloria Clough
Connell Limited Partnership
Jonathan & Margot Davis
Jonathan & Vicki DeSimone
J. Derenzo Company
Chris Drake
Eastern Bank
EMCOR Services Northeast, Inc.
Equity Office Properties
Fidelity Investments
John & Denise Glaser
Thomas P. Glynn III & Marylou Batt
Goldman Sachs
Goulston & Storrs
Rosemary Grande & Alphonse Antonitis
William Greco
Carolyn & Tim Grimes
John & Ann Hall
William Helman
Herbert L. Holtz & Judge Nancy Holtz
Jane Hovey
Robert & Constance Hunter
Nicole & Thomas Hynes, Jr.
Intercontinental Charities
Jabil
Michael & Barbara Jellinek
Bruce & Jean Johnston
Lenovo
John Mannix & Carmel Shields
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.
Massachusetts Convention Center Authority
Dean & Kim McCausland
National Development & Charles
River Realty Investors
Joseph & Deborah Norberg
Northeast Security
PerkinElmer Foundation
The Polito Committee
Larry Renfro
Barbara & Frank Resnek
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2015 Donor List
Liz Ross & Bill O’Reilly
Sanmina Corporation
Derri Shtasel & Gary Gottlieb
Skanska
Alan D. & Susan Solomont
Trust Family Foundation
UBS Financial Services
Ursuline Academy
WEi
$2,500-$4,999
Alli & Bill Achtmeyer
Mary-Jo Adams & John Sasso
Anonymous
Anonymous
Robert Badavas
Patricia & Jon Baker
Arnold & Barbara Barron
Kristen & Christian Bodner
Sheryl & Christopher Boland
Boston Private Bank & Trust Company
Peter Brown
Buck Consultants LLC, a Xerox company
John Butterworth
John J. Burns
The Catered Affair
Chestnut Partners, Inc.
Larisa & John M. Connors, III
Cynosure, Inc.
Kimberly Dadasis
Jane Deery
Judith & Robert Del Col
Meredith J. DeWitt
Darren Donovan
John & Kathy Drew
Barbara Finigan & Paul Fitzgerald
Daniel Finnegan
Gold Circuit Electronics
Mr. & Mrs. John Griffin
William C. Heggerick, D.D.S. &
Associates, Inc.
The Janey Fund Charitable Trust
Mark S. Joyce
Dr. Jean F. MacCormack
John & Cathy McAbee
Sharon & Brian McNally
Erin McSweeney
Marty Meehan
Drs. Elizabeth & Gary Nabel
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Catherine & Barry Nearhos
New York Football Giants
New York Jets LLC
Nancy & Paul Petry
Don & Marilyn Rodman
Mark Roopenian
Bill & Darla Shine
Silicon Valley Community Foundation
Stuart Newman Charitable Trust
Richard & Margaret Syron
United HealthCare
Eugene & Kelly Van Biert
Anne & Raimund Vanderweil
Richard Wagner
William & Cynthia Webber
David Whiston
Geoff & Lindsay Wilkinson
$1,000-$2,499
Jody Adams
George Albrecht
Danielle & Brian Black
Troyen Brennan
Paul & Patricia Chapple
Chris Ryan Fund
John F. Cogan, Jr.
Constant Contact
Charlie & Cheryl Cremens
Thomas Croswell
Thomas & Margaret Crowley
Kathy & Jim Daley
Maureen S. Demarco
Freddy Dent
Ray & Sharon DeVita
The Druker Company, Ltd.
Howard Elias
Fiduciary Trust
Bill & Gail Fine
Deborah & Douglas Fleming
Mary & John Fowler
Bink & Weezie Garrison
Joanne & Paul Guzzi
Jon Hamilton
Elizabeth & Robert Healey
Herald Media, Inc.
Thomas & Sandi Hoy
Lucy & John Kapples
Andrea & Henry Kara
Sonja Kelly & Steve Tordone
Erin & Matthew Lane
Mary & Arthur Lewis
LLH/LHM Foundation
Richard & Nancy Lubin
The Honorable Edward J. Markey
David & Cydney Martel
Lewis Marten
Paul & Gayle McAdams
Neil & Nancy McLaughlin
Nicole & Dana McNally
Craig & Susan Middleton
Joe Miller
Michael & Theresa Mullaney
Charles Orlando
Kevin & Anne Phelan
Pyramid Hotel Group
Regina Quinlan
David Raftery
Jack & Joan Regan
Tom & Dianne Reilly
Randall & Janet Seidl
Andrew & Tamara Shape
Eileen Shapiro & Reuben Eaves
Todd Shapiro & Stacy Segall
Eleanor Stoddard
Mark J. Tobin
Jane & Philip Tracy
Paul Tryder
David Twomey
Vashti Brotherhood & Scott Cheyne
Ron & Barbara Walls
Charles Weilbrenner
Michael Wilmot
Peter Wilson
Michael & July Woodall
Chris Woods
$500-$999
Charles & Allison Abrams
Amr E. Ahmed
Tamara Alairys
James V. Aselta
Bruce Auberbach
John Auletta
Susan & Ted Benford
Jeff & Heather Bennett
Robin & David Butler
Jenny & Jack Callahan
Emma Campbell
Kevin Close
Congregation of the Unitarian Universalist Area Church at First Parish in Sherborn
David L. Corcoran
Marc Crisafulli
Dianne Dana
Mark & Laura DiNapoli
Digger & Susan Donahue
John & Eileen Fox
Lawrence J. Goodman
Greetings from Boston, Inc.
Sylvia & Roy A. Hammer
Jack Hammond
Junaid Hoosen
Terrie Inder
Greg John
Paula Johnson
William & Annmarie Kennedy
Jessica Lanzoni
The Leather Shop at Faneuil Hall
Mark Ledbetter
Andrew Levine
Anita & Joseph Loscalzo
Carol Macura & Christopher Dign
Carol Lu & Ed Morata
Peter & Linda Manning
Lynn & John McCarthy
Nicole & Jeffery Mills
Diane & Mark Nardi
Patricia & Francis Nemia
Patrick & Laura O’Gara
Roger Park
Michael Rambasek
Bill & Marie Schlag
Richard Silverman
St. Peter’s Parish, Dorchester
Ben & Kate Taylor Foundation
George X. Tsantes
Sajid Usman
Richard & Stephanie Wang
Wendy Ware
Sharon Whitworth
Carol Palmer Winig
$100-$499
Carol & Paul Ahearn
Nicole Alessi
George & Maureen Allman
Brian Amper & Lisa Salerno
Taylor & Noel Anderson
Richard Armstrong
Bob Baker
John Beard, Jr.
Marcelle Belisle
Danielle Black
Patricia Boast
Chris & Marie Bohane
Julie Bonenfant
Amy & David Boyle
Gerry & Barbara Boyle
Tim & Lisa Bradl
Reed Bundy & Kelly Fanning
Liz & Mark Burnett
Ashley Butler & Jason Alvarez
George & Frances Clairmont
Michael Collins
Lynne Connor
Kelly & Shawn Cormier
Jean & John Corsi
Joseph Cusack
Betty Desrosiers
Edward T. & Anne T. Dolan
Mike Dorr
Jonathan Eilberg
Katherine & Charles Engle Fund
Jim Fahey
Nancy Ferraro
Matthew Fishman
Nicolas Gennetti
Pranav Gill
Gerard Gillis
Elizabeth Goodband
Anthony Grima
Koharik Gumusyan & Michael J. Allen
William Hartney
Kristin & Jim Healy
William Heneghen
Kelli Hewes
Laurie Hollingsworth
Susan Horan
Jacqueline Husid
Maryann Jalkut
Nan & Dave Johnson
Dot Joyce
Kristin Keating
Julie Kelly
Mary & Richard Kelly
Catherine Kennedy
Barbara Krede
The Krusz Family
Colleen & John Kyrios
Ted & Martha Lepcio
John & Nancy Levanchy
Peter & Charlene Levangie
Lawrence Makovich
Martha Mangelsdorf & Roy Peabody
Seth Andrea McCoy & Miguel Chavez
Neil & Gail McCullagh
Dominique Morgan-Solomon
Helen Mullin
Jane Mullowney
Jason Nieves
Patricia & James O’Brien
Paul O’Connell
Kathleen Riley
Mercedes S. Riley
Brian Rivotto
Neal Rubenstein
Judith Schlager
Emily Shamieh
Karen Slote
Patricia Starfield
Lucinda H. Stebbins
William Jon Swanson
Lauri & Robert Tenney
Maureen Ward
Faith Weiner
Christopher Wheeler
Lisa Wieland
Catherine Wissink
Elizabeth & Ron Wysocki
chvf.org | camp harbor view
23
2015 Operating Expenses: $3,906,794*
*Includes year-round and summer camp expenses.
2015
financials
Personnel
Personnel &
& Program
Program
General
&
Administrative
General & Administrative
Transportation
Transportation
Facilities
Facilities
Insurance
Insurance
60%
60%
21%
21%
10%
10%
5%
5%
4%
4%
2015 Funding
50
50
40
40
CAMP
HARBOR
VIEW
30
30
20
20
10
10
0
0
Corporate
Corporate &
& Corporate
Corporate Foundation
Foundation Giving
Giving
Individual
Giving
Individual Giving
Foundation
Foundation &
& Grants
Grants
44%
44%
44%
44%
12%
12%
Endowment balance through 2015: $6.5 Million
24
camp harbor view | chvf.org
Camp Harbor View Foundation
c/o The Connors Family Office
200 Clarendon St., 60th Floor
Boston, MA 02116
617.369.0070 | [email protected] | www.chvf.org
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