1999 Annual Report

Transcription

1999 Annual Report
For every one of me...
CELEBRATING A DECADE OF SERVICE & IDEALISM
City Year Annual Report 1999
For every one of me,
there are one thousand of me
Since 1988,
City Year has demonstrated that national
service works to inspire the individual, unite the community and
strengthen the nation.
HOURS SERVED ➤ 5.8 million
CHILDREN SERVED ➤ 380,604
CITY YEAR ALUMNI ➤ 3,981
CITIZENS ENGAGED ➤ 553,488
YOUNG HEROES ➤ 1,651
CORPORATE SPONSORS ➤ 238
TOTAL PRIVATE SECTOR FUNDS RAISED ➤ $83,000,000
NON-PROFIT PARTNERS ➤ 720
SERVE-A-THON VOLUNTEERS ➤ 96,734
COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIPS GENERATED ➤ $19,000,000
Photo by Jonathan Kannair
City Year, an AmeriCorps program, is a national
service organization that unites diverse young
leaders, ages 17–24, for a challenging year of fulltime service, leadership development and civic
engagement. A model private/public partnership
with lead investment by Compaq Computer
Corporation and The Timberland Company, City
Year is based in eleven cities nationwide and will
engage 1,000 corps members in 1.5 million hours of
service this year.
The Honorable John H. Chafee, 1922-1999
City Year’s 1999 annual report is dedicated to the memory
of US Senator John Chafee, who, during his distinguished
years as the Republican senator from Rhode Island, was a
powerful voice for education, environmental protection,
health care and national service. One of City Year’s most
beloved champions, Senator Chafee was the recipient of the
1997 City Year Lifetime of Idealism Award.
For their service in this challenging and diverse
environment, corps members receive a weekly
stipend and, at the completion of the ten-month
program, earn a $4,725 AmeriCorps education
award toward school or job training. Graduates of
City Year demonstrate a lifelong commitment to
social change and community involvement as student leaders, teachers, entrepreneurs, community
activists and members of the private sector.
TO THE CITY YEAR COMMUNITY
As we reflect on City Year’s first decade, two big thoughts
come to mind. First, national service works! We have witnessed time and time again - the enormous civic power of idealistic young
Americans working together for change. We are more convinced than
ever that national service is a critical element to making democracy
in America more active, more responsive, more thoughtful and
more just.
The second big thought that comes to mind is “thank you!”
We are inspired by the investments that countless people and institutions have made in City Year and we especially want to thank the 238
companies that have invested in City Year teams of corps members
led by The Timberland Company and Compaq Computer Corporation,
our National Leadership Sponsors. Timberland is the official outfitter
of the City Year national corps - providing over 20,000 uniform parts
a year. Compaq has donated state of the art computer equipment to
take us powerfully into the information age, and honored our alumni
with the annual Compaq Leadership Awards.
We want to thank President Clinton, President Bush, Senator
Ted Kennedy, and the late Senator John Chafee, who championed
breakthrough national service legislation. We also want to thank
Gregg Petersmeyer, Eli Segal and Harris Wofford for advancing the
national service movement and their faith and confidence in City Year.
To commemorate our tenth anniversary year, special champions
have stepped forward to provide City Year with the first endowment
in the nation dedicated to supporting national service activities. We
would like to thank Bain Capital, BankBoston, The Timberland
Company, Holly Davidson, Paul & Phyllis Fireman, Sidney & Judith
Swartz, who each committed $1 million to launch the endowment, for
their remarkable generosity and their belief in the civic power of
young people.
We are deeply grateful to three outstanding individuals,
Matina Horner, Ed Cohen and Jeff Swartz, who shepherded the
organization’s development as successive Chairs of City Year’s
national Board of Trustees. For the past six years, Jeff Swartz’s
remarkable energy, vision and commitment have powerfully charted
the organization’s future.
A special thank you goes to the more than 850 people who
have served on the City Year staff, board of trustees and advisory
boards over the past ten years. Their talents, ideas and enormous
energy have built City Year.
We especially want to say “thank you” to the City Year corps nearly 1000 strong! - and the almost 4000 City Year alumni. You
have demonstrated that, indeed, national service works. You have
shown that young people in service can open minds, transform hearts,
and yes, change the world.
Finally we wish to thank every single one of you who has made
City Year a part of your lives, hopes and dreams. City Year exists
because of the hundreds and thousands of “big citizens” who have
come forward and dedicated their time, talent, energy and resources
to make this dream a reality.
Thank you!
Michael Brown
President & Co-Founder
Alan Khazei
CEO & Co-Founder
Marking a decade of service and idealism – and the
celebration of this very special Tenth Anniversary Corps
– is a wonderful opportunity to reflect on the power and
impact of citizen service.
This is not an easy task, however. Indeed, how do you measure the
idealism and perseverance of over 5,000 young men and women who
have served their country as City Year corps members? How do you
measure the profound impact of the skills, strategic advice and belief
of corporate investors? How do you measure the expertise, training
and leadership of thousands of service partners and community
leaders? Impossible, almost.
But the smile of a child at a City Year camp, the shine of a
newly constructed playground in a Washington, DC. neighborhood,
the pride of a corps member who has just earned her GED the same
week she ran a camp for hundreds of schoolchildren — these are the
measures and rewards of service. There are a million moments and
memories. These are but a few snapshots of a decade of service and
the lives of the thousands of members of the City Year community.
But certainly, we can take some measure of our progress and
the growth of impact we have enjoyed, thanks to the investment and
belief of so many citizens. Service hours alone are astounding – 1.7
million this year, which brings the decade’s total to 5.8 million. That,
of course, is the most essential barometer of successful growth. But
there are more.
From a 50-person, $200,000 program, City Year now enlists
over 1,000 corps members supported by an annual budget of $25
million. In the last year, total revenue and support grew 62%, while
corporate funding grew by 76%. In fact, since 1988, over $83 million
of private sector funding has enabled service and innovation coastto-coast. And the resources go far beyond the financial: tireless
volunteers offer leadership support and hands-on service in every
one of our ten communities.
The Tenth Anniversary Year brought two very special
accomplishments. Compaq Computer Corporation, a National
Leadership Sponsor, deserves special recognition for envisioning
and then leading a major technology initiative which dramatically
increased our management capacity, connected the national network
and brought City Year service into the 21st century. We also launched
an endowment – the first ever in the history of AmeriCorps. The
unprecedented support from individuals and private sector sources
that initiated this fund made a down payment on the future of
service and idealism.
I am just a bootmaker – a proud one — who truly stands in awe
of the corps, who are dream makers. But, the accomplishments they
realize and the dreams they make come true are only made possible
by your generosity and support. Thank you to each and every one of
you for making this decade of service and idealism surpass all of our
dreams. And, it’s on to a new century.
Jeff Swartz
President & CEO
The Timberland Company
Chair of City Year, Inc.
For every one
of me,
there are 1,000 of me.
Developing leaders for the next generation.
Serving as AmeriCorps members, Vistas, and
Promise Fellows.
Transforming the world around us.
Leading with the energy and the spirit of idealism.
▼
AMERICAN TRADITION
“What City Year does every day is local, but it is part of something national
- something very big, something historic. In the tradition of the CCC and
VISTA and the Peace Corps, City Year is showing the country the power of
National Service, and especially the power of the young to lead through
service. Over the past ten years, you have given vital help to thousands of
Americans, showing how idealism can triumph over cynicism. I salute the
5,000 City Year corps members for taking responsibility and demonstrating
the patriotism on the home front that this country needs. City Year and the
rest of AmeriCorps must not stop working until we have made citizen service
the common expectation and experience of every American.”
Senator Harris Wofford, CEO of the Corporation for National Service
E Pluribus Unum - out of many, one. From
the founding of our great nation came the
powerful belief that America’s greatest
strength was derived from the extraordinary mosaic of our many people.
This celebration of a unified citizenry remains
deep within the American tradition – and the
most profound of these traditions is service.
Since 1988, City Year has harnessed the idealistic purpose of a generation in a call to action,
a call to serve. Over 5,000 young leaders ambassadors from every ethnic, religious, educational and socioeconomic background – have
responded. For a rigorous year of leadership
development and civic action, corps members
proudly continue the tradition of citizen service
forged throughout the last century by the
Civil Conservation Corps (CCC), VISTA and the
Peace Corps.
And since 1993, City Year has been strengthened and inspired as a member of the
AmeriCorps National Service Network. In
partnership with over 40,000 AmeriCorps
participants annually, City Year demonstrates
Margaret Mead’s simple yet powerful premise,
”Never doubt that a small group of committed
citizens can change the world; indeed it is the
only thing that ever has.“
5
For every
heart transformed,
there are 1,000 hearts to transform.
Breaking down barriers and building community
through service.
Training youth on conflict-resolution and an
anti-violence curriculum.
Establishing partnerships across private/public sectors.
Inspiring citizens to social action.
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▼
CITIZEN SERVICE
City Year was founded on the premise
that service is an inspirational and
effective strategy for uniting our
cultural mosaic and strengthening our
national community.
Like the military, citizen service provides opportunity and challenge for all citizens. In fact,
before there was a City Year “service” strategy,
there was a City Year “values and belief” strategy: inclusivity, responsibility, citizenship,
humanity. For ten years, an annual campaign of
idealism has embraced these values as the
central tenets of our civic action.
In ten cities from coast to coast, a vast
community of idealists who lead and serve
heed Dr. King’s charge, “…that something
must happen so as to touch the hearts and
souls of men that they will come together, not
because the law says it, but because it is natural and right… for the aftermath of nonviolence is reconciliation and the creation of the
Beloved Community.”
“City Year allowed me to see the world
without traveling beyond my own community.
I was able not only to open my eyes to the
problems we face, but was also given the
time and tools to look for answers.”
Shin Yun – Alumna, Columbia, SC ’94-95
In Chicago and San Jose, Columbia and
San Antonio, corps members hear the call of the
Native American to measure each decision and
action by “considering the effects on those who
will live in the seventh generation from now.”
In Columbus and Philadelphia, Seattle and
Rhode Island, the City Year celebration of
community reflects an unwavering commitment
to the African tribal teaching, ”It takes a village
to raise a child.”
In Cleveland and Boston and soon in Detroit,
City Year serves. But to truly create sustainable
change, our service must be a vehicle for a
powerful set of ideals and values - a catalyst for
uniting our communities.
7
For every
child tutored,
there are 1,000 children tutored.
At out of school, evening and enrichment programs.
On Saturdays with Young Heroes and
during school vacations at Camp City Year.
As a Big Brother or Big Sister, coach,
mentor or teacher.
By teaching that everyone can be great, because
anyone can serve.
EDUCATION AND LEADERSHIP
“At Blackstone Elementary, we have seen the development of City Year from its very first year. City
Year has grown and so have the resources they
bring, not just for our school, but for the entire
community. The partnership with City Year and Cisco
Systems brought the technology center – a powerful
statement of City Year’s ability to build connections
and strengthen the community around our school.”
Mrs. Mildred Ruiz-Allen, prinicpal of the William Blackstone
Elementary School, Boston
It is often said that our children are our
nation’s greatest resource and the hope
for our future.
At City Year, those words are more than just a
kind expression - they are motivation for action
and commitment.
one-on-one instruction, corps members forge
lifelong bonds and help propel their students on
a path to success.
Nationwide, our corps and community of
supporters and partners are unified in the
mission to educate and lead the next generation. This year, through 290,445 hours of
in-school education initiatives, after-school
enrichment programs and Camp City Year, City
Year promotes literacy and reading, citizenship
and inclusivity, academic achievement and
opportunity. Inspired by the teachers and
educators who lead them, corps members are
singularly dedicated to the children they serve.
Through mentoring, tutoring and intensive
City Year’s engagement of youth is also
dedicated to expanding the ethic of service. By
engaging 719 middle school students as Young
Heroes and 250 high school students as City
Heroes, corps members offer the challenge of
leadership, the values of inclusivity and the
promise of high-impact service to a younger
corps of idealists. United in purpose, corps
members and “Heroes” tap their unlimited
potential to inspire their peers and benefit the
public good.
9
For every
set of hands,
there are 1,000 sets of hands.
Building playgrounds and creating
safe learning environments.
Providing disaster relief and care to those in need.
Running a special place for the homeless.
Transforming vacant lots into community gardens.
▼
TRANSFORMATION
“A few years ago the kids weren’t coming out playing,
the women weren’t on the street. The elderly weren’t
sitting on the porches. What you see today is what
could occur if given the opportunity to happen. This is
an expression of communities coming together, including
outside communities, committed to people as a whole all different nationalities and races.”
Tyrone Parker, Alliance of Concerned Men, Washington D.C.
commenting on the day of service with City Year at cyzygy ’99
To truly affect the world around us,
Gandhi philosophized, ”You must
become the change you seek.“
From September to June - with hammer and
nail, imagination and perseverance – City Year
creates fundamental change on the landscapes
of
communities
across
the
country.
Playgrounds, urban gardens, revitalized community centers, trail renovation and highimpact disaster relief serve as monuments to
the collective will of citizens of all ages and
from every background.
Anchored by civic events such as the Serve-athon, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday celebration and annual conference of idealism – City
Year’s national convention, our physical service
agenda engages thousands of citizens and partners to impact and improve the lives of children.
Thanks to the guidance and engagement of 733
service partners, City Year annually dedicates
over 70,000 hours of service to the physical
transformation of our neighborhoods. To celebrate this commitment during the Tenth
Anniversary year, cyzygy '99 featured the most
ambitious service project in our history. For one
glorious sunfilled day in June, the DC Housing
Authority, Alliance of Concerned Men, hundreds
of residents and City Year united to realize a
shared vision for the Benning Terrace community
in southeast Washington.
Shoulder to shoulder in service, participants
built five play structures, painted three murals,
landscaped and beautified twenty acres
and painted eighteen apartment buildings.
At day's end, a newly formed community of
friends and neighbors celebrated their labor
with food, culture and song. E.J. Dionne of
The Washington Post bore witness to the power
and potential of citizens united in action. He
observed, “A peaceful revolution is taking
place…against cynicism, despair and selfishness…through the simple but fundamental work
rebuilding communities, and community.”
11
For every
community
strenghtened,
there are 1,000 communities
to strengthen.
Teaching about Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “Beloved Community.”
Befriending the elderly and respecting our past.
Teaching peace and celebrating our diversity.
Working together toward a common goal.
▼
PARTNERSHIP
“City Year embodies the American tradition of
spirit and service. I commend the 125 corps
members in Philadelphia and the 1,000 corps
members across the nation for touching the lives
of countless thousands and for tackling many of
the core problems that plague us as a society
and a people.”
Arlen Specter, United States Senator (R) – Pennsylvania
A decade ago, fifty young men and
women in Boston demonstrated courage
and conviction by answering the call
of service as the inaugural corps of
City Year.
In 1999, Seattle/King County became our tenth
site and by inspiring our nation’s Northwest,
completed City Year’s regional presence on
every corner and coast of the United States.
The Tenth Anniversary corps of over 1,000 is
truly national - and made possible by the
extraordinary belief and support of the
thousands of citizens we call champions.
Supporters, investors, civic leaders, family and
alumni - champions, whose enormous talent
and generous spirit are the inspiration and
foundation of City Year.
office and at home, they pull on their boots and
make a difference. By serving with the corps,
acting as mentors or hosting a team at the
workplace, City Year partners play a critical role
in developing the leadership and life skills of
the corps.
Like corps members, these citizens are idealists
in action. As members of local advisory boards,
corporate investors and service partners, they
build City Year’s beloved community and
strengthen the national service movement with
their advocacy, insight and passion. In boardrooms, classrooms, community centers, public
In ten vibrant cities — and with a strong presence in every one of our fifty states — a vast
community of leaders partner with a grateful
City Year to strengthen our communities and
our nation, improve the quality of life for our
children and create opportunities and justice
for citizens.
And as alumni, veterans of 5.8 million hours
of service to nation, they provide leadership and
vision as educators, corporate executives,
students, health care workers, founders of
innovative non-profits and active citizens.
13
For every one
of me,
there are 1,000 of me.
We are City Year.
We are AmeriCorps.
One hundred thousand strong.
Building one America through service.
▼
INCLUSIVITY
“At the end of the last century, progressive people
came together . . . to create enduring civic institutions like the Boys and Girl Scouts and the YMCA
or the Urban League. Well now, it’s up to us to
endow youth service and civic engagement to help
make sure that as we go into this new century, we
are equally committed to the kind of future we want
to make.”
Hillary Rodham Clinton, announcing the launch of the
City Year endowment, Boston
For ten years, City Year has sought to
honor the individual, while celebrating
the community…to pay tribute to the
unique contributions of the one, as well
as to the awe-inspiring power of the
many united in action.
As we have witnessed, service is the common
expression of our nation’s civic good and the
most powerful force for unifying our nation’s
diverse humanity.
Broad horizons still remain. For every one of the
over 4,000 alumni, there are thousands of
eager young leaders ready to serve. For every
one child impacted, there are millions in need of
a tutor, mentor or after-school program. For
every willing citizen in service, there is the
untapped contributions of a nation rich with
skills and energy.
City Year closes the first decade and launches
its second with dedicated spirit, discipline,
purpose and pride. The hammer of service - a
tradition of the corps’ induction each
September – is now passed into a new century.
It is a tradition in which the strength of our
nation will continue to be the passion and
actions of citizens demonstrated to the
common good.
Out of many, one. One thousand uniformed
idealists, tens of thousands of champions,
hundreds of thousands of children. One Beloved
Community known as City Year.
15
▼
A DECADE OF SERVICE AND IDEALISM
City Year was founded entirely on private sector support. In the last eleven years,
238 corporations have donated more than $83 million to support our mission. As
a result, we are able to match every government dollar with an additional $1.46 of
private sector support.
94% of principals surveyed in schools with a City Year team cite the
City Year corps members as improving students’ attitudes to learning.
96% say that the City Year corps increases academic performance of
children.
96% tribute City Year with improving the learning environment.
98% cite City Year corps members as providing positive role models
for children.
96% of City Year alumni state that the City Year experience has
positively affected their understanding and respect for diversity.
During the 1998-99 Service
Year, City Year generated
1,772,904 hours of service.
▲
Dedicated over 413,717 hours to tutor, mentor and assist children
in schools.
▲
Impacted more than 3,322 classrooms with life-saving information through peer-to-peer curricula on such topics as HIV/AIDS
awareness, domestic violence prevention and conflict resolution
and trained 666 additional peer educators.
▲
Provided safe havens, mentorship, educational enrichment and
service learning for 5,495 students in Camp City Year, Young
Heroes and City Heroes programs.
▲
Renovated 734 outdoor spaces, creating green areas,
refurbishing gardens, building playgrounds and constructing
educational labs.
▲
Enlisted and engaged 45,473 children and 20,444 adults in
community service and events.
16
1988
50 young idealists unite for eight-week summer pilot program,
Boston, MA
1989
Backed completely by private funding the first full-year corps is launched
Introduction of the City Year red jacket
1990
First year-long or “flagship” service project
1991
Named one of only eight National Demonstration Projects and awarded the
first federal funding by the Bush Administration
Presidential candidate Bill Clinton spends a day at City Year headquarters
in Boston
1992
The Timberland Company donates 50 pairs of boots
1993
Expansion! Summer program in Columbia, SC, and a year-long program in
Rhode Island
Digital Equipment – later the Compaq Computer Corporation – becomes a
National Leadership Sponsor
1994
The National and Community Service Trust Act passed creating AmeriCorps
City Year expands to three new sites – Chicago, Columbus, OH, and
San Jose/Silicon Valley.
The launch of cyzygy – City Year’s Annual Convention of Idealism.
1995
Launch of City Year San Antonio
The National Headquarters moves offices to 285 Columbus Avenue, Boston, MA
1996
City Year Cleveland becomes the eighth site
The Young Heroes program – a service learning program for
middle-schoolers – expands to City Year sites nationally
1997
The founding of City Year Philadelphia
Young Heroes program receives the Points of Light Award for its emphasis
on valuing children.
1998
Launch of City Year Seattle/King County
President Bill Clinton addresses the City Year network at cyzygy ’98
in Cleveland, OH
15,000 citizens serve in seven cities at City Year Serve-a-thon
1999
City Year Detroit start up team
cyzygy ’99 keynote speakers include President Bill Clinton and
General Colin Powell
The launch of the City Year endowment by First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton
City Year’s Tenth Anniversary Celebration
17
Rosabeth Moss Kanter,
professor at Harvard University
Graduate School of Business
Speakers at One America,
cyzygy ’99
“City Year and America OnLine
were born in the same year – but
more that that, we were born of the
Li Lu,
student leader of the
Tianamen Square
Democracy Movement
same spirit. A spirit that
says: with vision, anything is
possible. With persistence,
anything can be done.”
Steve Case, CEO, America OnLine, speaking to City Year corps
members at cyzygy ’99 in Washington, DC
Farai Chideya,
author of The Color of Our Future
18
Speakers at One America,
cyzygy ’99
Congressman John Lewis (D-GA)
LTC (Ret.) Consuelo Kickbusch
“When I saw City Year, I knew that I had found
the concrete,
living, breathing embodiment
of what I thought politics ought to be. This is something
that is just good,
good, good. I am convinced
that you have the power to change America forever, for
the better. And I
believe you will.”
President Clinton, speaking to City Year corps members at cyzygy ’99 in Washington, DC
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CITY YEAR ENDOWMENT CAMPAIGN
Thank you!
Capping City Year’s tenth anniversary year, First Lady
Hillary Rodham Clinton made City Year history on
June 4, 1999 when she announced the launching of our
newly established endowment – the first in the history
of AmeriCorps.
Chad Gifford, FleetBoston
The $1 million pledged by Bain Capital, FleetBoston, and The
Timberland Company will permanently endow their annual City Year
teams in Boston. “These companies are saying that just as our
society endows university ‘chairs’ for professors of political science,
we as a society should be endowing permanent positions for young
people providing such public service,” said City Year Co-Founder
and CEO Alan Khazei. “Over the course of the next 50 years, each
of these endowed City Year teams will contribute one million hours
of service and train 500 new leaders.”
In addition to these gifts, Holly Davidson, Sidney and Judy Swartz,
and Paul and Phyllis Fireman have each committed $1 million
to the City Year endowment. The Swartzs’ gift will endow the
“Bill and Hillary Clinton Civic Innovation Fund at City Year,”
which will promote new ideas for community service and civic
engagement. The Firemans’ gift will endow an annual “Fireman
Public Service Fellowship,” a competitive one-year fellowship at
City Year to be offered to a talented, civic entrepreneur.
Holly Davidson
Photos by Ed Nute
Mark Nunnelly, Bain Capital
Sidney & Judy Swartz
City Year Co-Founder and President Michael Brown expressed
his gratitude to the endowment contributors and Mrs. Clinton’s
involvement and support of AmeriCorps and to all of the endowment contributors: “City Year is greatly honored by the ongoing
leadership and vision of the First Lady. Through AmeriCorps,
President and Mrs. Clinton have enabled over 100,000 young
adults to act on their idealism to dedicate a year to service to their
community and their country. This new endowment will help sustain
City Year, keep it entrepreneurial—and to ensure that thousands of
young people will be able to put their idealism to work at City Year
in the next century.”
Phyllis Fireman
20
Debbi Swartz, The Timberland Co.
ALUMNI MAKING AN IMPACT
A sampling of the many City Year alumni who have continued to play leadership roles in social change
Alicia Greene (San Antonio ‘98)
Community Health Educator for
B.E.A.T. (Black Effort Against the
Threat of Aids) in San Antonio, TX
Chris Murphy (Boston ‘88)
Legislative Aide for
Senator Kennedy;
Executive Director of City Year,
Washington, DC
Darell Hammond (Chicago ‘95)
Co-Founder and Chief Executive
Officer of Kaboom, a national
nonprofit, based in DC, that unites
people to build safe playgrounds
David Satterthwaite (Boston ‘88)
Founder of SINAI
(Support and Incentive
forAutonomous Initiatives)
located in Managua, Nicaragua
Deb Kim (San Jose ‘95)
Coordinator for Plugged In, an
innovative program that teaches
computer literacy skills to
children in East Palo Alto
Doug Luffborough
(Boston/SanAtonio)
Director Youth and Family
Development, San Diego South
Bay Community Services
Eric Schwarz (Boston ‘91-’94)
President and Co-Founder of
Citizen Schools, a program which
seeks to meet the out-of-school
educational needs of children
in Boston, MA
Erin Moore (Columbus ‘98)
Member Development Specialist,
Ohio Governor’s Community
Service Council
Mark Payne (Chicago ‘96)
Youth Grantmaking Coordinator
for Stearns Family Foundation
in Chicago
Gianna Hamley (Philadelphia ’98)
Service Learning Program
Assistant for the School District of
Philadelphia
Noel Torres (City Year ‘91-’97)
Leadership Development Adviser,
Youthbuild U.S.A.
Karen Piasecki (Rhode Island ’96)
AmeriCorps leader with
CAREPLAN, a Cleveland, OH
program that teaches school
children about environment
Latonya Brown (Boston ‘94)
Program Director at The
Phllips Brooks House, Harvard
University’s community
service network
Lauren Tomaselli (Seattle ‘98)
Housing Advocate, Northwest Aids
Foundation
Lisa Schorr (Boston ‘93)
Director of Business Enterprise
Development, Pine Street Inn,
providing training opportunities for
homeless people to prepare them
for employment
Raquel Melo (Boston ‘88)
Echoing Green Fellow; Deputy
Director for the Rhode Island
Commission on National Service
Sara Price (Chicago ‘96)
Attorney with the Law Project
and the Chicago Coalition for
the Homeless
Shin Yun (Columbia ‘95)
Coordinator for the Carolina
Peace Resource Center;
Luthern Volunteer Corp Serving
in DE & Chicago
Sweet Joy Hachula (Boston ‘97)
Prevention Specialist,
Massachusetts Prevention
Center, Boston
“As a National Leadership Sponsor of City Year, Compaq
is committed to invest in the nation’s future and the
youth that will lead us in the new millennium.”
Michael D. Cappelas, President & CEO, Compaq Computer Corporation
Winners of the Compaq Computer Corporation Leadership Awards
1995
Spencer Blasdale (Boston ‘88)
Assistant Principal
Academy of Pacific Rim Charter School
Marilyn Concepcion (Rhode Island ‘94)
Pre-Med Student, Brown University
Nicole Fyvie (Boston ‘93)
Peer Educator, American Red Cross, HIV/AIDS
Stephen Spaloss (Boston ‘91)
National League Director, City Year
Andre Thomas (Boston ‘92)
National Leadership Development Advisor,
Youthbuild
1996
Jay Kim (Boston ‘93 Program)
Program Director, Public Allies,
Washington, DC
Chad Olcott (Boston ‘91)
Former Executive Director,
City Year Rhode Island
Living in California raising a family
Maritza Rosario (Chicago ‘94)
Project Manager, Kaboom, Chicago
James Willie (Boston ‘88)
Post-Secondary Readiness Coordinator,
Philadelphia School District
1997
Christine Bader (Rhode Island ‘96)
MBA Student, Yale University
Phil Clawson (Boston ‘94)
Manager of Community Relations
Arthur Andersen, N.E. Market Circle
Susie Margolin (Columbia ‘95)
Co-Founder/Executive Director Blackfeet
Youth Initiative
Kadi Tierney (Boston ‘91)
Student at Case Western Reserve’s School
of Business, Nonprofit Management Program;
City Year National
Bonnie Villegas (Boston ‘93)
Student, Mount Ida University
1998
Jim Balfanz (Boston ‘94)
Executive Director, City Year Philadelphia
Taj Mustapha (Boston ‘92)
Co-Founder, At The Crossroads
Kelly Overton (Columbia ‘95)
Director, Youth Voice Radio
Chris Smith (Rhode Island ‘94 )
Co-Director, Squashbusters, Inc.
Renee West (Boston ‘92)
Student, Bunker Hill Community College
1999
Jenny Gray (Boston ‘93)
Assistant Director of Resident Programs
Inquilinas Boricuas en Accion
Albert Moy (Boston ‘96)
National Administrative Assistant, City Year
Steve Burritt (Boston ‘97)
Student, Graduate School at UNC, Chapel Hill
Saskia Grinberg (Boston ‘92)
Coordinator of Milieu Services
Home for Little Wanderers
Deb Berman (Boston ‘96)
Founder/Executive Director Camp Starfish;
MBA student, Boston University
21
FINANCIALS
Independent Auditors’ Report
The Board of Directors City Year, Inc.
We have audited the accompanying statements of financial position of City Year, Inc.
(“City Year”) as of June 30, 1999 and 1998,
and the related statements of activities
and cash flows for the years then ended.
These financial statements are the responsibility of City Year’s management. Our
responsibility is to express an opinion on
these financial statements based on our
audits.
We conducted our audits in accordance
with generally accepted auditing standards.
Those standards require that we plan and
perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance about whether the financial
statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a
test basis, evidence supporting the
amounts and disclosures in the financial
statements. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management,
as well as evaluating the overall financial
statement presentation. We believe that
our audits provide a reasonable basis for
our opinion.
In our opinion, the financial statements
referred to above present fairly, in all
material respects, the financial position of
City Year as of June 30, 1999 and 1998, and
the changes in its net assets and its
cash flows for the years then ended, in
conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles.
KPMG, LLP
March 10, 2000
CITY YEAR, INC. STATEMENTS OF FINANCIAL POSITION
JUNE 30, 1999 AND 1998
Assets
Cash and equivalents
Investments
Government grants receivable
Contributions receivable, net
Other assets
Equipment and improvements, net
Total assets
Liabilities and Net Assets
Liabilities:
Accounts payable and accrued expenses
Note payable
Line of credit
Total liabilities
Net assets:
Unrestricted
Temporarily restricted
Permanently restricted
Total net assets
Total liabilities and net assets
See accompanying notes to financial statements.
1998
57,993
230,320
1,362306
4,676,007
93,223
2,192,036
8,611,885
$
1,695,284
160,000
2,000,000
3,855,284
2,180,562
—
418,600
2,599,162
2,589,677
9,713,633
2,642,708
14,946,018
$ 18,801302
2,313,401
3,649,322
50,000
6,012,723
8,611,885
CITY YEAR, INC. STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
YEARS ENDED JUNE 30, 1999 AND 1998
1999
Cash flows from operating activities:
Increase in net assets
$ 8,933,295
Adjustments to reconcile increase in net
assets to net cash used by operating activities:
Depreciation and amortization
691,630
Contributions of investments
(66,198)
Realized and unrealized net gains on investments
(83,604)
Contributions of equipment and improvements
(1,1886,60)
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
Contributions receivable, net
(8,355,428)
Government grants receivable
(144,045)
Other assets
(26,631)
Accounts payable and accrued expenses
(485,278)
Net cash used by operating activities
(724,919)
Cash flows from investing activities:
Gross proceeds from sale of investments
Capital expenditure
Net cash used by investing activities
Cash flows from financing activities:
Proceeds from note payable
Repayments of note payable
Proceeds from line of credit
Repayments under line of credit
Net cash provided by financing activities
Net increase (decrease) in cash and equivalents
Cash and equivalents, beginning of year
Cash and equivalents, end of year
Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information:
Cash paid during the year for interest
See accompanying notes to financial statements.
22
1999
976,188
25,060
1,506,351
13,031,435
119,854.2
3,142,414
$ 18,801,302
$
1998
554,790
380,830
(181,301)
(11,403)
(123,295)
(1,574,869)
(128,321)
(15,755)
435,672
(663,652)
356,747
(455,033)
(98,286)
—
(325,982)
(325,982)
200,000
(40,000)
3,190,000
(1,608,600)
1,741,400
918,195
57,993
$
976,188
—
—
3,489,500
(3,070,900)
418,600
571,034
629,027
57,993
149,271
24,595
STATEMENTS OF ACTIVITIES YEARS ENDED JUNE 30, 1999
1999
1998
7,373,464
3,141,724
704,858
834,808
8,526,108
1,602,569
35,269
83,604
2,687,150
$ 24,989,554
5,930,488
1,087,051
782,112
679,153
8,456,894
1,178,451
44,837
11,403
2,451,345
20,621,734
$
14,064,866
1,360102
251,654
1,288,906
717,106
17,682,634
11,034,821
1,312,704
207,064
1,055,338
583,297
14,193,224
5,931,001
1,099,643
7,030,644
24,713,278
276,276
4,974,412
1,035,754
6,010,166
20,203,390
418,344
2,531,468
6,219,993
—
Changes in unrestricted net assets:
Revenues and other support:
Corporate contributions
Trust and foundation support
Individual contributions
Special events
Federal grants - Corporation for National Service
Other government grants
Interest and other income
Realized and unrealized net gains on investments
Net assets released from restrictions
Total revenues and other support
$
Expenses:
Programs:
Program operations
Education, training and corps development
New site development
Special events
External affairs and organizational development
Total programs
Support services:
Organizational support
Fundraising
Total support services
Total expenses
Increase in unrestricted net assets
Changes in temporarily net assets:
Corporate contributions
Trust and foundation support
Special events
Other government grants
Net assets released from restrictions
Increase in temporarily restricted net assets
(2,678,150)
6,064,311
607,326
1,812,965
2,500
165,000
(2,451,345)
136,446
Changes in permanently restricted net assets:
Corporate contributions
Trust and foundation support
Increase in permanently restricted net assets
Increase in net assets
Net assets at beginning of year
Net assets at end of year
1,592,702
1,000.000
2,592,708
8,933,295
6,012,723
14,946,018
—
—
—
554,790
5,457,933
6,012,723
$
See accompanying notes to financial statements.
1999 Revenue Resources
1999 City Year Revenue Growth
1999 Expenditures
Other Government
$35M
Other Income
$30M
In-Kind
$25M
Program Expenses
Corporations
$20M
Training & Education
$15M
Management & General
5,931,001
0.2
$10M
Fundraising
1,099,643
0.0
$50M
Total Expenses
$ 24,713,278
1.0
$
Private Resources
Special Events
Foundatiosn
Individuals
Federal Resources
%
$ 16,322,532
0.7
1,360,102
0.1
Americorp
$0M
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
23
CITY YEAR, INC. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
Schedule of Expenditures of Federal Awards Year Ended June 30, 1999
(1) Organization Background
and History
City Year, Inc. (the “Organization”
or “City Year”) is a non-profit
organization as described in
Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal
Revenue Code (IRC), and is generally exempt from income taxes
under IRC Section 501(a). City
Year’s mission is to put idealism
to work by tapping the civic
power of young people for an
annual campaign of idealism that
generates transformative community service, breaks down
social barriers, inspires citizens
to civic action, develops new
leaders for the common good,
and improves and promotes the
concept of voluntary national
service. City Year works to fulfill
this mission through five primary
activities: (1) operating a national
youth service corps; (2) building
the infrastructure of national
service by setting up new operating sites across the country; (3)
providing technical assistance to
individuals and organizations in
national and community service;
(4) planning and running large
civic events to engage citizens
and organizations in activities
that promote service, inclusivity,
leadership and citizenship; and
(5) constantly developing new
ways to engage people and
resources to promote the concept
of voluntary national service.
City Year was founded in Boston
in 1988 as an action tank for
national service. Its first initiative
was to pilot a summer corps with
50 corps members, supported
entirely by contributions from
private sector organizations and
individuals. In 1992, City Year was
selected as a National
Demonstration Project and was
awarded its first federal funding
under Subtitle D of the National
and Community Service Act.
During fiscal 1994, City Year
operated its first program outside
of Boston, a summer pilot program in Columbia, South Carolina
with 50 corps members. In the
fall of 1994, City Year launched
its first full-year expansion site in
Rhode Island, and expanded its
Boston corps. In fiscal 1995,
corps were established in
24
Chicago, Illinois, Columbus, Ohio,
and San Jose, California. The
Organization expanded to San
Antonio, Texas in fiscal 1996,
launched the Cleveland corps in
fiscal 1997, began operations in
Philadelphia in fiscal 1998,
opened its tenth site in
Seattle/King County in fiscal
1999, and began the planning
process to launch Detroit in fiscal
2000.
(2) Summary of Significant
Accounting Policies
(a) Basis of Presentation
The accompanying financial
statements have been prepared
on the accrual basis of accounting.
Net assets and revenues are classified based on the existence or
absence of donor-imposed
restrictions. Accordingly, net
assets of the Organization and
changes therein are classified
and reported as follows:
Unrestricted net assets — Net
assets not subject to donorimposed stipulations.
Temporarily restricted net assets
— Net assets subject to donorimposed stipulations that may or
will be met either by actions of
the Organization and/or the passage of time.
Permanently restricted net
assets — Net assets subject to
donor-imposed stipulations that
they be maintained in perpetuity.
Generally, the donors of these
assets permit the Organization to
use all or part of the income
earned and capital gains, if any,
on related investments for general or specific purposes.
Revenues are reported as
increases in unrestricted net
assets unless use of the related
assets is limited by donorimposed restrictions, including
time restrictions. Expenses are
reported as decreases in unrestricted net assets. Gains and
losses on investments and other
assets or liabilities are reported
as increases or decreases in
unrestricted net assets unless
their use is restricted by explicit
donor stipulations or law.
Expirations of temporary restrictions on net assets are reported
as reclassifications between the
applicable classes of net assets.
Expirations of temporary restrictions occur when donor-imposed
stipulated purposes have been
accomplished and/or the stipulated time period has elapsed. If an
expense is incurred for a purpose
for which both unrestricted and
temporarily restricted net assets
are available, a donor-imposed
restriction is fulfilled to the
extent of the expense incurred
unless the expense is incurred for
a purpose that is directly attributable to another specific external source of revenue.
Contributions are generally recognized as revenue in the period
received. However, unconditional
promises to give that clearly stipulate that the promise to give is
to support current-period activities are reported as unrestricted
support. Similarly, contributions
subject to donor-imposed stipulations that are met in the same
reporting period are reported as
unrestricted support. Conditional
promises to give are not recognized until they become unconditional, that is, when the conditions on which they depend are
substantially met. Contributions
of assets other than cash are
recorded at their estimated fair
value at the date of gift.
Contributions scheduled to be
received after one year are discounted at rates commensurate
with the risks involved.
(b) Equipment and Improvements
Equipment and improvements are
stated at cost, except for donated
assets which are recorded at fair
market value at the date of gift.
When assets are retired or otherwise disposed of, the cost and
related accumulated depreciation
are removed from the accounts,
and any resulting gain or loss is
recognized in income. The provision for depreciation and amortization is calculated on a straightline basis, over the following estimated useful lives:
Furniture and fixtures
3-7 years
Equipment and software
3-5 years
Leasehold improvements
Life of lease
(c) Cash and Equivalents
Cash and equivalents include
checking, savings, money market
accounts and certificates of
deposit with maturities of
three months or less at date
of acquisition.
(d) Investments
Investments are reported at fair
market value. The market value
of publicly traded securities is
based upon quotes from the
principal exchanges in which the
securities are traded.
(e) Contributed Goods and
Professional Services
Contributed goods and professional services are reflected as
contributions in the accompanying
statements at their estimated
fair value at the date received
or provided.
(f) Use of Estimates
The preparation of financial
statements in conformity with
generally accepted accounting
principles requires management
to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported
amounts of assets and liabilities
and disclosure of contingent
assets and liabilities at the date
of the financial statements and
the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the
reporting period. Actual results
could differ from those estimates.
The Organization’s federal grant
programs are subject to financial
and compliance audits in accordance with Office of Management
and Budget Circular A-133. In
addition, various federal, state,
and private funding sources
reserve the right to perform separate program audits.
(g) Reclassifications
Certain 1998 information has
been reclassified to conform with
the 1999 presentation.
(3) Temporarily Restricted Net Assets
Temporarily restricted net assets consisted of
the following at June 30:
Time restrictions
Purpose restrictions:
Programs
Capital additions
1999
1998
$ 4,099,110
3,014,822
5,614,523
—
$ 9,713,633
629,500
5,000
3,649,322
Support Services:
Professional services
544,240
Rent
85,943
Advertising and promotional
61,888
Total support services
692,071
Depreciation and amortization 260,339
Total
$ 3,510,695
333,865
167,729
151,569
653,163
53,966
2,421,124 $
Contributions of equipment and improvements
in 1999 and 1998 were $1,188,660 and
$123,295, respectively.
(4) Permanently Restricted Net Assets
(7) Investments
In fiscal 1999, in recognition of its tenth
anniversary, City Year established and raised
revenue for an endowment as a means to contribute to the long-term financial sustainability
and security of the Organization.
The Organization’s investments are summarized at June 30:
Permanently restricted net assets at June 30
consist of the following endowment gifts
whose income is restricted:
Program sponsorships
Public service fellowship
1999
1998
$ 1,642,708
1,000,000
$ 2,642,708
50,000
—
50,000
(5) Net Assets Released from Restrictions
Net assets released from restrictions
consisted of the following for the years ended
June 30:
1999
Expiration of
time restrictions
Satisfaction of
purpose restrictions
$ 2,052,650
1,806,684
634,500
$ 2,687,150
644,661
2,451,345
Contributed goods and professional services
during the years ended June 30 were used for
the following purposes:
Program Services:
Uniforms
Transportation
and travel
Workshops and
conferences
Materials and supplies
Equipment rental
and maintenance
Food
Printing and copying
Telephone
Scholarships
Total program services
$
$
1999
1998
25,060
—
25,060
191,842
38,478
230,320
(11) Leases
Rental expense for office space was approximately $581,000 and $400,000 for the years
ended June 30, 1999 and 1998, respectively,
exclusive of certain in-kind arrangements.
Lease agreements with an original term of
more than one year expire on various dates
through 2003.
Future minimum lease payments under these
operating leases as of June 30, 1999, are as
follows:
2000
2001
2002
2003
(8) Contributions Receivable
Contributions receivable consisted of the
following at June 30:
1999
1998
Due within one year
$ 7,034,343
Due within two to five years
6,455,000
13,489,343
Less: present value discount
(457,908)
$ 13,031,435
3,633,835
1,110,750
4,744,585
(68,578)
4,676,007
$
650,816
441,909
300,355
74,915
$ 1,467,995
The Organization is also liable for certain
real estate tax increases and operating
cost adjustments under certain of the office
lease terms.
1998
(6) In-Kind Contributions
Nature
Equities
Mutual Funds
City Year received grants from CNS totaling
$9,611,058 and $9,615,705 for the program
years 1998-99 and 1997-98, respectively. The
funds were awarded through the AmeriCorps
program administered by CNS. Funds
expensed in fiscal 1999 and 1998 totaled
$8,526,108 and $8,456,894, respectively.
1999
1998
$ 1,842,262
1,247,319
458,853
319,486
2,204
97,750
55,312
51,934
65,647
23,159
7,373
13,337
47,700
2,558,285
21,068
15,296
3,580
—
—
1,713,995
(9) Equipment and Improvements
(12) Line of Credit
The Organization’s equipment and improvements were comprised of the following at
June 30:
The Organization has a $2,500,000 demand
line of credit with an interest rate at the
bank’s prime lending rate plus one and onequarter percent (9% at June 30, 1999). The
line of credit is for working capital purposes
and is secured by all assets of the
Organization. Interest expense under the line
totaled $135,454 and $24,595 for the years
ended June 30, 1999 and 1998, respectively.
1999
1998
70,142
2,686,278
2,235,741
4,992,161
68,142
1,341,710
1,941,421
3,351,273
Less: accumulated
epreciation and amortization (1,849,747)
$3,142,414
(1,159,237)
2,192,036
Furniture and fixtures
Equipment and software
Leasehold improvements
$
(10) Federal Grants - CNS
The Corporation for National Service (“CNS”)
selected City Year as a National
Demonstration Project under the National and
Community Service Act of 1990 and awarded a
two-year National Demonstration Grant. Funds
were awarded through the Massachusetts
Department of Education, which was the legal
grantor for these program years.
Programmatic oversight was provided by the
Massachusetts National and Community
Service Commission.
25
Over the last decade: 238 corporate partners. $83 million in private sector
CONTRIBUTORS
City Year is grateful to the belief and commitment of our partnering sponsors – corporations large and small, foundations, municipalities,
individuals and the Corporation for National and Community Service. City Year thanks all our investors across the nation and recognizes their
essential role in creating a new standard for investment, engagement and support.
NATIONAL
National Leadership Sponsors
National Sponsor
Foundations
AmeriCorps Alums, Inc.
Anonymous (2)
City of Aquadilla, Puerto Rico
The Baker Committee
Beacon Hill Garden Club
R. E. Brackett and C. R. Ballou
Charitable Fund
The Bromley Charitable Trust
The Edna McConnell Clark Foundation
Katherine Collins Fund
Combined Jewish Philanthropies
The Croll Foundation Trust
Daedalus Foundation
David A. Dechman Charitable Gift Fund
The Dover Church
Echoing Green Foundation
Eckerd Youth Alternatives, Inc.
Fannie Mae Foundation
The F.A.O. Schwarz Family Foundation
William H. Gates Foundation
The Giving Back Fund, Inc.
The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation
David Gopen Foundation
Grayling Fund
Hands on Atlanta, Inc.
Hands on Baltimore, Inc.
Harvard University Staff
Hoffenberg Family Trust
Ilene and Richard Jacobs
Charitable Gift Fund
Kargman Charitable & Educational
Foundation, Inc.
Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation
The Kresge Foundation
The Kurz Family Foundation, Ltd.
Leifer Family Fund
Lenny Fund of Fidelity
Investments Charitable Gift Fund
The John D. and Catherine T.
MacArthur Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Maynard, III Fund
McGregor Fund
MCJ Foundation
MKC Gormley Foundation
Open Society Institute
Rocky Mountain Youth Corps
26
Serve Houston
The Sogg Foundation, Inc.
Sherman H. Starr Family
Surdna Foundation
Syman Family Foundation
Temple Ohabei Shalom
Joseph F. and Kristine M. Trustey
Charitable Gift Fund
The United States Treasury
The Woodcock Family Foundation
Corporate Donors
ABC, Inc.
Abt Associates Inc.
Ad Vantage Inc.
Adobe Systems, Inc.
Advanced Benefit Strategies, Inc.
Alkon & Levine, P.C.
Allscope Services, Inc.
Anchor/Russell Capital Advisors, Inc.
Ariel Capital Management, Inc.
Armell Imports, Inc.
Austin’s Mobil
Avon Books, Inc.
BankBoston
B. R. Alexander & Co., Inc.
Bronner Slosberg Humphrey
Canam Consultants, Inc.
Carney, Sandoe & Associates, Inc.
Cash Flow Resources, Inc.
Catalano Architechs, Inc.
Charles River Hospital, Inc.
Chunky Productions
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
Compaq Computer Corporation
Computer Associates, International
Connors & Co. Investment Services
Cruz Management Company, Inc.
CTAM
“Don’t Quit Your Day Job”
Productions, Inc.
DST Systems, Inc.
Electro Sales Co., Inc.
Fairway Trust
Foley Food Service
Freedom Capital
Management Corporation
Goldman Sachs & Co.
Goodway Graphics
Grantham, Mayo, Van Otterloo
Co. LLC
Grogan and Company
Hale and Dorr LLP
Harcourt General
H.C. Wainwright & Co., Inc.
Hewlett-Packard
Imagitas
In Season
Irish Institute, Boston College
John B. Cruz Construction Co., Inc.
John Hancock Mutual Life
Insurance Company
JPA Management Co.
Juel
Lewis Wharf Dental Associates
Lynx, Inc.
The Martin Agency
Merrill Lynch
Microsoft Corporation
MTV Networks
Murphy, Hesse, Toomey, & Lehane
Nazzaro Recreation Center, Inc.
Provision Marketing, Inc.
Public Consulting Group, Inc.
Putnam Investments
Rhumbline Advisers Corp.
Robert Hanss, Inc.
Rocket Software, Inc.
Sam Gray Photography
Shaevel & Krems
Shawmut Design and Construction
Shea Brothers, Inc.
Sherin and Lodgen, LLP
Taylor, Duane, Barton & Gilman, LLP
Telecommunications Cooperative
Network, Inc.
The Timberland Company
Troy’s Advertising Specialties &
Promotional Services
The Trust Companies
Village Women
Wainwright Investment Counsel, L.L.C.
Wayne R. Smith Photography
Zealand Corporation
In-Kind National Sponsors
Atlantic Electric Supply Corp.
Campus Outfitters
The BiT Group
Commonweath Copy
Habbamock Design
Jack Morton Productions
Jonathan Kannair Photography
KPMG
Monitor Company, Inc.
Ha Nguyen Design
Nomad Sound Systems L.L.C.
Oxendine Publishing
Professional Event Images/
John Gillooly
BOSTON
Team Sponsors
Bain & Company, Inc.
Bain Capital, Inc.
BankBoston
Boston Lawyers Consortium
Choate, Hall & Stewart
Foley, Hoag & Eliot LLP
Goodwin, Procter & Hoar
Hale and Dorr LLP
Hill & Barlow, A
Professional Corporation
Palmer & Dodge
Ropes & Gray
Sherin & Lodgen LLP
Central Artery/Tunnel Project
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Compaq Computer Corporation
CSX Transportation
Johnson & Johnson Professional, Inc.
Keyport Life Insurance Company
Massachusetts Bay
Transportation Authority
Massachusetts High Tech Consortium
Dynatech Corporation
Genzyme Corporation
Thermo Electron Foundation
MFS Investment Management
Millipore Foundation
Monitor Company, Inc.
The Reebok Foundation
State Street
The Timberland Company
United Way of Central Massachusetts
United Way of Mass Bay
United Way of the Tri-State
Foundations and Other Sources
Agoos Charity Tust
AIDS Action Committee
American Express Foundation
Anon
Aquinas College
Big Sister Association
Boston Foundation
Boston Foundation-Kohlberg
Foundation
Boston Foundation-R Anders
Boston Rape Crisis Center
Boys & Girls Club
Campbell Hall Charity
Charles Hayden Foundation
Cisco Systems Foundation
The Clements Foundation, Inc.
Clemson University
Coolidge Family Fund
Credit Suisse First Boston
Cross Road Community Foundation
DiNovi Charitable Gift Fund
The Ellison Foundation
Foley, Hoag & Eliot Foundation
Germeshausen Foundation
Gravestar Foundation
Harvard University
Hyams Foundation
Italian Home for Children
Jump Start
Junior Achievement
Kauffman Foundation
The Lynch Foundation
Mabel Louise Riley Foundation
Massachusetts Bay Community College
Mortimer Charitable Trust
New England Home For
Little Wanderers
Peace Games
The Reebok Foundation
Regis College
Roblee Foundation
Sojourner House
St Paul’s Church
Starlight Foundation
Stoneham Charitable Foundation
Triantafillou Committee
Trustey Charitable Gift Fund
Weston High School Fund
Womancare Fund
Corporate Donors
Add, Inc.
Adept, Inc.
Advanced Benefits
American Red Cross
Anchor/Russel Capitol Advisors
Arbella Mutual
Arthur D. Little, Inc.
Bain Capital Children’s Charity
Baupost Group
Bell Atlantic
Biliofind, Inc.
Boston Private Bank & Trust Company
BR Alexander
Bronner Slosberg Humphrey
Brown, Rudnick, Freed & Gesmer
Cambridge Dental Associates
CB Commercial/Whittier Partners LLP
Community Servings, Inc.
Concord Academy
Development Direct, Inc.
Doyle’s Café
Elizabeth Stone House
EOP Management Corp.
Epsilon
Fidelity Investments
Fleet Bank
Foley Food Services
Gadsby & Hannah LLP
The Gillette Company
Goldman Sachs
Gordon Brothers Co.
Grantham Mayo
Harcourt General
Home Loan Bank
HPSC, Inc.
International House of Blues
John Hancock Mutual Life
Insurance Co.
Literacy Volunteers
Lotus Development Corporation
Lotus Philanthropy Program
Marketing & Planning Systems
Mercer Management Consulting
MIT Sloan School of Management
Museum of Science
Nail & Tanning Salon
New England Financial
One with One, Inc.
Partners
support. Every government dollar matched with an additional
Pfizer, Inc.
PricewaterhouseCoopers
Protestant Guild
Reebok International
The Samaritans
Showa Boston Institute
Solutions @ Work
Synectics, Inc.
Teach for America
Tufts Health Plan
UPS Foundation
Valet Park
Walker Home & School for Children
Wayside Youth & Family Supp
Women’s Lunch Place
Boston In-Kind Donors
Atent for Rent, Inc.
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
La Fete Catering
Massachusetts Bay Transit
Bay Transit Authority
The Medical Foundation
Timberland
National and Boston Individuals
$50,000+
Jeff Shames and L. Egasti
$25,000+
Anne Lovett and Stephen Woodsum
Deborah Cogen Swartz and
Jeffrey B. Swartz
$20,000+
Sidney W. and Judith H. Swartz
$10,000+
Joshua and Anita Bekinstein
Anna Lyons
$5,000+
James Ansara
Kristen and Jim Atwood
Michael J. Corcoran
Michael and Betsy Danzinger
David H. and Marsha G. Feinberg
Ruthanne and Joseph B. Fuller
John D. Hamilton, Jr.
Edward J. Hoff
Warren A. and Kip Hollister Hyde
William C. McConnell III and
Jersey Lane
David M. Mussafer
Mark Nunnelly and Denise Dupre
W.M.H and Ann Romney
Matthews A. and Susan B. Weatherbie
$2,500+
Anonymous
Morton and Micki Brown
Veronica W. and W. Reed Chisholm II
Mr. & Mrs. John Cozzi
George Gendron
Tammany D. Hobbs
Richard and Ilene Jacobs
Rosabeth Moss Kanter
Lin S. and Dennis M. Kelleher
Alex and Josh McCall
Bill and Susan McClements
William F. Miracky
Elizabeth Mykrantz
Robert M. and Theresa T. Wadsworth
$1,000+
Anonymous (2)
Mary Baird
Steven and Deborah Anne Barnes
R. William and Mary Jean Blasdale
Clarita H. Bright
Sierra H. Bright
Kevin T. Callaghan
Catherine and John F. Coburn
Jonathan G. and Margot T. Davis
Sara Campbell and Ken Maloney
Kevin M. Dennis and Rebecca Kellogg
Toni and Deanna DiNovi
J. Anthony Downs
Kenneth Edmonds
Richard A. and Nancy L. Farrell
Paul R. and Jacqueline D. Fehrenbach
Ian Cowan and Corinne Ferguson
Elizabeth Fowler and
James L. Parmentier
Kenneth and Cynthia J. Freitas
Hilary and Christopher Gabrielli
William N. Gerber
Michael and Nancy Grogan
Bernard and Jane Gottschalk
Mr. & Mrs. Kent Healy
Lucia A. Henderson
William and Mari-Ann Hogan
Todd and Rose Jick
David and Suzette Fresco Johnson
Alexander Karle and Katrin C. Herrling
John and Karen Keogh
Seth A. and Beth Klarman
Pamela Kohlberg
Ellen Kurz and Thomas C. Cosgrove
Robbie Lacritz
Eric & Lori Lander
Michael Lapham
Craig S. Lynch and Amelia A. Hajjar
Teresa Mao
Charlotte A. Mao and Michael H. Brown
Sarah Maynard
James S. and Karen L. McDonald
Stephen Galpin Moorhead
M. Morren
Robert Poor
Kenneth Pucker
Bunk and Gay Read
Cameron Read
Sally C. Reid and John D. Sigel
Jon Rotenberg
Michael and Elizabeth Ruane
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Segal
Barbara Healy Smith
Alan D. and Susan Lewis Solomont
Craig H. and Patricia Underwood
Mr. & Mrs. G. Vanderheiden
Nathan M. Wilson
$500+
William F. Achtmeyer and
Maryann Watts
Ann B. Ackil
Carol F. and Howard M. Anderson
Stever and Elsie O’Brien Aubrey
Mary O. Bardeen
Kathleen R. Beckman
Frank and Ruth P. Belvin
William L. Bennett
Alan S. and Donna Sebell
Carty Buchholz
Linda Noelle Cabot
Timothy Cahill
Jane Howard Cheever
Deborah Ciolfi
Andrew E. Clarkson
Lisa G. Cohen
James and Meredith Cutler
Glen and Julie Darby
Virginia Delima
Bonnie and John H. Emmons
Benjamin C. Esty
Thomas M. Feeley
Richard E. Floor
Mark B. Fuller and L. Jo Froman
Joanne E. Gay
James Gilbert
Lili A. Gottfried
Thomas Philip Gould
Ilene Greenberg and Michael Maynard
Keith D. and Tina M. Greenfield
Nicholas and Marjorie Greville
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Grieve
Richard and Lorie Hamermesh
Jillian and John Hayes
Kathi and William Heater
Mr. and Mrs. George Hibbard
Elizabeth C. Horan
Barbara and Amos Hostetter, Jr.
Robert Inches
Jennifer and Fred Jordan
Owen P. and Paige E. Kane
Abbie L. Kearse
Richard A. and Florence Koplow
Laura Feigenbaum Langer and
Robert S. Langer
William Laskin
Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey Leach
W. Brewster Lee, III
Pamela F. Lenehan
Christine W. and David Letts
Robert S. and Ralinda Y. Lurie
William G. Maynard
Kathleen and Joseph McCarthy
Colin S. and Anne Craige McNay
Melinda Mitchell
David R. and Michele H. Mittelman
Noah J. Morgan and Elise Newman
Estelle Morrison
Bansi Nagji
Ofer and Shelly Nemirovsky
Joseph Nye
Gary M. and Margaret
Mary Pforzheimer
James Brooks and
Kathryn O’Reilly Porter
Wayne Owen
Ellen M. Poss
Howard C. Rice
Deirdre Ann Roney
Carolyn Thayer Ross and
J. William Codinha
William T. Ruhl
Peter Salgo and James K. Marra
Peter C. and Cynthia
Amadon Schliemann
Neil Silverston
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Smith
Mr. & Mrs. Sherman Starr
Gordon Strauss
Laurie J. Thomsen
Joseph and Kristine Trustey
$1.46 in private sector funding.
Ernest and Margit Ulrich
David C. Weinstein
Danette and Stephen B. Wineberg
Peter Karl and Dyann Fergus Wirth
Harris S. and Audrey H. Yett
$250+
Alan Albert and Carolyn Heller
Laura Allan
Elizabeth S. and Oliver F. Ames, Jr.
Scott and Katherine Russell Anderson
Nigel Angelieasse
Linda Antonucci
Jennifer C. and Jeffrey B. Atwood
Jerome L. Avorn and Karen L. Tucker
Carl and Andrea Axelrod
Cynthia R. Ballantyne
Maxwell D. Bardeen
Henry W. Barnard
Meredith Robbins Basque
Jerome L. and Leah Bass
Gregg D. and Susan M. Bauer
David and Amy Dickinson Beckwith
Martin and Katherine N. Begien
Dupre Benning
Stewart Berg
William L. and Kathleen Spooner Bliss
Megan M. Block
Richard J. and Ellen A. Blocker
Judith M. Bramhall
Catherine A. Briasco and
Lawrence C. Stewart
Karen B. and William C. Brooks
Jeffrey W. Brown
Katherine Buckley
Thomas and Judith Bullitt
James C. and Reny Burrows
Franklyn A. and Monica M. Caine
Janet and David Campbell
Karen P. and Leon Cangiano, Jr.
Julie P. and Louis B. Casagrande
Robert Boyd and
Carol Jackson Cashion
Leslie Cheek and Charlotte R. Joslin
Linda M. Chin
Ted Clark and Cheri Clark
Kathleen C. and James Tracy Colby III
Brian and Gracemarie Concannon
Beverly and Victor Conklin
Brian J. Conway
David and Nancy Corkery
Thomas and Jennifer Lenox Craig
Claudette D. and Henry J. Crouse
Pauline F. and Walter Cummings
James and Meredith Cutler
Jeffrey P. Davis
Ann E. Daw
Stacy M. Debroff
Caren Demoulas
James F. Devins III
John and Leslie Moran Drew
Steven Drooker
Michael and Katherine Dukakis
Lauren S. Dutton
Lucile and Nabil El-Hage
Glenn and Sara Ellison
Olivia and Todd English
Germana Fabbri and Mason Day
Gretchen and Edward Fish
John Fiske III and Daniel Ludden
Daniel T. and Maureen C. Flatley
James O. Fleckner and
Sarah A. Katzman
Roderick W. and Barbara J. Fletcher
Andrew T. and Leslye P. Fligor
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Fogg
Joseph A. and Patricia G. Fournier
John C. Fox
Gregory C. and Rosemary B. Foy
Lisa W. and Richard D. Frisbie
Mr. & Mrs. David Frost
E. N. Gadsby, Jr.
Peter E. Gardiner
Jeffrey S. and Donna H. Garner
Carol S. Gelles
Larry and Annie Geoyhegan
Jeffrey P. Gilbard
Ed and Jenny Glaeser
Susan and Keefe Gorman
Bob and Donna Goulart
Preston B. and Susan M. Grandin
Alexander G. Grant
Eric K. and Lenore Shannon Gustafson
Bradley and Mary Henderson Hale
John and Ann Hall
K. C. Halpern
Philip K. and Mary Causey Hamilton
H. Bredt Handy and C.H. Reynolds
Harry A. Hanson, III
Robert and Michelle Hanss
Barbara Harrell
Louise O. Heath
Joan M. and Merrit Heminway
Cassandra Hyland Henderson
Betty Gene and Geoffrey J. Hibner
Barbara B. Hickey
Bruce Holbein
Rob Hollister and Catherine Donaher
Emily W. Hughey
Katherine Hurling
James Hynes
Mark and Susan Irvings
David P. and Molly M. Jackson
Elizabeth S. and Edward S. Jacobs
Georgia and Douglas Jenkins
Sara C. and Hugh R. Jones, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. John H Kellogg &
Tom and Nancy Kelly
Alan A. Khazei and Vanessa Kirsch
Jordan Kirsch
Adam W. and Mary E. Kirsch
Lawrence R. and Paula P. Klane
A. Lawrence and Ruth C. Kolbe
Pamela Wasley Larsen
David H. Lebreton
Betsy and Michael Lee
Jonathan O. Lee
Toni Lee
Alan and Marcia Leifer
Julie Leitman and
Charlton Macveagh III
Monica Lewis and Kenneth L. Fox, Jr.
J. Scott and Marian M. Lord
William McConnell
Joseph W. and Kristan Madison
Javad Maftoon and Golnoosh Darabi
Erin Maloney
Kevin J. and Polly H. Maroni
Douglas Marshall
Mr. & Mrs. Kevin Marshall
Carmine A. Martignetti
27
Edward J. Mathews, III
Yvedt Love Matory and
Randall L. Kennedy
Kate Orr McCandless
Kathleen and Joseph McCarthy
William and Hope McDermott
Scott F. and Kelly H. McDermott
Robert McGaughey
Catherine McKenzie
Cecelia L. Mead
Theo and Lisa Melas-Kyriazi
Arnold Messing
Susan Messinger and Robert Muller
Brian and Constance Millard
Michael and Alicia Milligan
Mary Ann Monroe and Roger Tackeff
Beth Ann and James W. Morgan
Shelby Calvert Morss
Francis Sykes Moyer
Beth E. and Marc W. Myers
James Neville
Sarah Bankson Newton
Nick and Ann Noyes
Daniel W. and Julia W. O’Connor
Taki and Elaine Pantazopoulos
Edward F. and Arleen E. Paquette
Drew D. Peck and
Mary Elizabeth Sullivan
Tod and Kristi Perry
Michael and Heather Pineault
Samuel Plimpton
Charles G. and Jessica L. Pohl
Stephen and Jane Poss
Jeffrey and Jennifer Potter
Susanne K. and John T. Potts, Jr.
W. David and Helene M. Power
Hewitt L. Pratt
George L. Priest
Merril S. and Sharon E. Pyes
Lee and Jim Rafferty
Anne A. and Stuart A. Randle
Charles V. and Natalie Wigotsky Reed
Thomas P. Reilly
Holly L. Smith Reynolds
Mary C. Richardson
Edward S. Rimer
Gabriela Dreyer and Bob Romanow
Philip and Myn W. Rootberg
Mr. & Mrs. Marc Ross
Robert Rothberg
Ethan C. and Francine H. Royce
Robert J. Samuelson
Anni and Charles Santry
Stephen Sayer and Nancy Watter
Robert and Nancy Schlundt
Elizabeth and Oliver Scholle, Jr.
Alan and Amy Seifer
Bill and Lois Shaevel
Dorothy F. and Stanley W. Shelton
Roger D. Shepley
Mr. & Mrs. Roger D. Shepley
Margie Shoukimas
John Shumway and Melinda Mitchell
Barbara Sidell
Howard and Mary Ellen Silverman
David M. Slye
Mason R. Smith
Andrew E. and Jody Snider
Elaine and David Sobell
Nancy Soulette
Christopher F. Speegle
Gilbert O. Stanley
Andrew and Anne Sternlicht
Carolyn R. and Douglass R. Stiles
Mary E. Sullivan
Mr. & Mrs. Gary Syman
John and Maria Tamvakologos
Marshall Taylor
Katherine S. and Benjamin B. Taylor
Carlota J. and Mark Taylor
28
M. Josh and A. Connolly Tolkoff
Elizabeth and Richard Tucker
Claudia Repp and Michael Tupanjanin
David M. Vernick and Mary C. Gardner
Douglas and Sushila Walker
Gerard J. and Lorrain H. Garnett Ward
Mr. & Mrs. David Weinberg
James Warren Westphal
Paul D. and Ann Marie White
David F. Wilder
Howard Wolk
Stephanie R. Wu
$100+
Eleanor D. Acheson
Julie H. Ahn
Walter Alexander
Curt Anderson
Colin F. and Melody J. Anderson
Donald Arnoudse and Colleen Kilcoyne
Donald C. Atwood
Sandra H. Bakalar
Lotte Bamberger
Whitt and Susie Barnard
John Baskey
Bruce A. Bauman and Denise D. Selden
Eric J. Bedard
G. D’Andelot Belin
Susan L. Berry
Gregory P. and Mary M. Bialecki
Patricia A. and Peter P. Bishop, Jr.
Laird and Sara Miron Bloom
Eric A. Boemer
Partha P. and Vinita P. Bose
Judith B. Boucher
Stephen P. and Sallyann Dooley Bowen
Amy M. Boyce
F. Bresnahan
David T. Brewster
Joanna Breyer
Karen M. Brown
Richard A. and Cheryl A. Bruun
Chris Buck
Lawrence I. and Phyllis K. Buell
Esther A. Bullitt
Christopher Burr
Linda Cabot
Maritza Calvillo
Meg Campbell
Barbara G. and
Nicholas A. Campagna, Jr..
Robert D. Carter and Gail Bolte
Joe Casey
Nellie Casey
James F. Chace, Jr.
R. Hoyt and Marybelle C. Chapin
Jane H. and Roger P. Cheever
Elaine C. Y. Chen
Julian Chu
Edward S. and Ruth P. Cogen
Robert A. Cohen
Priscilla Cohen and Antony Weiner
Ellen S. Cohn and
Lawrence I. Berkowitz
Joseph M. Collins
Frederic G. and Martha A. Corneel
Robert E. and Molly Rogers Cramer
John B. Crawford
Thomas E. Davidson
Ann E. Daw
Kirsten and Jed Dawson
John and Carol Lynne Deblois
David and Carole Decter
Linda M. Dempsey
Vikram Desai
S. Whitney Dickey
Robin A. Dubin
David W. Duehren and Anne M. Murphy
Stephen M. Dungan and
Pamela J. Weathers
Megan R. and Patrick S. Durkin
Leslie A. Eckel
Mark D. and Judith G. H. Edington
Thomas M. Egan
Martin and Anne Emanuel
Alexandra English and Charles Pratt
Kenneth W. Erickson
Jamie and Katherine Fagan
Catherine T. and Scott T. Fairbairn
Alfonso Felder
Peggy G. and David R. Fineman
Gerald J. Flannelly
Newell Flather
Art and Susan Fogel
John O. Francis, Sr.
Deborah A. and Alan M. Freedman
Robert Freeman
Charles Freifeld and Marilyn Ray Smith
Elissa L. Freud and Steven R. Willis
Shari and Richard Gelber
Rebecca Sue Gelman
Daniel and Maria Gerrity
Robert and Shirley A. Gerrol
John L. Giesser
Eva Ginsburg
Richard A. and Carolyn Glickstein
Lester P. Goldstein
Lisa M. Gomez
Jennifer L. Gonnerman
Allen M. and Linda B. Goorin
Anne D. and John L. Grandin, III
L. Gregory and Roberta Loomar
Catherine E. and Frederick H. Grein, Jr.
R. Grey and J. Loomar
Mildred Guberman
Mary G. Gurney
Greta P. Gustafson
Susan Hackley
Donald M. and Naoko B. Hague
Jamie and George F. Harper, Jr.
Mary A. and Stephen J. Harvell
Henry R. Hatch, III
William W. and Elizabeth Daisy Helman
Jennifer A. Henderson
Jason E. Hendrix
Paul W. Henry
Theresa M. and Charles C. Hewitt III
Robert F. Higgins
Thomas T. and Constance F. Kane
Michael J. and Monica S. Higgins
Linda A. Hill and Roger E. Breitbart
Elaine C. and Edward F. Hines, Jr.
Jeff A. and Linda J. Hinrichs
Benjamin A. Hochberg
Arthur C. and Eloise W. Hodges
Tony Hollenberg and
Judith A. Levenfeld
Peter Hollinger
Joan Hollister
A. Scott Holmes
Deirdre Holmes
Julie Horowitz
Stephen W. Howe
M. Timothy Hresko and
Ellen M. Gravallese
Keith L. and Catherine B. Hughes
Andrew N. Hultkrans
Janet and Jonathan Husband
Laura Inouye and Craig Weatherby
Waleed Iskandar
Gloria Jacobs and Sean Nolan
Catherine F. James
Richard A. and Patricia D. Johnston
Winston K. Jones
Jeffrey F. Jones
Karen C. Jordan
Kai Juel III
Esther and Ernest Kan
Robert and Marjie Kargman
Julian Katz
Patricia Keenan
Judith H. Kidd
Christopher Arnesen Klem
Pamela J. Knauer
Ross D. Knights
Thomas and Lisa Knott
Wendy Sue Kopp
Mitchell A. and Frances A. Kurker
Cynthia M. Laba
Michael J. and Gloria C. Lacek
Jennifer S. Laden
Carolyn C. Lamb
Katherine W. Larsen
Arthur J. Laskin
Denise M. and Donald E. Le Blanc, Jr.
Sarah Griswold Leahy
Beth Lebontz
John R. Leclaire and Ruth A. Hodges
Mark D. and Rebecca B. Leiter
R. Willis and Barbara B. Leith
Dr. and Mrs. Robert Levine
Ann R. Levison
Lawrence M. and
Margaret Gilmore Levy
Pamela M. Ling
Michael J. Lipton
Julia C. Livingston
Anthony P. and Sarah V. Lopez
Barbara Lehman Luddy
Christopher T. and Janice L. Mabley
Ronald K. and Lisa H. Macpherson
Nancy W. Mann
Domenic Marinelli
Lawrence J. Marks
Helen W. and Hunter S. Marston
Elizabeth Martineau and
John McClellan, Jr.
G. Thomas and Polly B. Martinson
David H. Mason and James G. Herman
William L. and Marcia C. Mather
Joan Creamer Mcardle
Janette MacInnes
Margaret McGavok
Kathleen L. McGirr
George J. McGovern
Barbara McLagan
Francis X. Meaney
Jeffrey A. and Karen F. Meeks
Christopher Meyer and Mary E. Rivet
Dean E. and Carole E. Michelini
James and Charlotte Milan
Christopher H. and Catherine W. Milton
Elaine S. Mittell
Leslie Mohr and Samuel I. Griesmer, Jr.
Erin A. Moore
Jennifer Morrison
Barbara C. Motley
Cheryl Mottley
Robert A. Mullaney
Thomas M. Murray
Julie Ann Mussafer
Sandra A. Nesbit
Peter M. and Ruth L. Nicholas
Kate O’Brian
Brian O’Connell
Jeffrey Orlin
Selwyn P. and Laura Oskowitz
Michael J. Pappone and Diane Savitzky
Daniel J. Para
Bruce M. Patton
Oglesby Paul
Rosanne Miller Payette
Perry Pero
Deborah R. and Daniel D. Phillips, Jr.
David E. and Susanna B. Place
Laura F and Robert J. Plumb III
Austin and Kimberly Poirier
Sally B. Porter
Vinita and Partha Pose
Bruce G. Posner and Betsy R. Rudnick
Milly Powell
Charles O.A. Pratt
Jane S. Pratt
Lori Platt Rappaport
Don R. and Roberta Ribatt
William P. and Lynn L. Rice
Christopher Rich and Mary Godwyn
Amelia Richards
Patrick G. and Virginia P. Richmond
Michael and Carol Riordan
Barbara E. Rose
Deb Rosenbloom
Charles and Susan Ross
Mr. & Mrs. Doug Rowan
Larry Rowe
Richard A. and Mary L. Russo
John and Ann Ellen Rutherford
Ronald Sable
Dell and Louis A. Salza
David F. Sand
Thomas H. and Laura Carter Sander
Paul F. and Jessica B. Schendel
Robert and Catherine G. Schneider
Daniel L. and Lisbeth B. Schorr
Susan Charm Schwartz and
Kurt N. Schwartz
Frederick A. O. III and Maureen Coffey
Jill Segal
Blanche and Joel D. Seifer
Jessica Seigel
Troy Selvaratnam
Danzy Senna
Joseph L. Serafini
Eric M. Shank
Natasha E. E. Shapiro
Brenda and Richard Sharton
Peter and Jeddie Shaw
Thomas R. Shepherd
James A. Shuchman
Daniel J. and Margot A. Silva
Alan K. and Ann S. Simpson
Ernest A. and Betty L. Singer
Carol Smith and Daniel E. Singer
Elaine K. and Myron N. Slotksky
Diana M. Smith
Peter Smith and Catherine Dickey
Thomas Royall and Sharon L. Smith
Robert L. Snuggs and Janet J. Kassler
Mark and Sarah J. Snyderman
Debra B. Solomon
John F. Spence, Jr.
Gary A. Spiess
Laura L. Stanley
Marjorie Cohen and Paul E. Stanzler
Marilyn J. and Sanford R. Stewart
Jenny Stieglitz
David Stolow
Toni Strassler
Gordon M. Strause
Andrew and Thelma Klein Strauss
Joseph Stutz, Jr.
Paul K. Sutherland
Thomas J. Swan, Jr.
Amy R. Tabor
Linda K. Taylor and Alexander W. Zinke
Joseph and Cornelia C. Tierney
Conrad H. Todd
Margie J. Topf
Martha Torrance
Karen Tucker
Jeffrey P. and Joan M. Turner
Urvashi Vaid
Ann E. Van Dyke and Sarah V. Lopez
Mr. & Mrs. Steven Vibert
Richard Victor
Janet R. Vohs
Robert Vokes
Robert H. Waldeck and
Robyn Reiss-Waldeck
Jeanne Waldlinger
Edith L. Walker
Steven M. and Nancy G. Walter
Martha M. Walz
Brice Watterson
J. Woodrow Weiss and Kay M. Petersen
Wendy Weiss and Stephen E. Shay
Christopher S. and Catherine W. Welles
Ellen K. White
William H. and Holly D. Whitledge
Leigh and Amy Finch Williams
Charles V. and Mary Sue Willie
Karyn M. Wilson and Miles Byrne
Richard I. and Frances M. Winneg
Anthony M. and Roberta C. Woeltz
Jeanne Woldinger
Harvey J. Wolkoff
Nancy Y. J. Wong
Samuel Yee
Virginia M.Young and
Jonathan B. Wiener
Mariann A. and Andrew J. Youniss
Arnold M. Zack
Jane Zirpoli
$50+
Gerald and Corrine Adler
Jo Anne and Read E. Albright
Richard Ames
R. Peter and Catherine A. Anderson
Robert G. and Judith P. Anderson
Juan A. Aponte
Evans Arnold and Helen Arnold
Bliss Austin Spooner
Mathew Axelrod
Victoria T. Baker
Lisa M. Baldassari
David M. Barry
Richard Barth, Jr.
Havard S. Bauer
Lynn Bauer
Robert I. and Jacqueline Baum Bechek
Sara E. Beinert
Danielle K. Berger
Hans-Peter N. Biemann
Philp R. Bosinoff
Kathleen C. Boyle
Judith M. Bramhall
Annabelle Brett
Myles A. Brown and Judy E. Garber
David S. Browne and Yuko Takagi
Heidi J. Burbage
Jeffrey and Barbara Bush
Robert and Ann Buxbaum
Joanne H. and Edward Cale, Jr.
Jeffrey S. and Ellen H. Campbell
Douglas Century
Tyler E. Chapman
Judith J. and Jonathan Chiel
Sung Choi
Chris Clark
James F. and Sarah Coakley
Priscilla Cohen and Antony Weiner
Stephen and Carol Cohen
Elizabeth H. Coit
Alan G. Corman
Linda L. and James W. Crawford
Ingersoll Cunningham and
Sheila D. Cunningham
Kelly A. Deck and Llewellyn Smith
Manthia Diawara
Laura Dickerson
Amu H. Duncan
Barry Dym and Francine H. Jacobs
Jennifer Edwards and James Gaherty
Marilyn R. and Marvin A. Eichner
Mark Eisenberg
Shari Lynn and Britt H. Ellis
Jessie Faige
Scott A. and Joanne L. Faust
Glenda S. and Robert A. Fishman
Bernard L. and Maureen Fitzgerald
Charles M. Flowers
Sarah C. and Charlie L. Forbes
Thomas Fredian
Carl H. and Laila M. Freedberg
Lynn Gallagher
Michelle A. Genece
Stephen E. Glinick and
Elizatbeth A. Welch
Benjamin A. Gomez and Susan W. Cable
Lucinda B. and Stephen F. Gormley
Gloria Grady
Mr. and Mrs. Francis C. Gray
Richard and Esme H. Green
Dwight Griesman
Caroline Kuhlman
Michael J. Kutter
Charles M. Lane and Catarina Bannier
Katherine W. Larsen
Judith Lavine
Peter G. and Linda L. Leahy
Matthew C. Lee
Karen Leibold and Steven Ratiner
Otto Leone
Peter D. Levin and Samara Kaufman
Ronald and Sandra Levy
Bruce and Rochelle Lipschultz
Ann Sanford
Richard Sanford
Martina Scharback
Elizabeth A. Seitz and
Jorge C. Abellas Martin
Josephine W. and Charles N. Shane
Robert D. Shapiro
Howard M. and Leslie H. Shapiro
Benjamin A. Shepherd and
Elizabeth L. Shepherd
Barry M. and Sally-Ann Shuman
Melissa Silverstein
Rosamond P. Smythe
Focal Communications
LaSalle Bank
Joseph J. Freed & Associates
Loop Capital Markets
The Northern Trust Company
Foundations and Other Sources
Chicago Community Trust
Chicago Community Trust
(Rowley Fund)
Donnelley Family Trust
Elliott R. Donnelley Family Trust
Fel-pro Better Neighborhood Fund
Technology Gets a Boost at City Year!
City Year launched a multi-year technology initiative
with major support from a consortium of technology
companies. After initial consulting support by
Compaq Computer Corporation to develop a detailed
technology plan, Compaq made a $500,000 challenge grant in the form of equipment and financial
support. This ”Compaq Challenge“ helped to secure
major contributions totaling over $900,000 from
Cisco Systems, Microsoft, Adobe, Computer
Associates International, and Hewlett-Packard, all
Dr. Andrew Gross
James E. Hamilton, Jr.
James Hammerman
Mathew Hawn
Maureen F. and Kent A. Healy
Nancy D. Hibbard
W.J. and D.P. Holinger
Joseph P. and Karen O’Malley Holland
Brian and Margaret Holland
Marybelle and William H. Hollister
Gordon Holmes
Nancy Holway
J. Richard and Tracey L. Hornby
Donald Campbell and
Anne Elizabeth Hovey
Linda Huntington
Janet V. and Warren D. Hutchison
Audrey I-Wei Huang and
Christopher J. Bradford
William and Nina Jackson
Jeffrey F. and Susan C. Jones
Arlene G. Kaitz
Katrina Karkazis
Walter B. and Eva Kasell
Rudolph and Helen K. Kass
Samuel C. Kendall and Catherine Zusy
James and Phoebe W. Kent
Molly E. Ker
Nelli Kheyfets
Patrick J. King
Spencer and Barbara Klaw
Mr. & Mrs. William Knowlton
Katherine F. Kopp
Jonathan L. Kotlier and
Nancy A. Nichols
Brian J. Kriebel and Kelly M. Parisi
Jeffrey Lissak
Dr. & Mrs. Anthony Lopez
Chantal Luc
Ann G. and Steven G. Manson
Frederick Martin
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph McGavok
Sylvan M. and Jennifer S. Mendelsohn
Joyce A. Michelini
Erik G. Miller
Mark W. Modrall
Joanne Percoco and Andrew Mooney
Stephen C. and Elizabeth G. Morris
Susan Hall Mugatt
Margueritte S. Murphy and
Brian P. Cooper
Julie Ann Mussafer
Steven and Denise Nachmanoff
Lynn Nichols
Catherine Nicholson
Patricia M. Nolan and David G. Rabkin
Marianna M. O’Brien
Elizabeth H. Ondaatje
David A. Pace
George and Virginia Parker
Anne Pearson
Frances G. Pratt
Herby Raynaud
David V. and Ann H. Rees
Thomas T. Reid
Tom Richman
Peter A. and Nina Bailey Roe
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Rosenfeld
Bob B. and Anne S. Rosenthal
John W. and Barbara B. Routh
Chris Saludo
Frank E. A. and Emily J. Sander
of which filled a unique and critical component of
the plan. Thanks to the generous support of these
companies, City Year's eleven sites are connected by
a wide area network and every station is connected
directly to the Internet. City Year is now poised to
develop powerful website, Intranet, and database
capacities to maximize the organization's ability to
sustain itself in the long term and to train powerful
leaders for the future. City Year extends its deepest
thanks to all of its technology sponsors!
Becca S. Solomont
Carmen A. Rosario Sosa
Deborah L. Stamper
Carolyn A. Starrett
William E. and Herrika D. Stevenson
Amy Sullivan
James T. Swanson
Sharon Syman
Clyde R. Taylor
Erich and Linda Thalheimer
Lucien and Astrid Thalheimer
Seth Tucker
K. Blair and Bradlee Vanbrunt
Judith K. and Menno Verhave
Charles M. and Rebecca M. Vest
William D. Waddill and
Katherine Downs Waddill
Bruce H. and Nancy B. M. Walton
James L. Ware, Jr. and
Sharon M. McCarhty
Lauren Courtney Wechsler
Dr. Richard M. Wilk
Brian K. Wolahan
Leonard P. Zakim
CHICAGO
Team Sponsors
The Alter Group
Arthur Andersen, LLP
Bain & Company
Charitabulls (Chicago Bulls)
Chicago Transit Authority (CTA)
City of Chicago (Mayor Daley)
City of Chicago (Department
of Human Services)
Equity Residential Properties
Field Foundation of Illinois
Francis Beidler Charitable Trust
Freed Family Foundation
Jewish Foundation of
Metropolitan Chicago
Lloyd A. Fry Foundation
Leo Guthman Foundation
John D. and Catherine T.
MacArthur Foundation
Nathan Manilow Foundation
Oppenheimer Family Foundation
Pittway Corporation
Charitable Foundation
Polk Bros. Foundation
RR Donnelley & Sons Company
(Dollars for Doers Program)
Sara Lee Foundation
Starbucks Foundation
Corporate Donors
360 Communications Company
Allegiance Telecom
ASAP Software
Ash, Anos, Freedman & Logan, LLC
BP Amoco
BFC Forms
Deloitte-Touche Consulting
Federal Express
Inland Steel Company
J.P. Morgan
Madison Dearborn Partners
Mayer & Morris Kaplan
Motorola
People’s Gas
RR Donnelley & Sons Company
Sears Roebuck & Co.
Starbucks Coffee Company
Thorek Hospital and Medical Center
29
Walmart
In-Kind Donors
The Alter Group
American Airlines
Capital Guardian Trust
Chicago Transit Authority
Harris Bank Foundation
Individuals
$1,000+
Jeanne S. Affelder
Mr. & Mrs. James P Gorter
Robert Helman
Phyliss Martin
James N. Perry, Jr.
Lee Selander
$500+
Philip D. and Judith S Block
(J.B. Charitable Trust)
James R. Donnelley
David & Mary Grumhaus
Mr. and Mrs. Bradley R. Krey
John Lahey
(Solomon Cordwell Buenz
& Associates Inc.)
Rootberg Business Services, Inc.
Lois and John Sachs
$250+
The Mary G. & Bradley R.
Krey Charitable Foundation
Alison P. and Erik G.
Birkerts Ranney
George A. and Vicky Ranney, Jr.
Robert Rivkin and Cindy Moelis Rivkin
Rothbart Construction
(Mr and Mrs. Michael Rothbart and
Mr and Mrs. Gary Rothbart)
David A. Sherman
Randolph F. and Barbara Thomas
Merrill H. Thorne
$100+
Carlos Azcoitia
Judith Block
Alice Blum
Mortan R and Terry Borkan
Jonathan M.Bross
Sally Carton
Libby Lai-Bun Chiu
Thomas C. Cronin
Shawn Donnelley
Marisol Figueroa
Larry Freed
Samuel F. and Kalee S. Gould
Mellody Hobson
(Ariel Capital Mgt, Inc.)
Phillip Jackson
Mr. & Mrs. Dennis Keller
(Keller Family Foundation)
Herbert J. Kendall
Richard P. and Susan R. Kiphart
Peter Behr and
Ellen Sue Rakieten Kupferberg
Milton and Iona Levenfeld
Susan Motley
Perry R. Pero
Stephen Quazzo
Alison Ranney
Kevin C. Richardson
David B. and Jill B. Sickle
Ronald and Anne Siegel
Adele Simmons (Norwottock
Charitable Trust)
Francine Soliunas
Sara and John Stassen
Doug and Patricia S. Sutton
David J. Vitale
Mark and Betsy Westhoff
Robert Zapko
Zunamon Family Foundation
30
$50+
Jean Allard
Charles and Lynn Elin Bencic
Lawrence and Rachelle Benjamin
Michael and Nicky Bliwas
Keith Dallas
Philip A. and Julie S. Delaney, Jr.
Joyce H. and H. Gary Frank
Matthew T. and Katy Kendall Furton
Lisa F. Grumhaus
Alison M. Helbling
Michael J. Iannelli
Bertina E. Lampkin
Joanne Dutcher Maxwell
Jenny Notz and Ian Watson Notz
Michael J. and Nannette M. Ochs
Kazuichi K. and Yasuko Okigawa
Howard E. Pattis (Pinnacle
Real Estate, Inc.)
Claire E. Pensyl
Ronald and Bernette Pleas
George A. Ranney
G. Benjamin Ranney
Michael Richardson
Sarah D. Solotaroff
Peggy Spizzirri and Gerry Hamm
Spizzirri (G.H. Building
Enterprise, Inc.)
Richard S. Treptow
Matthew Ward
CLEVELAND
Team Sponsors
Arter & Hadden LLP
Baker & Hostetler LLP
Calfee, Halter & Griswold, LLP
Cavitch, Familo, Durkin &
Frutkin Co., LPA
City of Cleveland
Cuyahoga County Board of
Commissioners
Davis & Young
Fay, Sharpe, Beall & Fagan,
Minnich & McKee
Gold, Rotatori & Schwartz
Hahn Loeser & Parks, LLP
Hyatt Legal Plans
Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue
Kahn, Kleinman, Yanowitz & Arnson
Kelley, McCann & Livingstone LLP
KeyBank
Mansour Gavin Gerlack &
Manos Co., LPA
Messerman & Messerman Co., LPA
Nurenburg, Plevin
Pioneer-Standard Electronics, Inc.
Progressive Insurance, Co.
Reminger & Reminger Co., LPA
Rust-oleum (RPM, Inc.)
Sisters of Charity Foundation
of Cleveland
Squire, Sanders & Dempsey LLP
Thompson, Hine & Flory LLP
TRW, Inc.
Ulmer & Berne, LLP
Weisman, Goldberg & Weisman Co., LPA
Weltman, Weinberg & Reis Co., LPA
Foundations and Other Sources
1525 Foundation
Abington Foundation
BFGoodrich Foundation
Bruening Foundation
Cav Charities
Chase Financial Corp.
Chisholm Memorial Fund
The Cleveland Foundation
The George W. Codrington Foundation
Deaconess Community Foundation
Eaton Charitable Fund
Harry K. & Emma H. Fox
Charitable Foundation
The Gries Family Foundation
George Gund Foundation
M. A. Hanna Foundation
Hathaway Brown School
McDonald & Co. Securities
Nord Family Foundation
F.J. O’Neill Charitable Corp.
Richman Bros. Foundation
Thomas C. Sullivan Family Foundation
Singer Family Fund
Thomas H. White Foundation
United Way (Michael Chesney,
Bill Papenbrock, Jan Roller,
Jennifer Stewart, John Wheeler,
Fleet Mortgage
Lexington/Richland Alcohol
& Drug Abuse Council
NCR Corporation
Palmetto Baptist Medical Center
Palmetto Richland Memorial Hospital
Richland County School District One
RL Bryan Company
Rotary Club 5 pts
Santee Cooper
Scana
Sedora Reality Corp.
Wachovia
Walmart
Corporate Donors
Individual Donors
$5,000+
American Greetings Corp.
Bradley Company
Cleveland Steel Container
CVS/pharmacy
In-Kind Donors
Busch Funeral Homes
Cleveland Television Network
Cuyahoga Community College
Home Depot
Nestle
Nextel
Regional Transit Authority
Jim Roop & Company
Individual Donors
$1,000+
$1,000+
Café Maxx
Capital Wine/Castle Springs
Carolina Peace Resource Center
City of Columbia Parks & Recs
Domino’s
Dwinnell’s Communications
Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox
Hooter’s
KFC
Kroger
McDonald’s
Papa John’s
Professional Printer’s, Inc.
Red Lobster
Rising High Natural Bread
Sherwin-Williams
Sonic
Taco Bell
Triangle Ice
Unisource
University of South Carolina
WWDM - Clear Channel Radio Columbia
Yesterday’s
David Dukes
Mr. & Mrs. John O’Brien
COLUMBUS
500+
Team Sponsors
James Dexter
Joel L. Smith III
Jane Suggs
Bank One
Borden Family of Companies
City of Columbus
Columbus Dispatch Charities
The Columbus Foundation
Dennis Kaufman/Vacuform
Honda of America, mfg.
Ingram White Castle Foundation
The Limited Foundation
Nationwide Insurance
Enterprise Foundation
Ohio Health
Panacea Products Corp
Plaskolite
United Healthcare of Ohio, Inc.
Joanne Suggs
Ken Suggs
$2,500+
Bunni Hart
Marie-Louise Ramsdale
$250+
Paula Christ
James Bradley
Jana Daley
Mathew Hartley
Clente Flemming
Vernice Leonard
$100+
$100+
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sullivan
Bill Summers
$250+
John Lewis
Margaret Wong
AKA Sorority
Allstate Foundation
Columbia Academy
Knox Foundation
Lipscomb Foundation
Publix Charities
Richland County Sheriff
South Carolina Special Olympics
Union Camp Charitable Trust
University of South Carolina
UPS Foundation
UW Midlands
Cordelia Allen
Emily Arnold
Cheryl Austin
Charles McGahan Black
Rochelle Brown
Joan F. Burritt
Steven Burritt
Frances Close
Callie Coleman
Sen. John Courson
Amy Coward
Clarire Ferrell
Eddie Fogler
Mr. & Mrs. Vince Ford
Carreen Frew
Frances Gibbons
James & Catherine Griffin
Julie Hall
Joyce A. Hallenbeck
Mr. & Mrs. Stuart Hamilton
Bryan Kost
Anil & Shubha Kudcadkar
Henri Montgomery
Richard & Penny Neilsen
Sandra Nesbitt
Anne Marie Pages
Karen Palmer
Debra Parker
Gregory Plagens
Marguerite O’Brien
Carol Reyner Barnett
Terry R. Scott
Ellen Verner Scoville
Peter Sederberg & Janice Love
St. Andrew’s Optimist
Elizabeth Wilhelm
Corporate Donors
$50+
AT&T
Bell South
Biscuit House
Charwood Women’s Club
Colonial Life
First Bank
In-Kind Donors
$50+
Michael Cavanaugh
COLUMBIA
Program Sponsor
City of Columbia
Team Sponsors
Richland County Bar Association
Belser & Belser
Coleman Catoe
Gergel, Nickles & Grant, P.A.
Lewis Babcock & Hawkins
Nelson, Mullins, Riley &
Scarborough, LLP
Janet L. Paduhovich
Eddie C. Roberts
Sherrill & Roof
Mrs. Joanne C. Suggs
Suggs & Kelly P.A.
United Parcel Service
Nations Bank
Foundations and Other Sources
Jason Heine
James Scurry
Alltel
Atlanta Bread
Avery Dennison
Foundations and Other Sources
Columbus Jewish Foundation
Columbus Youth Foundation
Roderick Dilon Foundation
English Family Foundation
OSU Fraternity & Sorority Foundation
Thekla R. Shackleford Foundation
United Way
Corporate Donors
Andersen Consulting
Application Link
Banc One Capital Corporation
Bob Evans Farms
Bricker & Eckler
Britt Business Systems
Commerce National Bank
Continental Furniture Company
Corna-Kokosing
Crane Plastics
D & D Group
Elford Inc.
Haynes & Haynes
Huntington National Bank
Keybank
MVP Systems Inc.
National City
Ohio Full Court Press
Porter, Wright, Morris & Arthur
Real Property Management
Redwood Development Corporation
Ruscilli Construction
Sarcom
Sater, Seymour and Pease
Schneider Downs & Co.
Short North Development Group
Solutions Staffing
Squire Sanders and Dempsey
Strathman Associates Inc.
Taft, Stettinius and Hollister
Techneglas
Time Warner Communications
Renny J. Tyson Co., LPA
Videofile
Vorys, Saters, Seymout & Rease, LLP
Waffle House
Wilds Oats Inc.
Wolfe Enterprises
Worthington Industries
In-Kind Donors
Ameritech
Audio Visual Impact, Inc.
Business First
Camp Mary Orton
Cedarbrook Nursery
Columbus Alive
Columbus Park & Recreation
Columbus Post
Columbus Public Schools
Columbus State
Cameron Mitchell Restaurants
COTA
Creative Paints
DeMonye’s Nursery
Dill’s Greenhouse
Duron Paints
Four Pines TV Hardware
GLAD
Godman Guild
Graphic T’s
Hyatt Regency Columbus
Jade, Inc.
NBC4
Ocean Spray
Ohio State University
OhioHealth
Porter Paints
Ruscilli
Ryder Truck Rental
Vet’s Memorial
WCBE Radio
Wells Lamont
Brian White
White Castle
Wild Oats
Wooster Brush
Individual Donors
$5,000+
Gary Glaser
$2,500+
Ellen Julian
$1,000+
Mr. & Mrs. William Courson
Elizabeth Mykrantz
$500+
Ronald Barnes
Barbara Brandt
Priscilla Butler
Kay Cipriano
Donna James
Les Wright
Sherri Wright
$250
Mr. & Mrs. William Bennett
Katherine Epler
Mr. & Mrs. Dax Hudson
Franklin Kass
Warren Tyler
Mr. & Mrs. David Weiss
$100+
Rick Ayish
Sheila Barfield
Maurice Blake
Seth Bridger
Lorraine Brock
Jeff Cabot
Beau Euton
Jean Hitchcock
Terrance Hubbard
Kelli Jo Mcnemar
Stephanie Tresso
DETROIT
Founding Supporters
The Kresge Foundation
Michigan Community
Service Commission
Founding Team Sponsors
Bank One
Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Michigan
Comerica Incorporated
DaimlerChrysler Corporation Fund
Henry Ford Health System/HAP
Jewish Community of
Metropolitan Detroit
Foundations and Other Sources
Audio-Visual Impact
Community Foundation for
Southeastern Michigan
David M. Whitney Fund
Hudson-Webber Foundation
McGregor Fund
The Skillman Foundation
In-Kind Donors
City of Detroit Department
of Transportation
Henry Ford Health System/HAP
Massie & Associates
Start-Up Funders
Grayling Fund of the Community
Foundation for
Southeastern Michigan
Henry Ford Health System/HAP
Hudson-Webber Foundation
McGregor Fund
Pistons -Palace Foundation
W. K. Kellogg Foundation
Start-Up In-Kind Donors
Henry Ford Health System/HAP
Home Depot
PHILADELPHIA
Founding Partners
PennSERVE: The Governor’s Office
of Citizen Service
The Pew Charitable Trusts
Safeguard Scientifics, Inc.
The School District of Philadelphia
SEPTA
Founding Team Sponsors
First Union
Prudential Fox & Roach Realtors
Safeguard Scientifics, Inc.
Philadelphia Lawyers Consortium
Ballard Spahr Andrews & Ingersoll
Blank Rome Comisky & McCauley
Connolly Epstein Chicco Foxman
Cozen & O’Conner
Dechert Price & Rhoads
Duane Morris & Heckscher
Engelmeyer & Ewing
Hoyle Morris & Kerr
Kohn Swift & Graf, PC
Montgomery McCracken Walker &
Rhoads, LLP
Morgan Lewis & Bockius, LLP
Pepper Hamilton & Scheetz
Philadelphia Bar Association
Schnader Harrison Segal & Lewis
Wolf Block Schoor & Solis-Cohen
Lead Team Sponsors
Firstrust Bank
The Hunt Corporation
Just for Feet
Radian Guaranty
Foundations and Other Sources
The American Red Cross of
Southeastern Pennsylvania
The Bankers Trust Foundation
The Barra Foundation
The Butler Family Foundation
The Charitable Gift Fund
Germeshausen Foundation
Greater Philadelphia First
The Nelson Foundation
The Sharift Family Foundation
Thomas Skelton Harrison Foundation
United Way of Southeastern
Pennsylvania
The University of Pennsylvania
Y.E.S. Foundation
Corporate Donors
American Mail Systems
Andersen Consulting
Benjamin Booth Company
Bjornson Design
Chubb Corporation
CMS Companies
Commerce Bank
Day & Zimmermann, Inc.
Dollar General Corporation, Inc.
Family Services of Philadelphia
Federal Insurance Company
Firstrust Bank
Harvest Book Company
Hunt Corporation
Investment Bankers
Credit Suisse First Boston
PaineWebber, Inc.
B.T. Alex Brown Inc.
Goldman, Sachs & Co
Malcolm Prinie
McNight Steel & Tube
MLW Association
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
Music Matters, Inc.
NWJ Management
The Penn Tower Hotel
Philadelphia Credit Union
Shared Medical Systems
Siemans
SportsRadio GIOWIP
Tri County, Inc.
US Airways
Wawa, Inc.
Special Event Sponsors
Laurada & Russell Byers
Marla & Richard Green
Craig & Michèle Millard
In-Kind Donors
AIG Incorporated
The American Red Cross of
Southeastern Pennsylvania
Bertucci’s
Bike Line
Center for Greater Philadelphia
Chili’s
Church of Jesus Christ &
Latter Day Saints
CMAC
Comcast Cablevision of Philadelphia
Fairmount Parks Commission
First Union Corporation
Food Distribution Center
Free Library of Philadelphia
Habitat for Humanity North
Central Philadelphia
High School for Creative &
Performing Arts
Home Depot
Independence National Historic Park
JR Flips
Kingsessing Recreation Center
Legg Mason
MAB Paints
Main Line Life
MG Enterprises
Mt. Carmel Baptist Church
National Gardening Association
Orfeo Restaurant
George Papadopoulis
Passarelle Restaurant
Pennsylvania Horticultural Society
Penn State Urban Extension
PhilAbundance
Philadelphia Green
Philadelphia Department of Recreation
Philadelphia Department of
Recreation, Mural Arts Program
Philadelphia More Beautiful
Philadelphia READS
PNI
Premier Talent Group
Rex Pizza
The School District of Philadelphia
School Sports Magazine
SEPTA
SHARE
Southwark Community House
Southwest Fruit & Produce
Spaghetti Wharehouse
Subaru Corporation of America
Individual Donors
$5,000+
Craig Drake
Richard & MarlaGreen
Amy Karp
Willard Rouse
$1,000+
Anonymous
Jim Balfanz
Joseph & Helaine Banner
Phil & Susan Behr
Donald McCollough
Charles Pizzi
Mr. & Mrs. Donald Thompson
$500+
Jim Balfanz
Maria Breck
Fred & Sylvia Blume
Yetta Brown
Laurada & Russell Byers
Richard & Marla Green
Mr. & Mrs. Jerome Hoffman
Sean Holleran
A. Scott Holmes
Burton Kehoe
Lois Kimbol
Kenneth & Eve Klothen
Theodore & Sally LaFair
Tara E. McLean
Arthur Newbold
Stephen & Patricia Segal
Richard S. Sperry
Stephen A. Stack, Jr.
John & Tracey Vispoli
Dan Wofford & Sarah Peck
$250+
Mr. & Mrs. F.K. Ackerman, III
Jerry Block
Donna Cooper
Leman Davis
Peter & Ellen Davis
Amy B. Ginensky
Stephen Grenz
Mr. & Mrs. Jospeh Gordon
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Hauptfuhrer
Melanie Hopkins
Mary Mackie
Marciene & Herman Mattleman
G. Daniel O’Donnell
May Belle & Ted Rauch
Andrew Rogoff
Susan Schotton
Don Tollefson
J.R. Williams, Jr.
Randolph & Nancy Williams
$100+
Anonymous
Martin Jay Black
Vincent & Ethel Boyer
Jennifer R. Clarke
Douglas & Janice Cox
Mr. & Mrs. Louis Davis
John DiPierro
Thomas E. Doran
Charles & Wendy Ekert
John E. Flaherty
Lynn Davis Fox
Vernon L. Francis
F.W. & Cordelia Fuller
Frederick J. Gerhart
Antonia Hamilton
Jenny Hamilton
Sarah Hargrove
Michael F. R. Harris
Nancy Harris
Elizabeth T. Hubbard
Dr. Julian Katz
Dale Levy
Angela Malave
John & Margaret Miller
Thomas B. Morris Jr.
Hon. Michael A. Nutter
Dennis Pizzica
Paul William Putney
Jeri Ramos
Gail & Robert Rudenstein
Isadore & Joan Scott
David Shulman
Shelly Y. Simms
Nancy Smoler
Joseph A. Tate
Suzanne Turner
Lee Vandevelde
Vince Varallo, Jr.
Pamela Wilcox
Denean & Alicia Wiliams
$50+
Peter Ackerman
Michael Bogdonoff
Edward & Ann Bowman
Julia L. Chapman
Ron & Rose Cortes
Norman E. Donoghue, II
Shirley F. Frey
Jerrold & Beth Frezel
Richard & Ann Ince
Carolyn Israel
Laura Jansen
Kenyatta Johnson
Dr. & Mrs. Mark Kelley
David Kollock
Chris Kovolski
Judy Leone
Alison McKay
Dr. Faith Ottery, M.D.
Bernice Jee & Mark Pendrock
Arthur H. Rainey
Michelle Regan
Robert & Mildred Riethmiller
Jordon Roberts
Douglas & Colleen Rodgers
Martin Rodgers
Barbara Rose
Bernardin & Elizabeth Schneider
David Schwartz
Douglas Taylor
Reeves Walker
Kathleen Ziga
31
RHODE ISLAND
Team Sponors
Bank of Newport
BankBoston
CVS/pharmacy
Fleet Bank - RI
Providence Journal
Charitable Foundation
Foundations and Other Sources
Alice I. Sullivan Charitable Trust
Alperin/Hirsch Family Foundation
Boys and Girls Club of Pawtucket
Bryant College
Carter Charitable Trust
Citizens for Fogarty
City of Newport
City of Pawtucket
City of Providence
City of Woonsocket
Corporation for National Service
Cote for State Senate
Daughters of Isabella
Greater Providence Chamber
of Commerce
Feinstein Foundation
Haffenreffer Foundation
Johnson & Wales University
Joslin Community
Development Corporation
Learn & Serve America
McAdams Foundation
Newport County Child
& Family Services
Newport Residents Council
North Smithfield, Jr. Sr. High School
Northern RI Chamber of Commerce
Office of Senator Chafee
Palazzo Campaign Committee
Prospect Hill Foundation
Providence College
Providence Teachers Union
Public Education Fund
Rhode Island Commission
for National and Community Service
Rhode Island Foundation
Rhode Island Historical Society
Rogers High School
Share Our Strength
Sharpe Family Foundation
Social Street School
State of Rhode Island
Woonsocket Housing Authority
Woonsocket YMCA
Woonsocket, Mayor’s Council on Drugs
Corporate Donors
Abbey Brokerage
Action Auto Parts
Amica Insurance
The Annex
Anthony’s Drug, Inc.
Aon Risk Services
Atlantic Alloys
Axelrod Music Inc.
Barclay’s Gourmet Inc.
Batchelor, Frechette, McCory,
Michael & Co.
Beacon Mutual Insurance Company
Beef Barn
Bell Atlantic
Bigney and Bigney
Biltmore Hotel-Providence
Blackstone Management
Leo A. Blais, Inc. Insurance Company
Bowen’s Wharf
Cacoon Company
Café Paragon
Check the Florist
Citizens Bank
City State Computers
Connecting for Children and Families
32
Creative Impressions, Inc.
Cumberland Farms
daly.commerce
DBA Atomic Comics
Dimeo Construction
Eastern Coast Auto Sales
Eastern Utilities – Blackstone Valley
Eastern Utilities - Newport Electric
Eastgate Nursing & Recovery Center
Edwards & Angell
Empire Loan of RI
Employees Mutual Casualty Company
Ernst & Young LLP
Exposure 1
Fidelity Investments
Flourishes
GTECH Corporation
Hinckley, Allen & Snyder
HN Design
The House of Beauchemin, Inc.
Jan Company
Just Uniforms
Kahn, Litwin, Renza & Co., Ltd
Laserworks
Levesque Insurance Agency, Inc
Lifespan
M & D Partnership
Maguire Group Inc.
Manpower
McDonalds
McLaughlin and Moran, Inc.
Metropolitan Property and Casualty
Moran Agencies
Moses & Afonso
Motte and Bailey LLC
Murray Cutcliffe & Glavin
Narragansett Electric
Drs. Nisbet and Scott, Inc.
Nortek, Inc.
Paramount Cards
Partridge, Snow & Hahn, LLP
Pawtucket Credit Union
Pawtucket Mutual Insurance Co.
Pharmacare
Providence Black Repertory Company
Providence Gas Company
Rhode Island Legal Services
Rhode Island Sheriffs FOP Lodge
Michael Rosenberg D.O., Inc.
Rotary Club of Woonsocket
RS Realty Company
Salon 211
The Sandwich Shop
Sansiveri, Kimball & McNamee, LLP
Satellite Paging, Inc.
Shaws Supermarkets
Simon & Windsor Interiors, Inc.
SM Treasures
Stop Over Services of Newport County
Sunrise Bagel Co.
Super Kicks Karate
Symonds Associates
Tailor Box Co.
Textron, Inc.
Tillinghast, Licht & Semonoff
Union Wadding Company
United Parcel Service
Uvex Safety
Wells Fargo Bank
In-Kind Donors
ABC6
Bally’s Total Fitness
Bess Eaton Coffee and Bake Shops
Budget Rent-A-Lot
Colonial Bakery
Dominican Super
Domino’s Pizza
Fleet Bank-RI
Industrial Welders
Kinko’s
Mary Caruso
Message Therapy
One Stop Supply Center
PrintSource
Providence Bruins
Scott Kenney
Spot Interactive
Spring Valley Natural Spring Water
Ultimate Party Warehouse
Verve Inc.
Whiteco.
Marron “Da Vance” Young
Individual Donors
$25,000+
Anonymous
$10,000+
Sarah Beinecke and Craig Richardson
$5,000+
United Way
Merle and Stanley Goldstein
Arnold “Buff” and Johnnie Chace
Kim and Liz Chace
Jonathan Nelson
$2,500+
Matt Brown
$1,000+
Guy Abelson
Alden and Emily Anderson
Daniel and Elizabeth Burke Bryant
Alan Shawn Feinstein
Christine Ferguson
Lawrence and Atsuko Fish
Art Joukowsky
Frederick Lippitt
Nicholas Trott Long
Howard and Kim Sutton
Sheldon and Sandra Whitehouse
$500+
Bruce Becker
Bernard V. Buonanno III
Donald Dwares
David Elbaum
Louis Fuchs
Ann Grasso
Perry Hooker
Bernard and Sharon Jackvony
John and Jackie Moran
Jyothi Nagraj
Henry and Peggy Sharpe
Brian and Kerry Reilley Travers
James Yoder
$250+
Anonymous (2)
Gregory and Tina Benik
Jack and Linda Bentz
John Berry
William Browner
Anthony Conca
Albert and Pamela Dahlberg
Judith Danforth
Murray Danforth
Elizabeth Delude-Dix
Keith and Althea Dickerson
Carol Downs
Bart Dunbar
Richard and Patricia Eannarino
Malcolm and Susan Farmer, III
Henry Fazzano
David and Virginia Fox
Louis Giancola
Tom & Lisa Goddard
Carolyn Greeley and Richard Carolan
Cristie Hanaway
John and Yvette Harpootian
Casby and Mary Sylvia Harrison
Richard and Carol Hoag
Andrew and Virginia Hodgkin
Dean and Felice Holt
Nicholas Janikies
HJ and Beverly Keigwin
Keith and Kathleen Lang
Deborah Woodward Leach
Ned and Joan Levine
Roger & Gayle Mandle
Ted and Kristen Moran
Robert and Linda Owens
Charles and Bernadine Reilly
Christopher Reilly
James Rosati
Charlie Rose
Robert and Carol Scholler
William Shuey
H. Curtis and Patrice Spalding
Kathleen Sullivan
John Tyree
Kathryn and Ewart White
Richard Worrell
Stephanie Wu
Myrth York and David Green
$100+
Joan Abrams
Mary Ellen Ahern
Bill and Amabel Allen
Donald and Kathleen Bochicchio
Alice Boss
Elizabeth Boucher
Dawn Brown and Michael Christopher
Gordon Brown and Richelle E. Johnson
William and Jeanne Bundy
Ray and Ann Buono
Kathleen Casey
Margaret Wilson Cook
Christine Cunha
Karl and Kathy Czerny
James Deschenes
Peter and Diana Dibari
Dianne Eaton
Raymond Endreny, MD
Kristen Erickson
Richard Bruce Feinstein
Valerie Gardiner
Gayle Gifford and Jonathan Howard
Mary Hollinshead
John Holmander
John Kelly
Robert and Joyce Klasen
Muriel LaFarge
Alice Lahoud
Henry and Amanda Frye Leinhos
Stephen Lichatin III
Theodore Loebenberg
Paul Mahoney
Paul Mangelsdorf
Christopher Martineau
Randall and Etta McKiel
Allan and Ruth Messier
Tomas Michie
Bonita Morris
Dennis Murphy
Charles Otto
Jeff Paquette and Heidi Johnson
Sandra Parsons
Tomas Ramirez
Andrew Rasmussen
Albert and Angela Rietheimer
Cate and Bill Roberts
Judi and Randall Rosenthal
Joan and Fred Slafsky
William Space
Joseph and Julie Sylvestre
Kenneth R. Tellier
Steve Vadnais
Robert and Mary Anne Van Degna
D. Villivam
Mary Warlop
Jessica White
Andrew Winston
Lauren and Samuel Zurier
$50+
Joel Almeida
Wanda Alves
Christine Austin
Kathleen and Roger Biron
Deborah Block and William Harley
Susan Bollens
Catherine Bonang
Cara Brady
Donald Brebien
Renee Brochester
Andrew and Anna Browder
Kathleen and Roger Brown
Ruth Chamberlain
Stephanie Chaplin
Patricia Chase
Susan Dumont
Aya and Minoru Endo
Sarah Endo
Jean Evans
Patricia Flood
Danielle E. Franco
Wellington and Alexandra Garcia
Catherine S. Gim
Guy Girard
Habib and Susan Gorgi
Ruth and Michael Gorman
Robert Grant
Allison Greenberg
Martha Marie Grogan
Darlene Gruttadauria
Jane Hall
Sally Hanchett
Kathryn Hickcox
Barbara Hurst
Jill Iannone
Victor Karkar
Patricia Keefe
Christine Lapierre
Robert Leaver and Sara Beliveau
Thomas and Karen Long
Arlene Maloney
Edward Martin
Andrew Mazurkie
Donald and Mary McClure
Edward and Marion McGoran
Arthur Menker
Erin Messier
Deborah Meza and Erik Van Renselaar
Katherine Morris
Douglas Morrison
Kathleen and Robert Muhr
Mark Mulcahy
Barbara and Al Mullane
Charlette and Barbara Nachbar
Albert and Florence Newton
Rose Ann Osmanian
David Padilla
Gordon Parker
Harold Parsons
Marilyn Peltier
Wayne and Hazel Proulx
Jonathan Richardson
Virginia Samples-McGhee
Otis Sampson
Elizabeth Seveney
Norm Shea
Jennifer Shepherd
Noelle Siravo
Ann Khaddar Slade
Laurel Smith
Riordon and Elizabeth Smith
Janet Stigberg
Colleen Sullivan
James and Janet Sullivan
Jason Tarricone
Albert Terminesi
Ann Thacher
Laura and Robert Tuscani
Willie Vails
Courtney Von Der Heyde
Rosalyn and Leonard Washington
Philip Weinstein
Katrina White
John Wolf
Peter Wooding
SAN ANTONIO
Team Sponsors
Bank One
The City of San Antonio
The Frost Bank Charitable Foundation
G.A.C. Halff Foundation
HEB Grocery Co
The Kronkosky Charitable Foundation
Levi Strauss Foundation
The Meadows Foundation, Inc.
Northeast Independent School District
Norwest Bank
San Antonio Federal Credit Union
St. Luke’s Lutheran Ministries
Target
Foundations and Other Sources
Bexar County Deputy
Sheriff’s Association
GAC Halff Foundation
Koehler Foundation
McCombs Foundation
Rotary Club San A Foundation
USAA Foundation
Habitat for Humanity
Southside Independent School District
Corporate Donors
Arter & Hadden
Central Cardio Institute
Ericsson, Inc.
Frost National Bank
Fulbright & Jaworski
Goetting & Associates
HB Zachary Company
Heard, Linebarger, Graham, Goggan,
Blair, Pena & Sampson
Merrill Lynch
NationsBank
Renaissant Development
San Antonio Assoc. Petro
San Antonio Spurs
SBC Comm Inc
Spark - KJS Marketing
Time Warner, Inc.
Valero Energy Company
In-Kind Donors
Alamo Community College District
HEB
Hixon Properties
VIA Metropolitan Transit Authority
Greg Wilson
Individual Donors
$5,000+
Mr. & Mrs. G. W. Worth, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bernal
Kathryn and Bill Bolling
Tino Duran
Arthur and Tertia Emerson
Burt Foreman
Mark Funk
Rose Garcia
J. Gates
Mr. & Mrs. Terrill F. Gates
Linda Glessner
J. Abel Godines
Don Gonzales
Janie Groves
Dwight Henderson
Gloria Hernandez
Col. Robert Hickerson (Ret.)
Joe and Cyndi Krier
Joe Linson
Carlos Mejia
Malory Meredith
Daniel Mezza
Tom and Gerri Misko
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Moore
Debbie Napier
Skipper and Susan Nelson
Dr. Arline Patterson
Grace Rose
Leslie Sachanowicz
Mrs. Hope Marie Scott
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Scott
State Representative Bill Siebert
Jennifer Sill
David Sprinkle
Patricia Stout
Kathleen Trenchard
Guadalupe Young
$50+
Ms. Beverly W Davis
Commissioner Paul and Mrs. Elizondo
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Fultz
Mr. Lukin Gilliland, Jr
Ms. H. Lynn Hallinger
Julia Castellano-Hoyt
Gloria Navales
Dr. Jada Pitman
Ginger Purdy
Alfred Rodriguez
Gerardo Rodriguez
Michael Rodriguez
Rebecca Waldman
Sally Wallace
Sharon Woldhagen
SAN JOSE/ SILICON VALLEY
Team Sponsors
Adobe Systems
Cisco Foundation
Compaq Computer Corporation
Consortium Team Sponsors
Mr. & Mrs. James Bastoni
Mr. & Mrs. William Worth
SGI (lead sponsor)
MIPS Technologies
NEC Electronics
Sony Microelectronics
$500+
Co-Team Sponsors
Drs. Al and Maria Hernandez Ferrier
Alfonso Garza
Laurence Kurth
James Lifshutz
Mary Kay Misko
Comerica Bank-California
San Jose Mercury News
The Sobrato Family Foundation
Therma
$250+
California Commission on Improving
Life through Service
City of San Jose
Community Foundation Silicon Valley
Corporation for National Service
The William and
Flora Hewlett Foundation
Northern California Grantmakers
The David and Lucile
Packard Foundation
$1,000+
Mr. & Mrs. Roland Dubay
Randell Gurley
Mr. & Mrs. Jon Johnson
$100+
Sandra Aguirre
Hope Andrade
Ray Baray
Ralph Bender
Foundation and Other Sources
The Sobrato Family Foundation
Christie Vianson
Serve-a-thon Sponsors
$100+
AT&T
GreenTeam of San Jose
Quantum
Toshiba
Western Digital Corporation
Cathy Barankin
Brian Bonnifield
Terry Christensen
Rena Creager
Kerry Fagan
Maury Kendall
Amy and Kevin Laughlin
S. Lee
Jamie Lee Manning
Al Moreno
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Rowna
San Jose Women’s Club
John Schummann
Wiggsy Silvertsen
Brooke and Kate Wagner
James F. Wallack
Kenneth Yeager
Richard Zeichik
Corporate Donors
Amdahl Corporation
Applied Materials
Ritchie Commercial
Wheel Works Foundation
In-Kind Donors
ADG
Adobe Systems
Asian Americans for
Community Involvement
Brobeck, Phleger, and Harrison
Cisco Systems
City of San Jose Department
of Parks, Recreation and
Neighborhood Services
Comerica Bank-California
Compaq Computer Corporation
De Anza College
Franklin-Mc Kinley School Disctrict
Joe Parisi and Therma Corporation
Kimball Small Properties
KNTV Channel 11
Red Ladder Theatre Company
Reno Airlines
San Jose Mercury News
The San Jose Repertory Theater
San Jose State University
San Jose Unified School District
Santa Clara Valley
Transportation Authority
SGI
Symthe Buick Pontiac GME
The Children’s Discovery Museum
The Fairmont Hotel
The Tech Museuj of Innovation
Weinerschnitzel
Individual Donors
$5,000+
Lisa and Matthew Sonsini
$2,500+
Sheri Sobrato
$1,000+
Carl Guardino
Mary Maben and Walter Hammond
Lynn Oliver
Ray Roeder
Patrick Tehan
$500+
Daniel A. Axelrod
John Canfield
Dyanne Compton
Susan and Phil Hammer
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin McCauley
John and Sharon Niedermaier
Joe Pon and George Duran
Regina Reilly
Neerav Shah
Joann Witt
Karen K. Zee
$250+
Christopher A. Aiello
Elena T. Batoyon
Megan Buck
Carl I. Dockhorn
Shawna Holmes
Martha Kanter
Jan McCann
Dolores Moore
John and Rachel Sarvey
Mary Beth Suhr
Mai Torralba
$50+
Matthew Asano
Susan A. Burke-Diquisto
Claire M. Constanza
Daniel Fonseca
Amber Mausling
Julien Phillips
Marylu Smith
Reuven Carlyle
Dean Hachamovitch
Marc Lhormer
Ronald & Angela Souza
Richard Tong & Connie Mao
Sally Veillette
Dan Williams & Susan Kim, MD
$500+
Karen Cameron
Kimberly Richter
$250+
Marlee & Mark Anderson
Ben Cribb
Ann Fenner
Adrienne O’Donnell
$100+
Keneta Anderson
Robert Braham
Angela Herbold
Pattie McCluskey
Eric & Lucy Meyer
Angelina Ong
Mr. & Mrs. Doug Rowan
Jon Staenberg
$50+
Aaron Butcher
SEATTLE/KING COUNTY
Team Sponsors
Adobe Systems, Inc.
Amazon.com employees
City of Seattle Department
of Parks & Recreation
KeyBank
Kids.Health.2001. Campaign
Seattle Public Utilities
Foundations and Other Sources
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
The Henry M. Jackson Foundation
The Bruce R. & Jolene M. McCaw Fund
The Craig & Susan Mc Caw Foundation
United Way of King County
Corporate Donors
Attachmate
Boeing Company
Employee Community Fund, Boeing
Puget Sound
Microsoft
Nintendo of America, Inc
Nordstrom Diversity Affairs
Product Development Corporation
Service Partner Matching Sources
Kent Youth and Family Service
Village Schools
Wing Luke Elementary
In-Kind Donors
Diversity Dance Workshop
Elgin DDB
The Foundry
Gateway Athletic Club
Highline School District
King County Metro Transit
Panels for Progress
Seattle Center
Seattle Public Schools
Southwest Youth and Family Services
Thrifty Car Rental
Individual Donors
$5,000+
Shelley & Dave Malcolm
Keith Grinstein
$2,500+
Madeline Kirbach
$1,000+
Richard Barton
33
CITY YEAR BOARDS
NATIONAL BOARD
OF TRUSTEES
Jeffrey Swartz, Chair
President and CEO
The Timberland Company
Kristen Atwood
Former Vice-President
City Year, Inc.
Michael Brown
President and Co-Founder
City Year, Inc.
Farai Chideya
Political Analyst, ABC News
George Gendron
Editor-in-Chief, Inc. Magazine
Susan Hammer
former Mayor, City of San Jose, CA
Deborah Jackson
Sr. Vice President for Network
Development and Community Service
Children’s Hospital
Ilene Jacobs
Executive Vice President
Human Resources
Fidelity Investments
Rosabeth Moss Kanter
Professor, Harvard University
Graduate School of
Business Administration
Alan Khazei
CEO and Co-Founder, City Year, Inc.
Roger King
Organizational Development
Consultant
Li Lu
CEO, Himalaya Capital Partners
Gary Orren
Professor, Harvard University
John F. Kennedy School of Government
Mitt Romney
Managing Director, Bain Capital
Lisbeth Schorr
Director, Harvard University Project on
Effective Services
Eli Segal
President, Welfare to Work Partnership
Bill Shore
Founder, Share Our Strength
Ron Sims
King County Executive, Seattle, WA
BOSTON
John Gilmartin, Chair
Retired, CEO, Millipore Corporation
John D. Hamilton, Jr., Co-Chair,
Managing Partner, Hale and Dorr, LLP
James Ansara
President, Shawmut Design
and Construction
Matthews Axelrod
Attorney
Hill & Barlow
Michele Courton Brown
President
Fleet Boston Foundation
La Tonya Brown
Philips Brook House
(alumna ’98)
Shirley Carrington
Director of Human Services
The Boston Empowerment Center
Arnita M. Cooper
The House of M&M Barbers
Commissioner Paul Evans
Boston Police Department
Ruthanne Fuller
Strategic Planner
Reverend Ray Hammond
Founder, Ten Point Coalition
Bethel AME Church
34
Alfreda Harris
Boston School Committee
Marianne Hughes
Interaction Institute for Social Change
Stacey Kabat
Peace at Home
Paige E. Kane
Regional Vice President
State and Local Affairs
CSX Transportation
Judith Kidd
Asst. Dean of Harvard College for
Public Service &
Director of Phillips Brooks House
Paula McNichols
Executive Director
Brookside Community Health Center
Reverend Roberto Miranda
Iglesia Bautista Central
John Muse
Vise President
Boston Private Bank & Trust
John O’Connor
President, Greenworks, Inc.
Gene Pritle
Community Investment Manager
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Ken Pucker
Vice President, General Manager,
Footwear, The Timberland Company
Evelyn Riesenberg
Executive Director
Boston Community Centers
Dr. Ravinder Sakhuja
APEX Enterprises
Casel Walker
Principal
Joseph Manning Elementary School
Ronald L. Walker, II
Senior Vice President,
Community Banking, Fleet Bank
Dana Weiss
Consultant
Dr. Bak Fun Wong
Deputy Superintendant for
Schools & Clusters
Boston Public Schools
CHICAGO
Michael J. Alter, Chair
President, The Alter Group
Dr. Carlos Azcoitia
Deputy Chief Education Officer
Chicago Public Schools
Judith Block
Retired Board Member
Chicago Community Trust
Libby Lai-bun Chiu
Executive Director
Urban Gateways
Shawn M. Donnelley
Manager, Political Affairs
RR Donnelley & Sons Company
Arne Duncan
Director, Magnet Schools
Chicago Public Schools
John Edelman
Assistant to the
Chairman/International Director of
Human Resources
Edelman Public Relations
Larry Freed
President, Joseph J. Freed &
Associates, Inc.
Michael Mandel
City Year Alumni 96-97
Student, Northwestern University
School of Law
Phyllis L. Martin
Executive Director
Financial Research and
Advisory Committee
Eric T. McKissack
Vice Chairman
Ariel Capital Management
Jeff Morales
Executive Vice President
Chicago Transit Authority
R. Susan Motley
Consultant
John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur
Foundation
James N. Perry, Jr.
Managing Director
Madison Dearborn Partners, Inc.
Stephen R. Quazzo
Managing Director
Transwestern Investment Company
Michael Reinsdorf
Managing Director, International
Facilities Group LLC
Jim Reynolds
CEO
Loop Capital Markets
David Rudd
Manager, Corporate Communications
Motorola, Inc.
Lee Selander
Executive Vice President
The Northern Trust Company
Gil Walker
Executive Director
Chicago Housing Authority Resident
Programs/Inner-City Games
CLEVELAND
Jan Roller, Co-Chair
Attorney at Law, Davis & Young
Thomas Sullivan Sr., Co-Chair
Chairman, C.E.O.
RPM, INC.
Bruce Akers
V.P. Public Affairs, KeyBank
Greg Brown
Fellow, Federation for Community
Planning
Thomas Clevidence
Sr. Managing Director of
Community Affairs
Mc Donals & Company Securities
Deborah Coleman
Attorney at Law, Hahn Loeser & Parks
Jeff Concepcion
C.E.O., Sagemark Consulting
Nancy Cronin
International/Government Relations
Cleveland Port Authority
Anthea Daniels
Partner, Attorney at Law
Calfee, Halter & Griswold
Robert Deitz
Director Community Affairs, RPM, Inc.
Mike Frothingham
Marketing Manager
Day-Glo Color Corp.
Pam George
Program Associate
The Cleveland Foundation
Gregory Johnson
Owner
Integrity Development
Judge Donald Nugent
Federal Judge
102 U.S. Federal Courthouse
James Mason
V.P. Public & Community Affairs
Eaton Corp.
Kathleen Obert
President, CEO
Edward Howard & Company
William Papenbrook
Partner
Calfree, Halter & Grisweld
Dr. Wornie Reed
Director, Urban Child Research Ctr.
Cleveland State University
Richard Sayers
Director of Community Affairs
TRW, Inc.
Ann Schoff
Alumni Parent
Ellen Ticktin
Grants Consultant
Yvonne Pointer-Triplett
Dept. of Parks & Recreation
Office of Mayor White
COLUMBIA
Monica Newman, Chair
Department of Juvenile Justice
Marie-Louise Ramsdale, Co-Chair
Director of First Steps
State of South Carolina
Charles P. Austin
Chief of Police
Columbia Police Department
William T. Bateman
Director of Economic Development
BellSouth
Tom DeLoach
President / Owner
BPIC
Bob Derrick
Senior VP
Wachovia Bank
David Dukes, Esq.
Nelson, Mullins, Riley & Scarborough,
LLP
Clente Flemming
Sen. VP / Carolinas Personnel
Executive
Bank of America
Eddie Fogler
Head Coach, Men’s Basketball
University of South Carolina
Vince Ford
Senior Vice President
Palmetto Health Alliance
Bobby Gist
Office of Equal Opportunity Programs
University of South Carolina
Wally Graves
Assistant Vice President
Blue Cross Blue Shield
Francenia B. Heizer, Esquire
McNair Law Firm
Ozie Jackson
Vice President of Community Relations
Budweiser of Columbia
J.T. McLawhorn, Jr.
President
Columbia Urban League, Inc.
Don Montgomery
Assistant Vice President
Colonial Life & Accident
Insurance Company
Rick Noble
Development Director
Midlands Techincal College
Brian Owens
President / Owner
Rising High Natural Bread Co.
Greg Plagens
Public Relations Director
Richland School District One
Terri Randall
Director Corporate Communications
Fleet Mortgage
Phil Retalick
Vice President
Safety Kleen
Jane Suggs
Community Volunteer
Kenneth M. Suggs, Esquire
Suggs & Kelly, P.A.
Cynthia Thomas
Policy Management Systems Corp.
Jesse Washington, Jr.
Executive Director
Greater Columbia Community Relations
Council
G. Todd Weiss
Heritage Chevrolet Buick
COLUMBUS
Gary Glaser, Chair
Chairman
National City Bank
Ron Barnes
General Manager
COTA
Maurice Blake
Vice President
Columbus Public Schools
Lorraine Brock
Associate V.P.
Nationwide Insurance
Wendell Bugg
Asst. Manager of
Company Communications
Honda
Erie Chapman
President
Baptist Hospital
Bill Courson
E.W.Ingram
President
White Castle
Yvonne Jones
Director of Classified Personnel
Columbus Public Schools
E. Jeffrey Kovacs, CPA
Shareholder
Schneider Downs
Terri Meldrum
Attorney
Taft, Stettinius & Hollister
Al Simmons
V.P. of Minority Affairs
Columbus State Community College
Krista Stastyshyn
Boardmember
Southwestern City Schools
David Weiss
V.P., National City Bank
David Williams II
Senior V.P. of Student Affairs
The Ohio State University
Les Wright
Founder, S.A.V.E.
DETROIT
Gail L. Warden, Chair
President and CEO
Henry Ford Health System
Walter C. Watkins, Jr., Co-chair
President
Bank One
Ismael Ahmed
Executive Director, ACCESS
N. Charles Anderson
President/CEO
Detroit Urban League, Inc.
Penny Bailer
Executive Director
MI Metro Girl Scout Council
Joseph Buttigieg
Vice Chairman
Comerica Incorporated
Amanda Caballero
Executive Director
Latino Family Services
C. David Campbell
Executive Director
McGregor Fund
Virgil Carr
President and CEO
United Way Community Services
Tarik Daoud
President
Al Long Ford, Inc.
Maggie DeSantis
Executive Director
Warren/Conner Development Coalition
Frank Fountain
Vice President for Government Affairs
DaimlerChrysler
Liz Kanter Groskind
Founder
Volunteer Impact
Joel Jacob
President
The Bottle Crew
Noreen Keating
CEO
Lighthouse of Oakland County
Mary Kramer
Associate Publisher and Editor
Crain’s Detroit Business
John Marshall
President and CEO
The Kresge Foundation
Heath Meriwether
Publisher
Detroit Free Press
Reuben Munday
Partner
Lewis & Munday, PC
Rex Nelson
Vice President of Community
Development & Player Programs
The Detroit Pistons
David Page
Senior Partner
Honigman Miller, Schwartz & Cohn
Paul Piper
Executive Assistant
Office of the CEO of the Detroit
Public Schools
Scott Romney
Senior Partner
Honigman, Miller, Schwartz & Cohn
Rebecca Salminen Witt
Executive Director
The Greening of Detroit
David Smydra
Group Executive
Office of the Mayor of Detroit
Martha Smydra
President, Oakland Community College
Royal Oak Campus/Southfield Campus
Edgar Vann
Pastor
Second Ebenezer Baptist Church
PHILADELPHIA
Joe Banner, Co-Chair
Chief Operating Officer
Philadelphia Eagles
Phil Behr, Co-Chair
Managing Partner
Advest New Century Capital
Rev. Dorothy Bailey
Philadelphia Clergy
Fred Blume
Administrative Partner
Blank Rome Comisky & McCauley
Maria Breck
Senior Vice President &
Regional Manager
Prudential Fox & Roach Realtors
Laurada Byers
President
Warthog Productions
Donna Cooper
Senior Vice President
Welfare to Work
Marla Green
Firstrust Bank
Gianna Hamley
Alumna, City Year Philadelphia 1997-98
Inaugural Corps
Office of Education for Employment
School District of Philadelphia
Mark Harrell
Associate Director of Development
Mayor’s Office of Community Services
Frances Jones
Assistant General Manager
Government Affairs
SEPTA
Karen Keating
Corporate Counsel
Safeguard Scientifics, Inc.
Frank Keel
President
Keel Communications
Eve Klothen
Philadelphia Bar Association
David Lacey
Vice President Human Resources
Technitrol, Inc.
Mary Mackie
Director of Community Services
United Way of Southeastern
Pennsylvania
Marciene Mattleman
Executive Director
Philadelphia READS
Honorable Theodore A. McKee
U.S. Court of Appeals, 3rd Circuit
Craig Millard
President, The Rittenhouse Group
Honorable Michael Nutter
City Council of Philadelphia
Laurel O’Brien
Director of Public Relations
Rittenhouse Financial Services
Charles Pizzi
President, Greater Philadelphia
Chamber of Commerce
Glenn Rieger
Managing Director
Cross Atlantic Capital Partners
Chip Roach
Vice Chairman of the Board
Prudential Fox & Roach Realtors
Richard Sperry
President
RS Sperry & Associates
Donald Thompson
Chairman and CEO
The Hunt Corporation
Don Tollefson
WXTF-TV
Suzanne Turner, Esq.
Partner, Ballard Spahr Andrews &
Ingersoll
Elizab eth Vale
Principal
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
Denean Williams
Consulting Group
Deloitte & Touche, LLP
Dan Wofford
Director, Philadelphia Scholars
Philadelphia Education Fund
Ahmeenah Young
Senior Vice President Sales & Marketing
The Pennsylvania Convention Center
RHODE ISLAND
Casby Harrison, Chair
Harrison Law Associates
Guy Abelson
Events
Matt Brown
William Bundy
Vice President, Professional Practices
Fleet Technology Solutions
Christine Ferguson
Director
Dept. of Human Services
E. Gordon Gee,
President
Brown University
Merle Goldstein
Cristie Hanaway
G. Frank Hanaway Insurance Agency
Kristen Haffenreffer Moran
Executive Director
RISE
George Nee,
Secretary Treasurer
RI AFL CIO
Tomas Ramirez
Providence School Department
Sarah Beinecke Richardson
Cate Roberts
Vice President and Community
Relations Manager, Fleet Bank-RI
Beverly Scott
General Manager, RIPTA
Delia Smidt
United States Census Bureau
Keith Stokes
Executive Director
Newport County Chamber of Commerce
Brian Travers
Vice President
BankBoston Investor Services, Inc.
Sheldon Whitehouse
Attorney General
State of Rhode Island
SAN ANTONIO
Kathy Sosa, Chair
President, KJS Marketing
Dr. Shari Albright
Principal,
International School of the America’s
Rick Cavender
Saturn of San Antonio
Roland Dubay
Vice President of Institutional
Advancement
Alamo Community College District
Tertia Emerson
Chairman
San Antonio
Neighborhood Resource Center
Steve Fanning
President
Buckner Fanning
Evangelistic Foundation
Robert H. Finney
Attorney
Arter & Hadden
Greg Flores
Manager of Public Affairs
& Communications
HEB Grocery Co.
Ed Gistaro
Chairman
Docucon
Janie Groves
President
Groves Cheney Group, Inc.
Lynn Hallinger
Community Volunteer
Derrick Howard
Executive Director
Freeman Coliseum
Jon Johnson
President
Team Leadership Resources
James Lifshutz
President
Texas Home Improvements, Inc.
Jane Macon
Attorney
Fulbright & Jaworski
Michael L Molak, Jr.
Vice President
Norwest Bank TX, NA
Dr. Arline Patterson
Director for Extended Learning
Texas Lutheran University
Dr. Jada Pitman
Executive Director of Special Program
Southwest Independent School District
Tony Rivera
Community Volunteer
Rene Ruis
Attorney at Law
Matthews & Branscomb
Les Sachanowicz
Attorney, Bexar County
Sue Merrell-Swirtz
Travel Agent, Seven Seasons
Jennifer Snoga-Sill
Investments Account Manager
MCI Worldcom
Eric Swellander
Assistant V. P. Commercial Lending
Bank One
Richard Tankerson
Board Chairman
VIA Metropolitan Transit Authority
Col. Lynn Wakefield
Dir. of Operations HQ AIA
Kelly Air Force Base
Lawrence Wellisch
Senior Manager
Trident Data Systems
SAN JOSE/SILICON VALLEY
Carl Guardino, chair
President & CEO
Silicon Valley Manufacturing Group
Dyanne Compton, vice chair
Manager, Community Relations
Adobe Systems
Cindy Chavez
Council member, District 3
City of San Jose
Terry Christensen
Professor and Chair
Political Science Department
San Jose State University
Melba Dangerfield
Community Relations, KNTV-Channel 11
Adam Escoto
Principal, Horace Mann Academy
Christie Hardwick
Senior Community Relations Manager
SGI
Shawna Holmes
Corporate Community Relations
Program Manager
Compaq Computer Corporation
Martha Kanter
President, De Anza College
Dolores Moore
Director of Administration
San Jose Mercury News
Linda Murray
Superintendent
San Jose Unified School District
Joe Pon
Global Corporate Affairs
Applied Materials
Steve Preminger
Community Services Director
South Bay AFL-CIO Labor Council
Rev. Lindi Ramsden
Senior Minister
First Unitarian Church of San Jose
Regina Reilly
Scott Smith
Chief Operating Officer, TheoryCenter
Lisa Sonsini
President, Sobrato Family Foundation
Mary Beth Suhr
Vice President
Comerica Bank-California
Laura Udall
President & Founder, Zuca
SEATTLE/KING COUNTY
Richard C. Yarmuth, Chair
Principal, Yarmuth Wilsdon PLLC
Fabienne L. Brooks
Major, King County Police
Reuven Carlyle
Vice President, Strategic Development
XYPOINT Corporation
Steve Daschle
Executive Director
South West Youth & Family Services
Mickey Fearn
Leadership Consultant, Synapse
Linda Filley
Youth Programs Manager
Seattle Center
Carol Gregory
Education Liaison
King County Executive Office
Keith D. Grinstein
President & CEO
Nextel International
Rodney Hines
Public Policy Consultant
Cedar River Associates
Susan Kim, MD
Dermatologist, Kirkland
Marc Lhormer
E=MC2
Shelley Malcolm
Marketing Consultant
John Merner
Director of Youth Programs
Seattle Center
Joseph Olchefske
Superintendent, Seattle Public Schools
Johnetta Rowsey
Diversity Affairs Director, Nordstrom
Craig Stewart
Executive Director
Bruce R. & Jolene M. McCaw Fund
Norma Straw
Youth Involvement Specialist
Office of Superintendent of Public
Instruction
Maxine S. Thomas
Secretary/General Counsel/Program
Officer
Kettering Foundation
Art Wahl
Real Estate Broker, Wahl & Associates
James A. Washam
President, Southern Puget Sound
District, KeyBank
35
SERVICE PARTNERS
BOSTON
ABCD/Dorchester Neighborhood
Service Center
Academy of the Pacific Rim
American Red Cross
William F. Blackstone
Elementary School
Blue Hill Avenue Boys & Girls Club
Cambridge Family YMCA
Cambridge Rindge and Latin
High School
Cathedral Housing Development
Citizen Schools
Cleveland Community Center
Commonwealth Housing Development
Youth Center
Condon Elementary School
Dorchester Boys and Girls Club
Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative
East End House
David A. Ellis Elementary School
John Eliot Elementary School
Escuelita Boriken
Edward Everett Elementary School
Franklin Field Teen Center
Harvard Kent Elementary School
Inquilinos Boricuas En Accion
Jorge Hernandez Cultural Center
Laboure Center
Joseph Lee Elementary School
Joseph P. Manning Elementary School
Samuel W. Mason Elementary School
The Nazzaro Center
Neighborhood House Charter School
Patrick O’Hearn Elementary School
Orchard Park Community Center
Peace at Home
Josiah Quincy Elementary School
Rising Stars After School Program
Roxbury YMCA
Salesian Boys & Girls Club
Taft Middle School
Tent City Corporation
Tynan School
Unity Towers
West Broadway Housing
Development Youth Center
West End House Boys & Girls Club
CHICAGO
AIDsCare
Albany Park Youth Net
Armour Elementary School
AVEC Agencies
Carole Roberston Center for Learning
Casa Central
Chicago Communities in Schools
Chicago Youth Centers
Chicago Youth Centers
Crane Technological High School
Educational Talent Search
Fleming Elementary School
Grant Elementary School
Grimes Elementary School
Hale Elementary School
Kennicott Park Youth Net
Lakeview Academy
Lee Elementary School
Open Hand
Piccolo Specialty School
CLEVELAND
Abington Arms
Art on Wheels
Center for Prevention of
Domestic Violence
Clark Elementary
Clark Metro and Ohio City Near West
Development Corporations
36
Cranwood Learning Academy
Fairhill Center for Aging
Goodrich-Gannett Neighborhood
Center
The Health Museum of Cleveland
H.O.S.T.S. (Helping One Student To
Succeed at Corlett Elementary)
Kethley House
Lexington Bell Community Center
Merrick House
Old Brooklyn United
Services Association
Our Lady Peace
Parkworks
Rainbow Children’s Museum and TRW
Early Learning Center
Salvation Army Computer Center
Scranton Elementary School
St. Malachi’s After-school Program
Stephen E. Howe Elementary School
Templum
Walton Elementary School
West Side Community Computer Center
Youth Opportunities Unlimited
James B. Webber School
Jewish Community Council
Junior Achievement of
Southeastern Michigan, Inc.
Lighthouse of Oakland County
Marcus Garvey Elementary School
Marsh Elementary School
Michigan Metro Girl Scouts Council
Miller Middle School
Motor City Blight Busters
NHEC/Adams Butzel Recreation Center
Nickels Elementary School
Northwest Neighborhood Health
Empowerment Center
Owen Elementary School – Detroit
Owen Elementary School – Pontiac
Pitcher Elementary School
Salvation Army – Eastern
Michigan Division
Southwest Counseling and
Development Services
Spain Middle School
Webber Middle School
COLUMBIA
PHILADELPHIA
Boys & Girls Club of the Midlands, Inc.
A.C. Moore
Lorick Park
Westside Boys & Girls Club
City of Columbia
Dent Middle School
EdVenture
KOBAN
Saxon Homes
Gonzales Gardens
Lexington Richland Alcohol & Drug
Abuse Council (LRADAC)/
Fighting Back
Hammond Village Superstars
Head Start
Latimer Manor Superstars
Speaker’s Bureau
Teen Discovery
Transitions
Palmetto Baptist Medical Center
Palmetto Senior Care
Richland Clicks
Students Advocating Volunteerism
Everywhere
Richland County School District 1
Sandel Elementary School
South Carolina State Hospital
COLUMBUS
Columbus Health Department
Gladstone Elementary School
Godman Guild
Lincoln Park Elementary School
Linden Resource Center
Main Street Elementary School
Second and Summit Senior Center
Second Avenue Elementary School
Short Stop Teen Drop in Center
South Side Settlement House
Weinland Park Elementary School
Windsor Academy Elementary School
DETROIT
Adams-Butzel Recreation Center
Butzel Elementary School
Cesar Chavez Academy
The Common Ground Sanctuary
Duffield Elementary School
Gang Retirement And Continuing
Education Employment (GRACE)
Greater Detroit Area Health
Council (GDAHC)
The Greening of Detroit
Harding Elementary School
America READS
The American Red Cross Partners For
Youth Program
Bridesburg Boys & Girls Club
Drew Elementary School
The Greater Philadelphia Book Bank
Habitat For Humanity, North Central
Philadelphia
Meade Elementary School
Temple Institute on Disabilities
The School District of Philadelphia
Service Learning Initiative
The Village of Arts & Humanities
West Philadelphia YMCA
RHODE ISLAND
SERVICE PARTNERS
Apeiron Foundation
American Red Cross
Amos House
Animal Rescue League
Banister House
Blackstone River Heritage Corridor
Boys and Girls Club
(Pawtucket & Newport)
Camden Avenue Elementary School
Center for Arts and Spirituality
Chad Brown Housing Development
Davey Lopes Community Center
Edmund W. Flynn Elementary School
Esek Hopkins Middle School
Florence Grey Center
Henry J. Winters Elementary School
Joslin Community Center
Kids First
Memorial Hospital
Nathanael Greene Middle School
Newport Parks & Recreation
Oliver Hazard Perry Middle School
OOP!
Providence Housing Authority
Rhode Island Food Bank
Rita’s Place
Roger Williams Middle School
Samuel W Bridgham Middle School
Shea High School
Slater Park
Smith Hill Center
Smith Hill Community
Development Corporation
Social Street/ Pothier
Elementary School
South Side Community Land Trust
South Providence
Neighborhood Ministries
St. Mary Sacred Heart Church
Steere House
St. Lucy’s Hearth
Stop Over Services of Middletown
Sullivan Elementary School
Teen Action, Woonsocket
The American Red Cross
The Rhode Island Children’s Museum
The Salvation Army, Woonsocket
Thompson Middle School
Trinity United Methodist Church
Tolman High School
Turbsi Park
Veterans Memorial Auditorium
William D’Abate Elementary School
Woonsocket Housing Authority:
Campus of Learners
Woonsocket Middle School
Woonasquatucket River Greenway
YMCA of Newport
YMCA of Woonsocket
YWCA of Greater Rhode Island
SAN ANTONIO
Flagships
Bowie Elementary School
Christian Senior Services/ Grace Place
& Meals on Wheels
Family Violence Prevention Services
Friedrich Wilderness Park
Palo Alto Community College
San Antonio AIDS Foundation Nimitz
Academy Middle School
Signature Service and Short Term
Service
City of San Antonio Neighborhood
Action Department
Project Learn to Read
San Antonio Alternative Housing Home
Repair Division
City of San Antonio Parks and
Recreation
Santa Rosa Children’s Hospital
YMCA Camp Flaming Arrow
The United Way of San Antonio
San Antonio Housing Authority
The San Antonio Chapter of the
American Red Cross
The Peace Initiative
The Peace Center
San Antonio MLK Day Committee
Project Wild
Honey Creek Wilderness Area
St. Peter’s and St. Joseph’s
Children’s Home
Habitat for Humanity
Junior Achievement
Martin Luther King Park
Southside Lions Park
Elmendorf Park
Eisenhower Park
San Antonio YWCA
San Antonio YMCA
Salvation Army
Renaissance Village
Retirement Community
VIA Metropolitan Transit
Elf Louise Christmas Project
Ronald McDonald House
Incarnate Word University
Southside Independent School District
Harlandale Independent School District
San Antonio Disaster Aid for Honduras
Mo Ranch
SAN JOSE/SILICON VALLEY
Bachrodt Elementary School
Burnett Middle School
Columbia Middle School
Columbia Neighborhood Center
The Digital Clubhouse
Erikson Academy
Horace Mann Academy
The Mexican-American Community
Services Agency
The National Conference on
Community and Justice - Green
Circle
Ryan Elementary School
Sacred Heart Community Services
George Shirakawa Community Center
Solari Community Center
Slonaker Elementary School
The Tech Museum of Innovation
Washington Elementary School
SEATTLE/KING COUNTY
African American Academy
Aki Kurose Middle School
BF Day Elementary School
Bitterlake Community Center
BizWorld
Central Area Youth Association
Consejo Counseling and
Referral Service
Children's Hospital
Diversity Dance Workshop
East Madison YMCA
Goodwill Industries
Habitat for Humanity
Highline School District
Junior Achievement
Kent School District
Kent Youth and Family Service
Kids.Health.2001. Campaign
King County Department of
Youth Services
Langston Hughes Cultural Center
Northwest Harvest
Panels for Progress
PlanetCPR
Puyallup High School
Ravenna-Eckstein Community Center
Salmon Creek Elementary School
Seattle Department of
Parks & Recreation
Seattle Public Schools
Seattle Public Utilities
Team Read
United Way of King County
Co-Founders: Michael Brown and Alan Khazei
Vice President & Director of National Affairs: Charlie Rose
National Director of External Affairs: Carolyn Casey
National Marketing & Communications Director: Kristin Thalheimer
Design: Liza Manshoor, Hobbamock Design
Printer: Puritan Press, Inc.
Cover Photo: John Gillooly, Professional Event Images
Photos by John Gillooly unless otherwise indicated
Special thanks to all those at each of the City Year sites whose
contributions and help made this report possible.
“You are the
very best. Of all the programs
that we are working with in America’s Promise, of all
the partners. . . no partner, not one, has been as
committed, has been as dedicated to the goals
of America’s Promise as City Year. You are not a
generation on its way to nowhere. You are not
Generation ‘X’ drop-outs. You are
Generation
‘Excellent’. You are our future… You are the
leaders, not only of the communities that you represent, but of the nation. You are the leaders of the
world that wants to be free… I want you to continue
to be an inspiration for the rest of the nation…
We have the
highest expectations for
you. Expectations that we know you will meet.”
General Colin Powell, Chairman, America’s Promise,
speaking to City Year corps members at cyzygy ’99
at Howard University in Washington, DC
City Year is an AmeriCorps program
City Year
National Headquarters
285 Columbus Ave.
Boston, MA 02116
617-927-2500
1-888-4-City-Year
City Year Boston
285 Columbus Ave.
Boston, MA 02116
617-927-2500
City Year Chicago
545 N. Michigan Ave.
Chicago, IL 60611
312-464-9899
NATIONAL
LEADERSHIP
SPONSORS
City Year Cleveland
1278 West 9th St.
Cleveland, OH 44113
216-574-2677
City Year New Hampshire
200 Doamain Drive
Stratham, NH 03885
603-773-1607
City Year Columbia
1817 Hampton St.
Columbia, SC 29201
803-254-3349
City Year Philadelphia
2221 Chestnut St. 2nd floor
Philadelphia, PA 19103
215-988-2118
City Year Columbus
16 E. Broad St.
Columbus, OH 43215
614-224-9569
City Year Rhode Island
56 Pine St.
Providence, RI 02903
401-553-2500
City Year Detroit
1 Ford Place, 1A
Detroit, MI 48202
313-874-6825
City Year San Antonio
302 Valley Hi Drive
San Antonio, TX 78227
210-678-0506
NATIONAL
SPONSOR
City Year
San Jose/Silicon Valley
116 Paseo De San Antonio
San Jose, CA 95112
408-294-3041
City Year
Seattle/King County
201 Broad St.
Seattle, WA 98121
206-269-0350
City Year DC
1527 New Hampshire Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20036
202-737-3767
www.cityyear.org
AmeriCorps
Getting Things Done