Annual Report - Feed the Children
Transcription
Annual Report - Feed the Children
01 | 2014 Annual Report 03 | Letter From The Board of Directors 04 Dear Friends, In fiscal year 2014, we experienced a time of collaboration and innovation at Feed the Children. We renewed our commitment to do more together so that no child ever goes to bed hungry. The results were powerful. Banding together with committed donors and visionary partners, we gave over $344 million in food, other necessities, educational supplies, and medicine, impacting close to 9 million individuals in the U.S. and over 4.9 million individuals internationally, for a total of 13.9 million individuals globally. None of this would have been possible without the help of you— • • • • • Generous donors who believe that we can end childhood hunger Experts who diagnose the problem and innovate solutions Unified partner organizations pooling their resources and expertise Thriving local communities working together towards sustainable success Leaders fighting to institutionalize change With your help, we are pioneering programs that bring together the strength of both public and private partners. We are building one of the fastest-growing child-sponsorship programs in the world. Your committed sponsorship supported over 11,500 children in 2014, and we are adding new child sponsors every day. Most importantly, millions of children’s lives are impacted by the work that Feed the Children does every day. Children have been fed, cared for, educated, and—most importantly—shown that they matter. It takes the power of many standing with children to fight childhood hunger. Thank you for uniting with us this year. Thank you for committing to fight childhood hunger, not because it is easy, but because it is the right thing to do. We are ready to take hold of the momentum built in fiscal year 2014, and to see even more success in fiscal year 2015. We invite you to stand with us to end hunger—one child at a time. Thank you, The Feed the Children Board 05 | TABLE OF CONTENTS 06 08. DOMESTIC 12. DOMESTIC & INTERNATIONAL 16. EDUCATION 20. ADVOCACY 24. DISASTER RELIEF 28. SPORTS & CELEBRITY/ ARTIST PROGRAM 32. DISTRIBUTION EVENTS 36. CORPORATE PARTNERS 40. FINANCIALS 44. BOARD & EXECUTIVE STAFF 07 | DOMESTIC 08 09 | DOMESTIC IMPACT ACROSS THE NATION Through our national network of partner agencies, Feed the Children distributed 106 million pounds of food and necessities valued at $266 million to close to 9 million people in the United States. • Total number of people impacted – close to 9 million SUMMER FEEDING PROGRAM For many children in the United States, school meals are the only consistent food they get in a day. When the school year ends, so do school lunches. Without school meals, kids across America go hungry every summer. In June 2014, Feed the Children launched the Summer Food & Education Program (SFEP). The program combined Feed the Children’s logistics and transportation experience with the support of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Summer Food Service Program. Through the SFEP, Feed the Children served approximately 195,000 meals with the help of public funds and private partners to children at 11 sites throughout Oklahoma. With the help of our partners, Feed the Children provided 900 backpacks and school supplies and 19,760 books to children in the program. We were even able to send groceries to hungry families on days when children could not reach the meal sites in person. • • • • Meals served – 195,000 Summer meals sites – 11 Backpacks and schools supplies provided – 900 Books provided – 19,760 10 $266M Through our national network of partner agencies, Feed the Children distributed 106M lbs. of food and necessities valued at $266M to close to 9M people in the United States. Through the SFEP, Feed the Children served approximately 195,000 meals to children at 11 sites throughout Oklahoma. 195K “We at Really Big Coloring Books, Inc. were honored when Feed the Children selected us last year to help with the Summer Food and Education program. We created a coloring book to help children understand the food groups and to help them understand and make healthier food choices. The coloring book is great for children of all ages—even small children who cannot read can learn from the pictures. We value our relationship with Feed the Children and look forward to growing our partnership over the years to come.” Kenneth Rich Chief Operating Officer Really Big Coloring Books, Inc. “Across the U.S., millions of children struggle with hunger, especially during summer months when free or reduced-price school meals aren’t available. The problem is particularly acute in Oklahoma, the state ranking last in serving summer meals, with only 6.7% of its 300,000 young residents getting the food they need at this particularly vulnerable time. PepsiCo works to support and strengthen the health of communities where we live and work. That’s why we’re proud to pair our food and beverage delivery expertise with Feed the Children’s established leadership in the fight against childhood hunger to serve the children of Oklahoma.” PepsiCo 11 DOMESTIC & INTERNATIONAL 12 13 | DOMESTIC & INTERNATIONAL Feed the Children believes that we can create a world where no child goes to bed hungry. Since 1979, Feed the Children has grown into one of the largest U.S.-based charities. We are accredited by GuideStar Exchange and the BBB Wise Giving Alliance, maintain a 4-star rating from Charity Navigator, and are also a member of InterAction. In fiscal year 2014, through our network of agencies, Feed the Children distributed over $344 million in food, other necessities, educational supplies, and medicine, impacting close to 9 million individuals in the U.S. and over 4.9 million individuals internationally, for a total of 13.9 million individuals globally. DOMESTIC IMPACT INTERNATIONAL IMPACT $266M $78M 106M lbs. Domestic Total Value: $266 Million Domestic Total Weight: 106 Million Pounds 21M lbs. International Total Value: $78 Million International Total Weight: 21 Million Pounds 127M lbs. TOTAL DOMESTIC & INTERNATIONAL IMPACT 14 TOTAL WEIGHT $344M TOTAL VALUE 15 HEALTH & WATER Feed the Children provides safe drinking water to Guatemalan families. Latrines are built in schools and community centers, children are taught proper hand washing, and are provided health care. Parents are also taught how to treat their drinking water and improve hygiene in the home to protect their children from harmful parasites, diarrhea, and malnutrition. Our goal is to more than double the amount of eneficiaries supported through the planned introduction of WASH promotion (i.e., washing hands with soap) through Care Groups projects. | EDUCATION 16 17 | EDUCATION Education is one of the best ways to help children escape poverty. Feed the Children helps children attend and finish school by distributing backpacks to homeless children and offering free books and supplies to educators through our Teacher Stores. Since the launch of Feed the Children’s Homeless Education and Literacy Program (H.E.L.P.), we have distributed over 772,000 backpacks to American children who are homeless. H.E.L.P. provided close to 65,000 backpacks to children in fiscal year 2014 alone. Feed the Children operates 3 Teacher Stores—located in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; Elkhart, Indiana; and LaVergne, Tennessee—which offer free school materials and books to educators in Title I schools in all three states and a portion of Michigan. In fiscal year 2014, Feed the Children hosted 18,000 teacher visits and gave away over $5 million in teaching supplies and over 575,000 books, benefiting more than 397,000 students across 105 school districts. 3 Teacher Stores 575K Books Given 18 $5M in Teaching Supplies 65K Backpacks Provided Benefiting: 397,000 STUDENTS 19 | ADVOCACY 20 21 | ADVOCACY At Feed the Children, advocacy educates, elevates conversations, and promotes policies to address the systemic issues of hunger and poverty. We seek to be a voice for the voiceless, and to partner with government agencies already engaged in similar work both in the U.S. and around the world. Feed the Children focuses on strategic policy reform and collaboration to end hunger in America, with a focus on the Federal Agricultural Reform & Risk Management Bill (FARRM), the Food & Education Oasis, the Child Reauthorization Act, and the Summer Food & Education Program. FEDERAL AGRICULTURAL REFORM AND RISK MANAGEMENT BILL (FARRM) In 2014, Feed the Children successfully advocated against a reduction in spending with the FARRM bill, which authorizes and assigns federal funds to such programs as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), formerly known as Food Stamps. FOOD & EDUCATION OASIS Feed the Children laid the groundwork for a community grocery store—the Food and Education Oasis—in the Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans. The store will launch in 2015 and is designed and funded through federal grants like the Food Insecurity Nutrition Incentive, created in lieu of the reduction in SNAP funding. The Food and Education Oasis will fill a needed gap for New Orleans and will provide residents a store that maximizes and highlights the use of SNAP benefits. CHILD NUTRITION REAUTHORIZATION ACT In 2014, we advocated and educated members of congress and their staffs on the importance of passing the Child Nutrition Reauthorization Act (CNR). The CNR authorizes federal funds to be assigned to such child nutrition programs as National School Lunch, School Breakfast, Summer Food Service, and the Women’s Infants and Children program (WIC). SUMMER FOOD & EDUCATION PROGRAM Feed the Children cultivated a strong relationship with the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and Food and Nutrition Services (FNS) to launch the Summer Food & Education Program, serving 195,000 meals at 11 sites. 22 23 HEALTH & WATER Feed the Children provides safe drinking water to Guatemalan families. Latrines are built in schools and community centers, children are taught proper hand washing, and are provided health care. Parents are also taught how to treat their drinking water and improve hygiene in the home to protect their children from harmful parasites, diarrhea, and malnutrition. Our goal is to more than double the amount of eneficiaries supported through the planned introduction of WASH promotion (i.e., washing hands with soap) through Care Groups projects. | DISASTER RELIEF 24 25 | DISASTER RELIEF At Feed the Children, we work day in and day out to help create a world where no child goes to bed hungry. When natural disasters strike, we also mobilize quickly to provide immediate aid to affected communities. Working with our local partners, we make sure children and families impacted by natural disasters have the food and necessities they need to survive. In fiscal year 2014, Feed the Children distributed over $11.6 million worth of food and other necessities to disaster-affected regions around the world, including $9.6 million of domestic disaster relief and $2 million of international disaster relief. Feed the Children delivered nearly 3,340 disaster pallets to those affected by natural disasters in fiscal year 2014 alone. $9.6M DOMESTIC RELIEF INTERNATIONAL RELIEF 26 $2M 27 SPORTS & CELEBRITY EVENTS ARTIST PROGRAM 28 29 |SPORTS & CELEBRITY EVENTS / ARTIST PROGRAM SPORTS AND CELEBRITY EVENTS Kentucky Speedway & Children’s Charities Operation Homefront Waltrip/Payton Gala Kenny Smith TNT Event Speedway Los Angeles Clippers Children’s Charities ARTIST PROGRAM Kari Jobe Anthony Evans Soulfire Revolution Newsboys Dailey & Vincent John Berry David Payne Judah Smith Christy Sutherland MIKESCHAIR 30 Waltrip Brothers 16 $75K to the general fund Trucks Payton Play It Forward Foun. 6 $25K Kenny Smith All-Star Outreach Event 3 Trucks 6 Trucks & $25,000 to the Food & Education Oasis 2 Trucks Operation Homefront 31 HEALTH & WATER Feed the Children provides safe drinking water to Guatemalan families. Latrines are built in schools and community centers, children are taught proper hand washing, and are provided health care. Parents are also taught how to treat their drinking water and improve hygiene in the home to protect their children from harmful parasites, diarrhea, and malnutrition. Our goal is to more than double the amount of eneficiaries supported through the planned introduction of WASH promotion (i.e., washing hands with soap) through Care Groups projects. | DISTRIBUTION EVENTS 32 33 | DISTRIBUTION EVENTS Feed the Children can’t fight poverty alone. We need the help of public and private partners. Together with companies like PepsiCo-Frito Lay and Teleperformance, we were able to provide food to hungry children and families in the U.S. and around the world. One of the most tangible ways that our partners contribute is through food-distribution events. Through these events, our corporate partners give free food and other necessities to hundreds of people at a time. Sponsored over 5,600 families 14 Cities TELEPERFORMANCE Helped support recovery efforts in the Philipines for both the earthquake and Typhoon Haiyan. Teleperformance also did distribution events in 14 cities across the US. 34 18 Trucks Equal to 7,200 families PEPSICO-FRITO LAY Frito Lay participated in community events in the following cities: Washington, DC / Atlanta, GA Detroit, MI / Chicago, IL Seattle, WA / Los Angeles, CA Miami, FL 35 | CORPORATE PARTNERS 36 37 | CORPORATE PARTNERS At Feed the Children, experience has taught us that the most effective way to combat hunger is through cross-sectional relationships and partnerships. In fiscal year 2014, we partnered with almost 600 corporations who donated products or provided the funds to purchase and deliver food and necessities to hungry children. CORPORATE PARTNERS 4Life Research Actavis Alliance One Avery Avon Better World Books Bookspan Bremner/ConAgra Campbell Soup Co. Chattem, Inc. Choice Hotels Church & Dwight Co., Inc. Cliff Bar & Company Coastal Business Group Concord Hospitality Enterprises Cott Beverages USA, Inc. CVS Energizer Personal Care EyeBuyDirect Fazoli’s FEMA Headquarters First Book 38 Foundation 4Life Garrett Popcorn Shops Good360 H.J. Heinz Hachette Book Group USA Half Price Books Hillshire Foundation Just Born, Inc. Kenco Logistics Lindt & Sprungli USA, Inc. Lions Eyeglass Recycling Center Mars Chocolate N.A. Ice Cream NBTY, Inc. Nestle Waters North America New Eyes for the Needy Niagara Bottling Nourish the Children Nu Skin Enterprises, Inc. Ocean Spray Cranberries Office Depot, Inc. Operation Compassion PepsiCo Pharmavite PL Developments Procter & Gamble Project Right To Sight, Inc. Ralston Foods Reader’s Digest Association Recycling Revolution, LLC School Specialty Silver Dollar Optical Starbucks Coffee Company Sterling Lyons Glasses Recycling Talking Rain Beverage Co. Tampico Beverages Teleperformance TOMS Tropicana/PepsiCo Tyson Foods, Inc. Unilever Vitamin Angels Walgreen Co. White Wave Foods Yamaha Motor Corporation 39 | FINANCIALS 40 41 | FINANCIALS : Year Ending June 30, 2014 REVENUES, GAINS AND OTHER SUPPORT: 2014 2013 Gifts-in-Kind 340,887,071382,943,793 Contributions & Government Grants 59,121,221 65,200,314 Transportation Service Revenue 5,190,409 3,403,673 Contribution Received | Acquisition of World Neigbors, Inc.7,152,364 Other Revenue 5,434,869 11,489,889 Total Revenue, Gains, & Other Support 410,633,570 470,190,033 EXPENSES: Program Services Fundraising Management & General Transportation Service Expenses Total Expenses 370,922,497 368,578,659 28,859,69332,470,505 12,858,855 14,451,276 5,075,810 4,337,884 417,716,85 419,838,324 PROGRAM SERVICES: Childcare, Food and Medical Disaster Relief Education and Community Development Total Program Services 221,205,815 267,436,141 12,229,715 17,494,062 137,486,96783,648,456 370,922,497 368,578,659 NET ASSETS: Unrestricted Temporarily Restricted - Purpose Restrictions Temporarily Restricted - Time Restricted Permanently Restricted Total Net Assets 139,551,266 16,518,392 8,794,251 2,796,564 167,660,473 42 Feed the Children’s audited consolidated financial statements for the years ended June 30, 2014 and 2013 are available at www.feedthechildren.org/reports or upon request. 140,423,264 20,992,816 10,531,114 2,796,564 174,743,758 2014 PERCENTAGES REVENUES, GAINS AND OTHER SUPPORT: 2014 2013 Gifts-in-Kind 83%81% Contributions & Government Grants 15% 14% Transportation Service Revenue 1% 1% Contribution Received 0% 2% Other Revenue 1% 2% Total 100% EXPENSES: Program Services Fundraising Management & General Transportation Service Expenses Total 89% 88% 7%8% 3% 3% 1% 1% 100% PROGRAM SERVICES: Childcare, Food and Medical 60% 72% Disaster Relief 3% 5% Education and Community Development 37%23% Total 100% NET ASSETS: Unrestricted 83%80% Temporarily Restricted - Purpose Restrictions 10% 12% Temporarily Restricted - Time Restricted 5% 6% Permanently Restricted 2% 2% Total 100% 83% Gifts-In-Kind 89% Program Services 60% Childcare, Food and Medical 83% Unrestricted 43 HEALTH & WATER Feed the Children provides safe drinking water to Guatemalan families. Latrines are built in schools and community centers, children are taught proper hand washing, and are provided health care. Parents are also taught how to treat their drinking water and improve hygiene in the home to protect their children from harmful parasites, diarrhea, and malnutrition. Our goal is to more than double the amount of eneficiaries supported through the planned introduction of WASH promotion (i.e., washing hands with soap) through Care Groups projects. BOARD & EXECUTIVE STAFF 44 45 | BOARD & EXECUTIVE STAFF FEED THE CHILDREN BOARD OF DIRECTORS FEED THE CHILDREN EXECUTIVE STAFF Rick England, Chairman Kevin Hagan, President and CEO Kevin Hagan Travis Arnold, Chief Operations Officer Mary Schrick, N.D., Ph.D. Matt Panos, Chief Development Officer Gregg Yeilding Christy Tharp, Chief Financial Officer Kathy Doyle Thomas Corey Gordon, Chief Marketing and Communications Officer Michelle Mesen Kim Baich, Chief Communications and Brand Officer Mary Wong Tom Davis, Chief Program Officer Mike Hogan Scott Killough, Ph.D., Senior Vice President of Int’l Operations Michael Dinkins Diane Moss, Senior Vice President of Human Resources Tetsunao (Ted) Yamamori, Ph.D. Gary Sloan, Senior Vice President of Domestic Operations 46 47 | 2014 Annual Report MK2114 12-14-15