makebetterhappen
Transcription
makebetterhappen
#MAKEBETTERHAPPEN annual report 2015 Jessica Hernandez @jessicahdz_cylr “Ms.Jessica, was your goal to change someone’s life? B/c my life has changed ever since i m e t yo u . I love school now!” #makebetterhappen Drine #MAKEBETTERHAPPEN Sydney Gahnz @sydneygahnzCYLR Mr. Dom inspiring students to be future city year corps members. #makebetterhappen Molly Mackinnon @mocoCYRI Last year, I worked with him every day in math class. this year, he tested into the "on track" level for math! City Year’s #makebetterhappen social media campaign amplifies real City Year stories from the perspectives of corps members themselves. Every day, corps members share inspiration and impact through Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram, and their moving stories ripple out through the City Year community and beyond. Many tell of small steps of progress made by a student, like reading a chapter book for the first time. Others describe a breakthrough moment, like making a big jump on a standardized test score. For the committed champions who help make our work possible – including donors, school partners, and board members – this campaign has deepened a connection to the students and schools that City Year serves. And throughout the City Year community #makebetterhappen has become a rallying cry – bringing us together, boosting team spirit, and motivating us for the work ahead. @DrineServes My teacher & my ELL Math group has grown the most on the STAR assessment in the whole building!! 92% met goal! #MakeBetterHappen #Teamwork R Dubs @cypvd_rwms Imagine. Recruit. Transform and Inspire. On “Dress like a Teacher” Day a student dressed up as her corps member! #spiritweek #makebetterhappen Stella Oloyede @MsOlovesCYDC Student: Do you have to graduate HS to be in CY? Me: Yup! She: Great. See you next year! Me: As what? she: a city year! #makebetterhappen so proud!!! #makebetterhappen Allison RennG_CYSKC @RennGutierrez And our 3rd graders are becoming math detectives by cracking secret codes! #makebetterhappen @APservesCYB Favorite moment of today? My 8th grade ELL talking about how hard she was working to become a doctor or engineer one day! #makebetterhappen City Year New York PS/MS 57 Janae Babineaux @BabineauxJanae @cyny_psms57 During a behavior activity students were asked to write things they can count on. 10:30 AM- Miss Faith makes algebra easy! #makebetterhappen #americorpsweek #adayinthelife on every paper ms. cassidy saw city year Lynnea Greene #makebetterhappen @lgreene_CYP Call your students "young scholars" and watch their attitude about education change #positivevibes #makebetterhappen @CityYearPhilly Norma Garcia @NormaG348 All those beautiful stars represent the positive behavior my students have demonstrated #makebetterhappen #CYCO Jessica Hernandez @jessicahdz_cylr “Ms.Jessica, was your goal to change someone’s life? B/c G Camp @gcampos_CYCO "CY has made an impact with me and my child. your service is invaluable." – Parent during ParentTeacher conference #makebetterhappen Tahia Islam my life has changed ever since i m e t yo u . I love school now!” #makebetterhappen Jennifer Iglesias @jen_in_jax "I am so grateful to have you in class. i don't know what i would do without city year" – my teacher everyday! #makebetterhappen @CityYearJAX @tahiatalks My student just received a 100 course avg improved from a 65 last marking period! @CityYearNewYork #makebetterhappen CYLA at 109th St ES @cyla_shine109 "At first I didn't get it, but then Mr. Omar helped me." #MakeBetterHappen #MathMondays DEAR CITY YEAR COMMUNITY Our 2015 annual report is a tribute to the dedicated young people who #makebetterhappen every day in some of America's highest-need urban schools. We hope their service and commitment inspire you and that you enjoy reading their tweets and Instagram posts, which provide a glimpse into the tremendous impact they are having across the country and the world, at our international affiliates in the UK and South Africa. Our 2015 report is also a testament to the commitment and generosity of the individuals, families, foundations, and corporations that make possible our AmeriCorps members' service. It would be hard to overstate the gratitude that we at City Year feel for the many members of our community who give precious resources that enable City Year AmeriCorps members to serve where they are needed most. Thank you for your support, and thank you for believing in the City Year corps. Yours in Service, Michael Brown, CEO & Co-Founder Jim Balfanz, President Jonathan Lavine, Chair, Board of Trustees TABLE OF CONTENTS 2 What We Do 4 Alumni & Staff Member Profile: Jarvis Nash 6 2014-2015 National Impact Highlights 8 External Evaluation 10 City Year's Long-Term Impact Goals 12 Diplomas Now 14 School District Partnerships 16 AmeriCorps & The Corporation for National and Community Service 17 International Affiliates 18 Champion Profile: Sandy and Paul Edgerley 20 25th Anniversary In School & On-Track Campaign 22 25th Anniversary Campaign Contributors 24 Champion Profile: Ana Mari Ortega 25 Red Jacket Society 26 Individuals and Family Foundations 34 National Strategic Partner Profile: New York Life 35 National Corporate Partners 38 Team Sponsor Profile: Staples 39 Team Sponsors 40 Corporations and Corporate Foundations 44Foundations and Nonprofits 45 In-Kind Donors 46 Board of Trustees 47 Site Board Members 49 Senior Leadership 50 Welcome: City Year Dallas 51 Executive Directors 52 Financials 1 WHAT WE DO At City Year we believe that every child has the potential to succeed and that a high-quality education can help ensure each child realizes that potential. But we also know that students, particularly those to bridge that gap by providing individualized supports living in poverty, face obstacles that interfere with their to students and schools that need them most – from ability to arrive at school every day ready to learn and elementary to high school. to succeed in school. Research shows that providing Diverse teams of City Year AmeriCorps members serve students with positive, developmental relationships, full time, providing high-impact student, classroom and individualized academic supports, and opportunities to school-wide support to help students stay in school and develop social-emotional skills can dramatically reduce on track to graduate from high school, ready for college the adverse effects on students’ readiness to learn, and and career success. can keep students on track to graduation and adult success.* However, for schools in areas of concentrated Throughout the entire school day, corps members directly poverty, there is an overwhelming scale of need, resulting support academic achievement and student engagement in chronic absenteeism, school in and outside the classroom. City Year suspension, low achievement and tutors students one-on-one; provides Mary DuBard high dropout rates. This places an in-class supports in partnership @mdubardcy unmanageable burden on even the with teachers; coaches students on most experienced teachers, who During an after-school attendance; helps students build critical must establish caring relationships, drawing contest, kids social and emotional skills, including deliver instruction and create learning drew their favorite goal setting, persistence and teamwork; environments that meet the unique and leads after school programs and academic and developmental needs school-wide initiatives to improve student of their students. In other words, there One student drew a engagement and academic achievement. is a gap between what students need CY logo! #inspiring and what schools are designed and City Year helps schools create learning #makebetterhappen resourced to provide. City Year helps environments that are responsive to superhero. 2 Ty @tylermiguel Met with our principal and the data doesn’t lie: our students have DOUBLED in proficiency for math standards since last yr #makebetterhappen students’ developmental needs and where students feel capable and committed to their academic goals. Corps members are “near peers” trained in youth development practices, which means they can uniquely connect with and relate to the students they serve – old enough to provide the wise guidance students need, yet young enough to relate to a student's perspective. City Year regularly monitors student performance on three early-warning indicators – attendance, behavior and course performance in math and English – which research shows can identify students at risk of dropping out as early as sixth grade. Guided by these data, City Year partners with teachers and other school staff to identify which students are most at risk and our corps members are able to customize the types and intensity of support they provide students. City Year also develops its AmeriCorps members as civic leaders and future educators who can drive transformative change in schools and communities. Through our work with students and our alumni, City Year is ensuring that the next generation is prepared with the skills and enduring civic mindset needed to contribute to our nation’s economic growth and prosperity and the success of our democracy. *“The Impact of Early Adversity on Children’s Development” (2015) http://developingchild.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/ inbrief-adversity-1.pdf 3 ALUMNI & STAFF MEMBER PROFILE JARVIS NASH City Year Washington, DC, ’14, ’15 | City Year Impact Manager “‘It takes a village to raise a child,’ was the setting I was raised in,” shares City Year alum Jarvis Nash, who grew up in Florida with his grandparents and aunts. Describing the journey that brought him to City Year, he puts it as simply as he can: “So many people invested in me. That’s what sparked my idea of giving back.” of the country’s largest historically black colleges, Florida A&M University. A required course on African American history had a profound effect on him. “It was the first time I understood who I am as a black male in western society,” reveals Jarvis. “It gave me a foundation for my identity – who I consider myself to be, and who I want to become.” Jarvis’s grandfather, in particular, was a powerful College also introduced him to service. He joined the influence. College-educated, with an advanced degree, on-campus affiliate of 100 Black Men of America. “It was he made education a family hallmark. all about fellowship, mentoring and When Jarvis was six, his grandfather professional development, but through “One day I realized it was had Jarvis read Ernest Hemingway’s the lens of African American males,” he The Old Man and the Sea. He listened says. “It sold me on the idea of service. intently as Jarvis read aloud, and with I loved giving back.” each chapter’s end, they would sit Joining City Year after college, Jarvis and discuss. For Jarvis, after this rite chose to serve in Washington, D.C., After that, when we of passage, going to college was no believing he could be of service to its worked together, she longer an option – it was a requirement. large African American community. started applying herself.” When the time came, Jarvis chose one He crafted his statement on “Why I all about trust. 4 Serve” – an exercise all City Year AmeriCorps members undertake – to reflect his own life experience: “I serve because so many people have poured their time, energy and talents into me, and I feel as it’s my obligation to do the same for someone else. I was provided a quality education that catered to my history, community and Alex Williams a peer whose behavior was a trigger. “For him to have had the self-control to not engage was absolutely incredible!” says Jarvis. When he visited the student the following year, Jarvis saw he had continued to learn and grow. His classmates knew it, too. “He’s actually been good this year!” his classmates said. It was clear their work together had made a difference. @I_HadADream So proud of Jarvis, amazing team leader, a powerful servant leader..and our bridge builder of the year! #cysummit identity, so I have made it my mission to provide that to others.” As a first year AmeriCorps member, Jarvis threw himself into mentoring his students, and was deeply drawn to one in particular, who, he discovered, could barely read. Though Jarvis tried continually to help her, she resisted all of his efforts. “I just kept at it,” he states, thinking of his grandfather. “One day I realized it was all about trust. After that, when we worked together, she started applying herself.” Unfortunately this student moved away well before the end of the year “denying me the fairy tale ending I was hoping for,” Jarvis says half-jokingly, now looking back. He did see her once again: she not only remembered him with enthusiasm, but had continued the course he had set with her. Serving at Martin Luther King, Jr. Elementary School, Jarvis worked closely with a student who fared well academically but had outbursts of aggression. “He was an absolute struggle the whole year,” says Jarvis. Together, they focused on building social-emotional skills. One day, he observed the student intentionally not react to Now on City Year staff as an Impact Manager, Jarvis knows that change takes place slowly, at its own pace, and often out of sight. While he yearns for that “Disney moment when fireworks light up the sky and it all works out in the end,” he has come to realize that progress takes time – and that his job is as much about patience as it is about lesson plans. Jarvis’s ability to see the bigger picture is just one of many attributes that won him City Year’s highest honor for a City Year AmeriCorps member, the Eli J. Segal Bridge Builder Award, awarded each year at City Year’s Summit. Overwhelmed by the surprise recognition, Jarvis was deeply humbled when he took the stage to thank everyone. “You just have to do what you believe is right and continue to support the students that you came there to serve,” reflects Jarvis. “You might not see the fruit of your labor by the time your service year is done, but you will know the amount of work you put into it. And you can be confident that the next person to come along will do their part as well.” 5 2014-2015 NATIONAL IMPACT HIGHLIGHTS increased number of students passing english and math courses: In one year or less, City Year helped drive a 57% reduction in the # of students off- track in english language arts and a 46% reduction in the number of students off-track in Math.2 accelerated academic progress: Students working with City Year on literacy or math demonstrated a higher growth rate than the national average for students at their initial proficiency level – 1.6x higher in english language arts, 1.7x higher in math.1 1. 2014-15 NWEA Measures of Academic Progress (MAP) Literacy n= 1,472; Math n= 1,512; 61 schools at 10 sites 2. English Language Arts n = 1,868; Math n = 2,203; grades 6-9 3. Attendance n= 2,761 grades 6-9 4. ACT, Inc. (2011) Enhancing College and Career Readiness and Success: The Role of Academic Behaviors 5. 2014-15 SEL Assessment (DESSA), n=426 students in pilot across 118 schools 6 Diana Gomez @dianagomez1996 Student: Mr. Dejesus when you explain math I understand, you’re like a big brother. Its great to see my teammates #makebetterhappen @CityYear Reduced Chronic Absenteeism: City Year helped drive a 36% reduction in students that are chronically absent (defined as missing at least 10 percent – approximately 18 days – of a school year).3 Strengthened Students’ SocialEmotional (SEL) Skills: SEL skills represent one of the greatest predictors of college and career readiness and academic success.4 City Year helped achieve a 78% increase in the number of students classified as having strong social-emotional learning skills – such as self-awareness, self-management and relationship development – on the Devereux Student Strengths Assessment (DESSA), a validated observational assessment that measures social-emotional competencies in children and youth.5 7 EXTERNAL EVALUATION Policy Studies Associates recently conducted a large-scale quasi-experimental study of whole-school academic outcomes for schools partnering with City Year, as compared to similar non-City Year partner schools, across 22 districts. The findings revealed that: Schools that partner with City Year are up to 2-3 x more likely to improve on English Language Arts and math assessments than non-City Year partner schools. Angele Maraj @angelehema The feeling when you call a parent to tell him his former D-student son now has 110 in English & he gets choked up #makebetterhappen Schools that partnered with City Year gained the equivalent of approximately one month of additional learning in math and English Language Arts. 8 “In fact, because we saw clear and consistently positive differences in city year schools versus their matched comparisons, by subject, by school level, and by site, we believe that these results support the conclusion that City Year is on to something with its Whole School Whole Child school improvement model and that further study is warranted.” – Leslie M. Anderson Report co-author and the managing director of Policy Studies Associates, Inc. Education Week June 9, 2015 City Year Schools Twice as Likely to See Math, English Boosts, Study Finds By Sarah D. Sparks Pleasant View School was one of a slew of high poverty schools in Providence, R.I., marked for an overhaul in 2012, but three years later, it is not only out of academic crisis, but thriving. activities, and after school homework help, and enrichment. Corps members serve in more than a quarter of schools eligible for federal school improvement grants. Pleasant View Principal Gara B. Field credits a big part of the school’s revival to a team of young adult AmeriCorps members who have adopted the school as part of the City Year program’s “Whole School, Whole Child” school wide initiative. “It’s been a huge partner,” she said. “One of the best things we ever did was write them into our school improvement plan.” Comparing Practices Some new evidence released this morning suggests Fields isn’t alone: Schools that participated in City Year’s 150 school wide programs in 22 cities were more likely to see overall improvements on their states’ mathematics and English/language arts tests than similar schools that did not participate, according to a new evaluation of schools in the nonprofit program’s 150 schools. City Year is a national nonprofit supported in part by the federal Corporation for National and Community Service that hires young-adult AmeriCorps to spend a year working and running programs in high-poverty schools. The group’s school wide program uses teams of seven to 18 corps members who support teachers, as well as provide reading and math tutoring, attendance and behavior coaching, social-emotional The study, by the Washington-based research firm Policy Studies Associates, Inc., compared state test performance of schools which received services from City Year in a wholeschool program, with local comparison schools matched on demographics and other factors. The researchers used surveys and administrative and testing data to track the performance of students overall in grades 3 through 8 and high school in math and language arts, as well as high school graduation, in 150 City Year schools and nearly 500 matched comparison schools. They also tracked how many students in the City Year schools were identified for “focus” support in math, reading, or social- emotional or behavior issues. School practices—data reviews, shared teacher-planning time, appreciation and reward activities, community-partnership development, tutoring frequency, and progress monitoring of students—were used to evaluate the schools’ levels of implementation. Schools working with the program were about twice as likely as comparison schools to show overall improvements in 9 CITY YEAR’'S LONG-TERM IMPACT GOALS City Year has a Long-Term Impact strategy to build the urban graduation pipeline and transform the future to significantly increase the number of students who them nearly four times more likely to graduate.* City Year has set the following bold Long-Term Impact goals: impact 80% of students in the schools City Year serves will reach the 10th grade on track to graduation. Sarah Lyle local scale City Year will reach a majority of the students at risk of dropping out in the communities where City Year serves. n ati o n a l s ca le City Year will serve in the cities that account for two-thirds of the nation’s urban dropouts. @slyle_CYCO "You're really making a difference. On average 196 suspension days last year and only 86 this year." – Our Principal #makebetterhappen * "What Matters for Staying On-Track and Graduating in Chicago Public High Schools: A Close Look at Course Grades, Failures, and Attendance in the Freshman Year" from the Consortium on Chicago School Research from July 2007 10 for thousands of students nationwide. Partnering with high-need schools across the U.S., we seek reach the tenth grade on track to graduate, making City Year is investing in the following strategies to accelerate its Long-Term Impact strategy: systemic change Influencing how schools are designed and funded Sherry Leung alumni Building a pipeline of human capital for the education sector impact partnerships Developing impact partnerships to build a multi-year continuum of care and meet students’ holistic needs @CYNH_SherryL "I wish City Year was around when I was growing up. You are such good influences on our kids." – said by a parent today #makebetterhappen 11 DIPLOMAS NOW Diplomas Now is an innovative secondary school turnaround collaboration between Johns Hopkins University’s Talent Development Secondary, City Year, and Communities In Schools, leveraging over 80 years of combined experience working in and with low-performing, under-resourced schools. Diplomas Now was designed to improve the nation’s highest-need, persistently low-performing middle and high schools. The Diplomas Now model combines evidence-based, whole-school reform with enhanced student support guided by an early-warning system, combining the efforts of three leading national nonprofits: Talent Development Secondary at Johns Hopkins University, City Year and Communities In Schools. Diplomas Now provides a comprehensive approach to redesign the school structure, culture and student supports while it provides the right students with the right supports at the right time. During the 2014-2015 school year, Diplomas Now served in 32 schools in 13 cities. In 2010, Diplomas Now received a $30 million Investing in Innovation grant from the U.S. Department of Education. Diplomas Now is partnering with MDRC, an independent research organization, to conduct the nation's largest randomized control trial of secondary school reform, which will study the impact of the model on attendance, behavior, course performance, and graduation rates in some of the nation’s highestneed schools and will evaluate the effectiveness of Diplomas Now as compared to other reform efforts. 2014-15 Diplomas Now Impact Highlights: 44% decrease in the number of chronically absent students* 57% decrease in the number of students failing English Dollar 59% decrease in the number of suspended students 58% decrease in the number of students failing math @DollarJDC Welcomed with hugs when returning back to service after graduation. #makebetterhappen #DedicatedDozo #diplomasnow *attendance below 85% 12 CY Team Schurz @CYTeamSchurz Today I asked my student what his favorite seat in the classroom was, and he said "next to you because you always help me" #makebetterhappen 13 SCHOOL DISTRICT PARTNERSHIPS Dr. Dan Good Superintendent Columbus City Schools Columbus, OH “City Year has been one of the most impactful nearpeer mentor programs I've measured in over three decades of public education service. The effects of the corps on students' attendance, behavior and course completion has contributed to doubledigit percentage gains in achievement across all five disciplines as measured on the State's standardized graduation test, an extraordinary decrease in reported level I disciplinary incidents, and a significant increase in the number of students matriculating to the next grade level. I have the data; the partnership works!” 14 D r . Ba r ba r a J e n k i n s Superintendent Orange County Public Schools Orlando, FL “City Year AmeriCorps members have supplemented the work of teachers and provided critical support for our students psychologically, socially, emotionally and academically.” CityYearBatonRouge Dr. Nikolai Vitti Superintendent Duval County Public Schools Jacksonville, FL “Through our partnership with City Year, attendance is climbing, student attitudes are improving and grades are rising. The culture of an entire school is being transformed by their ‘can do’ spirit. We’re investing school district funds to match AmeriCorps and private sector funds in our City Year teams.” @CityYearBR "@CityYear is not a nicety, but a necessity in Orange County Schools." Dr. Jenkins, OCPS Superintendent. It takes a village #cysummit SCHOOL DISTRICT PARTNERS We are proud to partner with the following school districts (2014-2015 school year). B at o n R o u g e L it tle R o c k Sac r a m e n t o East Baton Rouge Parish School System Little Rock School District Sacramento City Unified School District Superintendent: Dr. Bernard Taylor, Jr. Superintendent: Baker Kurrus Superintendent: José L. Banda Boston Los Angeles Boston Public Schools Los Angeles Unified School District Interim Superintendent: John McDonough Superintendent: Michelle King St. HOPE Public Schools Chief Executive Officer: Enoch Woodhouse Sa n A n t o n i o Green Dot Public Schools California North East Independent School District Chief Executive Officer: Dr. Cristina de Jesus Superintendent: Dr. Brian G. Gottardy Chief Executive Officer: Forrest Claypool LA’s Promise San Antonio Independent School District Chief Executive Officer: Veronica Melvin Superintendent: Dr. Sylvester Perez C le v e l a n d Partnership for LA Schools Cleveland Metropolitan School District Chief Executive Officer: Joan Sullivan C h i c ag o Chicago Public Schools Chief Executive Officer: Eric S. Gordon Miami C o lu m b i a Miami-Dade County Public Schools Lexington School District Four Superintendent: Alberto M. Carvalho Superintendent: Dr. Linda G. Lavender Richland County School District One Superintendent: Dr. Craig Witherspoon C o lu m b u s Columbus City Schools Superintendent: Dr. J. Daniel Good Da ll a s Dallas Independent School District Superintendent: Dr. Michael Hinojosa Denver Denver Public Schools Superintendent: Tom Boasberg D e tr o it Detroit Public Schools Emergency Manager: Darnell Earley Superintendent: Karen P. Ridgeway Starr Commonwealth Chief Executive Officer: Dr. Martin L. Mitchell Harper Woods District Schools Superintendent: Todd Biederwolf Jac ks o n v i ll e Duval County Public Schools Superintendent: Dr. Nikolai P. Vitti M i lwau k e e Milwaukee Public Schools Superintendent: Dr. Darienne Driver New Hampshire Manchester School District Superintendent: Dr. Debra Livingston New Orleans FirstLine Schools Chief Executive Officer: Jay Altman Sa n J o s é /S i l i c o n Va l l e y Alum Rock Union Elementary School District Superintendent: Dr. Hilaria Bauer S e at t l e / K i n g C o u n t y Seattle Public Schools Superintendent: Larry Nyland Tulsa Tulsa Public Schools Superintendent: Dr. Keith Ballard Michael Brown @MBrownCY Supt. Ballard: "We don't just like having you in @TulsaSchools, we need you in @TulsaSchools." Thank you for bringing @CityYear to Tulsa. N e w Yo r k New York City Department of Education Wa s h i n gt o n , D C Chancellor: Carmen Fariña District of Columbia Public Schools Chancellor: Kaya Henderson Orlando Orange County Public Schools Superintendent: Dr. Barbara M. Jenkins Cesar Chavez Public Charter Schools Chief Executive Officer: Joan Massey P h i l a d e lp h i a School District of Philadelphia Superintendent: Dr. William R. Hite Jr. Universal Companies Chief Executive Officer: Rahim Islam P r ov i d e n c e Providence Public School District Superintendent: Dr. Susan Lusi 15 AMERICORPS & THE CORPORATION FOR NATIONAL & COMMUNITY SERVICE AmeriCorps is a federal program designed to meet pressing community needs in areas that include education, the environment and disaster relief by engaging American citizens in intensive, results-driven service. Each year, AmeriCorps places more than 80,000 AmeriCorps members to serve with nonprofit organizations in more than 25,000 locations across the United States. Through participation in AmeriCorps, City Year’s full-time AmeriCorps members earn a living allowance of at least $12,530, as well as health care benefits. City Year AmeriCorps members who complete a year of service receive a $5,730 Segal AmeriCorps Education Award that can be used to pay for tuition or to pay off qualified student loans. AmeriCorps is operated by the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS), a federal agency that engages more than 5 million Americans in service through its core programs, including AmeriCorps. State Service Commission Partners State service commissions are governor-appointed commissions that work with the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS) to support service in each state. State service commissions partner with programs such as City Year to secure funding through the annual federal AmeriCorps grant competition. Beyond grant stewardship, commissions determine social needs in their states, provide training and assistance, support national days of service, and promote service and volunteering. Over 1,000 private citizens serve as commissioners who are responsible for setting state priorities and developing sustainable infrastructures for service. We are grateful to the following state service commissions, which provided funding to City Year during the 2014-2015 school year: Ca li f o r n i aVo lu n t e e r s S e rv e D C: T h e M ayo r’s O f f i c e o n S e rv i c e a n d Vo lu n t e e r i s m M a s s ac h u s e t t s S e rv i c e A lli a n c e M i c h i g a n C o m m u n it y S e rv i c e C o m m i s s i o n S e rv e I l l i n o i s C o m m i s s i o n o n Vo lu n t e e r i s m a n d C o m m u n it y S e rv i c e N e w Yo r k e r s Vo lu n t e e r : N e w Yo r k C o m m i s s i o n f o r N ati o n a l & C o m m u n it y S e rv i c e S e rv e O h i o : O h i o C o m m i s s i o n o n S e rv i c e a n d Vo lu n t e e r i s m O k l a h o m a C o m m u n it y S e rv i c e C o m m i s s i o n U n it e d Way A s s o c i at i o n o f S o u t h Ca r o l i n a O n e S ta r Fo u n dat i o n Vo lu n t e e r Fl o r i da P e n n S E RV E: T h e G ov e r n o r’s O f f i c e o f C it i z e n S e rv i c e Vo lu n t e e r L o u i s i a n a Vo lu n t e e r N H City Lights! @CityLightsFunky Today I recited the AmeriCorps pledge for the 2nd time in 2 years in 2 states, so I'm going to #makebetterhappen with City Year Detroit! 16 INTERNATIONAL AFFILIATES City Year South Africa City Year UK City Year South Africa, a leader in South Africa’s youth service movement, annually deploys 100 corps members in nine schools across Johannesburg, where they serve nearly 1,900 students. Corps members address critical needs in schools and communities, and receive training through the year that creates pathways to employment and promotes a culture of service. The organization’s nearly 1,600 alumni continue to demonstrate the power of service in developing the next generation of South African leaders. City Year South Africa’s roots lie in the deep commitment to citizen service and its role in strengthening democracy shared by former Presidents Nelson Mandela and Bill Clinton, who played instrumental roles in the founding of City Year South Africa in 2005. Launched in 2010, City Year UK has gained recognition as a leading youth and education nonprofit. During the 2014-2015 academic year, 160 corps members in 20 teams served 13,229 students in London, Birmingham and Greater Manchester. City Year UK is also a leader in the country’s growing national youth service moment, including through its participation in Generation Change (an independent partnership of the UK's leading youth social action organizations), which is committed to growing the impact and status of highquality youth social action initiatives. CityYearSouthAfrica @CityYearSoA The energy and idealism of young people are the two the most powerful and transformative forces at work in the world today @NYDARSA #CYSoA “You’ve changed [children’s] sense of what is possible…City Year has given you awesome skills, and every child you volunteer with can be empowered to live a different tomorrow by you.” – President Bill Clinton addressing the City Year UK corps in honor of its 5th Anniversary 17 I think the red jacket means being part of something bigger than yourself. it means being part of an incredible national corps of people who have similar values, who really care about service and giving of themselves to make a difference in the world. It means helping others achieve beyond what they would without some help. – Sandy Edgerley CHAMPION PROFILE SANDY AND PAUL EDGERLEY Both Sandy and Paul Edgerley grew up in households that placed tremendous value on education. “Education was of great importance for my parents,” shares Sandy, a firstgeneration American whose mother and father came from Vienna and Belgrade respectively. “They cared very much about ensuring that I received an excellent education. Moving to the U.S. from another country, their diplomas gave them opportunities.” It is no surprise then, that ten years ago, when City Year turned its focus to addressing the nation’s high school drop-out crisis, Sandy and Paul dove in with their time, energy and philanthropy. Sandy and Paul’s extraordinary generosity spans City Year’s history, with their most recent commitment of $5 million to City Year's 25th Anniversary Campaign, which included a challenge component to help launch the Red Jacket Society, a major gift program that is key to City Year’s plan to place more trained young people to serve as tutors, mentors and role models in more high-need urban schools. When City Year sought Sandy’s advice about the development of the Red Jacket Society, she rolled up her sleeves and strategized with the team: helping to 18 inform the levels of giving, associated benefits, and implementation stages. Now, as National Chair of the program, Sandy is leading the effort to expand it from nine City Year sites in its pilot year to the entire City Year network over the next two years. Sandy shares why leading the society was natural for her when she speaks about the symbolism of the red jacket: “I think it means being part of something bigger than yourself. It means being part of an incredible national corps of people who have similar values, who really care about service and giving of themselves to make a difference in the world. It means helping others achieve beyond what they would without some help.” “Sandy is a natural builder and an extraordinary professional, a highly strategic thinker with vast experience and knowledge about scaling and resourcing nonprofit impact. She is diving in at a critical time for City Year, helping us build a philanthropic model to sustain City Year on a national level,” says City Year CEO and co-founder Michael Brown. Sandy is helping to build and grow an organization that Paul has been a part of from its earliest days. “Paul has been an invaluable mentor and friend to me from our start-up years,” Michael shared. “He’s an amazing listener who brilliantly synthesizes our conversations and puts his extensive business acumen to work in getting to the core of an issue. His advice over the years has had a tangible impact on our direction and growth.” In addition to his personal time and mentorship, Paul and several of his Bain Capital partners have been instrumental in driving the firm’s ongoing sponsorship of City Year, which includes more than $25 million in donations, a special gift to celebrate City Year’s 25th Anniversary, and hundreds of volunteer hours by the firm’s employees. “Most organizations don’t succeed because they try to do too many things,” says Paul. “City Year’s focus on education, daily presence in the schools, along with extraordinary leadership, are what makes City Year’s work highly impactful. It is a special place.” Meeting at Bain and Company decades ago, Sandy and Paul are known throughout Greater Boston for their warmth, selflessness, and generosity. In Boston, Sandy is a go-to civic leader, working tirelessly on behalf of numerous organizations, including the Boys and Girls Club of Boston and the United Way. Together, Sandy and Paul are deeply involved at Harvard, where both earned an MBA and where Sandy earned a BA. sincerely, billie @jaswinksangha so excited to be an Ambassador to the Red Jacket Society ~ Paul and Sandy are also known for the importance they place on sharing their altruistic values with their children. When the Edgerley Family Commons was dedicated on the fifth floor of City Year's national headquarters some years ago, all four children joined them for the celebration and a family briefing on City Year's work and goals. “We are incredibly grateful to Sandy and Paul for their remarkable commitment and friendship,” says Michael Brown. “The entire City Year family is proud to count the Edgerley family as one of its own.” 19 25TH ANNIVERSARY IN SCHOOL & ON TRACK CAMPAIGN: A campaign to help students and schools succeed GOAL: $150m R AI S E D: $169.2m May 15, 2012 – June 30, 2015 Campaign Chair: Jonathan Lavine Campaign Vice Chairs: Sandy Edgerley & Michael Ward A Philanthropic Initiative Supporting City Year’s Long-Term Impact Strategy We are deeply grateful to the generous individual, foundation, and corporate campaign donors who enabled City Year to surpass its 25th Anniversary In School and On Track Campaign goal. The campaign raised more than $169 million in support of City Year's Long-Term Impact strategy to significantly increase the urban graduation pipeline. Philanthropic investments made as part of the campaign are providing key support for this strategy during its critical early years. Campaign objectives included building national capacities for deepening our impact, scaling local City Year program nationwide to reach additional high-poverty schools, expanding to new cities, and growing City Year's endowment. Capacity Building Highlights (2012-2015) • Worked intensively with local school districts and stakeholders to complete our Blueprints for Local Impact – sophisticated, data-driven plans to scale our impact. Expansion Highlights (2012-2015) Grew our corps to reach more students: corps members 1,998 to 3,016 • Launched cyschoolhouse, an innovative national database to track City Year AmeriCorps members’ impact in the schools where they serve. schools 189 to 292 • Initiated U.S. Department of Education-supported randomized control trial of the Diplomas Now collaborative of City Year, Communities In Schools and Talent Development Secondary. students 110,000 to 175,000 • Honed key school “feeder pattern” strategy to ensure City Year can strategically deploy for national and citywide impact. • Enhanced City Year AmeriCorps member training to strengthen members’ ability to deliver high-impact academic and social-emotional supports. Launched New City Year Sites: 2012: Orlando and Sacramento 2013: Jacksonville 2014: Tulsa 2015: Dallas Start-up underway: Kansas City 20 “” In partnership with AmeriCorps, our school partners, and the philanthropy from the 25th anniversary campaign, the City Year team across the country is laser focused on impact and scale. All City Year sites have their local Blueprints for LongTerm Impact, and our energetic, idealistic AmeriCorps members are, as always, ready to serve. We won't stop until every student in need has a City Year AmeriCorps member in their life. – Jonathan Lavine Chair, City Year Inc. Board of Trustees, and Chair of City Year’s 25th Anniversary In School and On Track Campaign, announcing the campaign’s successful close at the 2015 National Leadership Summit. Jonathan Lavine @Jonathan_Lavine @CityYear will always be about what unites us. #Ubuntu 21 25TH ANNIVERSARY CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTORS May 15, 2012 – June 30, 2015 T r a n s f o r m at i o n a l I n v e s t o r s ($ 1 0 m i ll i o n+) David and Julia Uihlein Charitable Foundation The Helmerich Trust Walmart Foundation Melanie and Stephen Hoffmeister Anonymous The Walton Family Foundation The Horning Family Foundation Einhorn Family Charitable Trust Michael Ward Foundation Jacobson Family Foundation Jeannie and Jonathan Lavine Windsong Trust Beth and Michael Jones S tr ate g i c Le a d I n v e s t o r s ($ 5 m i l li o n+) Investors ($ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0+) Bain Capital Community Partnership Amy and Ed Brakeman Ballmer Group Philanthropy Baupost Group Charitable Fund at the Boston CSX Transportation Foundation The Edgerley Family Foundation Julie and Kevin Callaghan The Lovett-Woodsum Family Foundation Diane and Neil Exter PepsiCo Foundation The Goldhirsh Foundation P r i n c i pa l I n v e s t o r s ($ 1 m i ll i o n+) Anonymous (4) The Alter Family The Aramark Charitable Fund AT&T Inc. Bank of America Charitable Foundation Barr Foundation Pamela Lederer and Michael Carmen Eugene and Emily Grant Family Foundation Cori and Brad Meltzer Brooke and Will Muggia The Poses Family Foundation Rapier Family Foundation Rachel and Mark Rohr State Street Foundation Summit Partners Westfield Capital Management John and Elaine Kanas Family Foundation Rosabeth Moss Kanter Mary and Jack Keenan Dianne and Bill Ledingham Carolyn and Jeffrey Leonard Lobeck Taylor Family Foundation Ellie and Philip Loughlin Fred Maynard Medina Family Foundation Gail and David Mixer, The TriMix Foundation Kristin and Stephen Mugford The Neithercut Family The Ortega Family Foundation The Palmer Family Terry and John Petersen C. Gregg and Julie Petersmeyer The Pinkerton Foundation The Piton Foundation Polsinelli Cisco Systems, Inc. Investors ($ 1 0 0 , 0 0 0+) Comcast NBCUniversal Anonymous PTC Stephanie and John Connaughton Kristen and Jim Atwood DeeDee Reilly Deloitte Services, L.L.P. Bain & Company The Rhode Island Foundation The Hall Family Foundation Brenda and Rich Battista Hannah and Joe Robson The Hauptman Family Foundation Teresa Blanca and Javier Juncadella Lesli and Philip Scott Barbara and Amos Hostetter The Brandmeyer Family Foundation Leo M. Shortino Family Foundation HSBC Bank USA, N.A. Richard L. Bready Sobrato Family Foundation Lori and Jen-Hsun Huang Barbara and Bill Burgess Sandy and Tony Tamer George Kaiser Family Foundation Colleen Foster and Chris Canavan Patrick F. Taylor Foundation Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation Constance Elaine and John Chambers Michael Walsh MFS Investment Management® Charina Endowment Fund The Ware Foundation Microsoft Corporation Rhonda and David Cohen Suzanne and Tom Werner Marion and David Mussafer The Thomas and Patricia Cornish Family Susan and Matthew Weatherbie Celanese Foundation National Grid Foundation The Price Family Foundation Wellington Management Foundation New York Life Foundation Ryan Cotton Mary and Jeff Zients Irene W. and C.B. Pennington Foundation Crown Family Philanthropies Debbie Zinke Anna Reilly and Matthew Cullinan Sally and David Dornaus Jennifer and Sean E. Reilly Family Fund of the The Dream Fund Baton Rouge Area Foundation Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation J.E. Dunn Construction The Eisner Foundation Carol and Stephen Geremia Jeff Shames Becky and Mike Goss TOSA Foundation The Boo Grigsby Foundation TowerBrook Foundation Christa and Jeff Hawkins The campaign includes multi-year gifts pledged during the campaign (May 15, 2012 – June 30, 2015) and contributed during the campaign and beyond. 22 CYDCJane Heidel @JaneCYDC "miss jane sit by me! you're my confidence!" A second grader working on ST math #makebetterhappen When I look at the kids corps members work with, I think ‘what if they’re able to graduate high school, go to the right school, and get a job?’ I think about how different their lives would be if they don’t graduate. and that to me is so exciting – that you can transform someone’s life for the better. CHAMPION PROFILE ANA MARI ORTEGA City Year Miami Board Member | National Vice-Chair, Red Jacket Society Since City Year came to Miami in 2008, corps members have reached over 225,000 students, serving more than one million hours in Miami’s highest-need schools. Much of their focus has been on literacy programs and support for English language learners, who represent 21% of the public school population in Miami. Ana Mari Ortega, a City Year champion and lifelong Miami resident, is passionate about this work. “Spanish speakers can get by easily in Miami, without ever learning English; all of life’s necessities – the grocery store, restaurants, a doctor’s visit – can be conducted in Spanish. But, not knowing English can be really limiting in terms of jobs and opportunities.” Education has always been a priority for Ana Mari and her family. Her parents were born in Cuba, but left the island as infants for Puerto Rico during the Cuban Revolution. Both families eventually immigrated to Miami, whose unprecedented growth at the time led to its being nicknamed the “Magic City.” There, the Ortega family established Sazón Goya, a Goya subsidiary that produces popular Latino-flavored seasonings. Ana Mari is continuing the family’s entrepreneurial tradition; after college, she became a fashion designer and established 24 Ana Mari Ortega, her own handbag and jewelry line, based in Miami. Ana Mari gives to City Year Miami and other organizations involved with community building and children, including Habitat for Humanity, through her family’s foundation – the Ortega Family Foundation – which also gives generous scholarships to Miami-area high school students. In addition to serving on the City Year Miami Board, Ana Mari is Vice Chair of the Red Jacket Society, City Year's national major gifts program. Her most recent gift is a $300,000 challenge grant to City Year Miami, given over three years, to encourage new members. Ana Mari’s conversations with potential supporters now hold even more sway: when she asks for a gift, she also guarantees she’ll match it. It is City Year’s impact on Miami’s next generation that keeps Ana Mari motivated. “When I look at the kids corps members work with, I think, ‘what if they’re able to graduate high school, go to the right school, and get a job?’” she says. “I think about how different their lives would be if they don’t graduate. And that to me is so exciting – that you can transform someone’s life for the better.” RED JACKET SOCIETY For more than 25 years, City Year AmeriCorps members have worn the red jacket with pride. In the communities we serve, the jacket is much more than a uniform. It’s a symbol of idealism, and the power of young people to help students and schools succeed. In FY15, City Year launched the Red Jacket Society – a community of philanthropic individuals and families who believe in the power of the red jacket. Red Jacket Society commitments of $10,000 or more directly make possible the work of City Year AmeriCorps members each and every day. This initial launch included nine pilot sites, and a network-wide launch is planned for FY17. Red Jacket Society Annual Membership Levels Membership Benefits A gift of $10,000 sponsors the service of one City Year AmeriCorps member for an entire year and increased investments enable more AmeriCorps members to serve in high-poverty schools across America. • A City Year Jacket (for members who give, or pledge to give, for three consecutive years) $ 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 a n d a b ov e – P l at i n u m • Personalized updates from a City Year AmeriCorps member $ 5 0 , 0 0 0 – G o ld $ 2 5 , 0 0 0 – S i lv e r • Special invitations to local and national events and conferences • Recognition in national and local City Year materials $10,000 – Bronze • Red Jacket Society digital stories each quarter Red Jacket Society Volunteer Leadership N at i o n a l C h a i r • Exclusive opportunities to visit schools and see City Year AmeriCorps members in action Sandy Edgerley City Year Trustee; Trustee, Edgerley Family Foundation • Volunteer opportunities for members and their families N at i o n a l Vi c e- C h a i r Ana Mari Ortega City Year Miami Red Jacket Society Chair and Board Member; Founder and Creative Director, Ana Mari Ortega, LLC For more information on the Red Jacket Society, contact Allison Graff-Weisner at [email protected] or go to www.redjacketsociety.org. Ana Mari Ortega @ana_mari_ortega Wrapped up our City Year RJS conference with the inspirational Deval Patrick and a Q&A with David Gergen. It was a dream day for a CNN junkie like me. I'm thrilled to be serving as a volunteer leader with an organization that is actually making a difference in the lives of students across the country. #cityyear #makebetterhappen 25 INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILY FOUNDATIONS We are grateful to the following individuals and family foundations for their contributions to City Year (July 1, 2014 - June 30, 2015). $ 1 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0+ Anonymous Ballmer Group Philanthropy Einhorn Family Charitable Trust Jeannie and Jonathan Lavine $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 - 9 9 9,9 9 9 Anonymous The Edgerley Family Foundation The Hauptman Family Foundation The Lovett-Woodsum Family Foundation Anna Reilly and Matthew Cullinan Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation TOSA Foundation David and Julia Uihlein Charitable Foundation The Walton Family Foundation Michael Ward Foundation $ 2 5 0 , 0 0 0 - $ 49 9,9 9 9 Anonymous The Alter Family Richard L. Bready George Kaiser Family Foundation Marion and David Mussafer Rapier Family Foundation $ 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 - $ 2 49,9 9 9 Anonymous Amy and Ed Brakeman Constance Elaine and John Chambers Compulink Business Systems/ Link Wilson Crown Family Philanthropies Diane and Neil Exter Eugene and Emily Grant Family Foundation The Helmerich Trust The Horning Family Foundation Jacobson Family Foundation John and Elaine Kanas Family Foundation Pamela Lederer and Michael Carmen Lobeck Taylor Family Foundation Gail and David Mixer, The TriMix Foundation Kristin and Stephen Mugford Jennifer and Sean E. Reilly Family Fund of the Baton Rouge Area Foundation 26 Jeff Shames Debbie Zinke $ 5 0 , 0 0 0 - $ 9 9,9 9 9 Anonymous (2) Louis and Anne Abrons Foundation Inc. Abt Family Charitable Foundation Himan Brown Charitable Trust Julie and Kevin Callaghan Rhonda and David Cohen Stephanie and John Connaughton The Crown Goodman Family Colleen Foster and Chris Canavan The Char and Chuck Fowler Family Foundation The Goldhirsh Foundation Becky and Mike Goss The Floyd Udell Jones Family Foundation The Kaplen Brothers Fund Brooke and Will Muggia Harvey E. Najim Family Foundation The Neithercut Family The Ortega Family Foundation The Dianne T. and Charles E. Rice Family Foundation Hannah and Joe Robson Rosenthal Family Foundation Leo M. Shortino Family Foundation Diana Davis Spencer Foundation Sandy and Tony Tamer David V. Uihlein Sr. Foundation Ware Family Foundation Alan and Elaine Weiler The Anne and Henry Zarrow Foundation Mary and Jeff Zients $ 2 5 , 0 0 0 - $ 49,9 9 9 Anthony R. Abraham Foundation Inc. Kristen and Jim Atwood John and Anne Baker Brenda and Rich Battista Jessica and Kenneth Blume Louis L. Borick Foundation Holly and David Bruce Barbara and Bill Burgess David and Barbara Caplan John and Letitia Carter Gary and Nancy Chartrand Bertram and Barbara Cohn Ron Conway Coretz Family Foundation The Thomas and Patricia Cornish Family Foundation Ryan Cotton Victoria and David Croll Fred Darragh Foundation Kent and Elizabeth Dauten Holly Davidson and Gregory Nagy Christopher and Theresa Dolloff Sally and David Dornaus DuBow Family Foundation Daniel M. and Cynthia G. Edelman Corinne and Tim Ferguson The Fernandez Pave the Way Foundation Finnegan Family Foundation Cynthia and John Fish Ellen Fitzsimmons and Gregg Rogowski Laura Fox and Bennet Van de Bunt Jeffrey Gates Carol and Stephen Geremia Greehey Family Foundation The Marc Haas Foundation Steve and Diane Halverson Christa and Jeff Hawkins The Higley Fund Robert and Margaret Hill Julie and Jordan Hitch Melanie and Stephen Hoffmeister Barbara and Amos Hostetter, Jr. Elizabeth Bixby Janeway Foundation Esther John and Aart de Geus Beth and Michael Jones Kelben Foundation Casey and Donna Keller Chris Kelly and Jennifer Carrico Patti and Jonathan Kraft Dianne and Bill Ledingham Carolyn and Jeffrey Leonard Joseph and Vera Long Foundation Chris and Melody Malachowsky Lisa Mancini and Peter Whitehouse Lisa and Robert Markey Seth Meisel and Anna Kovner Cori and Brad Meltzer Shyamli and Robert Milam Roberta and Colin Moore Jane and Keith Nosbusch O'Shea Family Foundation The Palmer Family Hope and Mike Pascucci James and Molly Perry Thomas and Elizabeth Petway Stephen and Deborah Quazzo Enrique Salem Karen and Ben Sherwood Vishal and Vandana Sikka Stacey Snider and Gary Jones Hap and Brooke Stein Robert and Mary Stein Roy and Christine Sturgis Charitable and Educational Trust Nancy and Arn Tellem Michael Walsh J. Wayne Weaver and Delores Barr Wearver Missy and Mike Young Mariann and Andrew Youniss $ 1 0 , 0 0 0 - $ 2 4 ,9 9 9 Anonymous (6) Ewa and Daniel Abraham Pennie and Gary Abramson Andreeff Foundation Michelle and Robert Atchinson Joe and Helaine Banner The William Bannerman Foundation Susan Bazett and Rom Watson Bruce and Teresa Beasley Max and Dale Berger Susan and Samuel Berger Andi and Tom Bernstein Laura and George Bilicic Steve and Marsha Birchard Arthur and Janice Block James and Cathy Bodenstedt The Solomon and Sylvia Bronstein Foundation John and Jacolyn Bucksbaum Family Foundation Marlene Canter Christine and William Carr Sr. Dominic and Gillian Carr Rick and Suzanne Cavender The Chernin Family Foundation Chowdhury Family Foundation Gary and Judy Clare Lee and Priscilla Cockerell Evan Cohen The Carol and James Collins Foundation Teresa Cooper and Jay Hamilton Juan Correa Stephen Cucchiaro Dana and Stuart Davies Vicki and Jonathan DeSimone Suzy and Sean Doherty Jim Dolphin Nancy and Brad Drummond Beth and Gerard du Toit Holly and Edmond Eger III Barbara and Michael Eisenson ELMS Foundation Nancy and David Farber JE Fehsenfeld Family Foundation Nina and David Fialkow Lauren and Phillip Fisher CJ and Heather Fitzgerald Valerie and Mark Friedman Simon Fuller, XIX Entertainment Mark and Jody Furlong Jeff and Jana Galt Eric and Susan Ganz Robert W. and Ann Gillespie John and Kate Gilligan Dit and Mark Goldberg Goldring Family Foundation Jennifer Granholm and Daniel Mulhern Mindy and Jonathan Gray Beth and Lawrence Greenberg Robert Greenblatt Doug and Ann Grissom Lisa and Glenn Gritzner Sandy Grossman The Thomas and Christina Grusecki Foundation Kara and James Gruver Al and Thea Guido Shreyas Gupta and Dianne McKeever The John R. and Ruth W. Gurtler Foundation Inc. Pancho and Kelly Hall Suzanne and David Hamm Alan and Bari Harlam Jessica and Matthew Harris David Hathaway Terence Hayes Anne Helgen and Michael Gilligan Regina Hitchery Roger and Stephanie Hochschild Lynne and Joe Horning Deke and Lori Hunter IF Hummingbird Foundation, Inc. Robert Iger and Willow Bay Ilene and Richard Jacobs Nancy Jacobson and Mark Penn Rebecca Jacoby Janice and Ralph James The Janning Family Foundation Janice and John Jester Rick Justice Dawn and Roger Kafker Rosabeth Moss Kanter Danialle and Peter Karmanos Mary and Jack Keenan Rosalind and Michael Keiser Pamela and Arthur Kelleher David Kenney The Patricia Kind Family Foundation Harold J. and Ruth Kingsberg Christopher Kiple Mary Beth and Adam Kirsch Edith and Jules Klein Fund The Robert P. and Arlene R. Kogod Family Foundation Kim Koopersmith and Bill Borner Kelly and Dennis Kramer Ronald Krancer Jeremy and Niccole Kroll Lynn and Jules Kroll Family Foundation Charles Lamar Family Foundation Lisa and Stephen Lebovitz Tom and Diana Lewis Fund Edward F. Limato Foundation The Christian R. and Mary F. Lindback Foundation Sue and Mike Lock Shelly London and Larry Kanter Ellie and Philip Loughlin Jean Maier and Edward Inderrieden Roy March Kristin and Paul Marcus Fred Maynard Shawn Buxton Jorge Salgueiro Florence and Alan Salisbury Lesa Scott and Philip Jackson Charles Seelig Molly Shannon Howard and Sylvia Shore The Siemer Family Foundation Vincent and Shannon Signorello Gerald Silk Kelly Sills Julius and Denise Sinkevicius Christine and Robert Small Jeffrey and Nora Smith Gary and Martha Solomon Beth and Tom Sorbo Fred and Winnie Spar Kerri St. Jean Dale Stafford @ShawnBux 3rd quarter grades just came out! One of my students improved from a D to a B and my day has been made! #makebetterhappen Sarah Maynard Mays Family Foundation Josh and Alex McCall Katie McGrath and J.J. Abrams Robert and Elisabeth McGregor Luis and Layni Mercado Ashley and Marc Merrill The Mesdag Family Foundation Lowell Milken Family Foundation Sarah and Jeremy Milken Matthew Miller Heather Monahan The Harry C. Moores Foundation Guillaume Morin Michael Morton Stephanie B. Mudick Oscar and Cathy Muñoz Neyeska and Steve Mut Linda and Dennis Myers Elin and Larry Neiterman Ruth Nelson Jon Neuhaus Matthew and Meghan Norton Robert and Diane O'Brien Shawn O'Connor James O'Donnell The Genevieve and Ward Orsinger Foundation Marsha and Alan Paller C. Gregg and Julie Petersmeyer The Pickard Family Fund Randall and Cynthia Pond Pritzker Traubert Family Foundation The Reilly Family Foundation Winifred and Kevin P. Reilly, Jr. Fund Dani Reiss Ressler Family Foundation Anne and J. Christopher Reyes Clare and Gerard Richer Pamela Rosekrans Gwenn and David Rosener Peter and Lee Ann Rummell Rohini and Ravinder Sakhuja William P. and Cora L. Sterling Sandra and Robert Taylor Laurie Tisch The Trafton Foundation Robin and Perry Traquina The Trustey Family Glen and Trish Tullman Family Foundation Charles and Rachel Uihlein Leslie and Frank van Veenendaal Shoshana and Kevin Vernick Terry and Robert Wadsworth Gail and Lois Warden Travis Warren Susan and Matthew Weatherbie Louise and David Weinberg Jeffrey Weissglass and Jeannie Affelder Brook and Kevin Westcott Tona and Robert White Wiener Family Future Foundation Matt and Jody Wilhelm Tae Yoo Otto H. York Foundation $ 5 , 0 0 0 - $ 9,9 9 9 Achieving America Family Foundation Apex Foundation Kulvinder and Romina Ahuja Tracy and Steven Angeli Astor Street Foundation Nicole Avant and Ted Sarandos Barton Family Foundation Frank and Kathy Baxter The Bell Family Foundation Brian Berger Dana and Jim Bernhard Carol Lavin Bernick Family Foundation Putu Blanco David and Allison Blitzer Andra and Steven Bolotin Peter Bowler Deborah and Gabriel Brener Lynn and John Brennan Bobbe J. and Jonathan J. Bridge Diane Buhl and Mark Polebaum Frank Buono Michael Camuñez Kathleen and Robert Carniaux Debbie and Lee Carswell Larry and Juana Carter John and Melissa Ceriale Foundation Ronnie and Reed Chisholm Joseph and Blair Christie Katie Clune Jeff Coburn Dennis and Amy Connolly Gerald and Elizabeth Connolly William and Mary Copeland Matthew and Cherie Cross Thomas Cullen Gay and Barry Curtiss-Lusher John and Elizabeth Cusack William Daley and Bernadette Keller Guillermo and Gema Diaz Deanna and Anthony DiNovi The Roy and Patricia Disney Family Foundation Kay and J. Anthony Downs Dunspaugh-Dalton Foundation, Inc. Lori Dutton Fredrik and Danielle Eliasson Quinn and Bryan Ezralow Lizanne Falsetto Julie Farkas and Seth Goldman Caryn Feinberg Susanna Felleman and Erik Feig Alex Fernandez Giselle Fernandez The Finlay Foundation Frank Hadley Ginn and Cornelia Root Ginn Charitable Trust Furlong Family Foundation Luis Gazitua Kristi and Bill Geary The George Family Foundation Jennifer Glassman Anne and Brad Globe Julie and Rolf Goetze Jessica Greenfield and Paul Hummel Donna and Steve Hackley Kerry Hall Laura Hamm Paul Hanneman Loretta and Blake Harnick Wilder and Natalie Harvard Bill Heffron Rose Marie and John L. Hendry, III Wes Heppler Thomas and Susan Hilb David Hiller David Hobbs Peter and Roberta Hong Aaron and Katherine Hood Allison Horne and Peter Riehl Jennifer A. Wells and Sally A. Hulsman Jennifer and Pat Johnson Gregory Jones Vikas and Priyanka Kamran Melanie and Josh Kaplan Francine and John Katsoudas Leah and John Ketcham 27 City Year LA Clinton Eagles @cylaclintoneagles After-school is the perfect time to get in some extra reading. We encourage our students to all bring books and to read at a higher grade level so that they can excel in their English classes. #makechangemonday #cyla #makebetterhappen Gregory Kingsbury Kathryn and Luke Kissam Melissa and Scott Klein Andrew & Julie Klingenstein Family Fund Abby and David Kohl Kyle and Lara Krpata George and Teresa Lawrence Lynn Harris Leshem and Matti Leshem Serena and Shawn Levy David Lincoln and Melissa Morris Donna and Jack Little Susan Littlefield and Martin Roper Zhen Liu Nancy Lotane Karen Keating Mara and Neil Mara Elaine and Charles Mangum Sharon Marcil and Tom Monahan James Martin Sallie Mason Sharon M. Matthews and James R. Tabasz Robert McCall McCombs Foundation Prakash Mehta Alan and Amy Meltzer Family Foundation George and Lois Meng Paul Merges Gregory and EJ Milken Foundation Hillary and Lance Milken Rick Miller Hannah Minghella and Mitchell Larson David Miniat Kimberley and David Monasterio Gary and Michelle Moore 28 Mario Murgado Vivian Myers Allyce Najimy and Smitty Pignatelli Nancy and Bruce Newberg Virginia and John Noland Lynne O'Brien Jim O'Gorman and Alberto Duarte Sissi and Gerard O'Reilly E.J. and Marjory B. Ourso Family Foundation Edzard Overbeek and Melissa El-Miligy Robert Pahlavan and Daria Natan Carmen Valle Patel Alan Patzik Anne and Steve Peacher Mary Beth and Robert Persons Ana Pinczuk and Shams Vaziri Joseph and Lynn Pinto Kenneth Porrello Denny Marie Post and Patrick Collins Edith M. Pricolo Donald R. Proctor Prough Berti Trust Julie Quinn Erik and Ranesh Ramanathan Rena Hozore Reiss and Steve Reiss Resnick Family Foundation Tony Ressler and Jami Gertz Sarah Robarts and Bob Ruth Charles and Paige Robbins Beth and Michael Roberts Rene A. Rodriguez and Rossana S. Morales John W. Rogers, Jr. Shannon and Michael Rotenberg May and Samuel Rudin Family Foundation, Inc. Kristen and Jim Saranteas Leigh and Jeff Schwartz Melissa Schwartz and Shane O'Brien Ridley Scott Mike Scudder Robert Scudiero Stacie and David Shaheen Udaya Shankar Lisa and Hal Shapiro Scott and Carin Sharp Theresa and Kashif Sheikh Liz and Brian Shortsleeve Jacqueline Simkin Douglas Simon Andy Sinha Benjamin Snow Beatrice Snyder Foundation Brian and Johanna Snyder Edward and Binh-Minh Sobol Ron and Kay Soukup John and LaVerne Sprouls Stamps Family Charitable Foundation, Inc. Kerri Strike Patricia and Tom Sugrue Dorothy and Scott Sumption Sun Shine On You Foundation Kerry and Brendan Swords Joyce and Steve Tadler Martha Tate Carol and Lee Tesconi Liz and Don Thompson Topol Family Fund Sandy and Kevin Tsujihara Lisa Tung and Spencer Glendon Urbanek Family Foundation Daniel Valerio Sara Van Arsdel Lee and Cynthia Vance Foundation Suzanne and Andrew Viens Justine and Paul Vogel Frederick Waddell Mohandas and Padmasree Warrior Edward and Dorothy Wehmer Dave Welch Suzanne and Tom Werner Jack Whalen Ann-Meg White and Sean Padgett Greg and Sherrie White Christopher Williams Janine and Daisy Williams Jean and Lewis Wolff Timothy Jason Young and Catherine Tsai $ 1 , 0 0 0 - $ 4 ,9 9 9 Anonymous (3) Siobhan Acheson Christine and Reuben Ackerman Tom and Lisa Adamek Family Fund Celiena Adcock Adegboyega and Mozella Ademiluyi Charitable Fund Ivona Adkins Anshu Agrawal and Nitin Motwani Beth and Rudy Aguilar Dawn Aiello and Andy Hackett Mitchell Aiello Maria Aini Cindy Akard Bruce H. and Barbara H. Akers Jason and Katie Albert Phillip Alexander Shannon Alfonso James and Alexandra Moore Allen Katherine Allen Donald Allman Sydney Altman and Bruce Singal Lynne Amerson Frank Amicizia John Ammendola Kathie Andrade and Greg Shea Kyle Angelo Sarathy Annamraju and Seema Gulati Karen and James Ansara Jennifer and Sean Ansberry Chris Anzivino Rebecca Arbogast Dorothy Aring Suzanne Arkle Colleen and Mike Armgardt Gordon Armstrong Cathy Arrendale Ricky Arriola Marie and Michael Ashton Jeremy and Meredith Aston Ava and Cordell Haymon Fund Jaime Avila Sheree Azbill Hilda Bacardi Amy and Matthew Baer Penny Bailer Mario Bailey John Balkcom Jose Banda Michael Bante James Bardinelli John Barker Amy Barnes Katherine Barnes Nicholas Barnes Nancy Barneson and Eric Almquist Christine Barney George Barrett and Debbie Neimeth Morag Barrett Anna and Tom Bartlett Caroline Dixon Bartman David Bates Neil and Kelly Batiancila Gio and Dante Battista Fran and Bob Bayham Carolyn W. and Charles T. Beaird Family Foundation Brian Beattie Susan and Joseph Becher Kathleen Beckman Caroline and Joshua Beer Janelle Beeson Jerry Beigel John and Wanda Beilenson Kellie and Robert Belk Brian Bell Dottie Belletto Chris Bellmare Christi Belz Nancy Benchoff Terry Bender Christine Benero Kathleen and Jeffrey Berardi Leslie and Scott Berg Geoffrey Berger The Bergman Family Foundation Olaf Bergqvist Craig Berkowitch and Barbara Bikoff Fred Berman Charlotte and Joe Berry Brandy Bertram Pamela and Bill Berutti Alison Betty Ragu and Gita Bhargava Bicknell Fund Stefanie Birkmann Sherry Bisaillon Katie Blanco-Crocquet Marcia and Don Blenko Jen Block David Bloom The Blum Family Foundation Nikhil Bodade Gary Bodenstab Charles and Beth Boehrer Robert and Ann Boh Howard Bornstein Colleen Boselli Mallory Boulter Liz Bower Kevin and Lynn Bowman Sara A. Boyd Michael Boyle Danielle Holliday Boysen Rachael Bradley Kirk M. Bradshaw Lucy and Thomas Brady Dwight Bragdon Jennifer and Gregory Brandes Stewart Brase and Sharon Reed Nancy and Doug Bray Erin Brennock Karen Bressler and Scott @Gomez_lroc Epstein Making attendance calls @CYSAwildcats. It’s super Robert and Marlo Brevetti Connie and Nathan Briggs important for students to be in class everyday. Matthew Brill Kelly Brink Jane Brock-Wilson Anne and Michael Brody The Andrea and Charles Lyle Casriel John Crowley Bronfman Philanthropies Susan and David Cassidy Lisa Cunningham Barbara Bronfman Charles and Karen Chaikin Timothy A. Peter A. Brooke Fund at the Steven Champlin Cunningham Boston Foundation Stephen Chaney Gretchen Curry Lisa Brooking and Bennett Davis Mary Chapman The Eugene Curtis and Florence Ann David Brown and Benjamin Perkins Maria and Adam Chase Armstrong Family Foundation Diana Henderson Brown Howard Chatzinoff Le Ann Cyr Karmen Brown Kanush Chaudhary Kathy Dahlman Linda Brown Susan Chen Catherine Daley Mary Rose Brown Sarah Cherry Polly Daly Tyrone Brown Alex Chi and Margaret Jan Reggie Daniel Brad and Denise Brubaker Geoffrey Chick William and Tracy Daugherty Sarah and Colin Bryar Linda and Don Childears Sheila Davidson Carl and Karen Buchholz John W. Childs James Davis Mike and Nancy Buckman Brenda Chilman Jason Davis Brent Bumpers Linda Chin Kristina and Evan Davis Nicole Burchill Patricia Choby Scott Davis Bill and Barbara Burdette Alexander Choquette Manuel De Zarraga Kathleen Burke Clayton Chrisman Mark DeDonato Greg Burkus Patricia and James Cicconi Kristen Deftos Ingrid Burnett Mark and Terri Cirinna Kristin DeKuiper Bladen and Julia Burns Tony Figueroa Cisneros Tom DeLacey Diane Burstein Jeff and Jenn Clark Sarah Denby Rupert Burtan David Clarke Alexandra Desbrow Susan Okie Bush Wendy and Christopher Clement Abigail Devaney Busse Family Foundation, Inc. Monty Cleworth Robin and John Devereux Paul and Catherine Buttenwieser Lisa Cloitre Jen and Brian Devlin Betsy Byrne Lisa Cohen and Neil Halin Meredith Jones Dewitt Kate and Bob Byrne Maria and Barry Cohen Mark Dexter and Deborah Cowley Brian Cabrera Matthew Cohen Pamela Diamantis Lara and Greg Caimi Michael Cohen Janice and Tony DiBona Michael L. Caldwell Michael L. Cohen David Dick Len Cali Daniel Cohn Leonard and Lisa Dick Susan and Christopher Callahan Jeffrey and Suzanne Cohodes Ron and Marion Dickel William Calvert Carol Thompson Cole Chris and Lori Didier Karina and David Calvert-Jones Clay Cole Maureen Dieckmann Sabah Camberelen David Colli Barbara Diette Dave Cameron Steven Collins Helen Dietz and David Mimeles Alix and Colin Campbell Tammie Collins Sebastian DiGrande Bruce and Kathi Campbell Phyllis and Bob Comeau John Dillard JC Cangilla and Amy Tan Pamela and Cesar Conde Bradford and Kim Dimeo Holly Cannon and John Guttmann Maria and Gregg Congleton Itai Dinour Michael Cantor Elizabeth Conklyn Lee Dobkin and Deborah Kuhn Abby and Andrew Capalbo Michael Connolly David Doebler Kenneth and Debra Caplan John Connor Jeff Dolan Kathy and Joe Capraro Amy Contreras Barry and Carol Dolich Michael and Susan Caraviello Karen and Brian Conway Mario Donato Debra and Andrew Carlino Julia E. Cooney Roger Donoghue Dana Carlos Scott Copas Gary Douglas Andrea and Eric Carlson Gerald Cope Sandhya Douglas Anne and Gerald Carlson Ethan Corey Carol Downs and Charlie Rose Ian Carnathan Stacey Cornforth James Doyle Jeffrey Carp Joe Corrado Stephen Dragich Joey and Dina Carr James and Sandra Corry Nikki and Steve Drake Vince Carrodeguas Cuan Coulter Nancy Duarte Bronwen and J. 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Shireen Kapadia Ted and Wendy Kapnek David Kappos and Leslie Kimball Michael Karlin Nitin Karnani James Karr Jamie Katz Joan and Michael Kearl Karen and Bob Keenan Katie Keller Henry Kelley Henry Latimer Maria Barrs Kemp Amanda Kennedy Liam Kennedy John and Susan Kerr Bobby Kessling Colleen and Frank Kettle Harlan and Vanessa Kickhoefer Peter Kidder Stephen Kidder and Judith Malone Michelle Kilkenney Erin King Kelly Kingsbury and Ryan Roskilly Amy Kingswell and Oliver Brew John Kitchens Paula and Larry Klane Laura Alter Klapman and Howard Klapman Donna and Russell Klein Matias Klein Bill and Margaret Klesse Joshua A. 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Landever and Keely O'Bryan William and Beth Landman Jesse and Perry Lane Edward Laney Christine and Eric Lange Sims Lansing Matt Lapides Keri Larkin and Brian Vollmer Eileen Lash Evie and Alfred Lau Cindy and Seth Lawry Ben Leahy Claire LeBlanc Gordon and Teri LeBlanc Family Fund David LeDuc Helen Lee Jessica Lee Matt and Jean Lee Christopher Leich Ellen and Bruce Leicher Peggy and Kevin Leimkuhler JoAnne and Martin Leinwand Jon Leisinger Rob Lester Daniel LeVan Susan and Jonathan Levine Andrea Levitt and Antoine Hatoun Abby Levy Brian Levy Scott Levy Jack Lew and Ruth Schwartz John Lewis Michael V. Lewis Patricia and Randall Lewis Thomas Lewis Jessica and David Lieberman John and Pat Lile Christina Lin and Phillip Da Silva Per Linden Daniel E. Little and Bernadette Lintz Tom and Catherine Livingston Lita and Bob Llaneta Lloyd & Short Half Century Fund Lisa and Eran Lobel Phyllis Lockett Jared Loftus Bryan Long Karen and Mike Long Jorge Luis Lopez John and Carolyn Lord Megan and Blue Loupe Susan and Lew Love Alyssa and Nick Lovegrove Peter Lucke Mark and Betsy Luger Jacqueline Lundquist and Richard Celeste Alessandro Luongo Bianca Lynch Susan and Richard Lynch Jason Mackenzie Scott and Jennifer Mackesy Greg and Christy MacMillin Kathy MacNaughton Alan Magdovitz Shoreen Maghame and Philip Paccione Joseph Mahady Rakesh and Tina Mahajan Majic Family Fund Susan Malloy Alexander Maltas David Manfredi Michael Mann Richard Manoloff Deborah Manus Charlotte Mao and Michael Brown Theresa Mao Charitable Foundation Seth and Jyothi Marbin Sheila and Ron Marcelo Claude and Joan Marchessault Anne and Paul Marcus David and Melina Marcus Ruth Marcus and Jon Leibowitz Lauren Marder and Kim Austin Jim Margolis Randy and Molly Markey Mike and Nancy Marsiglia Andrea and Rashaun Martin Rocco Martino Michael Masdea Nicolas Massard Michael and Angeline Materna Lisa Matthews Dave and Mary Mattson Jennifer Richter Maurer Miriam May and Shaye Cohen Patricia May Jennifer and Jason Mayer Leslie Mayer and Allan Kalish Stacy Mays Edith McAllister Janene McCabe Annemarie and James McCaig Todd Andrew McCarthy Courtney and Steven McCarthy Maureen McCarthy Nancy and Dave McCaughey Tiverton and Austin McClintock Sean McDevitt John McDonough Justin and Claire McEvily Hugh McIntosh John McKay Kathy and Michael McKim John and Carol McKinnon Linda and Andrew McLane The McMains Family Fund Mary McManus John McNichols Meredith and Matthew McPherron Michele Meadows Medina Family Foundation Nadeem Meghji Nisha Mehling Marissa Melnick Robert Menkes Mark Merritt and Lorena Barrientos Amanda Merz Marla and Brett Messing Carl and Linda Metzger Mark Meulman Dan Meyer Robert and Debbie Michalski The Michelson Foundation David Miller John Miller Libby and Steve Miller Michael and Janice Miller Wendy and Eric Miller Juli Miller-Robinson Ann Milner Carol Minkin and Dorothy Halperin Martha Minow Pedro Mirabal Sam and Becky Misuraca Michael Mockus Stephen Moeller Deno and Beth Mokas Carmen Monks Susan and John Montgomery Melissa Montgomery-Fitzsimmons Paul Montrone Adrienne and Jim Moore The Morgan Family Foundation Kevin Morin Matthew Morin John and Julie Mork Jolie Mosier Moyse Family Foundation Andrew Mudra and Melissa Studzinski Charles and Sherry Muller Laura Munilla Mary Beth Murphy David Murray Peggy Mussafer Kristen Mustad Janet and Milt Mutchnick Julie and Michael Myers Nelly Myers Susan Myers Susan Napier and Alex Berger David and Sabina Nathanson Kate Neave and David Bechhofer William Neuenfeldt Dan Newell David Newman Fong Ng Mark Nickson Margaret Niel Pawn Nitichan and Paul McNamara Kimberly Noble Susan Nokes Robyn Leuthe Norris and Dean Norris Chris and Katherine Norton Deborah Norton Amy Null Amanda O'Connor Barbara O'Connor Jack O'Connor Diane and Edwin O'Dell Barbara O'Dwyer Bob and Lisa O'Malley Kim Ogden and Francis Huntowski Tamara Olsen Bryan Olson Carrie Webb Olson Shelby Olson and Matthew Morris Dan and Karyn O'Neil Rusty Orben William O'Reilly Margaret and Todd Orenstein Gary Orren Gil Ortega Christopher Osgood Casey and Stephen Owen Robin and Jonathan Painter Leslie Palmer Jennifer Palumbo Bob Pan Nicolle Pangis Art Papas Kristy and Mike Papay Anthony Papetti Christopher and MaryLynne Pappano Jill and Thomas Pappas Susan and Steven Paris Jane Park and Burton Davis Ann Parker Hutch Parker Lana Parrilla and Alfredo DiBlasio Gary Parsons Gaetano Pasquino Neville Patel Susan Patel and Neerav Shah Josh Paul Tim Pebworth City Year MIA Pine Villa Elem @cymia_pinevilla "a good teacher can inspire hope, ignite the imagination, and instill a love of learning." #AmeriCorpsWeek #AmeriCorpsWorks #WeAreAmeriCorps #makebetterhappen Gregory and Patricia Penske Carolyn Perelmuter Raymond Perez Calvin and Pamela Peters Terry and John Petersen Joseph Petrone Raj and Sujata Pherwani Elizabeth Phibbs John Phillips Jane Phipps Tammy Piacente Dianna Piccolo Karen and Thomas Pickette Wendy Piecka Doug Pinciaro Debra Pipines John and Meena Pisan Karen Pitcher Andrew Pizza Jordan and Jarrad Plante Andy Plews Laura and Jay Poche Dorian Polhemus Natalie Ponte Adam Portnoy Linda and Mark Posner Michael Powell William Power David Powers Melissa Pozniak Lara Price Suzanne Priebatsch Stan Prince Othon Prounis Arvind Velu Sinha Purva 31 Michael Quinlan Robert Quinn Julie Raab Matthew Rachleff The Raffio Family Charitable Fund Andrew Rainer Richard A. Ralston Wendy Ralston Randy Randleman Kristienne and Todd Rassiger James and Judy Rauh Mike Ravicz James Ray Pace Reagan Ian Reasor Michelle and Doug Reeb Sally Reid and John Sigel Nick and Jamie Renwick Christine Reynolds Christopher Rich Loretta Richard Cynthea and Thomas Riesenberg Joseph Rigby Chris Rile Pat Riley, Jr. Reggie Riley John Riquelme Sarah Ritchey Joan Roache Elizabeth Roaldsen Brett Robbins Deborah and Joseph Robbins Cynthe Roberson Sarah E. Roberson David Roberts Maurice Roberts Roger and Ariel Roberts Megyn and Patrick Robertson Kathleen Rockey Rafael Rodon Haley Rodriguez Suzanne Roeder Bridget Rogers Brittany and Jonathan Rogers Caroline Rogers Jan Roller and David Abbott Etta and Mark Rosen Aimee and Mark Rosenbaum Marcia and Jim Rosenheim Stephen and Sandy Rosenthal Jon and Susan Rotenstreich Alan and Sara Roth Dionne Rousseau and John Pojman Larry Rowe Samantha Rowe Len Rozek Tim and Judy Rudderow Foundation, Inc. Christine and Kevin Ruddy Guy Ruffin Christyle Russell Edward and Sally Rust David and Liza Sadoff Randy and Kate Safford Luly and Maurice Samuels Richard and Annie Samuels Melissa and Jimmy Sanchez Ryann and Bradley Sanchez Marisa Sandler Richard and Ellen Sandler Family Foundation Richard and Jeanne Saunders 32 Laurie and Hank Saurage The Matt & Catherine Saurage Fund Carolyn and Paul Sax John Schindler Beth and Eric Schlager Nancy M. 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Sullivan Foundation Robin and Kenneth Svendsen Matt Swain Beth and Brian Swanson Meghan and Jeff Swenson Kim Syman and Jonathan Lyon Tom Synhorst Cara Tackett Cathy Taft Edward Tam Harold and Nicki Tanner Geri and Mark Tarini John Tarleton Andrea Tarr Bruce and Laurie Taylor Tricia Taylor Brenda and Tommy Teepell The Tenenbaum Foundation Judy K. Tenenbaum Grant and Rebecca Tennille William Terlato Joe and Angela Terry Tony and Monica Terry Sangita and Nick Thakore Joan Thalheimer Anne and Andy Thomas Heather Thomas and Skip Brittenham Newton B. Thomas Family Fund/ Newtron Group Fund Robert Thomas Marianne and Bruce Thompson Scott and Page Thompson Vince and Jacklen Thompson Susan and Samuel Thonis Ely and Ted Thurmond Mary Buckett and Norm Tiedemann Bonnie and Charles Tillen TKHTSS Family Fund Jessica Toal Stephen Tomlinson Nancy and Michael Tooke Rodolfo and Lydia Touzet Alison Towle Barbara J. 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Jeronica Anderson @jeronicajma "One of my favorite things about @CityYear is how they cheer the school up in the mornings" – student #makebetterhappen #powergreetingsuccess quality after-school programs are crucial for children growing up in under-served communities. – Heather Nesle President of the New York Life Foundation NATIONAL STRATEGIC PARTNER PROFILE NEW YORK LIFE FOUNDATION After-School Sponsor To Heather Nesle, the soul of New York Life is what makes the 170-year-old company special, and underlies its deep commitment to local communities across the country where it does business. Education has long been a critical priority for the insurance and investment company. When the opportunity arose to support City Year’s after-school programs nationwide, Heather, President of the New York Life Foundation, spearheaded a multi-year grant of $2.55 million starting in 2015. The grant will help City Year standardize and scale its after-school program over the next three years in its partner middle schools. Safeguarding educational outcomes for students is a critical priority for the New York Life Foundation. The network of education programs that New York Life sponsors helped them zero in on middle school as a critical time in students’ academic careers. Heather explains, “One of the organizations said, ‘Look, programs that provide academic and college prep support in high school are important, but by the time these kids get to high school, it’s often too late for them.’ This rang true with us and what we see across our partner organizations.” City Year is working with middle schools across its national network to build a menu of effective after- 34 school programming. After testing the impact of different curricula, the results will be evaluated by an independent third party. When added to current City Year after-school efforts, the resulting programming will have the potential to impact 150,000 students across the country. “Quality after-school programs are crucial for children growing up in under-served communities,” Heather maintains. “When you get to middle school, it’s tricky – you’re too old for a babysitter, but too young to make wise decisions regarding time-management. Kids growing up in more privileged communities have access to a variety of activities, but without those resources, after-school and summer can be a really tough time.” The grant expands New York Life’s collaboration with City Year from its local team sponsorship in New York to making a national impact on the entire City Year network and beyond. Reflecting on how all the groups they sponsor benefit from one another’s success, Heather described the shared learning as “incredibly powerful,” and said that it “helps to ensure that we and our partners are as effective as possible in our work to improve educational outcomes for all students.” NATIONAL CORPORATE PARTNERS Aramark and City Year share a mutual dedication to enriching and nourishing communities by engaging employees in high impact volunteer service. City Year is proud to support Aramark Building Community, the company’s signature global philanthropic and volunteer program. As a global provider of award-winning services in food, facilities management and uniforms, Aramark’s sponsorship of City Year Summer Academy’s Civic Engagement track and City Year's Civic Engagement Center of Expertise helps City Year provide a high-quality volunteer experience and innovative solutions for corporate volunteerism and community impact. As City Year’s Official Apparel Partner, Aramark literally has City Year’s back, providing uniform apparel to our corps members and staff serving in schools and communities. AT&T and City Year share the belief that every student deserves opportunities to reach his or her full potential. AT&T provides significant funding for City Year’s implementation of its Whole School Whole Child model and engages its employees to mentor students and City Year AmeriCorps members in multiple markets. AT&T is also a major supporter of Diplomas Now, an innovative collaboration designed to help turn around the nation’s most challenged schools and focused on meeting the holistic needs of students by combining three evidence-based models proven to help students and schools succeed. This support is part of AT&T Aspire, the company’s signature education initiative focused on school success and career readiness. Bain Capital serves as City Year’s National Gala Sponsor, supporting each of City Year’s US sites and three international sites, in Birmingham and London in the United Kingdom, and in Johannesburg in South Africa, marking the first time a City Year sponsor has contributed directly to every site. In addition to this support, the firm also served as Presenting Sponsor of City Year Boston’s Red Jacket Weekend, celebrating City Year alumni, partners, family and friends. Bain Capital and Bain Capital people have been essential to City Year’s development, growth and success for more than two decades, helping City Year grow to 27 US cities, with a corps of 3,000+ members, as well as to Johannesburg and the United Kingdom. Nearly 300 members of Bain Capital have participated in volunteer service days, given their expertise as advisers and board members, contributed generously to the organization financially, and leveraged their personal and professional networks on behalf of City Year. As City Year’s National Student Leadership Development Sponsor, Bank of America supports programs focused on helping underserved schools students graduate with the education and life skills needed to access post-secondary educational opportunities. Bank of America has supported City Year and young people who make positive change in their schools and communities for more than 25 years. In 1988, predecessor institution Bank of Boston became a founding sponsor of City Year, Inc. and was the first company in the nation to sponsor a City Year team. Bank of America played a pivotal role in the purchase and development of City Year’s national headquarters by supporting tax-exempt bond financing and bridge financing for the project. Berhan G @BerhanG_CYCO I love how my students introduce me to their parent. "Mom, this is Ms.G. Remember I told you she helps me with reading." #makebetterhappen 35 Through a commitment to improving the quality of life for people around the world, the Celanese Foundation is supporting City Year to improve the educational outcomes for students. The Celanese Foundation is sponsoring a Dallas AmeriCorps team to make an impact for students by investing their time, resources and talent. The Celanese Foundation leverages the expertise of its employees to support leadership and professional development for City Year AmeriCorps members through mentorship and high impact service projects to help transform schools. The Celanese Foundation also played a key role in engaging local public and private stakeholders to help bring City Year to Dallas. Comcast NBCUniversal is City Year’s Leadership Development and Training Partner. Comcast NBCUniversal supports City Year’s leadership development programs and recognizes the accomplishments of City Year alumni who have continued their dedication to community service through the conferring of the annual Comcast NBCUniversal Alumni Leadership Awards. Comcast NBCUniversal is also City Year’s National Opening Day Sponsor, Presenting Sponsor of City Year’s annual training academy, Sponsor of our Summit, as well as a multi-site team sponsor in 11 cities. Comcast NBCUniversal donates significant communication and broadcasting resources to help City Year raise awareness about its mission and focus areas by reaching more young people across the country through cable and internet. Comcast NBCUniversal’s investment in City Year makes it possible for thousands of corps members to help improve the lives of students while creating sustainable solutions for social change. As City Year’s largest team sponsor, supporting 15 teams of City Year AmeriCorps members across their network, CSX demonstrates a shared commitment to service and the positive role it plays in transforming neighborhoods and communities. CSX partners with City Year’s Care Force® team to engage employees, customers and community members in service days throughout the year. To support Care Force® service days across the country, CSX donated and transports two branded rail containers that bring tools and materials to service events across the country. CSX is also a sponsor of City Year’s National Leadership Summit, Sponsor of the Friends of National Service Awards Event and supports our national and regional recruitment and admissions efforts. As City Year’s National Strategy and Innovation Sponsor, Deloitte helps City Year to innovate and maximize its impact in schools across the country. Deloitte does this by providing pro-bono consulting to address key strategic and operational challenges related to City Year’s model, and by offering the skills and expertise of its employees to City Year AmeriCorps members and staff through a mentorship program and career development workshops. Through board leadership, skillsbased employee volunteerism, and financial resources, Deloitte is supporting City Year’s most innovative programming and helping to maximize our impact in schools in 17 locations. 36 HSBC Bank USA, N.A. is a company with a legacy of providing young people with educational opportunity and, in 2015, celebrated its 150th year anniversary with an additional $150 million donation to partners across the world. Those partnerships included an expanded relationship with City Year that provides critical support to students and supports the implementation of an industry proven process for measuring City Year's effectiveness with students while pinpointing individual instructional needs. Through HSBC Bank USA, N.A.’s support, City Year will be able to more effectively identify new math assessment tools and scale them to all of the cities and school districts in which we serve. HSBC Bank USA, N.A. is also sponsoring teams of City Year AmeriCorps members in four cities – Chicago, Los Angeles, Miami and New York – to deepen support for students in high-need schools. Lastly, HSBC Bank USA, N.A. is engaging its employees in high-impact service projects to help transform schools and offer professional development opportunities for City Year AmeriCorps members. MSFT Silicon Valley @MicrosoftSV #Microsoft Ramps Up Commitment to #SiliconValley Schools with @CityYearSanJose: http://bit.ly/1kbCOwK @CityYear Microsoft has been a long-time partner of City Year, enhancing City Year's IT infrastructure through over $11.5 million in critical in-kind technology support, sponsoring teams of corps members, and providing critical capacity building funds to help City Year develop its math curriculum. Through Microsoft YouthSpark, City Year has been able to expand its math tutoring program to reach nearly 14,000 students. Microsoft also sponsors City Year teams in four schools in Chicago, New York, Seattle and Washington, DC. Microsoft helps City Year reach an unprecedented number of youth in high-poverty schools nationwide The New York Life Foundation is supporting a three-year plan to standardize and scale City Year’s middle school after-school program. As City Year works towards meeting its Long-Term Impact goals, the resulting middle school after-school program will be a key component in City Year’s efforts to keep middle school students across the nation in school. City Year, with New York Life Foundation input, will select up to 24 schools over the course of the three-year grant. In these communities with diverse populations, City Year will update and strengthen its after-school curriculum, provide staff training, and pilot the enhanced after-school program before the full launch of the program. The partnership will result in an after-school program that has the potential to impact an estimated 150,000 middle school students at full scale. PepsiCo and City Year share a deep commitment to education, diversity and inclusion. The collaboration began in 2001 with community service projects that engaged PepsiCo employees in transforming communities across the country, and continued with spreading the City Year message on millions of Pepsi cans around the country. In 2008, the PepsiCo Foundation provided the initial seed funding to support Diplomas Now, and has been the driving force behind the growth and impact of its collaborative school turnaround model in the years since. PepsiCo and the PepsiCo Foundation played a critical role in Diplomas Now being awarded a prestigious federal Department of Education (DOE) Investing in Innovation (i3) grant in 2010, and have helped catalyze the program into a national network of 40 schools in 14 cities, reaching more than 31,000 students each year. Today, PepsiCo’s involvement comes back full circle to the community level, with employees mentoring Diplomas Now students to a brighter future. 37 TEAM SPONSOR PROFILE STAPLES Even though their headquarters are just a few miles apart in greater Boston, it took Twitter to bring Staples and City Year together. “Staples knew how City Year supports students in highpoverty schools but it wasn’t until #makebetterhappen caught our eye that the ‘aha’ moment happened,” said Emily McCann, Staples Senior Manager of Community and Giving. “With our tagline ‘Make More Happen’, it seemed a partnership could make more, and better, happen!” Fast forward to a tour of a City Year partner school. As Emily watched AmeriCorps members in action, a teacher shared that paper is at such a premium she acts as guardian, doling it out as needed. “Here, a ream of paper is a precious resource, worth its weight in gold,” recounted Emily, in amazement. “Down the street, Staples has a store filled with reams and reams of paper. It became instantly clear just how beneficial this partnership could be.” Now a team sponsor, Staples supports 18 AmeriCorps members at the Curley school in Boston. This year 38 they remodeled the in-school space where team members host tutoring sessions and run the after-school program. With months of planning, Staples employees happily pitched in. In addition to bright new paint and extensive storage space, Staples gave red backpacks filled with school supplies to 876 Curley students and resource kits to 60 teachers. CY Booker T. Nationally, Staples delivered its ‘Classroom in a Box’, stuffed full of school supplies, to every City Year site around the country, reaching 262 partner schools and hundreds of teachers. And Staples’ causemarketing efforts were equally successful, generating $125,000 in proceeds for City Year by donating fifteen percent of the face value of all gift card purchases in May. @cybtw Thank you for the awesom e partn e rs h ip @staples #BTW #MakeBetterHappen But for Emily McCann, it all comes back to that ream of paper. “It just seems so simple,” she explains. “We know that, in however small a way, these school supplies are going to have an impact on the City Year AmeriCorps members and their students as they provide necessary tools to get the job done.” TEAM SPONSORS The City Year Team Sponsor Program offers a unique opportunity for partners to engage with City Year AmeriCorps members and schools. A team of approximately ten AmeriCorps members is sponsored by a company or foundation that supports their service in a high-need school and helps City Year achieve tangible results for students. Over 100 companies and foundations sponsor City Year teams in their communities nationwide. Throughout the service year, Team Sponsors join their team(s) of diverse young men and women, who proudly wear their sponsor's logo on their uniform, to participate in high-impact service projects, transform schools and contribute to the individual leadership and professional development of the AmeriCorps members they sponsor. We are grateful to the following team sponsors for their support (July 1, 2014 - June 30, 2015): M u lt i -T e a m S p o n s o r s Alcoa Foundation (2) AT&T (3) Bain & Company (2) Bank of America (4) Comcast NBCUniversal (11) CSX (15) DC Promise Neighborhood Initiative (2) Deloitte Services LLP (4) Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, Inc. (2) JPMorgan Chase (2) Lincoln Financial Foundation (2) MFS Investment Management ® (2) Microsoft (4) National Grid (4) S i n g le T e a m S p o n s o r s The Acacia Group Acosta Sales & Marketing Albemarle Foundation The Alter Group Applied Materials, Inc. Bain Capital Ballard Spahr, L.L.P. BMO Harris Bank Brewers Community Foundation Capital Area United Way Capital One Celanese Foundation Chicago Fire Soccer Club Chicago Sky Chicago Transit Authority Chicago White Sox Charities Cisco Systems Foundation City of Little Rock City Year New Hampshire Alumni Credit Suisse Americas Foundation Darden Restaurants, Inc. Foundation Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center DePuy Synthes Companies of Johnson & Johnson Drinker, Biddle & Reath, L.L.P. Duane Morris Eagles Youth Partnership Entergy Corporation Entergy Louisiana Ernst & Young EverBank Exelon Foundation Farmers Insurance Firstrust Bank Northrop Grumman (2) Rackspace Foundation (3) TowerBrook Foundation (3) United Way for Southeastern Michigan (2) United Way of the National Capital Area (2) Universal Orlando Foundation (2) Walmart (2) Wells Fargo (3) Florida Blue Ford Motor Company Fund Glenmede Harry’s Hasbro Children’s Fund Heart of Arkansas United Way Heart of Florida United Way Heinemann Henry Ford Health System Horning Family Fund HSBC Bank USA, N.A. The Hyatt Hotels Foundation Jacksonville Jaguars JetBlue The Floyd Udell Jones Family Foundation Kaiser Permanente Lamar Advertising Company Lobeck Taylor Family Foundation M&I Foundation, Inc. Robert R. McCormick Foundation Miami Dade County College Miami Dade County Transit Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, L.L.P. New Schools for Baton Rouge Harvey E. Najim Family Foundation NVIDIA OneWest Bank Foundation Irene W. and C.B. Pennington Foundation PricewaterhouseCoopers, L.L.P. PTC RiverStone Resources, L.L.C. Rockwell Automation RPM International Inc. San Francisco Forty Niners Foundation Rebeca @RGomezB88 It's a great feeling walking the halls & hearing "Ms! I brought my grade up from an F to a B!" #makebetterhappen @CityYear @CityYearPhilly SAP Schneider Electric Sea Best ServeDC Sony Corporation of America/Sony Pictures Entertainment Staples, Inc. State Street Foundation Summit Partners Sun Life Financial The Sunoco Foundation SunTrust Foundation Synopsys, Inc. Teva Pharmaceuticals Industries Third Federal Foundation TJX TriMix Foundation Tulsa Area United Way James Tyree Foundation David and Julia Uihlein Charitable Foundation David V. Uihlein Sr. Foundation United Way of Greater Milwaukee & Waukesha County Walt Disney Company Warner Bros. Entertainment Wellington Management Foundation Westfield Capital Management WLRN Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company For more information about the Team Sponsor Program, please contact Kaitlin Sprong at [email protected] 39 CORPORATIONS AND CORPORATE FOUNDATIONS We are grateful to the following corporations and corporate foundations for their support (July 1, 2014 - June 30, 2015). $ 1 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0+ Bain Capital Community Partnership Comcast NBCUniversal CSX Transportation PepsiCo Foundation $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 - $ 9 9 9,9 9 9 The Aramark Charitable Fund AT&T Inc. Bank of America Charitable Foundation Deloitte Services, LLP HSBC Bank USA, N.A. Microsoft Corporation New York Life Foundation Wells Fargo Foundation $ 2 5 0 , 0 0 0 - $ 49 9,9 9 9 Alcoa Foundation Dimension Data JPMorgan Chase & Co. MFS Investment Management® National Grid NVIDIA Corporation Rackspace Foundation TowerBrook Foundation Walmart Foundation $ 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 - $ 2 49,9 9 9 The Acacia Foundation The Alter Group American Express Charitable Fund Applied Materials Foundation Bain & Company Bain Capital Children's Charity Baupost Group Charitable Fund at the Boston Foundation BMO Harris Bank Capital One Bank Celanese Foundation Cisco Systems, Inc. Credit Suisse Americas Foundation Darden Restaurants, Inc. Foundation DIRECTV Drinker, Biddle & Reath, L.L.P. Entergy Corporation EverBank Exelon Foundation Ernst & Young Farmers Insurance Group Florida Blue Foundation Ford Motor Company Fund Harry's 40 Harvard Pilgrim Health Care The Hyatt Hotels Foundation Jacksonville Jaguars JetBlue Airways JPMorgan Chase Foundation Lincoln Financial Foundation New Balance Athletic Shoe, Inc. New Profit, Inc. Northrop Grumman Foundation Northwestern Mutual Foundation OneWest Bank Foundation PricewaterhouseCoopers, L.L.P. Rockwell Automation Samsung San Francisco Forty Niners Foundation Sea Best Seafood Staples, Inc. The Starbucks Foundation Summit Partners Synopsys Outreach Foundation Taco Bell Foundation TEVA Pharmaceuticals Universal Orlando Foundation The Walt Disney Company Warner Bros. Entertainment Wellington Management Foundation Westfield Capital Management Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company $ 5 0 , 0 0 0 - $ 9 9,9 9 9 Acosta Sales & Marketing Company Albemarle Foundation Ballard Spahr, L.L.P. Blanca Commercial Real Estate, Inc The Boeing Company Brewers Community Foundation CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield Denver Post DePuy Synthes Companies of Johnson & Johnson Dow Chemical Company Duane Morris Fidelity Investments Firstrust Bank GCM Grosvenor The Glenmede Trust Company Hasbro Children's Fund H-E-B Grocery Company Infosys JCPenney Kirkland and Ellis Foundation Liberty Mutual Foundation ManpowerGroup Mercedes Benz Financial Services Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, L.L.P. Morgan Stanley THE PLAYERS Championship PTC RiverStone Resources, L.L.C. RPM International, Inc. SAP Schneider Electric Sony Corporation of America/ Sony Pictures Entertainment Sun Life Financial The Sunoco Foundation SunTrust Foundation Third Federal Foundation T-Mobile USA USA Funds Valero Energy Foundation Walt Disney World Resort The Wawa Foundation Weil, Gotshal & Manges, L.L.P. Wintrust Financial Corporation $ 2 5 , 0 0 0 - $ 49,9 9 9 Accenture AEG Akerman, L.L.P. Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, L.L.P. The Amgen Foundation Aon Foundation Bank of Oklahoma Banner & Witcoff, Ltd. Barclays Blue Cross Blue Shield of South Carolina Boston Celtics Shamrock Foundation Burger King Canada Goose CBS Television Network Centerview Partners Chevron Chicago Cubs Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton, L.L.P. Comerica Bank CVS Caremark Charity Classic, Inc. Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center Davis Polk & Wardwell Deluxe Entertainment Services Group, Inc. DreamWorks Animation Eagles Youth Partnership EMC Exxon Mobil Flextronics Florida East Coast Industries, Inc Florida Power & Light Company Foxconn Golden 1 Credit Union Goldman Sachs & Co. HBO Heinemann Honda of America Mfg., Inc. HTC America, Inc. Intel The Jeffrey Company KeyBank Foundation The Kraft Group LBrands Foundation LPL Financial Services McKinsey & Company Moroch Northern Trust O'Melveny & Myers L.L.P. Oracle Pacific Theater Entertainment Corporation People Magazine Pepco Holdings, Inc RealD Revel Consulting Riot Games Ropes & Gray, L.L.P Safeco Insurance Foundation Salesforce Foundation San Jose Sharks Foundation SanDisk Foundation Social Venture Partners Sacramento State Street Global Advisors Suffolk Construction TIAA-CREF The TJX Companies, Inc Transwestern Tupperware Brands Foundation Twentieth Century Fox U.S. Bancorp Foundation US Bank Wipro WME Xerox $ 1 0 , 0 0 0 - $ 2 4 ,9 9 9 Alcatel OneTouch All Star Automotive Group Fund Alliance Data Retail Services Allstate Insurance Company American Financial & Auto Services, Inc. Amica Companies Foundation Apple Vacations ArchPoint Arnold & Porter Aruba Networks Assurant, Inc. BAC Florida Bank Bain Capital, L.L.C./Sankaty Advisors, L.L.C. Baker, Tilly, Virchow, Krause, L.L.P. Bank of New Hampshire BankUnited BDT Capital Partners, LLC Bernstein, Litowitz, Berger & Grossmann, L.L.P. Big Lots, Inc. BJ's Charitable Foundation BlackRock BNSF Railway Bonanza Creek Energy The Boston Consulting Group Bright House Networks, L.L.C. Brocade Brown and Connery, L.L.P. Caliber Collision Centers Calvert Investments CBRE Citigroup, Inc. City National Bank Clark Construction Group, L.L.C. Clifford Chance US, L.L.P Cognizant Collette Foundation Con-way Freight Coolpad Corporate Executive Board Cox Charities Northeast Creative Artists Agency Credit Bureau of Baton Rouge Foundation Crowell and Moring, L.L.P. CTIA Davis, Wright, Tremaine L.L.P. DCI Group Delta Dental of Rhode Island Deutsche Bank Devcon Construction Dewey Square Group Discovery Communications DLA Piper Downstream Development Authority of the Quapaw Tribe DTE Energy Foundation Eastern Bank Electronic Arts, Inc. Enterprise Holdings Foundation Exactuals Fifth Third Bank FirstMerit Bank Forest City Enterprises, Inc. Fowler Foods, Inc. George P. Johnson Experience Marketing The Gillette Company Global Upside GMMB Goldberg & Rosen, P.A. The Graham Company Gravestar Foundation Greenberg Traurig, L.L.P. Greenlight Capital The Harley-Davidson Foundation, Inc. Herbalife Horning Brothers Corporation IMA Foundation IMAX Corporation Independence Blue Cross Ingram-White Castle Foundation Institute of Mental Hygiene Pontoon Solutions The Private Bank The Providence Journal Charitable Legacy Fund Public Strategies Washington Raising Cane's Raymond James Charitable Endowment Fund RealNetworks, Inc. Regal Entertainment Group Reserve Telecommunications Jessica Hernandez @jessicahdz_cylr Sometimes it takes a simple "i believe in you" to change a student's attitude about his education. #makebetterhappen Jack Morton Worldwide Jenner & Block, L.L.P. Jones Day Kasowitz, Benson, Torres & Friedman, L.L.P. Keker & Van Nest, L.L.P. KPMG Lamar Advertising Company Latham & Watkins Lazard Frères & Co. Lear Corporation Legendary Pictures Entertainment Loeb & Loeb L.L.P. Loomis, Sayles & Company, L.P. The Los Angeles Dodgers Foundation Macquarie Group Foundation Macy's Massachusetts Convention Center Authority McDonald's Corporation McLarty Companies Miami HEAT Charitable Fund Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky & Popeo National Cable and Telecommunications Association Nationwide Insurance Nordson Corporation Foundation Nordstrom Northeast Delta Dental NuStar Energy Omnicom Media Group, Inc. The One Fund One Kings Lane Inc. Origlio Beverage Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center Pepper Hamilton, L.L.P. Perspecta Trust L.L.C. Philadelphia Energy Solutions Philadelphia Insurance Companies Pinnacle Structures, Inc. Rhapsody Roberti+White Russell Investments Safelite Group, Inc. Safra National Bank of New York Schiff Hardin L.L.P. Security Service Federal Credit Union Shangi-La Industries Shutts & Bowen L.L.P. Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, L.L.P. State Farm Insurance State Street Corporation Sterling Fund Management Sutherland, Asbill & Brennan, L.L.P. Target Corporation Tata Consultancy Services TD Charitable Foundation Textron Charitable Trust Time Warner Cable Titan UnitedHealth Group Univeral Orlando Resort UTA Foundation Variety Foundation VOX Global Walden Media/Bristol Bay Productions Wesley K. Clark & Associates Wiley Rein Willis Willkie, Farr & Gallagher, L.L.P. WilmerHale L.L.P. Windhaven Investment Management, Inc. Winston & Strawn Foundation Winston Flowers World Bank Community Connections Fund Zausmer, August & Caldwell P.C. $ 5 , 0 0 0 - $ 9,9 9 9 Anonymous 3 Arts Entertainment AEP Ohio Alaska Airlines AllianceBernstein Allied Barton American Axle & Manufacturing Holdings, Inc. American Tower Corporation Aon Risk Services APCO Worldwide Arkansas Community Foundation Arrow Electronics Artefacto Ash, Anos, Freedman & Logan, L.L.C. Baird Foundation Baldwin & Shell Construction Bank of the Ozarks Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Barack, Ferrazzano, Kirschbaum & Nagelberg L.L.P. Baxter International, Inc. BBA Aviation USA BBVA Compass Foundation Becton, Dickinson & Company Bernstein Management Booz Allen Hamilton BR Alexander & Co., Inc. Bracewell and Giuliani L.L.P. Burlington Coat Factory Cadian Capital Management Capital Group Co. Charitable Foundation The Celtic Group Charter Manufacturing Company Foundation Chicago Bulls Chicago White Sox Charities Chickie's & Pete's Chuhak & Tecson P.C. Cinemark Theatres Cityside Management Corp. Coastal Bridge Co., L.L.C. Colonial Life Cooley L.L.P. CPS Energy Crown Castle Dana Holding Corporation DaVita DDB Chicago Dominion Foundation DPT Laboratories Edison International Energy BBDO Entertainment Software Association EON Office Ericsson Inc. FGMK, L.L.C. First Midwest Bank First National Denver FirstBank GEICO Philanthropic Foundation General Mills Foundation Generation IX Technologies Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher GL Homes of Florida Corporation Gonring, Spahn & Associates, Inc. Goodby, Silverstein & Partners Grange Insurance Company Greenspoon Marder Law Grifols USA Inc. GTECH Corporation Guggenheim Partners Gunderson, Dettmer, Stough, Villeneuve, Franklin & Hachigian For more information about corporate giving, please contact Chris Mann at [email protected]. 41 The Hanover Insurance Company Hansen, Jacobson, Teller, Hoberman, Newman, Warren, Richman, Rush & Kaller L.L.P. HCL America Health Care Service Corporations Heffernan Insurance Brokers Heitman, L.L.C. Hewlett-Packard Hogan Lovells Holliday, Fenoglio, Fowler, L.P. Honigman, Miller, Schwartz & Cohn L.L.P. Horwood, Marcus & Berk Hulu L.L.C. Huntington National Bank ICM Partners Ingredion Incorporated Investors Trust ITG - Independent Technology Group Jack B. Keenan, Inc. Jamie and Lisa Maguire Kaiser Permanente Kinder Morgan Klein Law Group, P.L.L.C. KOHL'S KVS Title, L.L.C. LaSalle Capital The Law Offices of Michael A Capuzzi, P.A. Lawler, Metzger, Keeney & Logan, L.L.C. The Lemoine Company, L.L.C. Levenfeld Pearlstein, L.L.C. Lightstorm Entertainment Inc. The Lincoln Electric Company The Lubrizol Corporation Magellan Corporation Major League Soccer The Mann Law Firm Marc Platt Productions Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. Mayer Brown LLP McGuire Woods MGM Studios, Inc. Miami Dolphins Foundation Milwaukee Bucks Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell Much Shelist Muckleshoot Tribe National Basketball Association NCS Pearson Nelson, Mullins, Riley & Scarborough NetApp Newman's Own Foundation Nextivity Northwestern Memorial Hospital Ogletree Deakins Orlando Health Pacific Coast Building Products Foundation People's United Bank - NH The Peter and Elizabeth C. Tower Foundation Philadelphia Activities Fund Philadelphia's Children First Fund Plante Moran PNC Bank Powell Group Fund Public Consulting Group qualcomm Quicken Loans, Inc. 42 Alex Williams @I_HadADream Principal: "@CityYear is helping my students. the connections are phenomenal." this inspires me everyday. #makebetterhappen #30daysofpurpose Reed Smith REDICO Regions Bank Rubenstein Communications, Inc. Salem Partners, L.L.C. Scott & Kraus, L.L.C. Securitas Security Services SGS Petroleum Service Corporation Shop2Care Foundation Simpson, Thacher, & Bartlett L.L.P. SolomonEdwardsGroup, L.L.C. Southern California Gas Company Starcom USA Stevens & Lee Superior Communications Sutter Health Svoboda, Collins Management L.L.C. TD Bank TDn2K The Timberland Company Toyota TrueCar, Inc. Umpqua Bank United States Telecom Association University of New Hampshire USI Insurance Services, L.L.C. Venable Foundation, Inc. VIZIO VyStar Credit Union Wargo & French, L.L.P. The Warren V. Musser Foundation Waveland Investments Western Oil and Gas JV, Inc. Westgate Resorts Foundation White & Case, L.L.P. Whitney Bank Wilcox Industries, Corp. Wilkinson Barker Knauer, L.L.P. Williams Corporation Willis North America, Inc. Windstream Corporation Young Presidents' Organization, Bel Air Chapter Ziffren, Brittenham, Branca & Fischer ZTE USA $ 1 , 0 0 0 - $ 4 ,9 9 9 4moms Action For Boston Community Development, Inc. Adams and Reese L.L.P. Addo Communications Adesa San Antonio Adobe AEEC L.L.C. AIG Algiers Charter School Association Allegro Realty Advisors Anagnost Investments, Inc. APEX Mortgage Corp APSCO Archdiocese of Miami Aristotle, Inc. Arkansas BlueCross BlueShield Arkansas Democrat-Gazette Arkansas Specialty Orthopaedics Spine Arnold Oil Company of Austin, Inc. The Ashley Group Associated Bank ATA International, Inc. Atlantic Trust Group, L.L.C. Atmos Energy Audi Financial Services Axiom Law Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell, & Berkowitz The Bank of San Antonio Bayview Financial Bedford Ambulatory Surgical Center, L.L.C. Bellwether Community Credit Union Bensinger, Dupont & Associates Bernstein Shur BKD, L.L.P. Blach Construction Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Rhode Island Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Blue Point Capital Partners L.L.C. BMO Harris Bradley Center Bober Markey Fedorovich & Co. Bollinger Shipyards, Inc Boston Private Bank & Trust Company Bowditch & Dewey, L.L.P. Brandmuscle Inc Brooks Rehabilitation Buquet and LeBlanc, Inc. CAA Foundation Calfee, Halter & Griswold, L.L.P. The Campbell Consulting Group Cardinal Health Foundation Carlton Fields Carnival Foundation Catholic Medical Center Central Ohio Transit Authority Century 21 Associates Foundation, Inc. Charity Motors, Inc. Charity Services Centers, P.A. CHI St. Vincent Childs & Halligan, P.A. Christopher B. Burke Engineering, Ltd. CNM L.L.P. Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Northern New England, Inc. Committee To Elect Walt Leger III Contemporary Staffing Solutions The Cozen O'Connor Foundation, Inc. Crain's Communications Crane Group Crist Kolder Associates Cross, Gunter, Witherspoon & Galchus P.C. Culligan Water Conditioning Custom Hardwoods by Brown Inc Customers Bank Davis Graham and Stubbs DBA World Class HR Consulting Delta Dental of Arkansas Devine Millimet & Branch Dollar Bank Foundation Donoghue, Barrett & Singal, P.C. Drexel University The Dunn Foundation E.Byrd & Associates, Inc. Edwards, Wildman, Palmer, L.L.P. EHIM Electric Cooperatives of Arkansas Entravision Communications Evacuteer.org Expocredit Exponent Philanthropy Femwell Finn Partners First Priority Bank First Security Bank First Western Trust FIU Alumni Association The Five Points Association Flour Bakery & Café FM Global Foley & Lardner L.L.P. Freeport McMoRan Friday, Eldredge & Clark Friedlander & Co. Inc. Frisbie Memorial Hospital Frontera Capital Advisors, L.L.C. Frost Bank Charitable Foundation Frost National Bank Gabriel Brothers, Inc. Gems Group, Inc. The Gigunda Group Glimcher Global Aerospace Global Parking Systems, L.L.C. Global X Grace Limousine, L.L.C. Grant Thornton, L.L.P. Greenup Industries, L.L.C. Griffis Group Residential Groom Law Group Hahn, Loeser & Parks, L.L.P. Hamilton, Miller & Birthisel, L.L.P. Hannis T. Bourgeois, L.L.P. HAP Midwest Health Plan, Inc. Health Plans, Inc. Heartland Advisors, Inc. Henry Ford Health System The Albert M. Higley Co. Hitachi Consulting Hollister Staffing Holloway Automotive Group HUB International New England, L.L.C. Huntington Bank The IMA Financial Group, Inc. Information Technology Industry Council Infusion Partners L.L.C. Irgens Development Partners, L.L.C. Jackson National Life Insurance Company James-Martin Chevrolet, Inc. The JBG Companies JLW Group L.L.C. The John Buck Company Foundation Jones Walker L.L.P. Kaminer Financial Group Kapco, Inc. Kean Miller, L.L.P. KENS5 King, Krebs & Jurgens, P.L.L.C. The Knisely Group, L.L.C. Kroger, Inc. Laitram, L.L.C. Lando & Anastasi, L.L.P. Langdon Publishing Larry Mondi Productions Laugh Factory Chicago, L.L.C. Lavallee Brensinger Architects Legacy Pest Control Leisure Dynamics Research, L.L.C. LG Electronics Lindt & Sprungli LINN Energy Longchamps Electric L'Oreal USA Products, Inc. Louisiana Business Inc. Louisiana Healthcare Connections Macy Industries, Inc. Marcus Corporation Foundation, Inc. The Mark Gordon Company The Markham Group Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital Massey Services, Inc. McClatchy Company Foundation McDonald Hopkins L.L.C. McGladrey L.L.P. McGlinchey Stafford McLane, Graf, Raulerson & Middleton, P.A. Mears Transportation Group Merrick & Company MetLife Auto & Home Metro Equipment Corporation Metropolitan State University of Denver Miami Marlins Foundation Michael Best & Friedrich L.L.P. Michigan First Foundation Miller and Chevalier Chartered MobiTV Morrow & Meyer L.L.C. Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corporation (MGIC) Mueller Communications, Inc. Munger, Tolles, & Olson L.L.P. Munro Foundation Mustang Expediting, Inc. Nationwide Children's Hospital Nehemiah Community Foundation Neighborhood Health Plan of Rhode Island New Orleans Convention Company, Inc. Newcastle Foundation Trust Nixon Peabody L.L.P. North American Corporation Nucor-Yamato Steel O'Brien & Levine Court Reporting Services Office Depot Foundation Old Oaks Country Club OneBanc Optima Bank & Trust Orlando Utilities Commission Oswald Companies Pacific National Bank Parker Auto Group Penske Motor Group Peoples Health Performance Food Group North Center PG&E Sacramento Phelps Dunbar L.L.P. Pioneer Investment Managment USA Inc. Piscataqua Savings Bank PJH & Associates, Inc. Portables Unlimited, Inc. Post Acute Medical L.L.C. Postlethwaite & Netterville Power Pro-Tech Services, Inc. PPGMR Law Proskauer Rose L.L.P. Publicis Seattle Quarles & Brady L.L.P. Quattlebaum, Grooms & Tull P.L.L.C. Rath, Young and Pignatelli Red River Bank Regional Rail Partners Regions Insurance Reid & Company Executive Search Republic National Distributing Company Foundation, Inc. Reynolds and Reynolds Ricoh RiverWoods The Robert Weiler Company Roberts Law Firm, P.A. Rosenthal Companies Rudd Equipment Company Sabadell United Bank Sabiston Consultants Sacramento Municipal Utilities District Sacramento Regional Transit Safe Credit Union Safeway Foundation Sagacity Media San Antonio Credit Union SCANA Energy and Natural Gas Scarinci & Hollenbeck, L.L.C. Scott and Joanne Tranchemontagne Seipp, Flick & Hosley, L.L.P. Serendipity Portsmouth, L.L.C. The Shiloh Foundation Sidley & Austin LLP Sidley Austin Foundation Silverman Consulting Simmons First National Bank The Smith-Free Group, L.L.C. Sodexo School Services South State Bank Southern Bancorp SPACECO, Inc. Spectrum Monthly Inc Spurs Sports & Entertainment Squire Patton Boggs State of South Carolina Stearns, Weaver, Miller, Weissler, Alhadeff & Sitterson, P.A. Storino, Ramello & Durkin Striker Entertainment, L.L.C. Stun Design & Interactive Sullivan Construction Sunset Cove Foundation SunTrust Bank SWBC T&G Constructors Talbot, Carmouche & Marcello Tanner, Mainstain, Glynn & Johnson, L.L.P. Thompson Coburn Thompson Hine L.L.P. Tivo Toyota Financial Services Tradeweb Trepwise L.L.C. Tucker Ellis, L.L.P. Turner Industries, L.L.C. Ulmer & Berne, L.L.P. University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service University of Colorado Hospital Vantage Bank Texas Verizon Communications Inc. Viridian Walton Distributing Co. Wampold Companies WaterStone Bank We Energies Foundation Webco Industries, Inc. Weisman, Kennedy & Berris, L.P.A. Western Union Weyco Group Charitable Trust Whyte, Hirschboeck & Dudek Wicker, Smith, O'Hara, McCoy & Ford, P.A. William Blair and Company Foundation Gallagher WGA Wilson Butler Architects Inc. Winstead PC Winston & Strawn L.L.P. WOW Factor Marketing Group WTAS Zachry Holdings, Inc. Zurich North America Alonna Nicole @alonnanicole12 "I've been acting like a city year so you won't have to worry about me getting in trouble and stuff." #cityyear #cityyeardc #makebetterhappen @staples For more information about corporate giving, please contact Chris Mann at [email protected]. 43 FOUNDATIONS AND NONPROFITS We are grateful to the following foundations and nonprofits for their support (July 1, 2014 - June 30, 2015). $ 1 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0+ Windsong Trust $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 - $ 9 9 9,9 9 9 United Way for Southeastern Michigan $ 2 5 0 , 0 0 0 - $ 49 9,9 9 9 Barr Foundation Carnegie Corporation of New York Oak Foundation USA Irene W. and C.B. Pennington Foundation United Way of Greater Cleveland $ 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 - $ 2 49,9 9 9 Anonymous The Anschutz Foundation Bloomberg Philanthropies Booth Ferris Foundation The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, Inc Chicago White Sox Community Fund, a McCormick Foundation Fund Daniels Fund Lois G. Roy Dickerman Fund of the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation Foundation for Orange County Public Schools The Boo Grigsby Foundation The Charles Hayden Foundation Heart of Florida United Way Jane's Trust The Lenfest Foundation Robert R. McCormick Foundation New Schools for Baton Rouge NoVo Foundation The Piton Foundation The Poses Family Foundation The Rhode Island Foundation The Share Fund State Street Foundation Tipping Point Community Tulsa Area United Way James Tyree Foundation United Way of Central Ohio United Way of Greater Milwaukee & Waukesha County United Way of Greater Philadelphia and Southern New Jersey United Way of Northeast Florida United Way of San Antonio and Bexar County United Way of the National Capital Area Weingart Foundation $ 5 0 , 0 0 0 - $ 9 9,9 9 9 Anonymous The Lloyd G. Balfour Foundation Baptist Community Ministries Booth Bricker Fund 44 Boys & Girls Club of Greater Washington Capital Area United Way The Case Foundation The City of Cleveland The Ellison Foundation Entertainment Industry Foundation Greater Milwaukee Foundation The George Gund Foundation William Randolph Hearst Foundation Heart of Arkansas United Way The Herzfeld Foundation Loeb Family Charitable Foundations M&I Foundation, Inc. Charles Stewart Mott Foundation Jane Bradley Pettit Foundation The Reinberger Foundation RosaMary Foundation Sacramento Region Community Foundation Silicon Valley Community Foundation Sobrato Family Foundation Solon E. Summerfield Foundation S. Mark Taper Foundation United Way of King County United Way of Metropolitan Chicago Huey and Angelina Wilson Foundation $ 2 5 , 0 0 0 - $ 49,9 9 9 The Abington Foundation Eva L. and Joseph M. Bruening Foundation Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation Cogswell Benevolent Trust The Frances L. and Edwin L. Cummings Memorial Fund The Denver Foundation Excellence in Investing for Children's Causes The David Geffen Foundation Granite United Way Evan and Marion Helfaer Foundation Leonard and Hilda Kaplan Charitable Foundation The Lynch Foundation William G. McGowan Charitable Fund, Inc. Colonel Stanley R. McNeil Foundation, Bank of America, N.A., Trustee Meyer Foundation Mile High United Way Jo Mitchell Foundation Orlando Magic Youth Fund, a McCormick Foundation Fund Orlando Sentinel Family Fund, a McCormick Foundation Fund Stuart Foundation Dwight Stuart Youth Fund United Way of Silicon Valley The Wasserman Foundation $ 1 0 , 0 0 0 - $ 2 4 ,9 9 9 Anonymous (2) Baptist Health Services The Herb Block Foundation John W. Carson Foundation Cavaliers Youth Fund Chicago Bulls Community Assist Fund, a McCormick Foundation Fund Christ Church Grosse Pointe Clark Charitable Foundation The Cleveland Foundation Connelly Foundation The Cudahy Foundation Dolfinger-McMahon Foundation Flamboyan Foundation Foundation To Be Named Later GPOA Foundation Harvard Business School Section J 2014 The Fred A. Lennon Charitable Trust Miss Wallace M. Leonard Foundation New Hampshire Charitable Foundation The Norcliffe Foundation Northwest Children's Fund Pro Bono Publico Foundation Saint Susie Charitable Foundation San Antonio Area Foundation The Sherwick Fund Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina Dorothy D. Smith Foundation The Kent H. Smith Charitable Trust Sun Times Foundation, a Fund of The Chicago Community Foundation The Thomas H. White Foundation Woldenberg Foundation $ 5 , 0 0 0 - $ 9,9 9 9 Arkansas Municipal League Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Milwaukee Dr. Scholl Foundation El Pomar Foundation Ralph Evinrude Foundation, Inc. Florida International University Foundation The Harry K. and Emma R. Fox Charitable Foundation Friends of Breakthrough Schools Gannett Foundation The Granite YMCA The Jandon Foundation Kelly Foundation June Rockwell Levy Foundation, Inc. Lucky Seven Foundation Massachusetts Project 351, Inc. The Miami Foundation David and Inez Myers Foundation The Prentice Foundation, Inc. Ronald McDonald House Charities Rose Community Foundation The Schrafft Charitable Trust The Skillman Foundation Bert L. and Patricia S. Steigleder Charitable Trust United Black Fund of Greater Cleveland United way of Central Carolinas United Way of Southeast Louisiana V.H. McNutt Memorial Foundation Valencia College YMCA of Greater Providence $ 1 , 0 0 0 - $ 4 ,9 9 9 AHS Foundation The Boston Foundation The Boston Red Sox Foundation The Brodovsky Foundation The California Endowment Center for Social Change City of Orlando City of Rancho Cordova Dade Association of School Administrators Democratic Party of Arkansas Easton Community Foundation The Fisher Cats Foundation Friends of Manual Greater Philadelphia Hispanic Chamber of Commerce Corina Higginson Trust Harry M., Miriam C. and William C. Horton Fund Rita J. and Stanley H. Kaplan Family Foundation, Inc. Keep America Beautiful John and Ilene Kennedy Foundation Kiwanis Club of Washington D.C. Learning by Giving Foundation Liftfund Lomax Family Foundation MARLO Foundation, Ltd. MCPHS University Milwaukee Public Schools Foundation, Inc. New Hampshire Healthy Families North Little Rock Chamber of Commerce Our Lady of the Lake College Rotary Club of San Antonio Foundation Sacramento Chinese of Indochina Friendship Association Sixers Strong Foundation St. Louis Catholic Church The Barbra Streisand Foundation ThursdayNights Triangle Community Foundation, Inc. The S.K. Wellman Foundation University of California: Davis Youth Service America Zemurray Foundation For more information about foundation giving, please contact Duke Guthrie at [email protected]. IN-KIND DONORS We are grateful to the following in-kind donors for their support (July 1, 2014 - June 30, 2015). The Aramark Charitable Fund Beasley Broadcast Group Central Ohio Transit Authority Chicago Transit Authority Cisco The Clinton Foundation Comcast NBCUniversal CSX Transportation Deloitte Gensler Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority Henry Ford Health System Hulu KPMG Lamar Advertising Company Lusk Architecture LYNX Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Miami-Dade College Microsoft Corporation Niche Media Holdings Orange Barrel Media PEOPLE Magazine Sacramento Regional Transit Santa Clara Valley Regional Transportation Authority SAP SeaWorld Orlando The Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA) Universal Orlando Parks and Resorts Valencia College VIA Metropolitan Transit Wells Fargo WilmerHale Ashley Dunbar @adcyphilly "i want to be a city year then I want to be a police officer. Both jobs will let me help people who need it." Everyone can #makebetterhappen #dreambig 45 CITY YEAR, INC. BOARD OF TRUSTEES Jonathan Lavine Chair of the Board Co-Managing Partner Bain Capital, LP Kristen Atwood Founding Staff Member City Year, Inc. Joe Banner Josh Bekenstein Co-Chairman Bain Capital, LP John Bridgeland President and CEO Civic Enterprises Michael Brown CEO and Co-Founder City Year, Inc. Michele Cahill Distinguished Fellow in Education and Youth Development National Center for Civic Innovation Carol Johnson Former Superintendent Boston Public Schools Shirley Sagawa Co-Founder Sagawa/Jospin Hubie Jones* Senior Advisor and Social Justice Entrepreneur-in-Residence City Year, Inc. Dean Emeritus Boston University School of Social Work Jeff Shames Executive in Residence MIT Sloan School of Management Rosabeth Moss Kanter Ernest L. Arbuckle Professor Harvard Business School Chair & Director Harvard University Advanced Leadership Initiative Alan Khazei* Founder and CEO Be the Change, Inc. Co-Founder City Year, Inc. Andrea Encarnacao Martin '02 Guidance Counselor Boston Latin School David L. Cohen Vice Chair of the Board Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Diversity Officer Comcast Corporation Rick Menell Chairman The Carrick Foundation Co-Chair City Year South Africa Board Manny Diaz Former Mayor of Miami Senior Partner Lydecker Diaz, LLP Larry Neiterman Principal National Managing Director – Operations & Finance Deloitte Consulting, LLP Sandy Edgerley Trustee Edgerley Family Foundation David Einhorn President Greenlight Capital David Gergen* Professor of Public Service and Director of the Center for Public Leadership Harvard Kennedy School Andrew Hauptman Chairman Andell Inc. Ilene Jacobs Vice Chair of the Board Executive Vice President, Human Resources (Retired) Fidelity Investments Secretary Rodney Slater* Former U.S. Secretary of Transportation Partner Patton Boggs, LLP Jeffrey Swartz* Former CEO and President The Timberland Company Michael J. Ward Chairman and CEO CSX Corporation Chair City Year Jacksonville Board Tom Ward, Clerk Partner WilmerHale, LLP Stephen G. Woodsum Chair Emeritus Founding Managing Director Summit Partners Secretary Leon Panetta* Former U.S. Secretary of Defense Chairman Panetta Institute for Public Policy C. Gregg Petersmeyer Vice Chair America’s Promise Alliance Chair and CEO Personal Pathways LLC Jennifer Eplett Reilly Co-Founder City Year, Inc. Founding Chair City Year Louisiana Founding Chair New Schools for Baton Rouge *Charter Trustee 46 CITY YEAR SITE BOARD MEMBERS B at o n R o u g e Laura C. Poché, Chair Rudy Aguilar Mike Anderson Ross Barrett Ralph Bender Lori Bertman Dan Gardiner Gwen Hamilton Tina Holland Luke Kissam Phillip May Matthew G. Rachleff Jennifer Eplett Reilly Dionne Rousseau Tricia Sanchez Robert Schneckenburger Thomas F. Teepell Erin Monroe Wesley Dr. Rani Whitfield Boston Dianne Ledingham, Chair Jim Atwood Andrew Bott Barbara Burgess Reed Chisholm Diane Exter Sally Dornaus Corinne Ferguson Michael Gilligan Steve Hackley Dr. Adrian K. Haugabrook Stephen Hoffmeister Karen Keenan Fred Maynard Josh McCall Will Muggia Marion Mussafer Larry Neiterman Marcy Reed John Reilly Aaron von Staats James Ward C h i c ag o Casey Keller, Chair Michael J. Alter John Barker Steve Birchard Jeffrey D. Cohodes Juan F. Correa John Crowley John Cusack Ravin Gandhi Rachel Gerds John Gilligan William Heard Tom Livingston Kelly Moen Linda Myers Matt Norton Stephen R. Quazzo Rena Hozore Reiss Kristen L. Saranteas Jeffrey J. Smith Lucino Sotelo Shoshana M. Vernick C le v e l a n d Gareth D. Vaughan, Chair Honorable Bruce Akers Jennifer Ansberry Anthony Bonavita, CFA Kate Brown Michael Cantor Chip Chaikin Patti Choby Jim Doyle Elizabeth Evans Robert Gillespie Collin Knisely Betsy Lambert David C. Landever Richard Manoloff Randy Markey Joseph Nanni Melissa Pozniak Monyka S. Price Jan L. Roller Jay Seaton Keith Silvestri Karen H. Thompson John Zitzner C o lu m b i a Jim Irvin III Esq., Chair Danielle Boysen Ken Childs John Dillard Elliott Epps Stephen R. Fitzer Cecil Hannibal Alan James Tommy Johnson Eddie Laney Amy Larkin Robert Wilcox Roscoe Wilson C o lu m b u s Tanya Crawford, Chair Tracy James, Vice-Chair Jeremy Ball Nick Barnes Matt Borden Donald Brown William Calvert Scott Campbell James Gaddy Roberta Meacham Rusty Orben Morna Smith, Ph.D. Susan Steinman, Ph.D. Heather Svetek Belinda Taylor Tricia Taylor Daniel Valerio Nicole Walker Chrisy Wright Da ll a s Mark Rohr, Chair Pam Gerber Charles Glover Adam Medrano Jennifer Sampson Denver David Kenney, Chair Suzanne Arkle Anne Bailey M. Gregory Bante Morag Barrett Christine Benero Jeff Dolan Allison Farish Tom Hilb Steve Kriedler Jacqueline Lundquist Neyeska Mut Wendy Ralston Brian Sandy, AFSB D e t r o it Mark Zausmer, Chair N. Charles Anderson Richard J. Burstein Julia Cooney Jason Gumbs Pancho D. Hall Mary Beth Halprin Rudy Hobbs Tracy Joshua Wright L. Lassiter, III Daniel E. Little, Ph.D. Joseph Mullany Stanley H. Pitts Ralph R. Safford Karen Sosnick Schoenberg Gail Warden Jac ks o n v i l l e Michael Ward, Chair John Baker Ricardo Bedoya Gary Chartrand Bill Ferry Dr. Barbara Darby Cindy Edelman George Lawrence Janet Owens Kelly Smith Dr. Nikolai Vitti Kim Ward Tina Wirth Lit t l e R o c k Bruce T. Moore, Co-Chair Stephanie S. Streett, Co-Chair Kirk M. Bradshaw General (Ret.) Wesley K. Clark Melinda Faubel Catherine Grunden Scott Hamilton Corey Jennings Haley Keenan-Gray Robert McLarty Mica Strother Judy Tenenbaum Grant Tennille Mike Wilson Mollie Webb Los Angeles Michael Walsh, Chair Laura Fox, Vice Chair Rich Battista Kelly Mullens Brown Michael Camuñez Marlene Canter Brad Drummond Giselle Fernandez Ben Goldhirsh Robert Greenblatt Glenn Gritzner Hill Harper Andrew Hauptman, Chair Emeritus Ellen Bronfman Hauptman 47 JD Heyman John Hotchkis Michael V. Lewis Marc Merrill Sarah Milken Hannah Minghella Courtney Reum David Shaheen Ben Sherwood Stacey Snider Octavia Spencer Amir Tehrani Arn Tellem Kevin K. Tsujihara Kevin Westcott Mel Myler Shawn O’Connor Steven Paris, MD Richard Samuels Lesa Scott Kerri St. Jean Scott Tranchemontagne Justine Vogel, CPA N e w O r le a n s Diana Lewis, Chair Ronald Carrere, Jr. James Shahid P h i l a d e lp h i a Art Block, Co-Chair Karen Keating Mara, Co-Chair Neil V. Batiancila John Beilenson Brad Brubaker William Copeland, Jr. Matt Cross Chuck Greenberg Mark A. Harrell Councilman Kenyatta Johnson Ted Kapnek III @shahid_james When asked who some leaders in their school Miami Tere Blanca, Chair were, an after school student excitedly responded Thomas Abraham Marcus Bach Armas Ana Babcock Felipe Basulto Dwight Bullard Eve Biskind Klothen Patricia Castellanos-Cornish Michael Connolly David Lincoln Carlos Dominguez Eli Feinstein Marciene Mattleman, Ed.D. George Foyo Donna Klein Mark McCarthy Luis Andre Gazitua, Esq. Donna Whalen Little Michael Miller Carlos A. Gimenez Norma Jane Sabiston Honorable Michael A. Nutter Debra Kerr Kyle Wedberg Tony Payton, Jr. Mojdeh Khaghan Danial, Esq. Kevin Wilkins Gregory S. Redden John Kitchens Mario Zervigon Kerri Strike, PMP Cristian LaCapra Brad Meltzer N e w Yo r k Cori Flam Meltzer, Esq. P r ov i d e n c e Jeremy Kroll, Chair Heather Monahan Stephanie Federico, Co-Chair Brian Berger Ana Mari Ortega Andrew Horwitz, Co-Chair Tom Bernstein Alberto Padron Kathie Andrade Gary Clare Madeline Pumariega Lynn Bowman Hon. Hillary Rodham Clinton Frank Ramirez Andrew J. Capalbo Evan Cohen Benjamin Reiss David C. Colli Terri Cooper, Ph.D. Gladys Reed Gary Frishman, MD Ryan Cotton Judd Rosen, Esq. Alan Harlam Amy Furman Jorge I. Salgueiro Heather Hower Jennifer Glassman Howard Shore Michael Hudson Terry Hayes Ronald E. Shrager Denise Jenkins Anne Herrmann Morgan Ware Chris Johnson Regina Hitchery Manny de Zarraga Lane H. Jost Peter Hong Lou Mercado Gess LeBlanc Andrew Mudra M i lwau k e e Seth Meisel Betsy Shimberg Julia A. Uihlein, Chair Ali Zelenko Andrew Viens Dennis Connolly Chris Didier Orlando Dr. Darienne Driver Sac r a m e n t o John Sprouls, Chair Kathy Feucht Kathie Sowa, Chair Kate Byrne Cecelia Gore Jen Ablog Debbie M. Carswell Anthony Hudson Nancy Brodovsky José A. Fajardo Kevin Joy Ray Burnell Joel Glass Jean Maier Gordon Fowler Elisha González David Marcus Koua Franz Marcia Goodwin Kristen Pisani Lisa Gutierrez Graciela Noriega Jacoby Laura Perez Harold Levine Dr. Jesús Jara James M. Rauh Kathy McKim Patti Johnson Robert Rauh Amelia McLear Scott Justice Marsha Sehler Julie Quinn Diane O’Dell Cal Schmidt David Sobon Bob O’Malley Brother Bob Smith Darrell Teat Pam Peters John Pisan New Hampshire Reginald B. Riley, Ph.D. Sa n A n t o n i o Beth Roberts, Chair Cora Sterling Craig Berkowitch, Chair David H. Cassidy, Jr. Joe Terry Amy Contreras Major General (Ret.) Kenneth Dale Whittaker Skip Cox Clark Jesse Edelman Christopher Dolloff Lisa Marie Gomez Sue Lock Roger Graham "city year" 48 #makebetterhappen Gregory MacMillin Darnell McLaurin John Riquelme Haley Rodriguez Stuart Schlossberg Timothy S. Wells Sa n J o s é /S i l i c o n Va lle y Sharon Matthews, Chair Todd Achilles Ragu Bhargava Mark S. Davis Ed Eger Stephen Fiss Carl Guardino Al Guido Anne Holloway Jennifer Johnson Kelly Kramer Kyle Krpata Judy Love Enrique Salem Linda Shelby Dr. Karie Willyerd S e at t l e / K i n g C o u n t y Jason Young, Chair Amy Barnes Jeff Clark Bree Dusseault Lori Forte Harnick Steve Holmes Vikas Kamran Chris Kiple George Meng Colleen Oliver Sandy Teper Travis Warren Jennifer Wells Tulsa Robert Thomas, Chair Lauren Brookey Kim Coretz Joseph J. Crivelli Dr. Kim Dyce Jim Langdon Kirk Wester Wa s h i n gt o n , D C Jeffrey Leonard, Chair Susan Berger Jeffrey Cooke Barbara Ddamulira Charles Dickerson Jim Dolphin Josh Edelman Garrick C. Francis Anjali Gupta Salene Hitchcock-Gear Fred Humphries Ronny B. Lancaster Timothy Johnson Chris Murphy David S. Rosener Hal Shapiro Jit Singh Donna Rattley Washington Robert M. Willis, Esq. Senator Harris Wofford (Emeritus) Missy Young SENIOR LEADERSHIP TEAM Michael Brown Chief Executive Officer & Co-Founder Jeff Jablow Senior Vice President, Strategy & Operations Jim Balfanz President Hubie Jones Senior Advisor & Social Justice Entrepreneur-In-Residence Evelyn Barnes Executive Vice President & Chief Financial and Administrative Officer Alice Markowitz Senior Vice President, Communications Sandra Lopez Burke Vice President & Executive Director of City Year Boston AnnMaura Connolly Executive Vice President & Chief Strategy Officer Allison Graff-Weisner Senior Vice President & Chief Development and Alumni Officer Welles C. Hatch Senior Vice President & Chief Information Officer Sean Holleran Executive Vice President & Chief Operating Officer Christine Morin Senior Vice President, Chief Growth & External Affairs Officer Mithra Irani Ramaley Senior Vice President, Regional and Site Operations Charlie Rose Senior Vice President & Dean Gillian Smith Senior Vice President & Chief Marketing Officer Stephanie Wu Senior Vice President & Chief Program Design and Evaluation Officer Alonna Nicole @alonnanicole12 "We aren't skipping. We're walk dancing. Me and Ms. Alonna walk-dance everywhere because it makes our hearts happy." #campcityyear #cityyear #danceparty #makebetterhappen 49 WELCOME CITY YEAR DALLAS We are grateful to the following founding Dallas supporters: The Dallas Morning News Editorial: There’s a thousand strategies to try to help teen students; this one works Published: October 29, 2015 helping plan a school dance or after-school swim coaching — is as critical as their classroom instruction. These young adults work from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. — and sometimes longer. Early in the morning, after lining up to greet Spruce’s 1,740 students, corps members make phone calls to check on those who didn’t make it to the Pleasant Grove campus. After school, they tutor in all subjects. AT&T In drenching rain on a recent Saturday, City Year members accompanied Petters and other Spruce staffers to knock on 74 doors to talk to families about why students weren’t showing up for school. Many of the high-absentee youth were back in class Monday. The Caruth Foundation The Celanese Foundation Deloitte Ed Galante The Meadows Foundation Mark and Rachel Rohr Foundation The United Way of Metropolitan Dallas Todd Williams 50 Teenagers, especially those who’ve been let down by adults before, too often see teachers only as objects in their way. But partner instructors with younger helpers and the students begin to see academic opportunities. That’s how Vanessa Jimenez, a City Year team leader at Spruce High School, sums up success. “The students begin to see us differently — as valuable resources,” says 23-year-old Jimenez, from the University of California, Santa Barbara. Thousands of programs nationwide are scrambling to help schools serve kids better. City Year, made up of AmeriCorps members assigned to low-performing campuses, is one that works. At City Year’s core is a focus on grades three through nine. The local operation is intent on expanding into more DISD schools, particularly the elementaries. That makes sense. Research shows that students who are not proficient in reading in elementary school are four times more likely to drop out. Students who reach the 10th grade on track and on time are four times more likely to graduate. Corps member Araceli Vicuna, 25, University of California, Santa Cruz, was struck by students’ initial suspicions. “Are you really going to be here — or are you going to quit?” they asked. From what we’ve observed, City Year doesn’t know the word quit. *** In its first full year in DISD, City Year can’t statistically measure its success in Dallas. But a recent three-year study of its work shows that U.S. schools with City Year teams were two to three times more likely to increase English and math proficiency rates compared to similar schools without the program. City Year, by the numbers Jimenez and her fellow corps members are committed to bringing those results to Spruce, one of five DISD schools hosting City Year teams this year. Funding: DISD picks up about a quarter of the cost, roughly $100,000 per campus. AmeriCorps picks up a little more than that; the private sector matches the other half. The nine corps members spend most of the day doing real teaching in classes filled with English I and Algebra I students. They roam the room to help anyone who’s struggling and do individual and small-group tutoring. Nationally: 2,800 corps members, ages 18-24, serve in 264 schools in 26 cities. The corps reaches far beyond academics. Spruce Principal Danielle Petters believes the personal connections the twentysomethings make with students — whether starting a creative writing club, Red jacket requirements: Corps spots are highly competitive, with only one of four applicants making the cut. Training for the job can require up to 340 hours. In Dallas: 49 corps members are divided among Roosevelt and Spruce high schools and three of the middle schools that feed into them, Comstock, Holmes and Medrano. Who they help: 75 percent of the schools are in their state’s lowest 10 percent, based on performance. EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS Ryann Denham Sanchez Baton Rouge Dan Foley Jacksonville Darryl Bundrige Philadelphia Sandra Lopez Burke Boston Sarah Roberson Little Rock Jennie Johnson Providence Rebeca Nieves-Huffman Chicago Mary Jane Stevenson Los Angeles Jeff Owens Sacramento Phillip Robinson Cleveland Keith Fletcher Miami Kelly Hughes Burton (Acting) San Antonio Gail Wilson-Giarratano Columbia Jason Holton Milwaukee Toni S. Burke San José/Silicon Valley Tasha Booker Columbus Pawn Nitichan New Hampshire Kyle Angelo Seattle/King County Alex Enriquez Dallas Peggy Mendoza New Orleans Tom McKeon Tulsa Morris Price Denver Erica Hamilton New York Jeff Franco Washington, DC Andrew Stein Detroit Jordan C. Plante Orlando briana a davis @DavisCommaBriCY In after-school someone asked "What does City Year help with?" My student responded "City Year helps with EVERYTHING!" #makebetterhappen 51 2015 FINANCIAL STATEMENT Years ended June 30, 2015 and 2014 Statement of Financial Position 2015 2014 Assets Cash and equivalents Government grants receivable, net Contributions receivable, net Other assets Investments, at fair value Property and equipment, net $ 24,377,585 8,618,829 5,798,300 1,458,813 12,929,486 20,104,540 23,263,660 7,379,446 4,498,840 1,730,324 12,472,286 20,516,852 Total Assets $ 73,287,553 69,861,408 $ 3,503,630 3,596,167 788,619 7,635,000 15,523,416 2,251,722 2,984,306 907,207 7,875,000 14,018,235 34,529,208 17,253,276 5,981,653 57,764,137 35,431,060 14,530,460 5,881,653 55,843,173 73,287,553 69,861,408 2015 2014 Liabilities and Net Assets Liabilities: Accounts payable and accrued expenses Accrued payroll and related expenses Interest rate swaps Bonds payable Total liabilities Net Assets: Unrestricted Temporarily restricted Permanently restricted Total net assets Total liabilities and net assets $ Statement of Activities Operating Revenue and Other Support Contributions and private grants Federal grants – Corporation for National and Community Service School districts and other local government grants Investment return utilized for operations Other income Net assets released from restrictions $ 73,975,513 33,111,983 27,254,924 469,799 447,206 7,561,100 61,446,035 32,626,297 25,903,768 403,917 330,765 8,432,900 Total operating revenues and other support $ 142,820,525 129,143,682 Program services Support services: Organizational support Fundraising $ 111,060,483 99,681,629 14,977,414 15,388,431 14,875,054 12,347,631 Total operating expenses $ 141,426,328 126,904,314 $ 1,394,197 (2,296,049) 2,722,816 100,000 1,920,964 2,239,368 152,019 (1,028,659) 100,000 1,462,728 55,843,173 54,380,445 57,764,137 55,843,173 Operating Expenses Change in Net Assets Increase in net assets from operations Increase in net assets from nonoperating transactions (Decrease) increase in temporarily restricted net assets Increase in permanently restricted net assets Increase in net assets Net assets, beginning of year Net assets, end of year 52 $ Revenue $142.8 million 24% Corporations 19% School Districts and other local government grants 18% Foundations Expenses $141.4 million 79% Program Services 11% Fundraising Expenses 11% Organizational Support 23% AmeriCorps 15% Individuals 1% In-Kind Stanton CYDC Team @stantonscholars "Mr. Stephen! You have to see my behavior goals sheet! You're never gonna believe it! i made all my goals!" #cityyearworks #makebetterhappen Charity Navigator Highest Ranking Charity Navigator is America’s premier charity evaluator. Since 2003, City Year has earned Charity Navigator’s highest rating, certifying our commitment to accountability, transparency and responsible fiscal management. Only 1% of rated organizations have received this distinction for more than twelve consecutive years, placing City Year among the most trustworthy nonprofits in America. 53 CITY YEAR LOCATIONS Baton Rouge New Hampshire Boston New Orleans Chicago New York Cleveland Orlando Columbia Philadelphia Columbus Providence Dallas Sacramento Denver San Antonio Detroit San José/Silicon Valley Jacksonville Seattle/King County Kansas City* Tulsa Little Rock Washington, DC Los Angeles Miami Milwaukee Jay Culkin @kenna_song My student started off doing no homework and failing math. Now she’s honorary “Assistant City Year” in my math group. #makebetterhappen International Affiliates Johannesburg, South Africa London, Birmingham and Greater Manchester, UK *Start-up Site @cityyear facebook.com/cityyear cityyear.org/blog cityyear.org #makebetterhappen City Year is an education-focused organization founded in 1988 dedicated to helping students and schools succeed. City Year partners with public schools in 27 urban, high-poverty communities across the U.S. and through international affiliates in the U.K. and Johannesburg, South Africa. Diverse teams of City Year AmeriCorps members provide highimpact student, classroom and school-wide support, to help students stay in school and on track to graduate from high school, ready for college and career success. A proud member of the AmeriCorps national service network, City Year is made possible by support from the Corporation for National and Community Service, school district partnerships, and private philanthropy from corporations, foundations and individuals. 54