CREA
TING
STRONGER COMMUNITIES THROUGH EDUCATION
COMMUNITY COLLEGE OF VERMONT | 2016 ANNUAL REPORT
Message From The President Dear Friends, At the Community College of Vermont, we believe in creating strong communities through education. We believe in working together to enhance the lives of all Vermonters. We have always prioritized building relationships across the state, and recognize that we do our best work through close collaboration. Today, we are deepening existing partnerships and diversifying the reach of new collaborations, helping us to more broadly serve Vermont students, businesses, and communities. This annual report celebrates several of our most successful initiatives. With twelve campuses and our Center for Online Learning, CCV offers comprehensive programs suited to meet the needs and goals of any learner, regardless of age, background, or life circumstance. Our classes and programs are designed to engage and enrich every student and directly affect the communities in which those students live and work. Our workforce initiatives are well suited to meet the changing needs of workers and industries. CCV has joined forces with Twincraft Skincare to offer leadership training, which increases worker efficacy while filling a skills gap at the Winooski-based facility. Our Career Services team has collaborated with the Vermont Department of Libraries to create the Job Hunt Helper program, which sponsors CCV students in Vermont libraries to assist patrons with searching and applying for jobs, training, and continued education. CCV’s comprehensive veterans services are tailored to those who have served or are currently serving, offering customized guidance in helping students meet personal, educational, and career goals. The Assessment of Prior Learning course is a cost-effective, efficient way to earn college credit for skills and experience gained outside the classroom, providing many students with a boost toward completing a degree. The Photovoice project in Springfield is an example of our dynamic service learning initiatives. The photography project placed students in direct contact with community members to bring art, conversation, and reflection to a town in transition. Our secondary education initiatives are expanding. Access Days offer middle school students an introduction to college through a day of mock classes, panel discussions, and meetings with CCV faculty, students, and staff. Showcasing our continued commitment to providing accessibility to higher education for all Vermont students, the Man Up and Move Up 802 programs are designed to increase the success of first generation college-goers. We are proud to report that these programs, as well as many others, are growing and thriving. We are confident that the coming year will be one in which we continue to empower our students and strengthen our communities, and we look forward to your support along the way.
Joyce Judy, President
Education is for improving the lives of others and for leaving your community and world better than you found it. - Marian Wright Edelman,
President and Founder of the Children’s Defense Fund
COMMUNITY COLLEGE OF VERMONT | 3
T
he halls at CCV’s Upper Valley academic center are often full of students making their way to classes, but this past April, the students were much younger than you might expect. Seventy-five middle schoolaged students were at the CCV location attending Access Day, an event designed to introduce young Vermonters to college. CCV is committed to ensuring that all Vermonters are aware of the options for attending college after high school. We are a leader in the state for introducing high school students to the collegiate world through our free Introduction to College Studies (ICS) course and via the state’s Dual Enrollment and Early College programs. While these programs are showing positive results—students who take ICS are 15% more likely to attend college—at CCV we have realized the benefits of reaching out to students at an earlier age by hosting Access Days around the state. During Access Days, middle school-aged students from neighboring communities are invited to CCV to take a mock college class, attend a panel discussion with CCV students, meet faculty and staff, and learn about options for pursuing a degree. More importantly, attending an Access Day means today’s middle school student is more likely to take ICS in the future, and eventually, attend college and earn a degree. At the April event, students from Woodstock Union High School & Middle School (WUHSMS) attended classes such as Pop Culture, Anatomy and Physiology, Ethics, Psychology, and Nutrition at the College’s Upper Valley location. Fourteen-year-old Alice Sperber from Pittsfield took the mock anatomy class and said the whole day was “interesting and informative.” Access Day, she said, reinforced her thoughts about college. “I always thought that college seemed like the next step,” Alice said, “and this solidified it for me.” Huddled around a table, Alice and twelve of her fellow students listened as CCV instructor Martha Rainville described the parts of a brain. Bathed in the light from an overhead projector casting the image of a brain on the wall behind them, the group stood transfixed when Martha held up a real sheep’s brain 4 | 2016 ANNUAL REPORT
62%
Early College Enrollment Increase, 2015 to 2016
3,550
Courses Taken By High School Students, 2015/2016 Academic Year
and offered it to them to hold. While there were a few audible “ewws,” there were far more expressions of excitement at the prospect of touching a real brain. Alice said that while holding a sheep’s brain in the anatomy class was her favorite part of the day, she also enjoyed hearing from the panel of college students about what they liked about CCV and college in general. More importantly, she said the benefits of attending CCV for the first few years of college and then transferring to a four-year school was information she’d be sharing with friends who didn’t make it to Access Day. Currently, Vermont has one of the country’s highest high school graduation rates, but that is countered by one of the lowest college-going rates in the United States. With economists predicting that within the next twenty years 60% of jobs in the state will require some post-secondary education credential, programs such as CCV’s Access Days, Dual Enrollment, and Early College are more important than ever. Ryan Becker, a science teacher and eighth grade team leader at WUHSMS who attended the Upper Valley event said Access Days are an essential means of increasing his students’ awareness of Vermont’s college options and the opportunities to get a jump on a college degree while in high school. “Access Day is valuable because it offers our students a window into some of the educational opportunities available just miles away,” Ryan said. “Whereas most students are at least vaguely familiar with traditional, four-year colleges, many are unfamiliar with alternatives. CCV offers a diverse, affordable, and high-quality experience that many can take advantage of even while still in high school.”
SECONDARY
EDUCATION COMMUNITY COLLEGE OF VERMONT | 5
SERVICE LEARNING
$471,021
Annual Value of Donated Time, Cash, and Goods, 2015 - 2016 Academic Year
D
epending on your aesthetic sensibilities, a trip to Springfield, Vermont can leave you feeling sad , astounded, or a myriad of other emotions, both positive and negative. The hulking brick remains of Jones & Lamson Machine Company’s lower factory greet you as you head into town from I-91. Vacant storefronts dot Main Street. Long-abandoned factories stand watch over Black River Falls, depositing themselves brick by brick into the rushing waters. While some look upon the town’s dilapidated appearance with disdain, CCV Coordinator of Academic Services Deb Grant and her students don’t.
6 | 2016 ANNUAL REPORT
For nearly a year Deb’s students worked with community members on the Photovoice project. This service learning initiative encouraged community members to photograph what they disliked, and more importantly, loved, about their town. Thousands of photos later, a selection of the best were displayed in a public exhibit that has drawn viewers from all over the state. “This is not supposed to be a negative thing, it’s supposed to be a positive thing,” said student Dagan Warner. “You know you have the optimists who see good in everything, and then you have the pessimists. We’re trying to show the pessimists that there are good things in Springfield, like the beautiful scenery and the life around town.”
Academic-Related Service Learning
HOURS ENGAGED IN... Community Work Experience & Projects
10,818
This is what CCV’s service learning projects are about: engaged learning that effects positive change within Vermont. Each semester CCV faculty build service learning projects into dozens of classes offered around the state and online. Sometimes the work is done directly with a community or town, such as with the Springfield Photovoice project. In other cases, students work with nonprofits such as local animal shelters and food banks to collect donations or volunteer at events. Regardless of how or where, service learning at CCV gives students opportunities that aren’t available through traditional classroom studies. These experiential, hands-on assignments translate into students putting theory into practice, engaging
5,982
America Reads
161
Peer Tutoring
3,663
in civic activities, and ultimately enriching the fabric of the state’s communities. And that, Deb says, creates the ties that bind students to their place here in Vermont. “The students with whom I’ve worked on the Photovoice project are becoming more articulate about their connections to the community and they’ve been better able to talk about their experience here and what they think should change,” Deb said. “They’re wanting to be more involved.”
COMMUNITY COLLEGE OF VERMONT | 7
M her goals.
organ Langlois has a look in her eyes that betrays experience far beyond her years, and she radiates a thoughtful, determined energy when she talks about
“I want to work with veterans and their families,” Morgan says. “I want to be a good advocate for them.” Morgan spent nearly nine years as a boatswain’s mate in the U.S. Navy. She completed two tours in the Persian Gulf, then left the military to return to Vermont in 2009. She says the transition to civilian life was unimaginably difficult. “I thought it would be this great thing, that I had all of this experience and all of this knowledge. I thought I was a shoo-in, that I would get a job.” Instead, she struggled. “It was a really big challenge,” she says. Then a friend offered to help her get started at the Community College of Vermont, and she decided to go to school. Morgan graduated from CCV in 2012 with a degree in human services. While in school—a difficult transition in and of itself—she wanted to tailor everything she was learning to be military-specific. She wanted to focus on veterans and their families and how best to support them. As Morgan describes her return to civilian life, one thing is clear: support is in desperately short supply. “I want to help veterans get what they need, but then also help the civilian side. The military really is a culture that’s completely different,” she says. “It is not understood by greater society. To bridge that gap, that’s what I want to do.” After finishing at CCV, Morgan went on to earn a bachelor’s degree in social work from the University of Vermont. While working toward that degree, she was hired as one of two veteran resource advisors at CCV—staff members who are part of a broad initiative at the College to offer specialized support for veteran and military students. In this position, Morgan launched her career in outreach and veterans services. Today, Morgan is an outreach specialist for the Vermont Veterans Outreach team. Her work is 8 | 2016 ANNUAL REPORT
83%
Part-Time Student Veteran Retention Rate, 23% Above The National Average
Vermont Veterans Outreach team. Her work is multidimensional and her responsibilities many; she does everything from educating the community to helping veterans understand their benefits to simply listening. “Veterans want to talk to other veterans, people who have been there and done that, and who can empathize with them,” she says. Morgan plans to continue her education and eventually complete a master’s degree in social work. She wants to continue helping others in whatever ways she can. CCV is proud to be a part of Morgan’s story. It seems there is very little that could stand in her way of supporting and strengthening her community—indeed, she already has. Enhanced veterans services are made possible by the generous support from the J. Warren and Lois McClure Foundation, Bari and Peter Dreissigacker, the Hoehl Family Foundation, the Vermont Veterans with Disabilities Fund, and the Vermont Community Foundation.
VETERANS SERVICES COMMUNITY COLLEGE OF VERMONT | 9
MAN UP
M
an up. It’s a familiar phrase you might hear joked about between friends bound for an adventure. But in Lamoille County, it’s a call for young men to step up and go to college through our donor-funded Man Up program. The program was launched in 2014, in a Vermont county with some of the lowest college-going rates among high school graduates who would be the first in their families to attend college. Through the generous funding of our donors, Man Up offers opportunities for young men between the ages of seventeen and twenty-seven to attend CCV with additional support services and benefits. 10 | 2016 ANNUAL REPORT
The success of the Man Up program in its first year was so profound, it attracted the attention of Governor Peter Shumlin, who invited two Man Up students to the State House for his 2016 State of the State address. As brothers and CCV-Morrisville students Brian and Justin Bourdeau watched from the balcony of the House Chamber, Gov. Shumlin lauded their work in the Man Up program and announced plans for the state to expand the program to a broader demographic and a larger geographic area. Man Up takes a novel approach to getting students into classes and on the way to college degrees. The program is built on a foundation of enhanced support services and leadership opportunities
for students. Participants in the program attend mandatory one-hour workshops to improve study skills. They also have direct access to tutors and academic personnel to help them with any part of their college experience. Man Up students take leadership roles in service learning projects and serve as peer tutors at the center. Students who fulfill academic and attendance requirements are given grant-funded gas cards to ease the burden of commuting to and from the College. And while the attraction of free gasoline has fueled enrollment in the program, students are taking away more than just full gas tanks. “Initially, Man Up students were telling us the gas cards were an incentive for signing up,” said Dean of Students Heather Weinstein. “But after spending time at CCV and taking classes, what we’ve heard from them is that the mentoring and academic support they received had much more of an impact on them than the transportation benefits.” The outcomes in Lamoille County have been remarkable. In the fall 2015 semester, 89% of Man Up participants were in good academic standing. As of June our first participant completed the program and graduated with an associate degree. Programs such as this, that offer opportunities and encouragement to Vermonters to enter and succeed in college when they might not otherwise do so, are needed now more than ever. The new Move Up 802 program uses a nearly identical model to Man Up, though the incentives will change to better meet the needs of the broader population the program will serve. We expect students to find the same successes that past participants, such as the Bourdeau brothers, have, and those successes are what change lives. “I say, give college a shot, because even if you don’t like it, you’ll get something out of the classes that will help you in life anyway,” Justin says. “But if it catches you and you find out ‘oh I can do this, I can educate myself and become more successful in life,’ then it’s a really good opportunity to improve yourself.” Man Up is made possible in part by the generous support of Bari and Peter Dreissigacker.
Revenues Government Grants & Contracts
25%
Gifts, Endowment Gains, Private Grants
1%
State Appropriation
12%
Tuition & Fees
62%
Expenses Academic & Student Support
Operations
27%
41%
Instruction
32%
CCV is committed to non-discrimination in its learning and working environments for all persons. All educational and employment opportunities at CCV are offered without regard to race, creed, color, national origin, marital status, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, veteran status, or any other category protected by law. CCV is an equal opportunity employer. Auxiliary aids and services are available upon request to individuals with disabilities. COMMUNITY COLLEGE OF VERMONT | 11
D
odit Tshibamba Buabua studies network administration at the Community College of Vermont. Born in the Democratic Republic of Congo, he came to the U.S. in 2011, first to Chicago and then, three years later, to Vermont.
“I wanted someplace quieter and less busy,” he says. “Vermont was an adventure.” Dodit lives in the heart of Winooski, an easy walk to the city’s CCV campus. In addition to taking classes here, he is an IT intern, he works in the Learning Center, and he is one of the College’s Job Hunt Helpers. CCV directly engages with and strengthens communities by working to develop information literacy. In partnership with the Vermont Department
CAREER
DEVELOPMENT 12 | 2016 ANNUAL REPORT
of Libraries, the College has launched Job Hunt Helpers, a program through which CCV students assist library patrons with using online resources to find employment. The program falls under CCV’s broader career development initiatives, which offer comprehensive services to assist students with career and job needs. From creating and implementing an academic plan to utilizing tools for job searches, students can work with faculty, staff, and our four dedicated career consultants to outline and reach career goals. The Job Hunt Helpers program faces outward, putting Dodit and five other students in local libraries where they are available as a public resource to aid in career development. Dodit spends six hours a week at the Winooski Memorial Library, helping users discover training and educational opportunities,
assess skills, write resumes, and search for and apply to jobs. Dodit says he enjoys his work at the library not only because information technology and literacy are his expertise, but also because it’s an opportunity to interact with community members. “[The] library is where everyone is coming. You meet different people [with] different backgrounds,” he says. “I think it’s a great program.” It’s clear that he finds his involvement with the library meaningful; he speaks quietly, and deliberately, when he shares that “every time you help somebody apply for a job, write a resume, fix a computer program, it’s amazing to see the way those people are happy.”
This is a big deal for Dodit, who began work toward a law degree before moving to the U.S. He takes his role as community member—and mentor—seriously. After CCV, he says he’d like to pursue a bachelor’s degree and eventually resume his study of law, potentially to work for an international organization. Dodit went through a major transition in moving to a new country five years ago. “You have to restart your life, change everything, start speaking English,” he says. By now, his English—one of his five languages— is quite good. He is a vibrant member of his adopted home. He’s found his niche in Vermont. “I like CCV,” he says. “It’s not like school, it’s like a family.” Career Services are made possible in part by the generous support of the J. Warren and Lois McClure Foundation.
1,713 Total Career Services Touchpoints
375 CareerSpot Users 404 Focus2 Users 934 Career Consultant Meetings
COMMUNITY COLLEGE OF VERMONT | 13
A
t the Bourbeau family farm in Sheldon, an expanse of fields surrounds a brick farmhouse, stout red dairy barns, and a cluster of tidy buildings where maple sap is boiled into syrup. Holsteins poke broad heads through open barn walls. Fields lie in even rows of freshly-mown hay, the grass deep green and fragrant. It is for good reason the family farm has long been a symbol of the culture, traditions, and values of Vermont: this is a place that shows off the work ethic of its people. This is a place where people and land together create a vibrant community. The woman who labors behind the scenes here, who keeps track of each page of paperwork, year after year, is Kimberly Bourbeau. She is the bookkeeper for this nearly 1,200-acre family farm, and her sons are the fourth generation of Bourbeaus to work its land and call it home. Kim is also a 2016 graduate of the Community College of Vermont, where she received an associate degree in administrative management. She is a firstgeneration college graduate. She was raised in a family of eight, and says earning her degree had long been a personal goal. “Our parents always taught us that if you want something, you need to work for it.” In the spring of 2015, Kim enrolled in CCV’s Assessment of Prior Learning, a course through which students earn college credits by demonstrating specific skills gained in a workplace or outside the classroom. Kim requested twenty-five credits: she’d spent over twenty years as a senior administrative assistant; she’d held several leadership positions at the St. Albans Elks Club; she’d spent almost thirty years keeping the books for the farm. At semester’s end, Kim was awarded thirty-two credits. She continued her coursework, ultimately earning enough credits to graduate just one year after completing the APL course—reflecting not only her extraordinary work ethic, but an impressive savings in both time and money. The family farm is vital to the Vermont landscape, and its people to the Vermont community. It is the result of generations who labor tirelessly, and Kimberly Bourbeau is no stranger to this tradition. For her, a college degree is a powerful validation. An education means a stronger contribution. 14 | 2016 ANNUAL REPORT
PRIOR LEARNING
ASSESSMENT
1,718 Prior Learning Assessment Credits Awarded, Fall 2015 Semester
$376,134 Tuition Dollars Saved, Fall 2015 Semester
COMMUNITY COLLEGE OF VERMONT | 15
P
eter Asch knows one of the keys to building a strong business lies in working with the people who work for him. And the way to do that, he says, is to provide people the opportunities to grow and find satisfaction in their work. “We’re deep believers in training and in truly helping people to better themselves,” said Peter, who is the CEO and co-owner of Twincraft Skincare. “People have to want to help themselves, and if they do, the company is open to it and we’ll also fund it. It’s all about inspiring people and helping them have a better life.” One of the ways Peter and Twincraft are helping the company’s employees is by providing access to CCV’s workforce education offerings. After meetings between the College and members of Asch’s team,
Workforce Courses Offered in 2011-2012
: 26 : 119
Workforce Courses Offered in 2015-2016
16 | 2016 ANNUAL REPORT
CCV and Twincraft began offering a Principles of Supervision course at Twincraft’s Winooski facility. Approximately a dozen middle managers participated in the program, which included material Asch refers to as “the pillars of management,” i.e. effective communication, goal setting, delegation, how to hire people, and then how to inspire those people. “The response was awesome,” Asch said. “Anytime people are helped to better themselves in life, that’s a big deal; that touches people’s hearts.” Across the state, CCV’s workforce education team is helping to create similar success stories with both large and small businesses. From leadership trainings to career readiness programming to industry-recognized credential courses such as our Certified Production Technician certificate,
our workforce programs have been designed to strengthen Vermont’s workforce and its businesses, and in turn, communities throughout the state. More than 125 companies and organizations have partnered with CCV to bring college-level training and professional development opportunities to their employees. These employers know that investing in workforce training is good business that will produce positive returns in a number of key areas.
employees learn here they can take home and have better relations with anybody they interact with because they’re learning skills they can apply anywhere in life.” Workforce programs are funded in part by a grant from the U.S. Dept. of Labor.
For Twincraft Skincare, the investment has made everybody feel good about the work they’re doing, Peter said. But the company won’t be resting on its laurels when it comes to training employees and helping them better themselves both in their work and in life.
WORKFORCE
EDUCATION
“We’re serious about it,” Peter said. “Anything our
400%
Enrollment Increase In Workforce Education Courses, 2011 to 2016
COMMUNITY COLLEGE OF VERMONT | 17
DONORS TO CCV BENEFACTORS Gifts Greater Than $5,000 Anonymous (2) AT&T Helen M. Clark & T. Wayne Clark Comcast EdMap, Inc. Fountain Fund Jane Guyette / Bergeron Family Foundation Hoehl Family Foundation Agnes M. Lindsay Trust J. Warren & Lois McClure Foundation NEFCU (New England Federal Credit Union) Vermont Community Foundation Vermont Veterans with Disabilities Fund PRESIDENT’S CIRCLE Gifts Of $1,000 To $4,999 Carol & David Buchdahl Concept2, Inc. Gerry & Ginny Couture Janice Couture Tim Donovan* Bob & Lois Frey Jerry Greenfield & Elizabeth K. Skarie Foundation, Inc. Susan Henry & Sture Nelson Ben & Joyce Judy Tom Kauffmann ‘04 Anne Lezak & Dr. Harry Chen Barbara Martin Bill Meyer Minier Family NFP Property & Casualty Services, Inc. Peter Smith* Dee Steffan & Catriona McHardy Aimee Stephenson Amy E. Stuart & Mark A. Rowell John & Jennifer Vogel Eleanor Wilson DEAN’S LIST Gifts Of $500 To $999 Anonymous (2) Thomas Arner Tapp Barnhill Linda Gabrielson Joan Kaye Laurie Loveland Tom & Charlotte MacLeay Katie & Seth Mobley The Richards Group Ernest & Deborah Stewart Meta Strick Margo Waite ‘75 James & Ginette Warner ADVOCATES Gifts Of $250 To $499 Gail & Kenneth Albert Graham W. Bauerle Steven Beaulieu ‘03 Pam Chisholm & Ted Franzeim Betty Dye David Ellenbogen
18 | 2016 ANNUAL REPORT
CCV gratefully acknowledges our generous donors. The gifts listed have been given in the most recent fiscal year, from July 1, 2015 through June 30, 2016. Jen & Deanna Garrett-Ostermiller Mark & Julie Hudson Ken Kalb* & Nance Driscoll Tricia & Jeff Kent Julie Lee Bette Matkowski Edlyn & David Pursell John N. Rosenblum ‘83 Eric Sakai Jeremy Schrauf William & Kate Schubart Warren & Nancy Severance
Jerry Spivey Diana Stone ‘02 / Stone Underground John Sweeney Carol Vallett Heather Weinstein J.J. & Kathy Williams Dave Wolk Gerry Woods Alexander & Marguerite Zabriskie
PATRONS Gifts Of $100 To $249
Anonymous (4) Carole S. Bacon ‘91 David Barch ‘90 Carolyn Barnes Jedediah Barton Kelley Beckwith Clem & Sharon Bissonnette Joanne Blakeman Mindy Boenning Janet & John Bossi Christine Brooks Candace Brown ‘92 Susan Buonincontro ‘92 Ann L. Chenery Jo Clawson ‘10 Dave Chase ‘06 & Pam Scott ‘04 David Coburn Lorei J. Dawson Gretchen DeHart Gabrielle Dietzel Mel Donovan Leora Dowling Ryan & Meg Dulude Anne Duzinski ‘90 Martin & Sheila Fors ‘78 Connie Frappiea ‘01 David Fuller Ronald Gabriel Bill & Winnie Geiger Seth Gibson Elisabeth Gish ‘02 Thomas & Lynne Greco Lisa Haft ‘11 John & Elizabeth Harrington Jody Hayden ‘02 Virginia Herron Jeffrey Hurlburt ‘04 Hope Keister Kimberly Kendall Sylvia Kinney ‘81 Alison Kirk Sheila LaPerle ‘08 Robert J. Larrabee ‘99 Kathy Leonard ‘94 Honey Loring Suzanne Lovell ‘87 Leigh Marthe Erika Martin ‘14 Jason Mearls ‘14 Adele M. Miller Irene Mitchell Ann Newsmith Matilda Newton Penny Nolte Roberta Noyes ‘83
Anonymous (4) Angie Albeck Ann Aspell Linda & Rich Bell Monica Beneyto-Santonja Adam & Dianne Benezra Linda & Jerry Benezra Lennox & Art Brodeur Stephen Chretien Deborah Clark Bernard & Jean Couture Allan Curtiss ‘13 Mica DeAngelis & Barry Mansfield Senator Bill Doyle Jeremiah K. Durick Noel Duvall G. Richard Eisele Ruth Farmer Cynthia Feiker Claire Flanagan ‘85 Hubey Folsom ‘93 Pat Forbes Cathy & Joseph Frank Ginger Gellman Charlotte Hanna Bill & Carol Harrison Diane Hermann-Artim Joe Hudzikiewicz Mary Hulette Don & Gracie Kelpinski Sarah Lavallee Robert & Elisabeth Lehr Candace Lewis David & Meredith Liben Aimee Loiter Peter LoIacono Maryellen Lowe ‘82 Dianne Maccario Ana Macduff ‘08 KD Maynard Linda R. Milne Dorothy & R. John Mitchell Dr. John Neuhauser Susan Nichols ‘14 Timothy O’Connor, Jr. Bruce O’Rourke & Liz Cote Mercedes Pour-Previti Shirley Ridgway Robert ‘94 & Denise Rodd Lucy Schumer Jean E. Snow ‘77 Jeb Spaulding
FRIENDS Gifts Up To $99
Patrick ‘09 & Bridget Peters Carol Plunkett Dianne Pollak Dick Rapacz Pamela Reed Michael & Carol Ann Richman Judith Robert Donna Sargent ‘76 Jody Schade Linda Schlott Ann Schroeder Anya Schwartz Evelyn Sikorski Debbie Spears ‘08 Katherine Stamper David Strickler ‘03 Karen A. Szely ‘89 Diego Uribe De Urbina ‘98 Michael Van Dyke Edward Vizvarie ‘01 Richard Wade ‘99 Peggy Williams Joan M. Wollrath ‘84 Michael & Lisa Yaeger Kelly Young IN HONOR OF Gifts in recognition of those who have made a significant difference in our donor’s lives. Linda & Jerry Benezra In the names of Bob & Lois Frey In the name of Lois Frey Gerry & Ginny Couture In the name of Janice Couture Janice Couture In the name of the Alfred & Margaret Couture Family In the name of Gail Tisseur In the name of John Devino Philip Crossman In the names of Skylar & Simeon Crossman Bob & Lois Frey In the names of Linda & Jerry Benezra Lois Frey In the names of Linda & Jerry Benezra Elisabeth Gish In the name of Elisabeth Dodds Dodds J.J. & Kathy Williams In the name of James D. Williams Gifts in honor of Dee Steffan, retired executive director of the Winooski, St. Albans, and Middlebury academic centers. Anonymous Tapp Barnhill Janice Couture Mica DeAngelis & Barry Mansfield Tim Donovan* Leora Dowling Jen & Deanna Garrett-Ostermiller Susan Henry & Sture Nelson Diane Hermann-Artim Ken Kalb* & Nance Driscoll Sarah Lavallee Candace Lewis Laurie Loveland Dianne Maccario
Leigh Marthe Bette Matkowski Katie Mobley Anya Schwartz Warren & Nancy Severance Amy E. Stuart & Mark A. Rowell Carol Vallett
Gerry Woods Kelly Young THE LEGACY SOCIETY Honors the generosity of donors who make bequests and planned gifts or who have established named endowments.
IN MEMORY OF Gifts in memory of loved ones who have passed away. Bernard Couture In memory of Jean Couture & John Couture Janice Couture In memory of Jean Couture & John Couture Pat Forbes In memory of Michael Kolesnik Bruce O’Rourke & Liz Cote In memory of Martha Ianelli Pamela Reed In memory of Elmer Kimball Debbie Spears ‘08 In memory of Jason Conway In memory of Brattleboro Coordinator of Academic Services Karen Raylene Clark (1956 – 2015). Gifts made to the Karen Raylene Clark Memorial Scholarship Fund established with an initial gift from her parents Helen M. Clark and T. Wayne Clark. Anonymous Angie Albeck Thomas Arner Tapp Barnhill Kelley Beckwith Monica Beneyto-Santonja Ann L. Chenery Stephen Chretien & Cynthia Doble Deborah Clark Helen M. Clark & T. Wayne Clark David Coburn Gretchen DeHart Noel Duvall Cynthia Feiker Jen & Deanna Garrett-Ostermiller Ginger Gellman Thomas & Lynne Greco Diane Hermann-Artim Virginia Herron Peter & Marlene Jameson Ben & Joyce Judy Edith & Bill Kaup Hope Keister Kimberly Kendall Sarah Lavallee Peter Lolacono Honey Loring KD Maynard Minier Family Katie & Seth Mobley Susan Nichols ‘14 Timothy O’Connor, Jr. Shirley Ridgway Ken & Pat Rodgers Linda Schlott Ann Schroeder Amy E. Stuart & Mark A. Rowell Heather Weinstein
Anonymous (2) Joseph & Dale Boutin Joseph & Dale Boutin Scholarship Fund Helen M. Clark & T. Wayne Clark Karen Raylene Clark Memorial Scholarship Fund Mica DeAngelis & Barry Mansfield Gabrielle Dietzel Bob & Lois Frey Jennifer Frey Memorial Fund Janet F. Gillette The Endowment for Teaching & Learning The Endowment for Student Success Ken Kalb* & Nance Driscoll Laurie Lawrence-Pepin ‘92 Barbara Martin Susan E. Mehrtens May Munger Ann Newsmith Peter Smith* John & Jennifer Vogel Leah M. Kalb Scholarship Fund GIFTS IN KIND Non-cash donations for designated use. Comcast Community Kitchen Academy – Vermont Foodbank FireProTech FRESH Food - Vermont Works for Women GE Aviation GLOBALFOUNDRIES Inc. Great Harvest Bread Company Hannaford Bros. Co. Harold Kaplan Laughing River Yoga Claude Lehman McKenzie Country Classics Pingala Susan Raber-Bray Short Stop Trader Joe’s R.L. Vallee Zabby & Elf’s Stone Soup MATCHING GIFTS Received from organizations that contribute matching gifts in response to an employee’s or affiliate’s gift. IBM National Life Group NEFCU (New England Federal Credit Union)
* Former CCV President
COMMUNITY COLLEGE OF VERMONT | 19
Community College of Vermont PO Box 489 Montpelier, VT 05601
WAYS TO GIVE There are many meaningful ways to support CCV and our students, including a gift in honor or in memory of a special individual.
THE ANNUAL FUND This fund supports the overall mission of CCV by providing unrestricted resources for new initiatives as well as a variety of operational needs and projects.
STUDENT ASSISTANCE FUND From fixing a tire so a student can get to class, to buying a much-needed textbook, every dollar donated to CCV’s Student Assistance Fund provides direct support to students in your local community.
GENERAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND Every dollar given to this non-endowed fund goes directly to tuition assistance for students attending one of our twelve academic centers or our Center for Online Learning.
PLANNED GIVING Bequests and planned gifts may take many forms, including named endowments; they ensure a strong CCV for generations to come.
Learn more about how you can support Community College of Vermont at ccv.edu/give.