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. Ryan Carroll
Bonnie and Christopher Covington
Ted Dubbs
Ivy Carter and Shawn Barney
Harvey Cox, III
Ken Duberstein
John Casais
Anne Craib
Danielle Dubreuil
Tim Case
Ellen Crane and George Goff
David Dukes
Michael Casey and Lisa Hughes
Tanya Crawford
Caleb Dulis
Tracy and Kevin Casey
Jonathan Cronin
Jackson Dunn
David Casper
Doug Cross
Anne Dupont
JesusG™
#makebetterhappen
Rob and Liz Durham
Dasha and Damien Dwin
Maria Dwyer
Andrea Eaton
Terri Eaton
Jesse and Lisa Edelman
Susan Edwards
Jordi Moncada Elias
Antonio Ellek
Katharine and Thomas Ellis
Elisabeth Embry
Amy and Scott Emerman
Lucinda Eng-Garcia and Carlos
Garcia
Missy and Jim Epperson
Amy and Elliott Epps
Anne Esbenshade and Mike Miele
Victoria Espinel
Curtis Eustis
Dan Evans
Daniel Evans
Elizabeth Evans
Madeleine Fackler
Matthew Fair
José Fajardo
Tom and Shannon Fallon
Allison Farish
Maia and Donald Farish
Richard A. and Nancy L. Farrell
Scott Faust
Stephanie Federico
Emily Feingold
Eli Feinstein and Jana Lipman
James Feldman and Laura Putney
Lew Feldstein
Carrie and Ruben Feliz
Quincy Fennebresque
Rob and Pam Ferguson
Rosaura Fernandez
Len and Lindsay Ferrington
Katherine Feucht
Irwin Field
Heidi Fieldston and Howard Ostroff
Amy and J.P. Fine
John Finegan
Lori Fink
Jim and Lynne Finnegan
Barbara and David Firestone
Samuel Fischer
Stephen Fiss
Bette and David Fitts
Stephen Fitzer
William Flatt
Christopher Fletcher
Lyle and Jennifer Flom
Harriet and James Fogarty
Michael Foley
Bitsey Folger and Sidney Werkman
Sue and Stephen Foreman
The Foster Family Foundation
William and Helena Foulkes
Gordon B. Fowler, Jr.
Fox Family Charitable Trust
Mary Ellen and Michael Fox
The George and Luisa Foyo
Foundation
Garrick and Sheila Francis
Michael Francis
Arlene and Irving Franco
William and Lauren Frank
Deane and Scott Frazier
Lulu and Bill Freiberg
29
Michael Fricklas
Lisa Friel
Lisa and Richard Frisbie
Mark and Meredith Frisch
Lori and Simon Furie
Megan Gadd and Nathan Wilson
David Gagnon
Luigi and Nina Galbiati
Ravin and Sonal Gandhi
Peni Garber
Joseph Garcia
Paola Garcia-Carillo
Shawna and Dan Gardiner
Peter Gardner
Jill Garrett O'Toole
William Gates and Mimi Gardner
Gates
John Gatins
James Gauch
David and Jackie Gay
The Gelfand Family Foundation
Timothy Gentry
Mary Jo George
Rachel Gerds
Ana and Juan Gershanik
Gerson Family Foundation
Mark Getachew
Patricia and Stephen Gianotti
Allie Gonyea
Christine Grimm
Doug Grip
Deborah Gross and Chuck Kurtz
Ken Grouf and Jenny S. Lorant
Catherine Grunden
Carl and Leslee Guardino
Maryanne Guido
Jason Gumbs
Anjali and Arun Gupta
Amy and Jay Gutierrez
Thomas Haas
Jason and Gillian Haberman
Michael and Trudi Haberman
Mary Hable and James Heppelmann
Glen and Claire Hackmann
Beth Hair
Pamela Hall
Veronica Hall
The Halperin Foundation
Jim Halpert
Joni and Clarence Hamilton
Angela Hamlin
Todd Hammer
Nick and Leslie Hanauer
Nancy Hancock
Peter C. and Sally S. Hanley
Meredith Hanrahan
Hill Harper
Matina Horner
Jeff Horowitz
Andrew Horwitz and Alexandra
Callam
Heather and Lee Hower
Mark Huddleston
Michael Hudson
Paul Hudson
Tisa Hughes
Ian Humphrey
Fred Humphries
Craig Hunegs and Daniela Roveda
Brian Hungerford and Lisa Neidhardt
Peter Hunter
Nancy Smith Hurd Foundation
Grant Hutchinson
John Hutchinson
Viva and Geoffrey Hyatt
Kip Hollister Hyde and Warren Hyde
Margot Hyun
Nora Iluri
Philip Inglima
Alyssa Irving
Patricia and John Isley
Philip Ivey
Bruce Jacobs
Martin Jacobs
Nirad Jain
@Miss_Allie_CYNH
When your students finish their homework during after school and
beg you for more of the math games... #makebetterhappen
Mary Gilligan
Claudia Gilman and Harry
Eisenbaum
Maryann and John Gilmartin
Jeremy Glassenberg
Brian Gleason
Janet and Jeffrey Glidden
Paul Glist
Asit Goel and Liping Qin
M. Norman and Jaclyn Goldberger
Craig Goldblatt
Bruce Goldfarb
James Goldfinger
David Goldman
Drew Goldman
Rodney and Keith Goldstein
Sarah and Gabriel Gomez
Jose Gonzalez
Daniel Good
Barbara and Robert Goodkind
Charles and Jaye Goodwin
Abby and Brett Gordon
Thomas Gougeon
Tim Grady
Virginia Graham
Christine and Charles Grant
Patrick Grant
Steven Green
Vincent Greene
Harriet Greenfield
Thomas Greenhill
Brian Griffin
Dorothy Griffin
Jason Grigg
30
Michele Harris and
Kevin Casey
Christine and Christopher Harvey
Pamela Harvey
Paul and Ann Harvey Legacy Fund
Robert Hassell
Alan Hassenfeld
Michael and Lisa Hatch
Welles Hatch
Tracy Hawkins
Barbara and Brian Haymon
Nancy Heinen
Grace and Christopher Heintz
Robin Heller
Ron Heller
Fred Henritze
Laurel Henschel
Tom Hense
Mark Herman
D'Juan Hernandez
Rafael Hernandez
Jorge Hernandez
Francis Herrmann
Martha Higgins
Erika Hindle
Judith Hogan
Mari-Ann and William Hogan
Joe and Jenny Hohner
Debbie and Daniel Holland
Steven Holmes
Allison Holt
Shawn and Peta Hoonan
Terree L. Hooper
Deborah Hopkins
Tracy and Stewart James
Joel Jankowsky
Cynthia and Andrew Janower
Denise Jenkins
Curtis Jewell
Pran Jha
Daysi Johansson
Chris and Linda Johnson
Pat Johnson
Percy Johnson
Matt Johnston
Foster Jondro
Brenna Jones
Earle Jones
Hubert and Katherine Jones
Jessica and Mark Jones
Karen and Michael Jones
Krissy and Tony Jordan
Lane Jost and Emily Robichaud
JSA Trust
Scott and Melissa Justice
Claudia Kahn
Kate and Jon Kalstein
Deborah Kanter and David Bartis
Mark Kantrow
Homi Kapadia and E. 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. Klevens
Eve Biskind Klothen and Kenneth
Klothen
Stephanie Kluft
Tania and Gordon Kluzak
Collin Knisely
Debbie and Kevin Knobloch
Richard and Elizabeth Knowles
Gail Knudsen
Debra Koenig
Laurie Kohn and Chris Murphy
Chris Koon and Tanya Gee
Florence and Richard Koplow
John and Connie Kordsmeier
Teresa Kostenbauer
Mitch and Sari Kovitz
Rosemary Kowalski
Beth Kramer
Kristin Kranias
Janny and Jonathan Kravetz
Lindsay Kronengold
Krouse Family Foundation
Jacqueline Kuehnel
Jeanette Kuhl
Rocky Kurita
Kurtz Family Foundation, Inc.
Amy Kyle and Alfred Rose
Betsy and Mark Lambert
Laura and David Lamere
Ronny Lancaster
David C. 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. Schlichting and Pam
Theisen
Stuart Schlossberg and Bonnie Reed
Calvin and Suzanne Schmidt
Karen Sosnick Schoenberg and
Jeff Schoenberg
Anne and James Schoff
Rebecca Scholl
Ellen Schoninger and Efraim
Grinberg
Michael Schooler
Garrett Schori
Jeffrey and Sara Schottenstein
Lulu Schroeder
Randi Schultz
Jay and Sharon Seaton
John Senior
Erika Serow
Christine and Jeff Serowik
Randy Seybold
Mitesh Shah
Risa Shames and Neil Silverston
BJ Shannon
Risa Shapiro
Michael Sharp
Andi and Douglas Shaw
Marilyn French Shaw
Tom Shaw
Miriam and Gregory Sheehan
Linda and Bob Shelby
Sara Lou and Jeff Sherman
Will Shields
Betsy Shimberg
Raleigh Shoemaker
Julie Shull and Michael Williams
Silvia Sich
Susan Siebert and Bart Mitchell
John Silberstein
Margery Silberstein
Keith and Dawn Silvestri
Susan and John Simon
Jit Singh and Lisa Swoboda
Raag Singhal and Lisa Mao
John and Colleen Sirek
Elena Sirpolaidis
Lynne Sirpolaidis
Robyn Wagner Skarbek
Elliot Sloane
Andreas Smith
Catherine Smith
Celena and Marcus Smith
David Smith
Debora Smith
Doug Smith
Dustin Smith
Edgar Smith
Gillian Smith
Jane Smith and John Reilly
John and Karen Smith
Morna Smith
Paul and Larraine Smith
Sherley G. Smith
Christine Smoragiewicz
Alix and Joseph Smullin
Eric Snow
Krista Snow
Cynthia Snyder
Jackie Snyder
Stephen Snyder
Rob and Julia Soderbery
Kathy and Steven Soll
Christopher Solomon
Erica Knievel Songer and Michael
Songer
Lionel and Kathy Sosa
Soukup Family Fund
Kathie and Joseph Sowa
Matt Spain
Kimberly Spalding
Justin L. and Jennifer Spelhaug
Octavia Spencer
John Spinney
Neal Splaine
Anne Spychala Family Charitable
Foundation
Samuel and Lynn Stahl
Mary Ellen and Scott Stanek
Kathy and Robert Stansky
Sharon Steadman
Esta Stecher
James Steeb
Shane Steffens
Adam Stein and Wendy Saltzburg
Casey Stein
William Stein
Susan Steinman
Philipp Stephanus
Sissy and Ralph Stephens
Terrie and Edmund Sterling
Mary Jane Stevenson and Alex
Ricciardulli
Leah Stevralia
Trina and Newcomb Stillwell
William and Mary Stock
David and Jacqueline Stockel
Courtney and David Straus
Trip Strauss and Lenka Horakova
Mica Strother
Lee Sudakoff
Kelli Sullivan
Regina Sullivan and Paul
Schierenbeck
Thomas C. and Sandra S. 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. Trask and Gerrit J. van
den Engh
Becky Trask and Marco Rivera
Theodore Tutun
Aviv Tzur
Robert P. Ufer
Lynde Uihlein
Ryan Vachon
Valerie Van Vleck
Gareth Vaughan
Shams Vaziri
Tutta and Cyril Vetter
Jennifer and Davide Visco
The Vlock Family Foundation
Eric Vogel and Megan Holbrook
Hillary and Carlo von Schroeter
Teresa and Aaron von Staats
William Waddill
Heidi Wahto
Kristin Walega
Ryan Wallach
Stephanie and Rich Walsh
Walter Family Foundation
Andrea and Tom Ward
Loren and Heath Ward
Lorraine and Gerard Garnett Ward
Sophie and James Ward
Tom Ward
Marcia Warner
Donna Rattley Washington
Steven A. Waters
Juanita and Bob Watt
Christina Wei
Deb Wein
Holly and Daniel Weinberg
Joan and Mark Weinsten
Katie and Nick Weiss
Mary and Scott Wells
John and Marcy Wemple
Steve and Jeanne Wentzell
Betsy and James Westra
Kenneth and Kimberly Whipple
Debra Whitby-Norman
Stephen White
Dale and Mary Whittaker
Bob and Lindie Lou Wightman
Robert Wilcox
Dan Williams and Susan Kim
Guy Williams
Robert M. Willis
Jack Willome
Denver Wilson
Kartini Wilson
Gail Wilson-Giarratano
Laurie Wingate and Mark Chandler
Henry Wirz
Carol Wise
Ellen Adele Wiss
Brigitta Witt and Frederick Medanich
James Lee Witt
Chris Wittek
Lisa Wolf
David and Susan Wolowitz
William Wolters
Lana Wong and Robbie Bissett
Carolyn Wood
Richard Wood
Sally Woodhouse
Jamie Woodruff
David and Sue Woodsum
LeeAnn and Eric Woodward
Chrisy Wright
Natalie and Robert Wright
Phyllis Yale and Tucker Taft
Julie and Willie Yandow
Jessica Yavitz
Carol and Bill Yermal
Jennifer Yohe
Catherine Young
Gary Yourtz
Kathy Zachem
Rabia Zafar and Mohammed
Anjarwala
The Zemeckis Charitable Foundation
Michael Ziegler
Ellen M. Zimmermann
John and Monica Ziraldo
John and Margaret Zitzner
Alex Zozaya
For more information about
individual and family giving,
please contact
Allison Graff-Weisner at
[email protected].
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.
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