Everlasting
2023 ANNUAL REPORT
Mission
The Community Foundation of Muncie & Delaware County, Inc. encourages philanthropy, assists donors in building an enduring source of charitable assets, and exercises leadership in directing resources to enhance the quality of life for residents of Muncie and Delaware County.
Vision
To impact and empower Muncie and Delaware County by enabling philanthropy as a trusted community leader and promoting positive change now and for generations to come.
Dear Friends,
The Community Foundation of Muncie and Delaware County was built to be an everlasting resource for the community. We strive to ignite generosity in Muncie and Delaware County.
In this year’s report, you’ll see how we’ve built upon the work of the leaders before us to be representative, responsive, and relevant today. We expanded opportunities for giving through a temporary program to encourage even more generosity, welcoming new named unrestricted funds that will have a lasting impact on our community.
With nearly four decades of stewardship under our belt, we’ve honed our approach to grantmaking and investment. This year, we proudly introduce our first local impact investment, a bold move that combines financial returns with social benefits. We awarded a full year of grants through our new grantee-centric, relationship-focused Community Grants Program. We even shared the development of this new program at the National Conference for Growing Community Foundations.
Last year, we shared our story of growth and the need
for more space. This year we settled in to our home –and we decorated. In this report, you’ll find the story of Everlasting, a special work of art that celebrates our past and what is to come.
In 2023, we said goodbye to one Board Member, Ermalene Faulkner. Ermalene originally served on the Board and Grants Committee in 2000 and came back to serve in 2017. Through recent growth and transitions, Ermalene bridged the past and present. She continues to serve on the Grants Committee. This year, we welcomed Jaime Faulkner and Daniel Stallings to the Board. Jaime has been a Foundation volunteer since 2013, serving on both the Scholarship Committee and the Grants Committee. Daniel has volunteered as a member of the Investment Committee since 2020. We continue the path of strong leadership to spark change in our community.
As you read through this report, we invite you to join us to spark change, too. Together, let’s make a difference in Muncie and Delaware County today, tomorrow, and always.
WITH GRATITUDE, Board Chair President & CEO
Our Leadership
Board of Directors
Sara Shade Hamilton
Chair
Casey Stanley Vice Chair
Magi Kirkpatrick Sikora
Secretary
David W. Heeter
Treasurer
Trent Dowling
Ex Officio
John W. Anderson, Jr.
Derron Bishop
Jaime Faulkner
Mia Johnson
Daniel Stallings
2023 Financials
Consolidated Statements of Financial Position
Years ended December 31
Cash and cash equivalents
Prepaid expenses
Pledges Receivable
Right of use asset
Cash surrender value of life insurance Property, building and equipment, net of accumulated depreciation
$3,112,712 $1,675$28,236 $559,404 $812,040 $78,300,931 $82,814,998 $2,226,088 $2,070 $333,000 $8,305 $242,562 $1,155,377 $85,916,103 $89,883,505
Annuity obligations payable
$7,593,241 $9,978 $389,372 $8,305$7,050,423 $833,474 $8,291,552 Administrative expenses payable Grants payable Right of use liability
$74,388,283 $75,221,757 $82,814,998 $1,100,300 $80,491,623 $81,591,953 $89,883,505
Consolidated Statements of Activities
Years ended December 31
Operating Support & Revenue
Contributions
Contributions and grants - BY5
In-kind contributions
Investment return (loss), net
Administrative fee revenue
Total operating support and revenue 2022
Net Assets Released from Restrictions
Satisfaction of purpose restrictions
Net assets released from restriction pursuant to spending policy
Operating
Expenses
Program services
Program services - BY5
Program services - NSN
Management and general expenses
Management and general expenses - BY5
Management and general expenses - NSN
Fundraising expenses
Fundraising expenses - BY5
Fundraising expenses - NSN
Total operating expenses
Change in Net Assets
Change in net assets
Net assets at beginning of year
$4,276$60,534
$3
$743,045 $807,858
$2,170,239
$61,223$8,953,599$11,185,061
$2,174,515
$61,223
$60,534
$8,953,602
$743,045 $11,992,919 $9,038,207 $2,075 $3,256 ($10,226,535) $722,300 ($460,697)
$3,840,106 $155,337 $111,346
$1,100,702
$112,925
$51,423 $189,745
$44,095
$17,044
$5,622,723
($697,077) ($4,075,970)
$3,840,106 $155,337 $111,346 $1,100,702 $112,925 $51,423 $189,745 $44,095 $17,044 $5,622,723
$3,176,616 $169,338 $49,167 $1,024,773 $137,348 $29,436 $180,455 $41,492 $11,114 $4,819,739
($41,818) $833,474 $791,656
$6,412,014 $74,388,283 $80,800,297 $6,370,196 $75,221,757 $81,591,953
Net assets at end of year ($5,280,436) $80,502,193 $75,221,757
*The Community Foundation of Muncie & Delaware County, Inc., uses Fund Evaluation Group, LLC (FEG) as its investment consultant. FEG provides a complete range of traditional institutional consulting services including investment policy development, portfolio design, asset allocation, manager search and selection, investment manager monitoring, plan monitoring and education for board members and staff. **represents the total grant distribution from all funds of the Foundation
The Community Foundation of Muncie and Delaware County, Inc. and Related Entities The audited financial statements are available on our website at CFMDIN.ORG
Igniting Generosity:
FOUNDATION BOARD LEADS THE WAY WITH OPTIONS TO GIVE
IN LATE 2023, The Community Foundation was given a special opportunity to bring $2.25 million into our community. Lilly Endowment Inc. announced the eighth iteration of the Giving Indiana Funds for Tomorrow initiative for community foundations (GIFT VIII). Through GIFT VIII, the Foundation applied for matching dollars to help grow unrestricted endowment funds with a $2 to $1 match.
The Community Foundation would need to ignite generosity to raise over $1 million in unrestricted funds to capture the match. Neighbors from across the community embraced several options for giving as they stepped up to the challenge. The Foundation’s board members led the way.
→ GIVING TO THE UNRESTRICTED FUND
→ GIVING TO AN EXISTING FUND
→ ESTABLISHING A NEW FUND
Giving to the Unrestricted Fund
After learning about the matching opportunity, Jaime Faulkner knew it was the right time to make a financial gift to The Community Foundation. Jaime, who currently serves on the Foundation’s Board of Directors, has given her time and talent to the Foundation for more than a decade. She began her service as a volunteer on the Scholarship Committee in 2013, joined the Grants Committee of the Board in 2015, and became a member of the Board of Directors this year.
Jaime and her husband Adam contributed this year to The Unrestricted Fund of The Community Foundation. Their gift will be matched $2 to $1 through the matching grant fund provided by Lilly Endowment Inc.
“I think I’ve always had in my mind that gifts from
predecessors like David Sursa, Ed Ball, and individuals who have since passed and gifted money are what fuels the Foundation’s ability to grant,” explained Jaime. “While those are components, it is actually a collective of generous givers, past and present at all levels who make grantmaking possible now and forever. To be a part of that is something special.”
Jaime is right. In 2023 alone, more than 500 donors made gifts to The Community Foundation, and nearly half gave to unrestricted funds.
Collective generosity makes an everlasting difference in the community.
Building an Existing Fund
While giving to The Unrestricted Fund is the best option for some donors, others took advantage of the matching challenge to grow an existing named unrestricted fund.
Casey Stanley, along with his wife, Jennifer, contributed to four different named unrestricted funds to help the Foundation meet the challenge put forth by the matching fund grant from Lilly Endowment Inc. Casey has served on the Board since 2019 and has been a member of the Finance Committee since 2016. The Stanley’s gift contributed to The Unrestricted Fund of The Community Foundation, the Board of Directors Endowment Fund, the Laura Stanley Keppler Fund, and the Ontario Systems – Wil Davis and Ron Fauquher Fund. Casey and Jennifer have a special attachment to each of those funds.
Beyond Casey’s service and the couple’s shared giving, the Stanley’s connection to the Foundation is generational. Both Casey’s and Jennifer’s fathers served on the Foundation’s Board of Directors over the years. Their families have given generously of their time and
talent. Casey and Jennifer’s decision to give to funds that are tied to their families and the sustainability of the Foundation build upon that history of support.
By targeting their giving to existing funds, Casey and Jennifer helped The Community Foundation capture matching dollars while honoring the people and things in the community that have their hearts. In early 2024, Casey and Jennfer also took advantage of another opportunity – the opportunity to establish a named unrestricted fund.
“To the extent that we have a positive impact, it’s because we have watched so many before us model what it means to be a good steward of their gifts.”
“It’s an easy choice for us – and we are thankful we are able to help out in this way,” said Casey.
Establishing a New Fund
Many Foundation supporters have seen the GIFT VIII matching opportunity as a catalyst for starting their own named fund. To make starting a fund even more accessible, the Board of Directors of The Community Foundation approved a new program that temporarily reduced the minimum gift requirement for a new unrestricted fund and encouraged donors to build their fund over time.
Before the year-end of 2023, donors stepped up to create five new named unrestricted funds.
When Mia Johnson, who has served on the Foundation Board since 2021, and her husband Wayne learned about the matching opportunity for unrestricted gifts, it sparked a desire to make a permanent mark on the community with a named unrestricted fund at The Community Foundation. The Wayne and Mia Johnson Fund will grow with pledged monthly gifts from the Johnsons. Each gift will be matched $2 to $1. Once complete, grants will be awarded annually from the fund through the Community Grants Program.
“Our story began here in Muncie, and we have decided to raise our family in this community,” said Mia. “Starting an unrestricted fund with the Community Foundation has
always been a goal for us. The opportunity for monthly payments with a $2 for $1 match was the perfect opportunity to make this a reality. We are excited to watch this fund grow and make a positive financial impact here in Delaware County.”
FOUNDATION LEADERSHIP really led the way with their giving. Board Chair Sara Shade Hamilton and her husband Brandon Hamilton also established the Brandon Hamilton and Sara Shade Hamilton Fund, which will grow with a pledge made through 2026. Daniel Stallings, who joined the Foundation’s Board in 2023, also saw this as a unique opportunity to create a legacy in the community. He and his wife, Lynne, have raised their family and called Muncie home for the last 20 years. The Daniel and Lynne Stallings Fund will also grow with monthly pledged payments following the special program established by the Board earlier in the year.
The Community Foundation ignites generosity with options for giving. Each donor sparks change through their gift to The Community Foundation.
New Funds
UNRESTRICTED FUNDS
William and Juanita Bruns Fund
Brandon Hamilton and Sara Shade Hamilton Fund
Wayne and Mia Johnson Fund
Jason and Marcy Minton Fund
Daniel and Lynne Stallings Fund
DESIGNATED FUNDS
Delaware Community Schools Educational Foundation Fund
DONOR ADVISED FUNDS
Kirk and Deb Mace Memorial Foundation Fund
Mia and Wayne Johnson with sons Miles and Walker at Minnetrista .Growing Endowment:
INVESTING FOR LASTING IMPACT
THE FIRST DONORS to The Community Foundation expected their gifts would have a lasting impact. Those gifts, and so many more, have!
“We gave to The Community Foundation in its early years, knowing that our gift would make a difference right away, but also have a lasting impact. As we’ve moved from Muncie, it’s rewarding to know that we have a lasting legacy in the community that was our home,” said Mary Sissel, an early member of the Board, who, along with her husband George, was one of the first donors to The Community Foundation.
Thanks to The Community Foundation’s enduring model, the Sissel’s gift continues to make a difference - and in ways they may not have even imagined when the gift was
made. Gifts to The Community Foundation are invested for growth. Each year, a portion of the earnings are spent on grantmaking to enhance the quality of life in Muncie and Delaware County.
Today, an investment committee comprised of local volunteers monitors and recommends the diversified allocation of assets, monitors and reviews the performance of investment managers and investment consultants, and recommends investment policies to the Board of Directors, including spending policy. The investment managers follow the investment policy approved by the Board of Directors. The policy is prudent and requires action that will support the Foundation forever. As the Foundation has grown, aged, and matured, the investment policy has, too.
George and Mary Sissel, pictured, were one of The Community Foundation’s earliest donors. Their gift from 1985 continues to make a difference in Muncie and Delaware County.
Investment Performance
The Foundation’s Investment Committee sets goals and monitors the performance of investments. While growth through investment is never guaranteed, 5-year and 10-year rates of return that exceed spending is the key to a permanent future.
9.8%
5 YEAR RATE OF RETURN
Before the establishment of a dedicated investment committee, the Foundation’s finance committee served in that same role. Mary served on the finance committee from 1995-1998. She saw first-hand the value of responsible investment for long-term growth.
Earliest investments included stocks, bonds, and mutual funds to balance the opportunity for growth against risk. In 2012, we expanded our portfolio for further diversification to include private equity.
As a field, the community foundation sector is exploring new opportunities to further benefit the communities they serve. The Community Foundation of Muncie and Delaware County emphasizes continued learning and improvement in our work. We see that our investments can help us impact Muncie and Delaware County residents.
Over the last several years, the Foundation’s Board of Directors has explored local impact investing as a tool to be utilized by The Community Foundation. Local impact investing gives foundations the opportunity to invest in local projects and programs for a combined social and financial return. In 2022, The Board of Directors approved an impact investment policy and introduced an Impact Investment Subcommittee to serve under the Investment Committee. The policy sets parameters on the portion of the endowed assets that can be used for impact investments. The Impact Investment Subcommittee evaluates and recommends investment opportunities.
At the recommendation of the Impact Investment Subcommittee and the Investment Committee, the Board of Directors approved its first impact investment in late 2023. Working in partnership with Prime Trust
Financial and a handful of referral partners, micro business owners, defined as small businesses who have less than ten employees, who might barely miss traditional commercial loan opportunity requirements, will have access to capital in the form of capacity building loans. The Community Foundation’s investment will serve as collateral for the loans when needed. In return, The Community Foundation will earn a return rate on the invested dollars during the life of the program. The Micro Business Loan Program will strengthen entrepreneurship and small business in Muncie and Delaware County with access to capital for capacity building and upward mobility opportunities that develop our local economy positively.
Mary gave knowing her contribution would have a lasting impact. Investing for growth allows us to serve the community better and be responsive to change.
Investing in the community is precisely why The Community Foundation is here.
Strategies for Growth
LONG-TERM SUSTAINABLE SOLUTIONS
The Community Foundation invests its endowed funds to provide a stable resource for Delaware County that responds to today’s needs while preserving and enhancing funds for future needs.
AN ENGAGED INVESTMENT COMMITTEE
The Investment Committee makes recommendations to the Board regarding investment policy and strategy, working with an investment manager. The committee includes community volunteers with expertise in finance, investments, and business.
SAFEGUARDING AGAINST VOLATILITY
A well-diversified portfolio is fundamental to The Community Foundation’s strategy to maximize investment returns and reduce risk and volatility. Our Investment Committee regularly reviews the asset allocation strategy.
BALANCED SPENDING
Each year, The Community Foundation’s Board reviews the spending policy rate. A prudent spending policy rate helps maintain the funds for future years. Our rate is 4.25%, and the grant distribution amount is calculated using a 12-quarter average balance.
Fire Up DowntownSparking Change:
GRANT GIVES OPPORTUNITIES FOR WHITELY COMMUNITY COUNCIL
WHITELY COMMUNITY COUNCIL serves and is a voice for the residents of the Whitely community on Muncie’s northeast side. Today Whitely Community Council is working in three main areas to support its residents: education, community safety, and health and wellness.
Recognizing the importance of the work of this organization, The Community Foundation awarded Whitely Community Council $26,500 through the Community Grants Program to support core mission work and education initiatives.
Through Community Grants, The Community Foundation awarded more than $1.5 million in competitive grant funding to support vital programs and projects in arts and culture, community betterment, economic development, education, and human services.
To make progress toward its mission and goals, Whitely Community Council relies on the expertise of committees in each of these areas to provide guidance and develop action plans. In 2023, the education committee landed on the idea of organizing a summer college visit to Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) for students who live in Whitely. Unlike other college visits, the committee specifically wanted to take middle school-aged students who might not be thinking about college as an option. This education program was funded in part through the 2023 grant from The Community Foundation.
“High school students may have already made their mind up,” shared Ken Hudson, executive director of the Whitely Community Council, “So it was important to provide experiences for these students before they decided they weren’t ‘college material’.”
Ken and the education committee worked with middle school staff members, who had strong relationships with their students already, to identify students who they thought would benefit from the trip. The hope was that they could inspire students early to consider what they would need to do to prepare for college.
In June of 2023, 16 middle school students, one high school student, and five chaperones traveled by charter bus to Washington, D.C. By the end of the trip, the students had visited museums and national monuments, with their tour guide even pointing out the names of some Muncie residents inscribed on Vietnam Veteran Memorial Walls. Students were engaged in educational sessions on mental health, connecting with adult mentors, and fulfilling their potential. And, they visited two HBCUs, Howard University and the University of the District of Columbia. Throughout the trip, they were inspired by the possibilities in their own futures.
When they returned to Muncie, a few of the students shared about their trip with the Muncie Community Schools Board of Directors. One student specifically shared that, after going on these college visits, she had decided that she wanted to go to college.
“They might not go to an HBCU, but even right here, there’s Ball State, there’s Ivy Tech, there are opportunities for college that they will now consider as an option,” explained Ken.
The college tour was not the only programming by Whitely Community Council in the summer of 2023. The education committee developed a summer reading and writing contest, offering prizes to students who read books and then wrote essays about what they had read. They partnered with Classroom Connections to
provide books for the students. Parents encouraged reading and writing over summer break. The contest is set to continue in 2024. The education committee hopes to encourage more parents to get involved, with plans to shift the announcement of winners to the schools’ family nights. Building relationships between parents and teachers is a major goal of the program in 2024.
Whitely Community Council’s grant was supportive beyond education initiatives. The grant provided core mission support to ensure that the organization has flexible resources to work toward its goals.
The Community Grants Program, which operated under a new model in 2023, invites applicants to apply through one wide open door. Foundation staff listen to the needs of the nonprofit organization to understand their complete need. The organization submits one application and is matched with the appropriate grants committees whose collective awards result in one comprehensive grant.
Whitely Community Council’s grant request was reviewed by The Community Foundation’s Grants Committee of the Board, as well as by the Kitselman Committee, and Mutual Legacy Committee. The Board of Directors then approved a grant to Whitely Community Council made up of contributions from The Unrestricted Fund of The Community Foundation, Harry and Janet Kitselman Fund, and Mutual Legacy Fund.
Community Grants
Each year, The Community Foundation partners with nonprofit organizations by providing funding in the form of community grants.
The Funding Process:
1. REACH OUT TO US
Nonprofit organizations seeking funding from The Community Foundation should reach out to the Programs and Nonprofit Relations team or submit a Letter of Intent to apply at cfmdin.org/grants.
2. APPLY
Foundation staff may reach out for additional information and provide guidance on next steps. When appropriate, a grant application will be requested.
3. COMMITEE REVIEW & BOARD APPROVAL
Grants committees review all grant applications. These committees consist of volunteers who live or work in Delaware County. After review, funding recommendations are presented to the Board of Directors, who approve all grantmaking from the Foundation.
4. RECEIVING A GRANT
Grantees can expect a continued relationship with Foundation staff during their grant period (and often beyond). Through reporting, stories and photos shared may be used by The Community Foundation to promote good work in the community further.
Whitely Community Council was able to use its grant to support its organization’s goal of education and work toward another goal, health and wellness.
The Whitely Community Council food pantry saw huge growth in the number of clients they served in 2023, which Ken attributes to Whitely Community Council’s efforts to get the word out in the community. The food pantry is also an example of how work expands outside of the geographic constraints of the Whitely neighborhood – just over 60% of clients are residential, but the rest come from the surrounding neighborhoods.
The Whitely Community Council uses the food pantry as an opportunity to partner with other agencies to provide additional services. In 2023, they offered flu and COVID-19 vaccinations, blood pressure screenings, and voter registration. Clients can learn about community partners like Open Door Health Services, Pathstone Corporation, and neighborhood churches. Sometimes, the connection can be as simple as handing out a flyer
for a neighborhood program that could benefit residents. “The goal is to get people to a place where they no longer need the pantry,” Ken explained. As the Whitely Community Council continues to grow and work toward their mission, they hope to bring in partners to provide even more services to not only food pantry clients, but any community members who need them.
While the programming undertaken by the Whitely Community Council has had a major impact on the community, as Ken notes, the council’s most important accomplishment is the relationships that they have built with Whitely residents – getting to know the community members, listening to their input and feedback, providing the programs and resources that they want to see, and developing trust in each other.
“We don’t want to wait on someone else. We want to see the entire east side transform, starting with the Whitely Community,” Ken said.
Whitely Community Council hosts monthly neighborhood meetings where community members can share opinions and insights on how to improve their neighborhood. Pictured here, Ken Hudson engages in conversation at the March 2024 meeting.
Building Legacy:
EMBRACING THE COMMUNITY, BUILDING PRIDE
WHEN JILL JEREB AND GARY DODSON DREAM ABOUT THE FUTURE, they hope for a community where people are welcomed and celebrated as their authentic selves. They enjoy happy stories, beautiful sights, and helping others. They see the potential for a better community when people come together toward common goals instead of dividing based on their differences.
“You have to embrace a lot of people to have a good outcome,” explains Jill, “You have to trust them, and rely on them and help them when they need it.”
Jill and Gary are world travelers. Together, they have visited more than 40 countries, claiming Borneo and New Zealand as their top picks. Domestically, they have been working to visit all the national parks. Their time spent in new places and their childhoods spent in Miami and Knoxville, respectively, have made Jill and Gary appreciate people as unique individuals and the qualities, skills, and gifts they can bring to create a better community.
Jill and Gary dream of a future where authenticity
Planned Gifts
is valued, and differences are seen as assets. They shared, “We are fortunate to live in a democratic nation founded on principles emphasizing equal rights for all citizens, but the reality is that certain groups of people in our society continue to face overt discrimination. All people are worthy of the same rights regardless of their race, religious beliefs, sexual identification, or any other ‘categorization’.”
To help create that future they dream about, Jill and Gary have created the Jill Jereb and Gary Dodson Fund, a fund to benefit Muncie Outreach. The fund, which is currently a future fund at The Community Foundation, will be established with a gift from the couple’s estate.
Jill shares the experience of her older brother as a key motivator for her and Gary’s commitment to Muncie Outreach. Jill grew up with her family in Miami in a bluecollar neighborhood where people helped one another. While they made do, financial resources were tight. Love and relationships were abundant.
Their neighborhood was diverse. In many houses, both parents held jobs. Jill’s mom stayed home and regularly
Planning for a gift to be made after you are gone creates a legacy in the community. The Community Foundation can work with you and your professional advisor to ensure your plan is realized. Making a planned gift can be simple.
SIMPLE BEQUESTS
You can designate a gift or a portion of your estate to one or more funds at the Community Foundation in your will.
NAMED BENEFICIARY
Name The Community Foundation as the beneficiary on an investment account (IRA) or any bank account or certificate of deposit.
Rather than cancel life insurance policies that you no longer need, consider naming The Community Foundation as the beneficiary or donate the policies outright to the Foundation.
For more ways to give, visit cfmdin.org/donors.
opened their door to the kids in the neighborhood. Jill shared fond memories of her and her brother coming home from school to a house full of neighbor kids eating kumquats, mangoes, oranges, and avocados from the trees around the neighborhood, blanket forts that took up the whole living room, and so much laughter.
While their house was filled with love, Jill’s brother struggled to fit in outside the home. Jill described him as smart – he was valedictorian of his class. He was a fabulous tennis player and downhill skier. He loved nature, hiking, and white-water rafting. And he had a great sense of humor. He suffered from ankylosing spondylitis, a disease that causes inflammation of the joints and ligaments of the spine and limits movement. Today, he would have identified as part of the LGBTQ+ community, but he grew up in a time and community where being different was taboo.
This caused him to live in fear. He never had the opportunity to live as his authentic self.
Jill and Gary envision a future where people don’t have to live in fear of discrimination, mistreatment, or bullying. They lead with caring hearts. Through volunteer
work, advocacy, and support across the community, they look for opportunities to help those who may be overlooked by others.
While they firmly believe all oppressed groups deserve support and attention, Jill and Gary feel particularly motivated by unjust treatment of members of the LGBTQ+ community.
Today, Jill and Gary support Muncie Outreach directly with their time and financial resources. The couple has also created a future fund at The Community Foundation that will continue their work with Muncie Outreach and fulfill their desire to ensure support continues beyond their lifetimes. A highlight of their participation with this group has been their attendance at Muncie Pride events.
“We’re inspired because the Pride Festival went great. There was lots of positive energy, and it was wonderfully joyful there,” said Jill. “It gives you hope.”
Jill and Gary give today to make a difference. They are also planning for the future.
2023 Donors
Accutech Systems Corporation
Sophia Maxon Ackerly
Emily Adams Donley
Bobby and Jana Adams
Jean Adams
Jim Adams
Michelle Adams
Margaret Adams
Shawn Adams
Gary Addison
Larry and Betsy Ahlersmeyer
Alaska Heating & Cooling, Inc.
Tom Alexander
Jay and Susan Allardt
Joe and Maraby Allardt
Hazel Amos
Julius and Belinda Anderson
Stefan and Joan Anderson
Edward Armantrout and Bonita
Ramirez
Dr. Ramon Avila
Stephen and Mary Avila
Kayla Bachmann
David and Joan Bahlmann
James Bailey
Eric Baker
Ted and Gail Baker
Ball Brothers Foundation
George & Frances Ball Foundation
Ball State University
Rudy and Candace Ballard
Michael and Patricia Barlow
WaTasha Barnes Griffin
Neal Barnum
Lonita Bassett
Steve and Amy Bassett
Daniel and Carolyn Beard
Mary Ann Beard
Bryan Beaty
David and Mary Benbow
Judy Benken
Daniel and Janet Benson
Marianne Benson
Teresa Bergan
Vicki Bickett
Ken and Patti Biller
Derron and Charity Bishop
Dennis and Tanya Blair
Michael R. Blake
Megan Blake Weinman
Jane Botts
Forrest and Mary Bowers
Chris M. Bowles
Trina Bowling
Scot and Jo Boyce
Boys & Girls Clubs of Muncie
Sheila Bracken
William Bracken
Bridges Community Services
Ken and Peggy Briner
Cathy and Mark Brinker
Brian and Tina Brinkman
Rob and Mary Brodhead
Sally Brodhead
Michael W. and Lisa M. Brown
Patricia Brunette
Juanita A. Bruns
Schuyler and Mary Louise Buck
Jack Buckles
Ronald and Margaret Bullock
Ed and Kathy Burgauer
Philip Lee Burk
John and Karen Burkhardt
Joe and Linda Burnworth
John and Donna Burton
Robert and Lydia Burton
Michael and Abby Butler
Judi Calhoun
Care Animal Hospital
Nancy Carlson
James and Jennifer Carmichael
Ann Carney
Dolores Kibler
Bill and Mikki Carr
Jeffrey and Connie Carter
Larry and Jane Carter
Catalina Charitable Foundation
Peggy Cenova
Gretchen Cheesman
Christian Student Foundation, Inc.
Marcille Claar
Patricia Clark
Tom Clark and Mary Foster
Richard and Raquel Clasby
Teresa and Samuel Clemmons
Susan Cline
Mike and Susie Cloyd
Carolyn Cooley
Phillip Coon
Ray and Leslie Cortopassi
Gordon and Pam Cox
Sharon Cox and Family
Larry and Connie Crabtree
Jim and Janice Craig
Laura Crampton
Allie and Juanita Craycraft
Marlin and Mary Ann Creasy
Jim and Barbara Crookston
Linn and Susan Crull
Bob Cummins
Ted Cunliffe
Dick Daniel
JoAnna Darda
David and Mary Jane Sursa Trust Fund
Wil and Cindy Davis
Mary and Jim Dawson
Chris and Catherine Day
Mark Decaroli
Cheryl and Jim Decker
The Deering Family
Delaware County Farm Festival
Delaware County Historical Society
Delaware Community Schools
Educational Foundation
Jason and Melissa Delk
Jack and Patty Demaree
Connie I. Denney-Meier
Steven R Dettman
Mark and Barbara DiFabio
Diane J. Digman
John Disher
Cherilynn Dollison
Cornelius and Mary Dollison
Melissa Donahue
Jason Donati
David M. Donovan
Elizabeth Douglass
Anthony Dowell
Kim S. Dowling
Helen S. Duncan-Rucker
Larry and Gloria Durham
William and Barbara Eidson
Anthony Elliott
Jason and Joy Elwood Family
Matt, Heather, Will, Olivia, and Hank Elwood
Sue Errington
Mark and Molly Ervin
Estep Burkey Simmons, LLC
Lance and Mary Jo Estep
Teresa Evanko and Zoe Bilello
Exchange Club of Muncie
Adam and Jaime Faulkner
Ronald and Cheryl Fauquher
Olivia Evelyn Frances Fellows
Jeffrey and Susan Felton
Kimberly Howe Ferguson
Jim Finan
Luella Finan
James and Elizabeth Fisher
Jud Fisher and Carey Amos Fisher
Mark Flodder
David Forbes
Larry and Donna Fouch
Foursquare Church
Joe C. Fouse
Frank Brinkman Law, PC
Floyd Freer
Jane E. Freestone
Kenneth and Barbara Frost
Jasmine Fullove
Kimberley and Cornelius Fullove
Amy Gackenheimer
Jean Gadziola
David and Nancy Galliher
Mike and Cathy Galliher
Keith and Debbi Gary
Scott and Jane Gasser
Kari Gayes
Gem Mint Auction
Barbara Gillian
Richard and Nikole Gillis
Patronella C. Gillis
Richard and Renee Gillis
Marlene Girton
David and Marcia Gobble
Goelzer Investment Management
James Gooden
Mark Goodpaster
Dr. Anthony M. Grasso
Judith I. Gray
Mark and Traci Greenberg
Merrill and Linda Greene
Keith Greenwalt and Marla
Templeton
Connie Gregory
Della D. Gregory
Linda Gregory
Suzanne Gresham
Michael and Carolyn Grieves
Ron and Mary Groves
Patricia A. Guize
Lynn Hale
Maureen Hale
First Muncie
Hamer D. and Phyllis C. Shafer
Foundation
Frederick M. Hamilton
Brandon Hamilton and Sara Shade Hamilton
Marshall and Nancy Hanley
Christina Hansen-Pulaski
Linda Hanson
Mark and Cathy Hardwick
Jane Harman
Randy and Thanh Harnish
Bill Harris
Paul and Rebecca Harris
Richard Harris
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Harris
Gayle and Jeannine Harrold
Leslie M. Hatcher
Brian Haughn
Peggy Hazlett
Heart of Indiana United Way
Tom Heck
Brandee Heeter
Dave and Deb Heeter
Jon and Janis Hendrix
Steven and Kristen Herbst
Charles Hetrick
Bill and Jackie Hill
Nancy Hines
Cynthia Hoffman
Jim and Jill Holstein
Home Savers of Delaware County
Mark Hood
Hoosier Pride Excavating, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. David Hoover
Janet (Stevenson) Hoover
Lindsey Horan
Dan and Mary House
Aileen Howard
Keri Howell
Gregory Huffman Estate
Hillary Hughes
Jane E. Hughes Education Fund
William and Roseanne Hughes
Virginia Hunter
Indiana Michigan Power
Indianapolis Stage Sales and Rentals
Innovation Connector Inc.
Ann Johnson
Wayne and Mia Johnson
Jennifer Johnson
Julianna Jarabak Johnson
DONORS CONTINUED
Roni Johnson
Junto of Muncie
Dain and Amanda Kavars
Lisa and Ingrid Keener
Steven and Amy Kehoe
Stanley Keil
Eric and Sandra Kelly
Allen and Connie Kemper
Gary and Sue Ann Kemper
Martha Kendrick
Patricia Kennedy
Jennifer Kent
Jeff and Ruth Kiger
Jack A. King
Jim and Shirley King
Amy E. King
Thomas Kinghorn
Magi Kirkpatrick Sikora
Carl Kizer
Emily, Jason, and James Klinker
Patricia Knasinski
Thomas and Alexandra Kocoshis
Kirby and Kristi Koriath
Carol Kosisko
Dr. John Koumoulides
Dennis and Carolee Kramer
Timothy and Sharon Kuzma
David Land
Jeff and Beth Lang
Janice Largent
Philip and Kathy Lawson
LEAP Managed IT
Susan Leffler
Jaime Lemna
Lilly Endowment Inc.
John and Kathy Littler
Jill Long Thompson
Terry Lothamer
Connie J. Loveless
Janet Loveless
Rachel Lunsford
Kirk and Deb Mace Memorial Foundation
John and Vicki MacIntyre Family
Dorothy and Arthur Malman
Gabe and Kerri Manis
Julie Mannies
Meryl E. Mantione
Maplewood Animal Hospital
Marilyn Marks
Dick and Liz Marshall
Jay and Mary Ann Matchett
Elizabeth P. McClinchie
Becky (Becca) McConnellCunningham
B. Allen McCormick
Bill and Jan McCune
Joann McKinney
Susan Meiers
Todd Merickel
Dr. Fred A. Meyer, Jr.
Nancy Millard
Beverly Carroll Miller Living Trust
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Miller
Keith and Elaine Miller
Kevin and Sherri Miller
Minnetrista
Jason and Marcy Minton
James E. Mitchell
Lisbeth Mitchell
Cindy Modlin Adams
Jon Moll and Nancy Barefoot Moll
Frank A. Monroe
Barbara and Randy Moore
Bruce Moore
Mark and Mary Mordue
Kappy (Klang) Morin
Shirley Morrison
Tom and Kathy Morrison
Becky L Moss
Wilfridah Mbone Mucherah
City of Muncie
Muncie Altrusa Foundation, Inc.
Muncie Central Boys Basketball
Muncie Children’s Museum
Muncie Duplicate Bridge Club
Muncie Power Products
Steve Murphy and Lisa Thomas
Janie and Todd Murray
James, Kate and Sagan Murray
Ryan and Jennifer Murray
Murray’s Jewelers
Rick and Eva Muzzy
Barbara L. Myers
J. Matthew and Alexis Neal
James Needham
Bob and Susan Nelson and Family
Vonnie Newburn
AJ Nicholas
Nonprofit Support Network
Normandy Flower Shop
Northwest Bank
Akilah Nosakhere
Mary Ann Olinger
Open Door Health Services
Keith and Betty Orebaugh
Larry and Barbara Ottinger
Michael and Patricia Painter
Deborah A. Parish
Don and Claire Park
Paul and Stacia Partezana
Patricia Schaefer Foundation Trust
Ruth and Wayne Payne
Richard and Regina Peck
Sandra F. Peterson
Frank and Angela Petty
The Pfanschmidt Family
Luke Philippsen
Luke and Dianne Philippsen
Tamara Phillips
Karen Pickering
Donna Polcz
Psi Iota Xi
Judi Putt
Jim Pyle
Susan Rains
Steve and Amy Reed
Susanne Reising
Dan and Jana Reno
Chuck Reynolds
Polly Richman
Dan Ridenour
Sherry Riggin
R. Donn and Freida J Roberts
Harold Lee Roberts
Jane B. Robertson Revocable Trust
Roche Diagnostics
Vernon and Patricia Rodeffer
Janet Roepke
Judith Roepke
Lenora and Bob Rogers
Ginger K. Ros
Rusty and Trula Ross
Rotary Club of Muncie
Connie Roth
Max and Barb Rudicel
Nanette Rushton
Carol Salian
Charles E. Sanders, Jr. and Sarah A. Sanders
Marilyn Scales
Jennifer Scarberry
David John Schakel
Judith Schell
Neil Schmottlach
Christopher and Debra Schneider
Kay Schnuck
James Schrecongost
Lisa, Vanessa and Sam Schroeder
Lauren Schultz
Emily Scott
Joe F. Scott
Andrew Seager
Carol E. Seals
Doreen Sebring
Second Harvest Food Bank of East Central Indiana Inc.
Lisa Self
Peggy Selvey
David Sexton
Dianne B. Shafer Estate
Shafer Leadership Academy
Janet Sharp
Robin and Mary Shear
Nancy Sheets
Dave and Angie Shondell
John Shondell
Steve Shondell
Jennifer Shopher
Harry L. Shrieve
Kelly and Joel Shrock
Kent Shuff and Steve Fennimore
Larry Shultz
Sigma Phi Epsilon, Indiana Gamma Chapter
Kyle and Stacia Simmerman
Larry and Kathie Simmons
The Singleton Family
Mary and George Sissel
Julie Skinner
Eric and Suzanne Small
Nancy J. Smith
Greg and Sandra Smith
Jeffery L. Smith
Jenny Moore Smith
John Smith
Les Smith and Marla Boatwright
Steven and Barbara Smith
Van and Margaret Smith
Robert and Marilyn Smitson
Randy and Cindy Sollars
Larry and Jeanine Souders
William and Isabelle Sowers
Cindy Spears
Rich and Sheila Spisak
Rachel Spodek
Daniel and Lynne Stallings
Casey and Jennifer Stanley
Kelly and Donna Stanley
Don and Ramona Stetson
Catharine Stewart
Eric Stout
Robert and Janet Stratton
Kallie Sulanke
Charlie and Claudia Sursa
Joe and Jolena Sutherland
Tania Said Consulting
Samantha Taylor
Robert A. and Beverly D. Terhune Fund
Robert A. Terhune Charitable Lead Trust
Robert H. Terhune
Allan and Carolyn Thomas
Larry and Jo Ann Thomas
Wayne and Carolyn Thomas
Dennis and Melinda Thompson
Katie, Will, Ben, and Edward Thorndike
Charles and Marguerite Tice
Michael and Ruth Ann Tolle
Craig and Cynda Turner
Rob Tyler
Union Chapel Ministries
United Day Care Center
United Way of Central Indiana
James Updike and Munjot Sahu
Barbara Vanbuskirk
Warren and Joy VanderHill
Marilyn Vanhooser
Vekstar
Russ Vernon
Jim and Karen Vincent
Rinda Vogelgesang
Marianne Vorhees
Dr. Annemarie Voss
Rex and Rhonda Waldo
Steve and Marilyn Waldo
Terry and Cheryl Walker
Suzie Wallach
Brandon and Kristi Walters
Daniel Wantz
Carol Watkins
Diane Watters
Westminster Villas
Wheeling Condominium Association
Don and Sue Whitaker
John and Susan Whitaker
Douglas and Kathy White
Max and Carol White
Bill Whitehead
Bill Whitehead and Family
Carole Whitehead
Whitinger & Company LLC
Gayle and Chris Williams
Heather Williams
Jim R. Williams
Pam and Jim Wingate
Suzanne Wingate
Betty Wingrove
Lezlie Winter
Arno Wittig
Dan and Christine Wolfert
John E. Worthen
Mark and Mary Ann Wright
Susan Wyne
Tony Yakos
YMCA of Muncie
Yorktown Swim Club
YWCA Central Indiana
Sherman and Marjorie Zeigler Foundation
Tributes
HONORARIUMS
Jay Allardt
Marilyn Ault
Mary Ann Beard
Clark Beebe Koontz
Jean Blake
Matthew Blake
The Board of Directors of the Childrens Clothing Center
The Community Foundation Staff
Carolyn Cooley
Tricia Davis Williams
Carol and Tony Elliott
Fred Feick
Steve Fennimore
Jim Finan
John and Debbie Foster
David and Nancy Galliher
Julia Gouveia
Erma L. Green
Connie Gregory
Suzanne Gresham
Patty Guize
Sara Shade Hamilton
Kelly Heavilon
Fred and Janna Hollowell
Mary House
Steve and Kim Hunter
Ann Johnson
Roni Johnson
Laura S. Kelley
Nancee Kinghorn
Tom Kinghorn
Lee Ann Kwiatkowski
Bill and Jan McCune
Fred A. Meyer Jr.
Nancy Millard
Kandi Miller
Jon Moll
Partners for Profit
Janet Roepke
Carol E. Seals
Nicholas Peter Shear
Boone Wingate Shear
Steve Shondell
Kent Shuff
Staci and Steve Slavin
Van and Margaret Smith
Daniel and Lynne Stallings
Brooke Stallings
Kelly and Donna Stanley
Andrew Stratton
Peter Stratton
William Summers
Peter Voss
Robert Walters
Katherine White
Jim and Pam Wingate
MEMORIALS
Tiny Adams
Janet Arnold
Ron Aylor
Verna L. Bartlett
Bob Beasley
Kevin Bergan
J. Wilbur and Marie I. Berry
Everlasting
ARTWORK HONORS COMMUNITY MEMORIES
THE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION HOLDS MORE THAN FUNDS – we also hold the memories of our community. Each contribution to the Foundation and each fund established holds the intent of the donor. The Community Foundation carries that intent forward, generation after generation, creating an everlasting resource of charitable dollars for Muncie and Delaware County.
Last year, we shared the story of our new home – a building where we could create new memories for the community. Throughout our office space, we honor the community through local photography and contemporary artwork by local artists. We also wanted to embrace opportunities to ensure the past would be remembered. To honor our past, and two of the Foundation’s earliest champions, David Sursa and Edmund Ball, we commissioned Everlasting. The sculpture, installed in the
building vestibule and lobby but visible even from outside the building, reuses glass removed from Minnetrista’s Catalyst sculpture.
Everlasting features a stainless-steel tree with dichroic glass leaves. The tree and its deep roots represent the permanency of The Community Foundation of Muncie and Delaware County. The leaves change color from different angles like our community changes over time. The Community Foundation is everlasting – here to benefit our community today, tomorrow, and always.
David Sursa and Edmund Ball envisioned a community foundation’s impact on Delaware County. They encouraged others to see the vision when the first seeds were planted for The Community Foundation nearly 40 years ago. It’s only fitting that we honor their shared contribution within our walls.
Mr. Ball receives credit for issuing the challenge to community leaders to start The Community Foundation. He even offered a matching gift from the Ball Family for the first $1 million raised. Catalyst was commissioned in 2003 by Virginia B. Ball to honor her late husband, Edmund. The couple served as a catalyst for great things in our community. In 2019, Catalyst underwent restoration, including replacement of the glass. Minnetrista offered the original glass for artistic purposes and to celebrate our shared history.
Mr. Sursa was the Foundation’s founding president, championing the power of endowment in the community. He was a visionary leader and driving force behind the foundation we have become today. Together, he and his wife Mary Jane invested in The Community Foundation. They established funds to benefit the causes that mattered most to them. Their everlasting support inspired their children and grandchildren to embrace
philanthropy. They have created a multi-generational family legacy.
In fact, the Sursa children and grandchildren partnered with The Community Foundation to bring Everlasting from a concept to a beautiful piece of art. The family funded the project in honor of their parents and grandparents.
Through Everlasting, The Community Foundation honors the memory of our earliest champions. Through our service in Muncie and Delaware County, we hold the memories of so many others, too.
Our Volunteers
STRATEGIC
Trent Dowling
Sara Shade Hamilton
Magi Kirkpatrick Sikora
Casey Stanley
FINANCE
Kathy White, Chair
Trent Dowling
Mark A. Ervin
Michael B. Galliher
Erika Hayes
David W. Heeter
John D. Littler
Carol E. Seals
Casey Stanley
INVESTMENT
Tom Heck, Chair
Ronald K. Fauquher
Jennifer Gibson
Thomas J. Kinghorn
Mark Price
Carol E. Seals
Daniel Stallings
Rob Tyler
IMPACT INVESTING
Ben Freeman
Jeff Huff
Magi Kirkpatrick Sikora
Carol E. Seals
Steve Slavin
GRANTS
Sara Shade Hamilton, Chair
John W. Anderson Jr.
Chris Day
Andrew Draper
Ermalene Faulkner
Jaime Faulkner
Olivia Fellows
Molly Flodder
Keith Gary
Charlize Jamieson
Lathay Pegues
SCHOLARSHIP
Derron Bishop
Rateira Dodds-Simmons
Keith Doudt
Aileen Howard
Marchal Hudson
Ryan Hunter
Mia Johnson
Jared Quarles
Ali Starkey
ROBERT P. BELL EDUCATION FUND
Tom Arnold
Devon Barbosa
Lisa Brand
Courtney Crabtree
Felicia Gray
Kacie Hall
Eileen Molter
Kris Nauman
Erin Wilson
Melanie Wright
KITSELMAN FUND
Jon Moll, Chair
Stefan S. Anderson
Steven Smith
Franky Voss
Jim Williams
LAND CONSERVATION FUND
John Craddock, Chair
Jay Allardt
Sue Errington
Sara Shade Hamilton
Paul Russell
Les Smith
John Taylor
MUTUAL LEGACY FUND
R. Donn Roberts, Chair
Linn Crull
Sara Shade Hamilton
David W. Heeter
Carol E. Seals
ALBANY TOWN ENDOWMENT FUND
Lance Engle
Tony Evans
Barb Frazee
Kristen McConnell
Clyde Shaffer
Ryan Vannatter
GASTON TOWN ENDOWMENT FUND
Lisa Brown
Trent Dowling
Dick Johnson
Kyle Mealy
Brandon Petro
James Wormer
LIBERTY PERRY SELMA TOWN ENDOWMENT FUND
Jim Ballenger
Kim Connor
Larry Crabtree
Theresa Johnson
Brandon Morvilius
Kristy Thompson
TOWN OF YORKTOWN ENDOWMENT FUND
Edward Armantrout
Carolyn Gant
Sarah McCord
Bryan Smith
Samantha Taylor
CHAIR EMERITUS
Stefan S. Anderson
Wilbur R. Davis
Trent Dowling
Mark A. Ervin
Ronald K. Fauquher
Jeffrey R. Lang
John D. Littler
Carol E. Seals
Steven M. Smith
Charles V. Sursa
Marianne Vorhees
IN MEMORIUM
Edmund F. Ball
Jack E. Buckles
Oliver C. Bumb
Suzanne Gresham
David Sursa
PRESIDENT EMERITA
Roni Johnson
Marcy Minton President and CEO
Kallie Sulanke Chief Community Partner for Outreach and Donor Relations
Amanda Kavars Chief Community Partner for Program and Nonprofit Relations
Carol Kosisko Community Partner for Donor Relations
Molly Harty Community Partner for Program and Nonprofit Relations
Trina Bowling Finance Officer
Rachel Spodek Outreach and Donor Relations Manager
JoAnna Darda Program and Nonprofit Relations Manager
Rachel Lunsford Operations Support Manager
PROFESSIONAL COUNSEL
Steven D. Murphy, Legal Counsel