Dear Friends of Goodwill, In 1954 Goodwill Industries-Suncoast opened its doors in St. Petersburg and began helping people with special needs secure jobs. During its first year of operations, the new Goodwill provided employment opportunities to 45 people with disabilities. Today Goodwill-Suncoast employs 1,334 people, and last year we served 74,439 people with disabilities or other barriers to employment and placed 15,050 in jobs. We ranked second and third among 165 Goodwills nationally with respect to the number of people we served and the number of people placed in employment. As we celebrate our 60th year, we want to thank you for making this growth possible. In the following pages you’ll learn about some of the people served by the Goodwill mission. People like Aida, who took charge of her life and was reunited with her son; Robert, who finds a purpose each day through work; and Lisa, who is making the most of her second chance. These are lives you helped transform! You’ll also read about initiatives that allow us to offer many opportunities to those with the most significant needs. The men and women in our Life Skills Development program now perform a wide range of work activities in our retail stores in preparation for community employment. Meanwhile we’ve expanded programs that offer job coaching and ongoing support to help individuals with disabilities transition into jobs with community employers. Many of you know Goodwill as a place to donate or shop. Our donated goods/retail operation helps preserve the material resources of our community through re-use and recycling while providing financial support for our mission and offering training opportunities for those we serve. And we create employment options with every new donation center or store we open. That’s the core of the social enterprise known as Goodwill. Thank you for your financial and material donations, for shopping in our stores and for hiring those we serve. Your patronage and support have changed lives - for six decades! With gratitude, Deborah A. Passerini, M.Ed., CRC, CE President and Chief Executive Officer Goodwill Industries-Suncoast, Inc.
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Oscar J. Horton Board Chair
Sixty Years Under the Sun! The year is 1954. Gas costs about 29 cents a gallon, Fast-forward to 2014.
Father Knows Best is a popular TV show, and Elvis Presley cut his first commercial record. The “DIY” trend is born as families decide to do their own home maintenance. In St. Petersburg, Florida, Goodwill-Suncoast bought a Borden’s Dairy building downtown, moved in and began helping people with disabilities get jobs.
Gas is about $3.55 a gallon. Modern Family is a popular TV show and vinyl records are a dying medium. The DIY movement is still going strong. Goodwill-Suncoast has a firm foothold in West Central Florida, after having helped populate the state with Goodwill branches from Miami to Tallahassee.
This year we celebrate our 60 years under the sun, literally and metaphorically. Florida is, of course, the Sunshine State. That’s the literal part. Metaphorically, we’ve been privileged to spread a little warmth and sunshine to the people we’ve served and to bask in the countless smiles we get in return. 2
Goodwill Suncoast – a trip through time! Boy Scouts began collecting for Goodwill in 1954, our first year of operation. The first donation drive distributed 25,000 bags to St. Petersburg homeowners one Saturday, and collected 18,000 filled bags the following Saturday.
Weeki Wachee was one of the nation’s most popular tourist stops in the 1950s. This undated photo shows Goodwill-Suncoast was in on the mermaid action!
Mrs. Gladys Revell was named “Goodwill Worker of 1956.” That year saw the opening of a Goodwill store in Sulphur Springs (a Tampa neighborhood), the use of five trucks and the employment of 86 people with disabilities.
American cartoonist Milton Caniff created Good Willy, a symbol of Goodwill efforts, in the 1950s.
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In 1967, the original downtown St. Petersburg store was moved to a much larger location at 915 Central Ave. Our current superstore on Central Ave is one of our largest, at 29,000 square feet.
Joe Morgan of the Cincinnati Reds “Big Red Machine” filmed a public service announcement for Goodwill during his 1970s spring training in Tampa.
Dr. Paul Bearer was the host of Creature Feature, a TV horror movie series based in “St. Creaturesburg,” from 1973 to 1995. He’s shown here in his vintage hearse at a Goodwill picnic.
Goodwill is always in fashion! A 1980 “runway” show of Goodwill finds was held at Tyrone Square Mall in St. Petersburg.
A sunny, groovy billboard campaign from the late 1970s encourages people to “get that good feeling” by donating to Goodwill. 4
Walking on Sunshine
Good Work • Employment services for people with all types of employment challenges • Training centers and work for people with disabilities
How We Serve the People of West Central Florida
• Transportation for people with disabilities
Our mission is to help people achieve their full potential through the dignity and power of work.
Good Lives Good Homes
• Two residential work-release programs to help offenders transition back into society
• Five affordable apartment communities
• Residential substance abuse treatment programs
• Barrier-free architecture for seniors and people with disabilities
• Counseling, life skills training and job placement • Literacy program for children from low-income families
• On-site Goodwill management and service coordinators When you donate to or shop at Goodwill you help support these programs and services. 5
At a Glance Map Legend
Fl rida
89%
74,439
Workforce development
61,657
Childhood literacy
6,022
Community corrections
1,278
Community service workers
3,260
Temporary staffing
1,178
Vocational training & services 544 Goodwill housing
355
Other training & services
145
Superstores Retail Stores Outlets
percent of operating budget devoted to programs and services
Training Centers
A complete financial statement appears on page 21.
Community Corrections
CareerSource One-Stop Centers
Counties served: Pinellas Hillsborough Polk Pasco Hernando Marion Citrus Levy Sumter Highlands
The Juice! Total people served
Headquarters
People placed in jobs
15,050
Employees 1,334 Operating budget
$60,093,557
Total revenue
$62,727,918
Retail program revenue $43,129,349 Human services revenue $18,122,136
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s
u
ccess
story
Meet
Lisa faces a changed world with a confidence she feared she had lost.
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L
isa Merritt opened the envelope, pulled out a bus pass, and cried.
She cried because she wanted to ride the bus, not because she had to. “This is the next step in my freedom,” she thought.
Goodwill and a full-time job helped jumpstart Lisa’s reentry to society.
The bus pass was a symbol of Lisa’s growth. She had spent the last 10 years in prison for a series of white-collar crimes. The final two years of her sentence were spent in work-release at Goodwill’s Tampa Bay Community Corrections Center (TBCCC). While living at TBCCC, Lisa worked in Goodwill’s cafeteria before moving on to an outside job. The transition time from prison to the outside world was priceless.
In 2013 we served 1,278 people like Lisa in our corrections programs and placed 1,022 in jobs.
“I thought everyone would judge me, see my scarlet letter, not smile or say good morning,” she says. “None of those things happened. So every day my confidence grew.” At TBCCC Lisa attended classes focused on life skills and helped other residents in their GED studies. That, plus her time spent working in the cafeteria, boosted her confidence and prepared her for the outside world. Lisa left TBCCC with more than $13,000 saved, a full-time job and newfound self-esteem. While she still sometimes feels like “a stranger in a foreign land” she is employed by the same financial company that hired her while she was at TBCCC, has been promoted, and is earning an aboveaverage salary. “Goodwill was the launching pad to my happily-ever-after,” she says.
Make a New Life ! 8
s
u
ccess
story
Meet
Robert loves owning his own home and swimming for Special Olympics. 9
R
obert Wienrich is an accomplished man. He’s part of the
St. Pete Sting Rays swim team for Special Olympics. He owns a two-bedroom, one-bath home with his girlfriend of 17 years. He smiles when he says the home has a fenced-in front yard and a garage. That garage is where Robert works on his favorite hobby, model cars. He has so many model cars he constructed wheeled shelving to keep them organized. Robert also dabbles in painting and repairing bikes.
Goodwill job coaching and transportation have helped Robert stay employed and productive.
Robert began working at Goodwill-Suncoast 29 years ago doing janitorial work and later transferring to work in the warehouse. He left Goodwill for a few months to work at a grocery store, but came back to us in 2001. Since 2005, with the help of job coaching and Goodwill transportation, Robert has worked at MacDill Air Force Base’s 440-seat Diner’s Reef. He’s grateful for the help he has received from Goodwill over the years, his steady paycheck, and the moral support he receives along the way.
In 2013 we served 83 people like Robert in our Supported Employment program.
“Goodwill helps a lot,” he says. “They helped me find a job at MacDill and my job coach tells me about things that are going on.”
Fun in th e Sun! 10
s
u
ccess
story
Meet
A job she loves gives Aida pride, purpose and a paycheck.
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F
or Aida Sager, it came
down to three strikes and you’re out.
She was a participant in Goodwill’s Life Skills Development program for adults with disabilities in Ocala for two twoyear stints, and each time her “bad attitude” caused her to give up and walk away.
“I didn’t like myself. I didn’t care what people thought of me. I was into bad choices,” she says. During that time she also gave birth to a son, James, now 6 and diagnosed with Asperger syndrome. Eventually her poor parenting skills caused James to be taken from her. Aida was court ordered to complete parenting and anger management classes. That’s when everything changed.
Aida is steadily rebuilding her life for herself and her son James.
“When I lost him I was devastated, devastated,” she says. “I was determined to change. If Goodwill didn’t take me back I’d be lost.”
In 2013, we served 305 people like Aida in our Life Skills Development programs.
Aida re-entered the Life Skills Development program for a third time. And instead of striking out, she hit the ball out of the park. She started back in September of 2013, got custody of her son in October, and two weeks after that landed a cashier position at Burlington Coat Factory through Goodwill’s Supported Employment program. She has earned high praise from store management and is by all accounts a completely changed person. “Boom!” she laughs. “I achieved my dream!”
Catch Yo ur Dream! 12
365 DAYS OF We welcomed several government officials, such as Senator Jeff Brandes, to tour our headquarter operations and see the Goodwill mission in action. ie w Ou r Y ear in R ev
Residents from our community corrections center decorated 600 bags containing Thanksgiving food and wrapped 250 presents for Nourish to Flourish, a program for needy children.
Hundreds of guests supported our third-annual Halloween-themed fundraiser in October. For 2014, we’re renaming the event Ghoulwill Bash and changing the venue to the historic Coliseum in downtown St. Petersburg. More space, more scares!
Marilyn Groves of Bartow, a very enthusiastic reader for our BookWorks program, is our Volunteer of the Year. The Kiwanis Club of Greater Brandon was named Volunteer Group of the Year.
Thank you to all our community partners for offering deals in exchange for donations to Goodwill! They include The Florida Aquarium, the Florida State Fair, Dinosaur World and the Dunedin Blue Jays. 13
Our Skyway location in south St. Petersburg added Supported Employment to its mix of services for people with disabilities. Supported Employment offers on-the-job training and job-finding services with the goal of workforce integration.
Residents at our affordable housing communities enjoy regular visits by volunteers. The volunteers lead arts and crafts projects and social activities.
Dozens of Deloitte employees chose Goodwill-Suncoast for their company’s “IMPACT Day” of volunteering, fanning out to our different locations to lend a helping hand.
Kim Smith, a participant in our Life Skills Development program for adults with disabilities, joined a fashion show of Goodwill finds in May. She “walked the runway” during a luncheon held at the Estates At Carpenters retirement community in Lakeland, along with several Carpenters residents.
We were once again awarded a three-year accreditation by CARF, the highest endorsement awarded to agencies providing community integration and employment services for people with disabilities. Our CARF review notes: “This achievement is an indication of your organization’s dedication and commitment to improving the lives of the persons served.”
Our updated sales software allows Goodwill shoppers to “round up” their purchases to the nearest dollar to support our services. We still have collection jars for coins and bills, but the option to round up on a debit or credit card is proving very popular.
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Training Grounds
Times have changed dramatically since our “hire-the-handicapped” first days. So too have our services. But in some ways, GoodwillSuncoast is returning to its roots. We are refining our efforts to help people with disabilities get jobs by offering more and more work activities in our stores. Our goal is to prepare our Life Skills Development program participants to find work in the community, earn a paycheck and be “visible” members of the workforce. Our Goodwill retail stores are the perfect training ground for this endeavor. We’re challenging ourselves – and our program participants – to push the envelope on what we all can achieve together. Our Life Skills clients are learning to become an integral part of our store operations – taking donations from customers, pricing our retail items and operating our cash registers.
At the end of its first full year of operation Goodwill-Suncoast had hired 45 employees with disabilities and its payroll was $41,797. Historical records state:
“Little did those Goodwill pioneers realize the gigantic strides the embryo organization was to make; that in 10 years it would rank 14th largest among 130 similar organizations throughout the United States.”
The effort will take time, patience and compassion. But we’d like to think Dr. R. C. Adair, our first executive director, would approve. Dr. Adair hired Goodwill-Suncoast’s first employee, Mrs. Anna Waldo, as his secretary. Mrs. Waldo is described in our archives as a disabled widow with a young daughter to support.
Thank you for your support as we work to continue the legacy of Goodwill-Suncoast.
A program participant accepts drive-through donations while learning customer service. 15
Adults with disabilities learn to package and price new goods sold in our stores.
The 2013-2014 Goodwill-Suncoast Board of Directors Goodwill is grateful to the members of its all-volunteer board for their commitment to our organization, for their invaluable gift of time and their wise counsel. Board Officers
Secretary
GIS Housing Board
Corporate Officers
Ed Rader Chair
Deborah A. Passerini President and Chief Executive Officer
Deborah A. Passerini
Paul Horowitz Vice Chair
Martin W. Gladysz Raymond James Bank
Directors
Louise Lopez Secretary
Gary R. Hebert Corporate Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer
Vice Chair
Joshua Beyer The Sembler Company
Deborah A. Passerini Executive Vice President
Robert D. Dobkowski Mr. and Mrs. Blindmaster
Joshua Beyer
Steven M. Erickson Raymond James Financial, Inc.
Marie Carson Hebbler HomeBanc
Mark Pichowski
Vice Chair
Paul Horowitz Foelgner, Ronz & Straw PA
Chair
Oscar J. Horton Sun State International Trucks, LLC
Senior Vice Chair
Heather Ceresoli CPA Taylor White
Vice Chair
Karl Koch Holland & Knight, LLP
Vice Chair
Richard E. Ludwig TECO Power Services Corp., Retired
Vice Chair
Loreen M. Spencer Deloitte
President and CEO, ex officio
Louise R. Lopez PricewaterhouseCoopers
Vice Chair
Robert A. Wabbersen Publix Super Markets, Inc.
Jacqueline R. Miller Vice President for Human Resources Paul M. Norris Vice President for Corrections and Housing
JobWorks Board
Kris Rawson Vice President for Workforce Development James D. Williams Vice President for Fund Development
Heather Ceresoli Vice Chair
Mark Pichowski Bouchard Insurance Timothy Salzsieder Commercial Insurance Specialists LLC
Edwin R. Malnory Vice President for Retail Operations
Timothy Salzsieder
Martin W. Gladysz Chair
David E. Murphy The Sembler Company, Retired
John McCaugherty Hawkins Construction
Ed Rader Kmart, Retired
Robert D. Dobkowski
Lee C. Zeh Corporate Secretary and Vice President for Board Development
Charlie Robinson, Jr. Secretary Oscar J. Horton Deborah A. Passerini President
Vice Chair
Charlie Robinson, Jr. Wells Fargo Insurance Services 16
President and CEO Emeritus R. Lee Waits
Our Generous Donors Goodwill-Suncoast thanks our financial donors for their generosity. Your financial gifts make you a vital part of achieving the Goodwill mission.
Richard J. Sargent Cumulative Giving Society Richard J. Sargent generously bequeathed the largest single gift in our history. This society honors donors whose cumulative gifts total $100,000 or more.
Senior Founders ($1,000,000+) Ms. Sylvia H. Forster Publix Super Markets Charities, Inc. Mr. Richard J. Sargent Theodore P. and Marian Hadley Tonne
Founders ($500,000 - $999,999) Mr. Joseph J. Bagnor Ms. Tucker Mae Hall Mrs. Ethel T. Michaud Mrs. Mabel I. Soine Ms. Rita Tavenner Ms. Hedy Tumillo Ms. Laura White
Guardians ($100,000 - $499,999) Mr. Nicholas F. Abens Ms. Rosamond Allen Central Power Systems Mr. Lewis F. Colbert Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Cummins Vera and S. Alton Dallgaard Mrs. Gwendolyn M. Deckert Miss H. Louise Eaton Eckerd Corporation Foundation
Mr. Richard Y. Fernandez Mrs. Gertrude M. Fetzer GTE Florida, Inc. Mr. George Jara Dan and Tina Johnson Mr. William A. Klein John H. and Lillian C. Kopp Ms. Priscilla Lange Mr. Robert W. Laude Mr. F. Neuman Miller Frank T. and Gladys M. Mills Ms. Beni Morrison Ms. Bernice E. Muench Mr. Malvin H. Olsen Mr. John Sharp Peyton Donald M. and Leila T. Pouttu Progress Energy George A. and Evelyn S. Rawcliffe Mrs. Fimie R. Richie Ms. Margaret G. Ruff Ms. Rita Sherman Mrs. Kathryn B. Stenquist Ms. Helen Hartinger Stevenson Mr. Stephen K. Stimson Mr. Harris M. Sullivan, Jr. SunTrust Bank, Tampa Bay Ms. Helen Swarthout TECO Energy, Inc. TECO Power Services Corp. Ms. Bernice K. Trulsen Mrs. Janet L. Whitlock Mr. Roland E. Whitney Muirene R. and Samuel A. Wilke
Leadership Society We recognize those who made substantial gifts to Goodwill-Suncoast in the 2013-2014 fiscal year.
Platinum ($10,000+) Russell and Lillian Quarles Fund within the Community Foundation of Greater Lakeland Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Cummins Dan and Tina Johnson PNC Foundation Publix Super Markets Charities, Inc. Mrs. Elizabeth D. Rankin SunTrust Foundation Theodore P. and Marian H. Tonne
Gold ($5,000 - $9,999) Mr. Lewis F. Colbert The Dana Beck Fancher Fund within First Presbyterian Church Wells Fargo Insurance Services SE, Inc. Willis of Florida, Inc.
Silver ($3,000-$4,999) Eileen Barbara Center Trust Mr. Gary R. Hebert Deborah A. and James P. Passerini Mr. and Mrs. R. Lee Waits Jim and Sue Williams
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Bronze ($1,000 - $2,999) The Bank of Tampa Arthur T. and Annabel G. Bennett Bright House Networks Catalina Marketing Charitable Foundation David & Marie Hyman Fund within the Community Foundation of Tampa Bay D.J.H., Inc. Deloitte Florida State Fair Authority Foelgner, Ronz & Straw, P.A. Mr. Martin W. Gladysz The K. W. Grader Foundation, Inc. Gregory, Sharer & Stuart, CPAs Hawkins Construction, Inc. Historic Old NE Neighborhood Association of St. Petersburg Inc. Humana Thomas A. and Mary S. James Foundation Rex C. and Marie Elizabeth Larabee Leon Korol Company David and Pam Murphy National Charity Services, Inc. Mr. Paul M. Norris Piedmont Companies, Inc. Regent Products Corp Adam Hanson Better Communities Fund within the Renaissance Charitable Foundation Sabal Trust Company The Sembler Company
Skyway Business Center Marc and Loreen Spencer The USAA Foundation Wells Fargo Foundation Richard and Lee Zeh Zeno Office Solutions Inc.
Edgar J. Helms Heritage Society This society is named for the founder of the international Goodwill movement and honors those who have shared his vision and ensured the future of Goodwill-Suncoast through their wills or estate plans. Mr. Nicholas F. Abens Ms. Viola M. Adams Ms. Caroline M. Adams Ms. Irene A. Alexander Ms. Rosamond Allen Ms. Deborah Axtell Mr. Joseph Bagnor Ms. Marion Baker Ms. Helen Beaumont Mr. Frank R. Becker Ms. Edith Bedole Mr. Harry A. Beede Mr. Richard Bekken Mr. and Mrs. Arthur T. Bennett Ms. Emilia S. Benz Mrs. Mary C. Black Ms. Mildred A. Boerckel Ms. E. Barbara Boger Ms. Mary Boghi Mr. Paul H. Bojack Mr. and Mrs. George C. Bossard Col. George Brown Ms. Monette R. Burns
Mr. J. Harry Carr Miss Mary Alice Case Ms. Jewell P. Chapek Ms. Thelma F. Cherry Ms. Helen K. Clark Ms. Catherine C. Clark Mr. Lewis F. Colbert Ms. Florence G. Copeland Ms. Anna S. Corbett Mr. Pierre J. Costich, Jr. Ms. Muriel H. Craig Mr. and Mrs. Alfred E. Craig Mr. Clement Crawford Mr. William E. Culbreath, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Cummins Mrs. Ruth Dahling Dr. and Mrs. S. Alton Dallgaard Mr. Edward W. Davis Ms. Donna Day Ms. Leonora W. Dearlove Mrs. Gwendolyn M. Deckert Ms. Sadie F. DeFlaun Mr. Ronald Dew-Brittain Ms. Stella F. Dixon Mr. and Mrs. Adin M. Dosh Mrs. Irene E. Draper Mr. Thomas T. Dunn, Esq. Ms. Phylista Dye Miss H. Louise Eaton Mrs. Sarah Eberhardt Ms. Elizabeth English Mr. Hubert E. Erickson Ms. Leone A. Farmer Mr. Richard Y. Fernandez Mr. and Mrs. Albert C. Fetzer Ms. Sylvia H. Forster Mr. Alfred G. Frey Miss Jo Ann Gemignani Mrs. Dorothy L. Gittings Mr. Sergei Gladilin Mrs. Callie Grall Mr. Raymond N. Gramm
Ms. Moni-Beth Griesemer Ms. Helen Grunenwald Ms. Gladys L. Hahn Ms. Myrtle A. Hall Ms. Dorothy Hall Ms. Tucker Mae Hall Ms. Vera Hanifan Mr. Aaron F. Head Ms. Alma E. Hildred Mr. and Mrs. James A. Hinton Ms. Mathilda F. Hoffman Mr. Luther Y. Holland Ms. Laura E. Hollar Ms. Jane Carver Holmes Mr. Richard N. Holt Dr. John W. Holter Mr. Daniel Howe Ms. Bessie R. Huff Mr. Charles N. Hunt Mrs. Mary F. Hutchins Mr. and Mrs. Harold R. Jaberg Ms. Alice Jacob Mr. George Jara Mr. Fred W. Jobe Dan and Tina Johnson Mrs. Helen M. H. Jones Mr. Howard G. Keller Ms. Rosemarie Kibitlewski Dr. Alfred E. King Capt. Leonard K. Kissack Mr. William A. Klein Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Knoblow Mr. and Mrs. John H. Kopp Ms. Marianne Kormendy Mr. and Mrs. Royce Ladd Mrs. Kathryn E. Lading Ms. Priscilla Lange Mr. Arlo Langer Rex C. and Marie Elizabeth Larabee Ms. Genevieve J. Larges Mr. Solvieg Larsen
Ms. Dorothy Marrs Owen Mr. and Mrs. Nick Pargeans Ms. Freda H. Pasanen Joseph P. and Rose E. Patton Ms. Nina I. Pease Mr. and Mrs. Hobart D. Pelhank Mrs. Margaret D. Pereira Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Peters Mr. John Sharp Peyton Mr. and Mrs. Rodney F. Pierce Ms. Marie T. Pogar Miss Anna Pollmann Mr. and Mrs. J. Oliver Pore Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Pouttu Mr. and Mrs. Martin Quak Ms. Mary Rabanus Mrs. Louise W. Rahmel Ms. Hortense L. Ramsay Mr. David V. Ramsay Mr. and Mrs. George A. Rawcliffe Mr. Carl H. Reed Mrs. Fimie R. Richie Ms. E. Hope Rietschlin Mrs. Elizabeth C. Roberts Ms. Grace C. Roe Ms. Eva P. Rogers Ms. Margaret G. Ruff Mr. Charles Saltzman Mr. Richard J. Sargent Edward E. and Ella Schenk Ms. Erika Schnabel Mrs. Jean A. Schneider Mr. William H. Schoenfeld, Jr. Mrs. Anella B. Shapiro Ms. Rita Sherman Ms. Pearl F. Shuttlesworth Mrs. Mabel I. Soine Dr. Florence E. Stansbury Ms. Kathryn B. Stenquist Robert G. Stern, Esq. Ms. Helen Hartinger Stevenson Mr. Stephen K. Stimson
Mr. Robert W. Laude Ms. Carolyn W. Law Mr. Frank A. Lay Mrs. Carol M. LeBeau Ms. Ethel A. Lee Mrs. Charlotte Lehnherr Ms. Sylvia Lerner Ms. Vera M. Lillia Ms. Dorothy A. Lindahl Mrs. Julia Linscott Ms. Marjorie J. Lyman Ms. Katherine P. MacDonald Mrs. Leona G. Mace Ms. Mary W. MacMonnies Ms. Nellie M. Maedler Edward and Jeanne Mansfield Mr. and Mrs. Gottfried Marti Mr. Robert T. McGeorge Ms. Gertrude Spear McGrew Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. McIntosh Mrs. Ada B. McManeus Mrs. Jane Damm McPherson Mr. Raymond E. Meyer Mrs. Ethel T. Michaud Ms. Lucille Miller Mr. F. Neuman Miller Fred & Grace Miller Ms. Margaret B. Miller Frank T. and Gladys M. Mills Mrs. Beatrice L. Moon Ms. Beni Morrison Mr. Arthur A. Moulton Ms. Bernice E. Muench Mr. Harry C. Mulder Mr. Bob Murtagh Ms. Lucille M. Netcott Mrs. Ida Curry Newberg Mrs. Anne Noble Mr. Montgomery G. Northcutt Ms. Norma B. Nunlist Mr. Malvin H. Olsen Mr. Donald Overholt 18
Mr. Harris M. Sullivan, Jr. Mrs. Catherine L. Svoboda Ms. Helen Swarthout Mrs. Esther C. Swiney Ms. Rita Tavenner Mrs. Betty M. Teguns Mr. Lawrence J. Thiery Mr. and Mrs. Daniel S. Tinstman Theodore P. and Marian Hadley Tonne Ms. Bernice K. Trulsen Mr. Henry W. Tuck Ms. Hedy Tumillo Mr. and Mrs. Herman B. Van Schooten Mrs. Grace Vargo Mrs. Adeline M. Vavrik Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Volkman Mr. Henry E. Walters, Jr. Mr. Frank Warren Ms. Cora H. Wasser Ms. Janet S. Weaver Mr. and Mrs. Alfred R. West
Ms. Virginia F. Westervelt Mr. Orville L. Westlund Mr. Flernoy White Ms. Laura White Mrs. Janet L. Whitlock Mr. Roland E. Whitney Mr. and Mrs. Harold A. Whitney Mr. and Mrs. Samuel A. Wilke Jim and Sue Williams Ms. Eva M. Wills Mr. William B. Wood Mrs. Helen M. Zachariasen Richard and Lee Zeh For more information about financial gifts to Goodwill Industries-Suncoast, Inc., please contact Vice President for Fund Development Jim Williams toll-free at 1-888-279-1988, ext. 1050, or e-mail jim.williams@ goodwill-suncoast.com.
Where to Find Goodwill in Your Community Administrative Offices Goodwill Industries-Suncoast 10596 Gandy Blvd. St. Petersburg, FL 33702 (727) 523-1512 TTY: (727) 579-1068 www.goodwill-suncoast.org
Goodwill Human Services Suncoast Business Solutions Goodwill Temporary Staffing Community Service 16432 U.S. Hwy 19 N. Clearwater, FL 33764 (727) 577-6411 www.sbsgoodwill.com
Community Employment Services 16432 U.S. Hwy 19 N. Clearwater, FL 33764 (727) 437-4035
St. Petersburg Life Skills Development 10596 Gandy Blvd. St. Petersburg, FL 33702 (727) 523-1512, ext. 1350
Goodwill Welfare Transition, Food Stamp and WIA Services*
Clearwater Life Skills Development 16432 U.S. Hwy 19 N. Clearwater, FL 33764 (727) 523-1512, ext. 1350
Pinellas Park Life Skills Development
CareerSource One-Stop Center
7601 Park Blvd. Pinellas Park, FL 33781 (727) 541-6205
4440 Grand Blvd. New Port Richey, FL 34652 (727) 484-3400
Skyway Life Skills Development
CareerSource One-Stop Center
2393 31st St. S. St. Petersburg, FL 33712 (727) 523-1512, ext. 1879
15000 Citrus Country Dr. H Building, Suite 303 Dade City, FL 33523 (813) 377-1300
Lakeland Life Skills Development
Goodwill Housing Freedom Village I 7700 66th St. N. Pinellas Park, FL 33781 (727) 541-6620
Freedom Village II 5002 S. Bridge St. Tampa, FL 33611 (813) 831-6988
Freedom Village III 1167 Turner St. Clearwater, FL 33756 (727) 443-6799
Heritage Oaks of Palm Harbor
3033 Drane Field Rd., Suite #5 Lakeland, FL 33811 (863) 701-1351
CareerSource One-Stop Center 7361 Forest Oaks Blvd. Spring Hill, FL 34606 (352) 200-3020
Ocala Life Skills Development Community Employment Services 2920 W. Silver Springs Blvd. Ocala, FL 34475 (352) 629-0459
* Through the Pasco Hernando Workforce Board
JobWorks
Goodwill Corrections Services
8118 Hillsborough Loop Dr. Building 263 MacDill Air Force Base Tampa, FL 33621 (813) 840-2846
2351 Alderman Rd. Palm Harbor, FL 34683 (727) 787-0792
Heritage Oaks of Ocala 2820 S.W. 34th St. Ocala, FL 34474 (352) 854-1515 TTY for all Goodwill apartments: (727) 579-1068
Tampa Bay Community Corrections Center
Goodwill BookWorks Childhood Literacy Program
10596 Gandy Blvd. St. Petersburg, FL 33702 (727) 523-1423
16432 U.S. Hwy 19 N. Clearwater, FL 33764 (727) 523-1512, ext. 1976
Hillsborough County Residential Re-entry Center 4102 W. Hillsborough Ave. Tampa, FL 33614 (813) 877-2257
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Our Clearwater Center houses employment services, BookWorks, a Life Skills Development program and Human Resources.
Goodwill Stores Pinellas County 3929 Tampa Rd. (SS) Oldsmar, FL 34677 (813) 792-6092 1460 Missouri Ave. N. Largo, FL 33770 (727) 581-7069 3365 Central Ave. (SS) St. Petersburg, FL 33713 (727) 346-1460 10596 Gandy Blvd. St. Petersburg, FL 33702 (727) 523-7354 10596 Gandy Blvd. (OS) St. Petersburg, FL 33702 (727) 523-1512, ext. 1450
Hillsborough County 1106 E. Brandon Blvd. (SS) Brandon, FL 33511 (813) 689-6279 4102 W. Hillsborough Ave. (SS) Tampa, FL 33614 (813) 874-7077 2802 James Redman Pkwy. Plant City, FL 33566 (813) 754-2778 3050 College Ave. E. Ruskin, FL 33570 (813) 645-3615
Pasco County 11462 S.R. 54 (SS) Trinity, FL 34655 (727) 247-1600 2390 Willow Oak Dr. (SS) Wesley Chapel, FL 33544 (813) 751-2047
Hernando County 4750 Commercial Way (SS) Spring Hill, FL 34606 (352) 596-1712
Just as there are things you recycle, there are things you donate. Although donations are gratefully accepted at all Goodwill stores, Goodwill Attended Donation Centers and 24-hour donation bins are available for added convenience. For locations of donation sites throughout our region, please visit www.goodwill-suncoast.org.
Polk County 5411 S. Florida Ave. (SS) Lakeland, FL 33813 (863) 646-4301 3033 Drane Field Rd. (OS) Lakeland, FL 33811 (863) 647-4225 600 Sixth St. N.W. Winter Haven, FL 33880 (863) 299-1486
Marion County 2830 S.W. 27th Ave. (SS) Ocala, FL 34474 (352) 629-4202 2920 W. Silver Springs Blvd. (OS) Ocala, FL 34475 (352) 369-3000
Citrus County 408 N. Suncoast Blvd. Crystal River, FL 34429 (352) 795-5920
Sumter County (opening early 2015) 11954 C. R. 105 (SS) Oxford, FL 34484 SS = Superstore OS = Outlet Store
Donations are gratefully accepted at all our stores, attended donation centers and bins.
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Fiscal Year 2013-2014 Financial Report Balance Sheet
2013 - 2014 REVENUE
Assets Cash and cash equivalents
Year ended 6/30/14
Year ended 6/30/13
$8,278,587
$8,088,797
Accounts receivable
2,670,641
2,356,572
Inventories
3,593,780
4,012,976
Prepaid expenses/other
1,070,315
1,219,133
Investments
6,572,561
6,602,309
56,739,641
53,666,824
$78,925,525
$75,946,611
Land, buildings and equipment Total Assets
$916,136
$560,297
$18,122,136
Sales and salvage Consumer services $43,129,349 Public support Other
Liabilities Accounts payable
$1,107,639
$1,250,444
Accrued payroll
1,172,515
1,075,794
Other accrued expenses
2,429,878
2,942,308
Deferred gift payable
336,497
381,562
Deferred revenue
428,595
349,942
2,304,160
2,350,712
38,084,989
37,168,956
Total Liabilities
$45,864,273
$45,519,718
Net Assets
$33,061,252
$30,426,893
Deferred compensation payable Long-term debt
2013 - 2014 EXPENSES $513,817 $7,543,453 Program services Management and general Public support
$52,036,287
Total Liabilities and Net Assets
$78,925,525
$75,946,611 Total Revenues
$62,727,918
Total Expenses
Change to Net Assets $2,634,361
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$60,093,557
We’ve Come a Long Way!
Our first Goodwill facility was a former Borden’s Dairy building at 114 2nd St. South in St. Petersburg. The original asking price of $126,000 was negotiated down to $20,000. The space was outgrown within five years of its 1954 opening date.
Fast-forward to 2014. Goodwill-Suncoast operates nine “superstores” and nine smaller stores and outlets. Most superstores have this distinctive signature look, with the front swoop reminiscent of 1950s architectural design.
®
Suncoast Business Solutions
www.sbsgoodwill.com
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10596 Gandy Boulevard • St. Petersburg, FL 33702 727-523-1512 • Toll-free 888-279-1988 • TTY 727-579-1068 www.goodwill-suncoast.org
®
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