2016 ANNUAL REPORT
This is an exciting time full of possibility and potential for All Hands Volunteers. From my vantage point as its founder, I look at our development in 5 year segments: 2005-2010 The foundation for All Hands Volunteers was built the week after Katrina hit when we engaged hundreds of spontaneous volunteers in the response effort. Our experience in response grew over the next five years and across multiple disasters as our limited staff focused on engaging spontaneous “ordinary” volunteers primarily in international response projects. This manner of engaging volunteers remains foundational to our model today. 2010-2015 Because the magnitude of the Haiti earthquake was so great, we launched our first recovery effort, which included rebuilding 20 schools, still one of my personal high points. Then,in the Philippines, and in NYC following Hurricane Sandy, we committed years to each of these projects and they, in return, taught us about the “art of post-disaster recovery”. We also developed our model of working with (and training) the local labor force, first in the Philippines and today in Nepal. 2016I’m proud of the strength and reputation we’ve developed. Our paid staff now numbers about one hundred, with 85% providing experienced leadership in the field. And our professional staff, led by Executive Director Erik Dyson, provides real results while maximizing the revenues spent directly on helping those impacted by disaster. As a result, we are now strong enough to reach more people in need. Toward this end, we have been able to engage in more response and recovery programs in 2016 than ever before. With our solid foundation in place, this is a time of strength for All Hands Volunteers. We are so grateful for the generosity of our supporters that has built that foundation one brick at a time. David Campbell Founder
When I have the privilege of visiting our programs and meeting families still reeling from disaster and volunteers that have put their lives aside to help, I consistently hear the word “Hope”. Hope for a fresh start, hope for the good in humanity, and hope for a brighter future. And as Thich Nhat Hahn said, “If we believe that tomorrow will be better, we can bear a hardship today.” Facts and figures do matter (and there are plenty of those in the ensuing report), but what matters most is the farreaching impact our staff and volunteers have on the individual lives of people and families around the world as we muck out basements and rebuild homes and schools. I’m proud to say that each and every day, in ways that are sometimes difficult to measure, All Hands Volunteers is neck and elbow deep in Rebuilding Hope. This is the power in engaging passionate and committed “ordinary” people to lend a hand to families staggering from something so paralyzing as a natural disaster. In the end, all of us are transformed in the process. We could not do this without you; our generous supporters, amazing staff, local and international partners, and tireless volunteers- each of whom has chosen to shake off the weight of cynicism, replacing it with a healthy dose of hope that together, we really can make a difference. Erik Dyson Executive Director and CEO
How We’re Making An Impact
TABLE OF CONTENTS Voices of Disaster 5 Map of 2016 Programs
6
About All Hands Volunteers
7
Core Programs* Snapshots
1.2 Million+
Volunteer Hours
68
Disaster Programs
Nepal Earthquake Response/Recovery
10
Philippines Typhoon Response/Recovery
12
Detroit Flood Response/Recovery
14
Individual 2016 Program Snapshots South Carolina Flood Response/Recovery
16
Louisiana Flood Response Bogalusa
18
Louisiana Flood Response Baton Rouge
20
Texas Flood Response 22 All Hands vs Goliath Response
24
Ecuador Earthquake Response
26
Fiji Cyclone Response 28 Malawi Flood Response/Recovery
30
Dominica Flood Response 32
37,719
Volunteers
116
Volunteer Nationalities
Renew 33 List of 2016 Donors 34 Strategic Partners 39 2016 Impact Overview and Board of Directors
40
Financials 41 *Core Programs are those that have been active for over one year and have evolved from Response to Recovery.
I’m so happy that you made us a home. The volunteers work so hard. They cleared the rubble and it looks so good. After good things, all people have hope. I am hopeful. Salina is a 23 year old woman from Nepal who lost her two young sons in the earthquake.
VOICES OF DISASTER I am thankful to God for all the volunteers who came. We didn’t expect such big help from all those that built the bamboo house. I love it and also them. I carry them in my heart. Maria and her husband Roberto have lived in the same house in Ecuador for 30 years. This April, they lost their home in the Earthquake in Ecuador.
My dad owned this land since 1940. I’ve been awake a lot of nights thinking about what do I need to do next. That went on for months. Then All Hands came along and boy that was a life saver. Norman from South Carolina
The last time it flooded was 150 years ago but this was the first time the water was forceful. It was strong enough to tip over deep freezers. We rushed to our cousin’s house on the hill and watched as the water rose. Some waited for the water to go down so they could drive their car but it just kept on rising and we had to be saved with boats. Evelyn is from Louisiana and her family has owned and lived on their land there for 150 years.
Cyclone Winston completely destroyed our house and our source of income. We have only two most important houses in our daily lives- the place where we sleep and eat, and the toilet. We received a gift from All Hands Volunteers - To build and construct a new toilet. It’s a very special moment because we never expected this to happen. Ulaiasi from Fiji
05.
12 8
11
10
7
9
2
1
6
4 5 3
Map of 2016 Programs INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS
DOMESTIC PROGRAMS (US)
01.
Dominica Flood RESPONSE
07.
South Carolina Flood RESPONSE / RECOVERY
02.
Nepal Earthquake RESPONSE / RECOVERY
08.
All Hands vs Goliath RESPONSE
03.
Fiji Cyclone RESPONSE
09.
Louisiana Flood RESPONSE - Bogalusa
04.
Ecuador Earthquake RESPONSE
10.
Louisiana Flood RESPONSE - Baton Rouge
05.
Malawi Flood RESPONSE / RECOVERY
11.
Texas Flood RESPONSE
06.
Philippines Typhoon RESPONSE / RECOVERY
12.
Detroit Flood RESPONSE / RECOVERY
ACTIVE PROGRAM
COMPLETED PROGRAM
Our Mission
Rebuilding Hope
All Hands Volunteers is a US-based, 501(c)3 non-profit organization that addresses the immediate and long-term needs of communities impacted by natural disasters by engaging and leveraging volunteers, partner organizations and local communities. Our vision is to demonstrate the power and value of volunteer service through the tangible work done, the hope it brings to suffering communities and the transformative experiences it provides for volunteers.
We are proud to say that All Hands Volunteers is the leading disaster relief organization powered by volunteers. Over the last 12 years, we have enabled over 37,701 volunteers to donate more than 200,000 days impacting at least 500,000 people all over the globe. And in the process of responding, recovering and renewing the communities we serve, we are transformed by the resilience, hope and strength found in the hearts of the people we meet. And that is why All Hands isn’t just about responding or recovering after disaster. We’re about Rebuilding Hope - in all of us.
07.
What We Do RESPOND We respond to the needs of communities impacted by the immediate devastation from natural disasters by engaging and leveraging volunteers, partner organizations and local communities to help homeowners by engaging in activities like “mucking and gutting” after a flood, “rubbling” after an earthquake, or safe demolition of buildings that are dangerous.
RECOVER We work together with communities to meet their longer term needs by rebuilding the basic “hubs” of a community, including homes, schools, day care facilities, and community centers.
RENEW We become part of the fabric of the communities we serve. As we do so, we uncover new ways that we can serve and encourage our volunteers to meet these needs where feasible. Projects have included weekly movie nights for kids in Malawi to offset the devastation with smiles and laughter, holding weekly English tutoring sessions in the Philippines, or hosting a Thanksgiving dinner for hundreds of flood victims in Detroit.
08.
What Makes Us Unique We are all about Creative Problem Solving:
We Rebuild Together with Local Homeowners and
Every disaster brings unique challenges. We discover the specific needs of those whom we serve and create solutions to fit those needs... not the other way around.
Community Members:
We Focus on the Greatest Need: While there are almost always multiple communities heavily impacted by a natural disaster, All Hands Volunteers is deeply committed to fleshing out the most under-served communities which are often outside of the public eye.
A key objective for All Hands Volunteers is to work together with members of the community. We also offer job training opportunities and certification programs according to the needs of the community.
We Provide a Free, Open Door for Every Volunteer:
We recognize that local organizations understand the needs of their communities better than we do so we work with, and not against, them.
All Hands Volunteers strongly believes in the untapped power of the individual when driven by a desire to make a difference. We take a unique approach and accept spontaneous volunteers from any background, providing on-the-job training free of charge. This broadens our capability to help those in distress, offers a transformative experience to those who serve with us, and brings a wider pool of skills to the relief effort.
We Solve for the Long Term:
We Learn from Those We Serve:
We Collaborate with Local, National, and International Partners:
All Hands Volunteers doesn’t just respond to the initial damage sustained by disaster, we stay onsite and rebuild as long as the need exists. All Hands Volunteers averages 148 days on a program and, as such, always has an eye toward the long term.
In the process of responding, rebuilding, and renewing the communities that we serve, we are transformed by the resilience, hope, and strength we find in the hearts of the people we meet. That is why All Hands Volunteers isn’t just about responding or rebuilding after a disaster. We’re about rebuilding hope in all of us.
09.
NEPAL EARTHQUAKE
1,805 Volunteers
KATHMANDU
RESPONSE
SINDHUPALCHOK
RESPONSE
NUWAKOT
RECOVERY
72
Nationalities
900
activities completed
121
192,980 Volunteer Hours
4,139 families helped
42
unsafe buildings demolished
classrooms and community centers rebuilt
100
53
homes rebuilt
RECOVERY
toilets rebuilt
15
Months Invested
18,501 people impacted
583
sites cleared of debris
200
people trained with new skills
PARTNERS
10.
LINCOLN SCHOOL, KATHMANDU NEPAL · SINGAPORE AMERICAN SCHOOL · THE DAN FREDINBURG FOUNDATION · SEVA FOUNDATION · THE BOSTON FOUNDATION · CANTOR FITZGERALD RELIEF FUND · AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS FOUNDATION · REACH OUT WORLDWIDE · IOM · HAPPY HEARTS FUND · ROOM TO READ
NEPAL EARTHQUAKE RESPONSE/RECOVERY In April 2015, a massive 7.8 earthquake hit Nepal, causing over 9,000 deaths and crippling destruction of homes, schools and infrastructure. It was the worst of its kind in 80 years. All Hands Volunteers has now been in Nepal for 15 months and 1,805 volunteers have joined us, generously donating almost 200,000 hours toward putting families back in homes and kids back in schools in Kathmandu, Sindhupalchok and Nuwakot. We have simultaneously launched numerous community projects such as masonry training, school reading projects, and even weekly movie nights. After more than a year, the Nepali people are still in dire need, so we are still hard at work. Moving forward, All Hands Volunteers will focus our efforts on the one goal that will forever shape the future of Nepal - getting the children back to school.
11.
PHILIPPINES TYPHOON LEYTE TYPHOON
RESPONSE
RECOVERY
SAMAR TYPHOON
RESPONSE
RECOVERY
1,282 Volunteers
66
1,332
people impacted
20
310
1
community improvements made
41
toilets rebuilt
27
Months Invested
20,000
families helped
homes and schools cleared of debris
13
Volunteer Hours
5,000
activities completed
schools and community centers rebuilt
243,930
Nationalities
evacuation center built
448
homes rebuilt
500
people trained with new skills
PARTNERS
12.
STREETLIGHT · SAN MIGUEL COMMUNITY FOUNDATION · OPERATION BLESSING INTERNATIONAL · TZU CHI · SHELTER BOX · WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION · INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION ON MIGRATION · OTTERBOX · CATHOLIC RELIEF SERVICES · HUMEDICA INTERNATIONAL AID
LEYTE TYPHOON RESPONSE/RECOVERY In November 2013, Typhoon Haiyan, the strongest storm to make landfall in recorded history, tore through the Philippines; ripping up farms, leveling villages and leaving 1.1 million homes damaged or destroyed. After months of clearing debris and demolishing unsafe buildings, All Hands Volunteers focused our efforts on building hundreds of homes. Most recently, we came across another NGO called Streetlight, which was created to better the lives of street children by getting them off the street, and their residences had been completely destroyed. We determined that we could use our expertise to help these kids by building a new dormitory, study center and clinic - this time, farther from the water- and that is just what we did.
SAMAR TYPHOON RESPONSE/RECOVERY Due to its location on the eastern coast of Samar, the small town of Hernani was left in a state of ruins when Typhoon Haiyan swept through. When the typhoon struck Hernani, villagers ran to higher ground in a bid to survive the storm, enduring several fearful hours of high winds and destruction out in the open. These stories prompted All Hands Volunteers to build a two-and-half-story concrete evacuation center to protect the villagers from future storms and to serve as a community center in calmer weather. And in 2016, the Hernani Evacuation Center was open for business.
13.
DETROIT FLOOD DETROIT FLOOD
923 Volunteers
673
activities completed
567
homes and schools mucked and gutted
51
homes rebuilt
RESPONSE
32
RECOVERY
27,298
Nationalities
Volunteer Hours
572
families helped
18
Months Invested
1,888
people impacted
5
day care centers rebuilt
50
people trained with new skills
PARTNERS
14.
NORTHWEST DETROIT FLOOD RECOVERY PROJECT · UMCOR · UNITED WAY OF SOUTHEAST MICHIGAN · 5TH/3RD BANK AND FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK OF INDIANAPOLIS DISASTER RELIEF PROGRAM · MENNONITE DISASTER SERVICES · PRESBYTERIAN DISASTER ASSISTANCE · PRESBYTERY OF DETROIT HANDS ON MISSION · ISLAMIC CIRCLE OF NORTH AMERICA ICNA (ARIF) · CITY OF DETROIT · SEMIFRG · BUILDON · WAYNE METRO COMMUNITY ACTION AGENCY · DEVELOPMENT CENTERS, INC · STIHL · SOUTHWEST AIRLINES
DETROIT FLOOD RESPONSE/RECOVERY In August 2014, a large storm system moved across parts of Southeastern Michigan producing a record one-day of rainfall, damaging over 129,000 homes across the greater Detroit area. The Detroit flood was declared by FEMA as the worst disaster of 2014, but it received little media attention, so the residents of the city never experienced the swell of support that is so critical to engaging help and financial support in the recovery effort. But All Hands Volunteers was there and stayed the course, working tirelessly to repair flood damaged homes and remove mold from hundreds more that had been neglected for many months by high risk homeowners that could not afford the repairs.
15.
ECUADOR EARTHQUAKE RESPONSE April 18, 2016 to Present On April 16, a 7.8 magnitude earthquake and violent aftershocks occurred in Ecuador destroying roads, bridges, and power supplies to the regions surrounding the Esmeraldas province. The damage to the country’s infrastructure was unprecedented, with over 20,000 people left without homes. A state of emergency was declared across six provinces in Ecuador and the death toll reached over 660. The greatest damages and largest number of affected populations were reported in the Manabi province with 22,754 people living in shelters and 16,185 households destroyed or damaged. All Hands Volunteers has teams performing debris management, rubble and demolition activities, and camp improvement in the Esmeraldas and Manabi Provinces. The program also consists of constructing temporary and permanent homes.
16.
SOUTH CAROLINA FLOOD RESPONSE/RECOVERY The October 2015 North American Storm Complex caused historic river and flash flooding across South Carolina and severe damage. In immediate response, All Hands deployed teams to the overlooked areas of St Andrews and Georgetown for 2 months, mucking and gutting and removing debris from people’s properties. And in February 2016, as the need remained severe, we made the decision to come back to lend our host of volunteers to rebuilding homes for families that remained homeless as a result of the storm. We have been engaged in this effort ever since.
SOUTH CAROLINA FLOOD RESPONSE RECOVERY
499
38
Volunteers
Nationalities
170
projects completed
21 homes repaired
10,397 Volunteer Hours
105
families helped
3
rain gardens built
10
Months Invested
530
people impacted
17 mold removals
92
homes mucked and gutted
PARTNERS NAMAN HOTELS · AIRBNB · SOUTHWEST AIRLINES · TRAVELERS FOUNDATION · AMERICAN RED CROSS · MORGRIDGE FAMILY FOUNDATION · OSKAR BLUES CAN’D AID RELIEF FUND · MB3 · CREDIT SUISSE · TOOLBANK · REACH OUT WORLDWIDE · HABITAT FOR HUMANITY - GEORGETOWN COUNTY · SALVATION ARMY · BLACK RIVER UNITED WAY · CENTRAL CAROLINA COMMUNITY FOUNDATION
17.
LOUISIANA BOGALUSA 178
Volunteers
10
9,284
Nationalities
162
Volunteer Hours
102
activities completed
families helped
13
45
rooves tarped
mold removals
86
homes mucked and gutted
RESPONSE
4
Months Invested
203
people impacted
18
homes cleared of debris
PARTNERS
18.
REACH OUT WORLDWIDE · AIRBNB · FEMA · AMERICORPS · 3M USA · INTERNATIONAL PAPER FOUNDATION · SOUTHWEST AIRLINES · TOOLBANK · STIHL USA · MISSIONS ON WHEELS · AMERICARES · DEWALT · NORTHSHORE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION
LOUISIANA FLOOD RESPONSE BOGALUSA In March 2016, flooding in the south-central US brought record level rain and flash floods, leaving more than 12,000 homes severely damaged or destroyed. All Hands Volunteers immediately engaged in the response effort, focusing on the hardest hit, most ignored areas (as always). The need was so overwhelming that we received daily calls for help from other areas that we could not respond to as we didn’t have sufficient resources. This was hard on our teams who had come to help, but they kept at it, mucking and gutting and sanitizing homes with a fervor only accessible to those with a genuine purpose beyond themselves.
19.
LOUISIANA FLOOD RESPONSE BATON ROUGE In August 2016, the state of Louisiana was hit with a second wave of flooding that was declared one of the worst natural disasters in recent years. Thousands were forced from their homes into shelters, and over 100,000 homes damaged. All Hands Volunteers immediately jumped into action to help victims who were reeling from the storm. And we are there today mucking and gutting homes for families living in those shelters - getting them one step closer to reclaiming their homes and the precious routines of every day life.
20.
LOUISIANA BATON ROUGE RESPONSE
44
3
Volunteers
1,621
Nationalities
11
Volunteer Hours
9
activities completed
2
Weeks Invested
23
families helped
people impacted
11
3
homes mucked
homes cleared
and gutted
of debris
PARTNERS AIRLINK · SOUTHWEST · AIRBNB · MEDTRONIC · AMERICARES · REACH OUT WORLDWIDE · STANLEY BLACK & DECKER, INC. · TOOLBANK · HABITAT FOR HUMANITY · MB3
21.
TEXAS FLOOD RESPONSE In April 2016, historic rainfall struck the state of Texas, crippling Houston and a vast region surrounding it. As a result, our long time partner, UMCOR-TX, asked All Hands Volunteers to join them, bringing our disaster assessment tools and volunteer coordination expertise to bear on the problem. Due to the thousands of residents suffering from water damage, we threw ourselves into clearing homes covered in debris and mucking, gutting and sanitizing homes that had been flooded.
22.
TEXAS FLOOD 363
10
Volunteers
7,878
Nationalities
73
activities completed
4
unsafe buildings demolished
7
homes cleared of debris
Volunteer Hours
55
families helped
RESPONSE
3
Months Invested
150
people impacted
47
homes mucked and gutted
15 mold removals
PARTNERS UMCOR (UNITED METHODIST COMMITTEE ON RELIEF) · TOOLBANK · THE GEORGE FOUNDATION · THE HENDERSON-WESSENDORFF FOUNDATION · SOUTHWEST AIRLINES · AIRBNB
23.
ALL HANDS vs GOLIATH
MISSISSIPPI, MISSOURI AND TEXAS
216
30
Volunteers
Nationalities
119
8,800
4
Volunteer Hours
96
activities completed
RESPONSE
Months Invested
250
families helped
people impacted
54
12
34
homes cleared of debris
homes mucked and gutted
mold removals
6
unsafe buildings demolished
13 homes rebuilt
PARTNERS
24.
TOOLBANK USA · CHURCH WORLD SERVICE · SOUTHERN BAPTIST DISASTER RELIEF · WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY · HEART MINISTRIES · EUREKA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE · SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTISTS · WORLD RENEW · LUTHERAN FAMILY AND CHILDREN SERVICES OF MO · DISABILITY RESOURCE CENTER OF FESTUS MO · IOCC (INTERNATIONAL ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN CHARITIES) · CONVOY OF HOPE · AMERICORPS SAINT LOUIS · MDS (MENNONITE DISASTER SERVICES) · UNITED METHODIST COMMITTEE ON RELIEF · TEAM RUBICON · SOUTHWEST AIRLINES · SRS RAISE THE ROOF FOUNDATION · THE BOEING COMPANY · AIRBNB
ALL HANDS vs GOLIATH RESPONSE In December 2015, tornadoes and floods from winter storm Goliath struck the southern and mid-western parts of the U.S. One of the many tornadoes that hit was 130 miles long. With rapid responses first launched in the states of Mississippi and Texas, All Hands then turned to St. Louis, Missouri where the response effort focused on gutting and sanitizing homes for high risk residents who couldn’t otherwise afford the treatment.
25.
ECUADOR EARTHQUAKE 230 Volunteers
64
activities completed
30
temporary homes built
1
school improved
28
Nationalities
25,000 Volunteer Hours
104
families helped
1
permanent home built
29
homes cleared of debris
RESPONSE
5
Months Invested
550
people impacted
2
community improvements made
1
community center built
PARTNERS
26.
KAHRE · GAD DE SAN VICENTE · PROGAD · RACE2REBUILD · IRONMAN FOUNDATION · INSECT SHIELD · OPERATION USA · AIRLINK · GLOBAL GIVING · GREATER GOOD · STANLEY BLACK & DECKER, INC. · AIRBNB
ECUADOR EARTHQUAKE RESPONSE In April 2016, a 7.8 magnitude earthquake and violent aftershocks hit Ecuador destroying roads, bridges, and power supplies. The damage to the country’s infrastructure was unprecedented. The largest number of affected people was reported in the Manabi province with 22,754 people living in shelters and 16,185 households destroyed. All Hands Volunteers has been fully engaged since April in the response effortthrowing our 230 backs into clearing debris and building both temporary and permanent homes for families in need. MANTA SATELLITE PROJECT In Manta, we have partnered with the Ironman Foundation, Kahre and Race2Rebuild, to construct a community center for Ceibo Renacer - a new housing development for more than 500 families who lost their homes in the earthquake. This center will provide these families with a place to gather, celebrate and rebuild a sense of community, belonging and hope.
27.
ECUADOR EARTHQUAKE RESPONSE April 18, 2016 to Present On April 16, a 7.8 magnitude earthquake and violent aftershocks occurred in Ecuador destroying roads, bridges, and power supplies to the regions surrounding the Esmeraldas province. The damage to the country’s infrastructure was unprecedented, with over 20,000 people left without homes. A state of emergency was declared across six provinces in Ecuador and the death toll reached over 660. The greatest damages and largest number of affected populations were reported in the Manabi province with 22,754 people living in shelters and 16,185 households destroyed or damaged. All Hands Volunteers has teams performing debris management, rubble and demolition activities, and camp improvement in the Esmeraldas and Manabi Provinces. The program also consists of constructing temporary and permanent homes.
28.
FIJI CYCLONE RESPONSE On February 20, 2016, Fiji took a direct hit by Tropical Cyclone Winston, the strongest tropical cyclone ever to strike this small island nation, flattening numerous buildings, decimating countless villages and leaving an estimated 250,000 people without access to water and sanitation and almost 50,000 in need of emergency latrines. So All Hands Volunteers jumped into action, restoring and building emergency latrines, toilets, septic systems and showers across affected villages.
FIJI CYCLONE
127
Volunteers
18
12,582
Nationalities
360
RESPONSE
Volunteer Hours
622
projects completed
7
3,111
families helped
TEMPORARY BUILD (WASH)
285
75
latrines
community showers
Months Invested
people impacted
DISTRIBUTION - SHELTER/HYGIENE KITS
129
solar lamps distributed
101
hygiene kits distributed
PARTNERS AIRBNB 路 AIRLINK 路 SHELTERBOX 路 HABITAT FOR HUMANITY FIJI 路 UNICEF
29.
MALAWI FLOOD RESPONSE/RECOVERY In January 2015, torrential rain caused mass flooding throughout Southern Malawi leaving 336,000 people displaced from their homes. All Hands immediately responded, assisting the International Organization for Migration in tracking Internally Displaced Persons and providing flood survivors with temporary shelters. Moving into the recovery phase, the focus turned to hand digging and bricking 48 wells for the farmers who lost all access to water and therefore, their livelihoods. The completion of these wells provided the local farmers, who worked alongside us each day, with a sustainable system that uses irrigation to produce up to three crops a year.
30.
MALAWI FLOOD 283
15
Volunteers
Nationalities
48
55,212 Volunteer Hours
500
activites completed
families helped
RESPONSE RECOVERY
11
Months Invested
2,000 people impacted
48 wells completed
PARTNERS MONSANTO FUND · MOUNA FOUNDATION
31.
DOMINICA FLOOD 56 8 2,658 2
RESPONSE
Volunteers
Nationalities
30
activities completed
Volunteer Hours
100
families helped
Months Invested
600
people impacted
29
1
homes cleared of debris
school cleared of debris
PARTNERS SEABORNE AIRLINES 路 IGT路 SOUTHWEST路 AIRBNB路 CREDIT SUISSE
32.
DOMINICA FLOOD RESPONSE In August 2015, Tropical Storm Erika ravaged the eastern Caribbean island of Dominica, destroying entire villages and changing the lives of more than 20,000 people. As a result, 56 All Hands Volunteers embraced the challenge of helping this island nation in their hour of need, working 6 days a week for over 2 months and donating more than 2,658 backbreaking hours removing debris from homes and schools so the community could begin again.
RENEW
South Carolina
As All Hands Volunteers responds to disasters, we become connected to the people that we serve. In short, we make friends. And as we do, we organically uncover new ways that we can help. We encourage our teams to act on these ideas because in the end, we find that these experiences change us all - from the inside out. Here are just a few examples from 2016.
Rain Garden Project Three Rain Garden Projects have been created to build hope literally in the “ashes of disaster” as volunteers and homeowners work side by side to plant a garden on once-flooded properties. These special gardens are specifically designed to absorb more rain water than normal in order to prevent future flooding from rainfall.
Philippines
Nepal
Little Dreams
PASSA Training - Participatory Approach for Safe Shelter Awareness
Most kids we met in the Philippines had never been to the cinema, so we decided to take our projector and
Mason Trainings and a PASSA
screen and watch a family-friendly
training were conducted both to give
film twice a week together. We called
individuals new job skills and to build
it our “Little Dreams” project and
important long-term resiliency for the
hosted hundreds of children. Why
entire community. Over 200 Nepalese
Little Dreams? Because it lit up our
have participated and when they
program every single time - for kids
graduated, there wasn’t a dry eye in
and volunteers alike.
the house.
Fiji
Fiji
Community Day
WASH-based Education Project
Our team launched community days,
To raise awareness of safe hygiene
engaging families from villages all
practices and protection measures,
around. Activities included sports
the team held free WASH (Water,
events, art and crafts sessions,
Sanitation, Hygiene) classes for
cooking, and crab hunting. These
women, children, the elderly and
days were full of play and laughter - a
people living with disabilities.
welcome break from the harsh realities of post-disaster life.
33.
On behalf of the entire All Hands family, thank you to our generous donors! Gifts $200,000+
•
Asami and Benjamin Ferguson
•
Anonymous
•
Mary Boone and Jack Ferrebee
•
Streetlight
•
GlobalGiving
•
•
Happy Hearts Fund
•
International Organization for Migration
•
Karakin Foundation
•
•
Southwest Airlines
•
Lutheran Family and Children’s Services of
•
Dora Gafford
Missouri
•
Habitat for Humanity
MB3
•
IGT
•
Barbara and Michael P. McQueeney
•
Innovation Advisors
Ironman Foundation
•
Andrew Morse
•
Kit and John E. Krampf
•
Nancy and Ernest Keet
•
Naman Hotels
•
Kon Eng Kwek
•
Doris and John Keiser
•
Norman Raab Foundation
•
Karen and Nick Leschly
Gifts $100,000+
•
Medtronic, Inc.
•
Northshore Community Foundation
•
Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City
•
American Red Cross
•
Monsanto Fund
•
Oskar Blues Can’d Aid Relief Fund
•
McCarty Family Foundation, Inc.
•
Gay and David Campbell
•
Natalie and Michael Pehl
•
OtterBox
•
Saira and Rob Minter
•
Center for Disaster Philanthropy
•
Stanley Black and Decker, Inc.
•
Presbytery of Detroit
•
Presbytery of Cincinnati
•
Google, Inc.
•
Seva Foundation
•
Reach Out Worldwide
•
Lynn and Michael Robinson
•
Humedica International Aid
•
Singapore American School
•
Andrew Rudnick
•
The Carlos And Elizabeth Heath Foundation
•
Lincoln School, Kathmandu Nepal
•
The Boston Foundation
•
SRS Raise the Roof Foundation Inc.
•
The Domenico Paulon Foundation
•
Travelers Foundation
•
The Dan Fredinburg Foundation
•
The American Institute of Architects
•
The Hunt-Dann Charitable Fund
•
United Methodist Committee on Relief
•
3M USA
•
The George Foundation
•
The Mulroy Family Foundation - Hodgson
•
The Ziff Family
•
The Henderson-Wessendorff Foundation
Russ
Gifts $10,000+
•
The Palmer Foundation
Gifts $50,000+
•
Airbnb
•
Janice and Thomas A. Young
•
Airlink
•
Black River United Way
•
Trinitarian Congregational Church
•
Joni Wong
•
Catholic Relief Services
•
Robert Bracco
•
Wordstream, Inc.
•
Tian Zexin
•
Central Carolina Community Foundation
•
Center for Orthodox Chrisian Studies
•
Ian D’Arcy
•
Pam and Bruce Coleman
Gifts $5,000+
Gifts $1,000+
•
Goulston & Storrs Counsellors at Law
•
Paul Dodd
•
Anonymous
•
Carolyn and Thomas Adams
•
The Morgridge Family Foundation
•
Joanne and Alan T. Eland
•
The Boeing Company
•
AKC Fund, Inc.
•
Operation USA
•
Greater Good
•
Mary Ann and Robert Budin
•
Akron University
•
Renee and Adam Haber
•
Justin Cava-Jones
•
American School of Milan
Gifts $25,000+
•
William T. Hammond
•
Chambers Family Foundation, Inc.
•
AmeriCorps
•
Ansara Family Fund
•
Harmes C. Fishback Foundation
•
April and Kris Cyr
•
Anonymous (17)
•
Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund
•
Henry E. Niles Foundation
•
Chester Kitchings Family Foundation
•
Kesang Angotsang
•
Cloudsplitter Foundation
•
International Paper Foundation
•
Fifth Third Bank
•
Nancy Arnosti
•
Credit Suisse
•
Keen
•
Liz and Eric Friedfeld-Gebaide
•
Jane Astrid
34.
•
The South Carolina Synod Evangelical Lutheran Church
•
Yuen Ting Au
•
Stephen Donehoo
•
Harris Publications
•
Michael P. Mello
•
Gail Babel
•
Caissa Douwes and L. Keith Mullins
•
Jan and Beez Hazen
•
Milestone Golf Club, LTD
•
Carol and David Baer
•
Harriet Dugan
•
Janet Hecker
•
Alexander F. Moore
•
David Baggs
•
Joane and Bernard Dumont
•
Michael W. Hecker
•
Moravian Church in America
•
Doris and Sheldon Baron
•
Debbi and Erik Dyson
•
Coleen and Brett Hellerman
•
Cynthia Moser
•
Baycoast Bank
•
Colleen and William Earle
•
Heather Hull
•
Motor City Blight Busters
•
Bell Family Foundation for Hope, Inc.,
•
Eileen Fisher, Inc.
•
Michael Inscore
•
Ranj Nair
•
Bike & Build, Inc.
•
EO Products
•
Insect Shield
•
National Voluntary Organizations Active in
•
Christina Bodznick
•
Eureka United Methodist Church
•
Interlot, Inc.
•
Judith and Vanu Bose
•
Shelley Evans
•
Christie Jeffers
•
Luis Neira
•
Kevin Boudreaux
•
Exelon
•
Jefferson County Community Partnership
•
Vuong Nguyen
•
Patrick Brennan
•
Monique Falloux Morizet
•
Bruce Jones
•
Joan and Carter Norris
•
Helen Brierley
•
Peter Feeney
•
Matthias Kaiser
•
Nortek Global HVAC
•
Brookside Christian Reformed Church
•
Michael Fenton
•
Ben Karp
•
North & Southampton Reformed Church
•
Michele Bruno
•
Beth Floor
•
Liz and Peter Kirkwood
•
Osaka International School of Kwansei
•
Ian Bryant
•
Focus Fund
•
Brian Kitchener
•
Joel Buckwell
•
Joseph Foust
•
Emma Knight
•
Kinnari and Jaymin Patel
•
Lisa and John Cancro
•
Frans. P. Guepin Living Trust
•
Tracee and Paul Laing
•
Pembroke Philanthropy Advisors
•
Simon Carter
•
Peter Friedfeld
•
Connie and Patrick Laverty-O’Connor
•
Thomas Polk
•
Charitable Choices
•
Keith Frohreich
•
Tatiana Lesko
•
Robin and Michael Prescott
•
Charles E. and Dorothy K. Brown
•
FT Cares Foundation
•
Cindy Lin
•
Nick Price
Foundation
•
Joseph Gendron
•
Catherine Lino
•
Ana Priu
•
Elena and Peter Chia
•
Catherine Gevers and John Fernandez
•
Lowcountry Presbyterian Church
•
Quail Roost Foundation
•
Gabriele and Walter Chorney
•
Justin Gmelich
•
Loretta Lowe
•
Revelly, Inc.
•
Joe Chouinard
•
Chanelle Gonzalez
•
Rebekka Balser
•
Rotary Club of Torrington - Winsted Areas
•
Rosemary Clark
•
Mark Gorsuch
•
William Luby
•
Cecilia Ruffing
•
Clean Ones Cares
•
Patricia and John Goss
•
Dil Maharjan
•
Shawn Rupp
•
Catherine Coe
•
Brian Gustafson
•
Patricia and Robert Maloney
•
Rural Heritage
•
Fran and Monroe Cowan
•
Brendan Hames
•
Diane and Kenneth Mandile
•
S.W.I.F.T. Pan Americas, Inc. Community
•
Cumberland Presbyterian Church
•
Judy Hamilton
•
Marianapolis Prep School
•
Peter Cunningham
•
Tracee and Paul Hammond
•
Janet Martinez
•
Angelika and Mitchell Sadar
•
Adam and Rachel Deery
•
Handang Tumulong Foundation
•
Mary and Anthony B. Martino
•
Salem Lutheran Church
•
Development Centers, Inc.
•
Miriam Hancock
•
Sara and James McClure
•
Keith Salvata
•
Gregory Dietrich
•
Rachel Hansen
•
Gretchen McGill
•
Salvation Army
Disaster
Gakuin
Affairs
35.
•
San Francisco State University
•
Vincentian University
•
Daniel Monnet
•
GDF Suez Energy North America, Inc.
•
Jedd Sankar-Gorton
•
Nancy Wadhams
•
Blair Morrison
•
GE Foundation
•
Michael Sapnar
•
Waypoint Community Church
•
Victor Nguyan
•
General Mills, Inc
•
Sarah and Jackie McCarron Memorial Fund
•
Gwen and Tom Weihe
•
Amy & Bobby Ontheroad
•
Give 4th
•
Savastano Family Foundation
•
Dennis W. White
•
Patsy Pang
•
Goldman Sachs
•
Schoenberg Family Charitable Fund
•
Helen Willetts
•
Brooke Paulus
•
Google, Inc
•
Douglas Schoenberg
•
Barbara and Michael Williams
•
Matthew Prete
•
Hewlett-Packard
•
Elizabeth and David Scott
•
Susan and Frederic Winthrop
•
Paul Rando
•
Keysight Technologies
•
Seaborne Airlines
•
Laura and Spencer Winthrop-Abbott
•
Ramiel Rogers
•
•
Second Church In Newton
•
Katie Wolf
•
Rostislav Rumenov
•
Macy’s
•
Rhys Sevilla
•
World Nomads
•
Casey Schick
•
Maser Consulting
•
Laura and Christopher Seyfarth
•
World Renew
•
David Scott
•
Medtronic, Inc
•
June and Kenneth Shwartz
•
Yale University Law School
•
Blair Scott
•
Microsoft Corporation
•
Scott Siemon
•
Linda and Bill Young
•
Chris Seyfarth
•
Newfield Exploration Company
•
Albert Silva
•
Anthony Yuen
•
Alix Seyfarth
•
Nordstrom
•
Sanda Simanavicius
•
Eddie Shields
•
Nortek, Inc.
•
Michelle Sink
Fundraising Superstars
•
Tyler Storlie
•
Nvidia
•
Ingebjørg Skaare
•
Mike Arceo
•
Tom Vickers
•
Outerwall
•
Steve Soh
•
Roos Boeve
•
Candice Young
•
People’s United Bank
•
Robert Steckel
•
Joanna Bowden
•
Lena Yi Yu
•
Pfizer, Inc.
•
Ned Stetson
•
Patrick Brennan
•
Pioneer Natural Resources
•
St. Mark’s Evangelical Lutheran Church
•
Simon Carter
Corporate Matching Gifts
•
Salesforce
•
Stihl Southwest, Inc
•
Tricia Chang
•
Adobe Systems
•
Shell Oil
•
Wendy Storlie
•
Serena Chia
•
Alliance Data
•
Swarovski
•
Barbara and James Stowe
•
Jeff Colombo
•
American Express
•
Takeda Pharmaceuticals
•
Strandberg Engineering
•
Marianne Cornell
•
Apple, Inc.
•
The International Monetary Fund
•
Natalie Sukhaphadhana
•
Samuel Corwin
•
Bank of America
•
TransRe
•
Marianne Sullivan
•
Mo DeLong
•
Boeing Company
•
UnitedHealth Group
•
Donald Sweitzer
•
Christopher Duffy
•
Chevron Energy Solutions
•
Visa
•
Rich Tennessen
•
Amy & Blanka Flavin
•
Dell, Inc.
•
Workday, Inc.
•
The Adam F. and Judith H. Ambielli
•
Giacomo Gianniotti
•
Exelon
•
ZGF Architects LLP
•
Gap, Inc.
Foundation
•
Tanya Glanville-Wallis
•
The Greater New Orleans Foundation
•
David Guhl
•
The Phantom Laboratory
•
Christopher Helmerson
•
The Workshop Brewing Company
•
Amanda & Pat Hess
•
Bing Thom
•
Wayne Hitchings
•
Thomas P. Waters Foundation
•
Shannon Hudson
•
Roxanne Torok
•
Brian Kahn
•
Sandra Ueltschi
•
Megan Langridge
•
Gary Vance
•
Amanda Mead
36.
A special thank you to those generous supporters that have joined our inaugural Legacy Circle by remembering All Hands Volunteers in their estate planning.
• • • •
Gay and David Campbell Ian D’Arcy Jack Ferrebee Judy Hamilton
• • • •
Michael W. Hecker Sandra Lawson Michael P. McQueeney Andrew Rudnick
Donors under $1,000
•
Irene Bointon
•
Sengphet Dao
•
Martin Frenzel
•
Alex Holmes
•
Richard Ableser
•
Charles Bond
•
Tonya Davies
•
Hans-Peter Frier
•
Dominic Honey
•
Jorge Abreu
•
Bonfire Entertainment
•
Wayne De Nazarie
•
Chantel Fulmer
•
Robert Howley
•
Diane Accica
•
Becky Bonnell
•
Trevor Deave
•
Richard Garcia
•
Richard Hudson
•
Warren Acuncius
•
Alison Boulle
•
Rosanne Deblaere
•
Pf Garcier
•
Thomas Huggett
•
Roger Acunicus
•
Bosse Tools
•
Nicolas Delieutraz
•
Adrian Gardham
•
Daniel Hughes
•
David Adelman
•
Roger Boyce
•
Carmen Denekamp
•
Luana Gastaldin
•
Wendy Hughes
•
Jeya Aerenson
•
Bernhard Brandstetter
•
Sandrien Deroose
•
John Gavin
•
Matthew Hughes
•
Joanna Ah Yow
•
Thomas And Brita Brennan
•
Linda Deubert
•
Frances Gawn
•
Lea Hungerbuehler
•
Jennifer Ahlgren
•
Shane Brennan
•
Phil Dieckmann
•
Catherine Gevers
•
Andrew Hunter
•
Lisa And Ken Alexander
•
Melanie Britton
•
Susan Diekman
•
Ewan Gibson
•
Craig Hupper
•
Steve Alianiello
•
Mike Brook
•
Ann Dimaggio
•
Virginie Gmelich Meijling
•
Kevin Hurley
•
Ashley Allen
•
Jean-Luc Brouillet
•
James DiNardo
•
Jeffrey Goldfarb
•
Fionnuala Hussey
•
Diana Alves
•
Robert Brown
•
John Distaso
•
Sharan Golini
•
Christopher Hutchings
•
Kenneth Apfel
•
Jessica Brown
•
Martin Donaghy
•
Antonio Goncalves
•
Erik Hutchinson
•
David Arnold
•
Anna Buch
•
Katie Doyle
•
Michael Gonzalez
•
Simon Insoll
•
Becky Atkins
•
Richard Butz
•
Jo-Ann F. Driscoll
•
Pamela Goodman
•
Fred Jacques
•
Robert Au
•
Jessica Capshaw
•
Alexander Dudley
•
Jacinda Gorring
•
Steve Jamers
•
Michael Babel
•
Richard Carter
•
Lynne Duffy
•
Tom Gozney
•
Robert James
•
Joo Young Baek
•
Fabio Celadon
•
Kathleen Duffy
•
Timothy F. Grace
•
Tina John
•
Julian Balaam
•
Juan Pablo Chadid
•
Emma Duley
•
William Graebner
•
Mark Felix Johnson
•
Balbach Family Foundation
•
Gunneswar Challa
•
Rose Dunham
•
Jean Graham
•
Melissa Jones
•
Kevin Ballard
•
Joyce Chan
•
Sarah Dye
•
Barry Greer
•
Kelvin Jones
•
Deborah Barber
•
Francis Ki Kai Chan
•
Jeanne Eagle
•
Brent Grey
•
Farid Kader
•
Cherie Barbian
•
Stefanie Chang
•
Rob Elliott
•
Holly Grimm
•
Hannah Kahn
•
Katrina Baren
•
Ryan Chang
•
Deirdre Ely
•
Alfred Gruber
•
Yashica Karanduth
•
Katherine Barker
•
Charlene Chang
•
Ryder England
•
Barbara M. Gunther
•
Emily Karp
•
Roland Baskerville
•
Hung Chao Heng
•
Robin Erler
•
Larry Gurwin
•
Samrat Kc
•
Tarek Bass
•
Imogen Charnley
•
Donny Fan
•
Jonathan Hadas
•
Tom Keirl
•
Steve Baxley
•
Armelle Chenevez
•
John Favorite
•
Meghan Hagedorn
•
Colin P. Kelsey
•
Mary Bayly
•
Carol Chiu
•
Jayne Feeney
•
Ronnie Halper
•
William Kennedy
•
Kirsten Beasley
•
Nina Chokshi
•
Maureen Feeney
•
Deborah Halper
•
Samuel Kilby
•
Eamon Beirne
•
Indira Clark
•
Brook Feerick
•
Kevin Hanrahan
•
Robin Kim
•
Michele Bell
•
Tim Clarke
•
Dovid Fein
•
Derek Hansen
•
Alice Kirby
•
Celina Beltran
•
David Coffey
•
Joyce Feng
•
Ross Hayashi
•
Philip Klein
•
Christine Benn
•
Antonio Joao Collaziol
•
Curtis Fennell
•
Jan Hebert
•
Richard Knapp
•
Frank Benn
•
Nancy Conyers
•
John Fernandez
•
Richard Hein
•
Casey Korsak
•
Catherine Bennett
•
Scott Cooper
•
Claudia Fiedler
•
Richard Heitzmann
•
Veselin Kulev
•
Adler Bernard
•
Chris & Roxanne Copass
•
Brendan Finlayson
•
James Heller
•
Kasturi Kumar
•
Zillie Bhuju
•
Jill Cornell
•
Malcolm Finlayson
•
David Henderson
•
Henry Lacey
•
Howard Bierman
•
Konrad Crabtree
•
Joseph Fitzgerald
•
Valerie Henry
•
Meredith Lackey
•
Joe Stanbridge Billie Marchant
•
Doug Crossley
•
Joyce Flaherty
•
Connie Hershey
•
Brooke Laing
•
Julianne Bisceglia
•
Megan Curphey
•
Joelen Franks
•
Madeleine Hesselink
•
Gary Lamb
•
Monika Blach
•
Frank Cuthbert
•
Cliff Freeman
•
Chelsea Hill
•
Bryce Lampshire
•
Robert Blasio
•
Nguyen D Dug Vuong
•
Marjorie Freiman
•
Margaret Hill
•
Daniel Lancaster
•
Susan Boggio
•
Isabelle Daniel
•
Carolann Frenzel
•
Wayne Hitchings
•
Steve Latimer
37.
•
Dick Lauteslager
•
Daniel Monnet
•
Jennifer Powers
•
James Scott
•
Victor Unger
•
Don Lavelle
•
Fehrunnisa Moore
•
Martin Pratley
•
Stefan Seeger
•
Kerry Unwin
Suzannah Press
•
Alexis Senentz
•
Bradford Uricchio
Brian Sheehan
•
Jean-Marc Vallas
•
Sarah Lawrene
•
Jane Moore
•
•
Brett Lawton
•
Edward Moragas
•
Coral Prete
•
•
Andrew Leavey
•
Kelly Morris
•
Roy Price
•
Catherine Shelley
•
Mark Van Vroonhoven
•
David Leonard
•
Jessica Morrison
•
Pat Pritchard
•
David Shepherd
•
Teresa Van Woy
•
James Leslie
•
Anna Morrow
•
Daniel Pritchard
•
James Shields
•
Ellie Vandiver
•
Lester Poretsky Family
•
Viola Morse
•
William Purkis
•
Edward Shields
•
Antoon Vanhaverbeke
Eduardo Raez
•
Curt Siemon
•
Gale Vantrease
Adam Signy
•
Mary Vecchio
Foundation Inc.
•
Kellie Mueller
•
•
Esther Lewis
•
Jim Myhre
•
Arlynn Raez
•
•
Dekyi Lhaze
•
Virginia Neill
•
Brenda Rafter-Tadgell
•
Rita Sinkovec
•
Kathleen Vendola
•
Kellie Lim
•
Christian Nelles
•
Rachel Rando
•
Gary Smith
•
Jennifer Vickers
•
Wenhong Lin
•
Selina Ng
•
Vanessa Rayner
•
Jeff Smith
•
Maria Viso Gonzalez
•
Kaj Lindholm
•
Hong Nguyen
•
Laura Reid
•
Soapbox Soap
•
Lynn Vojvodich
Aline Reis
•
Lisa Stelmar
•
Dow Walker
Paul Sterbenz
•
James Walker
•
David A. Liu
•
Hoan Nguyen
•
•
Glenys Livesey
•
Joy Nicholson
•
Emilie Reiser
•
•
Maistre Louis
•
Tory Norwood
•
Diogo Ribeiro
•
Scott Stoll
•
Frank Wall
•
Jon Love
•
Elida Nosenzo
•
Ross Richardson
•
Daniel Stoorza
•
Jasmin Wall
•
Phyllis P. Lowe
•
Patrick Novak
•
Ed Richardson
•
Scotty Stoughton
•
Douglas Ware
•
Don Lyman
•
Ivan Nunes
•
Cheryl Ripp
•
Iveta Strakova
•
Mary Waters
Eileen Ritter
•
Suzanne Stratford
•
Hitchings Wayne
Scott Strenge
•
Jamie Weirback
•
Geraldine Lynch
•
Kirstin O’ Regan
•
•
William Maher
•
Margaret O’Brien
•
Alvaro Rivas
•
•
Richard Maier
•
Terry O’Neill
•
Benjamin Rocci
•
Betsy Strikwerda
•
Esther Weld
•
Sanjeev Malik
•
Orchard Hill Reformed Church
•
Timothy Rodgers
•
Robert Stringer
•
Jonathan Wells
•
Michelle Marcus
•
Niall O’Reilly
•
Jack Rodman
•
Megan Stull
•
Edward Welz
•
Connie Markle
•
Belinda O’Reilly
•
Marc Rogers
•
Shanker Subramaniam
•
Jun Wen
Ramiel Rogers
•
David Sullivan
•
Joel Wendland
Sarah Sweeney
•
Charlotte Wenger
•
Cheryl Markowitz
•
Patricia Ogura
•
•
Chloe Marshall
•
Dennis K. Oleksuk
•
Megan Nichols Rosan
•
•
John Marshall
•
Robert Orlich
•
Warwick Ross
•
Ty Tadano
•
Josefina Wenko
•
Maria Martinez
•
Gabriel Ossa
•
Patricia Rothwell
•
John Tadgell
•
Joanne Westburg
•
Kyle McCann
•
Rocio Otero
•
Marcelo Rovai
•
Karen Tan
•
Kyle Whalen
•
Benjamin McCarty
•
Remi Otsuka
•
Daniel Roy
•
Taos Community Foundation
•
Jeffery E. Whitesel
Joseph Rubin
•
David Taylor
•
Michele Wiltshire
Marc Teillon
•
William Winfield
•
Steve McColl
•
James Padbury
•
•
James McCoy
•
Charles Paget Seekins
•
Cristian Ruilova
•
•
Grace McDonagh
•
Vijay Patel
•
Arthur A. Russ
•
Jean Tennessen
•
Janice Wong
•
Jan McDougal
•
Patagonia Europe
•
Amy Rutland
•
Rebecca Thomley
•
Emma Wooding
•
Kelly McEnhill
•
Biswabandhu Pattnaik
•
James Ryan
•
Joanna Thompson
•
Jing Xu
•
Michael McGrory
•
Michelle Pavliv
•
Steven Sanford
•
Steven Thrussell
•
Mike Yacullo
Nelson Santos
•
William Toland
•
Robin Yates
Mark Tomlin
•
Shaun Young
•
Ralph McHenry
•
Pamela Sardone
Group
•
Larry Sasso
•
Ben Tong
•
Stephen Young
•
Denis Petropoulos
•
Jean Sauthier
•
Richard Tonneson
•
Edward Zick
Melanie Mg
•
Ann Pettibone
•
Bill Scannell
•
Victor Torres
•
Heiner Ziems
Natalie Mikic
•
Philippine American Chamber of
•
Robin Scarborough
•
Frank Tycksen
•
Paul Zinn
Sally Scarlett
•
Angel Uhercik
•
Kathy Zirker-Smith
Kelly Schermer-Maass
•
Armand Unabia
Amanda Mead
•
Ray Merlano
• •
38.
•
Performance Environment Design
Megan McIntyre
•
•
Wong Peng Foo
•
•
•
• •
Jonathan Mitchell Nikola Momchev
Commerce •
Leta Porter
• •
STRATEGIC PARTNERS
Rebuilding Hope
39.
2016 IMPACT OVERVIEW
Board of Directors David Campell (Founder & Chair)
59,105 volunteer
Stefanie Chang
days of worK
Consultant at Deloitte
Erik Dyson (Executive Director)
Ian D’Arcy Chairman, Tynan D’Arcy
by 3,712 volunteers (37% increase from 2015)
from 98 countries around the world resulting in 27,683 mothers, fathers, sons and daughters
who today have a home to live in
Jack Ferrebee
Eric Friedfeld-Gebaide
Partner at Hofheimerl
Managing Director
Ferrebee, P.C.
Innovation Advisors
Adam Haber
Peter S. Kirkwood, Esq.
Owner of
Founder, The Workshop
Aldea and Lupulo
Brewing Company,
Restaurants
The Remedy Café, Michigan
Michael Mcqueeny
Darius A. Monsef IV
Founding Partner,
Founder & CEO
Summer Street Capital
Fanhandle
Mike Pehl Partner, North Bridge
or somewhere to go to school
Growth Equity
Trevor Stedke Vice President Technical Services,
and in the process, 31,395 hearts were transformed
Southwest Airlines
Laura Winthrop-Abbott Rebuilding Hope
40.
because they found just 1 more reason...to HOPE
Senior Advisor, Secretary’s Office of Global Partnerships, U.S. Department of State
Sanda Simanavicius CAO at Sandia Holdings, LLC
Alan Eland COO Brightstar Corp
Ethan C. Yake Independent Consultant
Financials
(unaudited projected FY2016 financial results)
Fiscal Year 2016 was our strongest year ever with regard to overall contributions received, and we were able to leverage this support with over 87% of all funds spent on direct programs. Even though we were spread geographically more than ever before, with work in
26+ 8 2 5 7 24 + 18 87
seven countries, we ensured funds were effectively deployed to help those in need as total administrative/fundraising costs were just 12.6% - the top tier of efficiency as measured by third party rating agencies.
Total Contributions
$5,655,706
Program Expenses:
$5,018,853
USA Philippines Nepal Ecuador Fiji Other International Program Support
$1,491,111 $1,033,530 $1,402,997 $378,423 $311,181 $128,948 $272,663
General & Administrative
$452,785
Fundraising Expenses
$271,980
Total Operating Expenses
$5,743,618
Change in Net Assets For complete audited financial statements visit www.hands.org
($87,912)
Fundraising Expenses
Administrative Expenses
Program Support
Other International Programs
4.7%
7.9%
4.8%
26% US Programs
2.2%
5.4% Fiji
6.6% Ecuador
18% Philipines
24.4% Nepal
87.4% Program Expenses
41.
RECOGNITION
www.hands.org
Email: info@hands.org Phone: 508-758-8211 All Hands Volunteers, 6 County Road, Suite 6, Mattapoisett, MA 02739 USA US Tax ID: 20-3414952 UK Charity Number: 1139938 Philippines Tax No: 429-953-584