ANNUAL REPORT 2012
past, present ... future!
contents Welcome from the Chairman and President
2
Giving: Past, Present . . . Future!
4
Selected Grants
12
Apply for a Grant
16
Become a Donor
18
For Attorneys and Financial Advisors
22
Our Board
24
Staff
26
Suburban Divisions: Long Island and Westchester
27
Financial Statements
32
Financial Highlights and Investment Committee
41
Funds in 2012
42
Grants in 2012
51
Chelsea Fountain by Kalani Chen-Hayes, age 11 In addition to making art about things he doesn’t like about the City---pollution and trash chief among them---Kalani painted this abstraction of the 20-foot urban waterfall in the Chelsea Market that flows from an exposed pipe into an underground pit.
welcome from the chairman
& president
One of the best things about our jobs at The Trust is seeing daily
And one of the best things about being involved with The Trust is knowing that many of the thorniest problems in the City can be solved. Because of caring donors, effective nonprofits, and determined New Yorkers, we see progress being made every day.
evidence of the big hearts
Although metricsÂ---the elusive search for measures to accurately gauge philanthropy’s impact on the problems it tries to solve---are clearly a goal we must and savvy of the people pursue, we can’t afford to wait for perfect knowledge. Trust donors understand the insistent needs of their who are our donors. fellow New Yorkers and are willing to forgo absolute certainty that what they and we support will always produce results. We know that risk often entails failure, and that risk is essential to finding new solutions to problems old and new.
2
So we visit potential grantees, review their financial data, and ask them hard questions about what they hope to accomplish and how they will know when they have. We check with other funders, government, and other nonprofits. Our staff and board apply years of experience and knowledge of the City to help with decisions, which are almost always tough.
In an age that demands instant gratification and teems with controversial matters, community foundations like The New York Community Trust raise endowment that allows us to stick with issues over the long haul. Entrenched poverty and environmental degradation will not be solved during our lifetimes. Fixing the schools, creating jobs for all who need them, and reforming health care will take years of hard work and perseverance---and reliable, patient capital. It’s no accident that we often focus on “intractable” problems. And our endowment, created by generous New Yorkers who understood the need to leave resources for those who come after us, also enables The Trust to respond to emergencies such as Hurricane Sandy and unpopular causes. We work hard to weave the passions of our donors---yesterday’s and today’s---in all their variety into grantmaking that contributes to the whole community, helping to find the balance between individual and collective giving. We are vigilant in fulfilling a donor’s legacy to support the arts, or preschool education, or immigrants, or scientific research, or . . ., finding the best nonprofits doing the work. In the Giving section of this report, we highlight four donors who created endowed funds and the nonprofits we are able to support through their generosity. All of the grantees are helping children and young people who struggle to live healthy and productive lives. They inspire us. We hope they will inspire you as well. Charlynn Goins Chairman
Lorie A. Slutsky President
Skyline by Irati Egorho-Diez, age 10 When she’s not painting or speaking one of the “threeand-a-half” languages she knows, Irati writes and creates infographics for the IndyKids newspaper in its Trust-funded Kid Reporter program.
giving: past, present .. . future!
For years, the Sunday Times has given us glimpses of New York philanthropy: tiny pictures of the rich and famous, the women in elegant ball gowns at charity galas. But philanthropy is much bigger, includes all kinds of people, and covers a much broader territory than it once did. Community foundations have fueled a lot of the growth and innovation. And they’ve been doing it for almost 100 years.
The New York Community Trust, like many older community foundations, has been able to respond to the City’s needs because of endowed funds left to us by generations of donors who understood the need for their communities to have a permanent financial resource for the common good: money for parks, the arts, and schools. Money that they can use in times of crisis, in weak economies, for unpopular causes, and for those problems that abide. Those donors knew that they couldn’t predict the future any more than their grandparents could, so they created legacies for the “health and welfare” of their communities, for causes they had supported during their lifetimes, and occasionally for specific charities. Over time, we have perfected the art of weaving together the diverse charitable interests of a large group of donors who care about the City and funding nonprofits that make a difference. The Trust introduced the first donor-advised fund in 1931, and since then we have learned to balance the passions of our current donors with our dreams for a better New York. We stay true to the charitable intent of our legacy donors while making sure that their funds meet contemporary needs. This report will look at how some of these philanthropists are helping today’s kids thrive in a complex, changing, and challenging world.
Getting a Jump on School
past
“Well before Martha Stewart, Mr. Bailey produced attractive books about how to entertain . . . making glamorous cooking and presentation seem accessible to the uninitiated,” read the New York Times obituary in 2003. But besides writing 18 books, contributing to Food and Wine, House and Garden, and Vogue, and running a small shop in Bonwit Teller, Lee Bailey was a philanthropist. He set up a fund in 1991 and enjoyed “giving while living,” asking Trust staff to handle his grantmaking. In his will, he asked us to support programs that help disadvantaged young children and infants “to reach their full potential.”
present
One way of doing that is to give children in low-income communities the same experiences that affluent kids get in private nursery schools. Nowhere is this more needed than in District 12 in the Bronx, which has the highest poverty rate in the City and where fewer than one in five third graders read at or above grade level.
Jumpstart volunteer Sam Redwood, Fordham ’16, with his reading buddies at CS92.
Enter Jumpstart for Young Children, a national program that trains college students and community volunteers to work with young children in Head Start and other programs for poor kids. Using a curriculum that develops language and social skills, the college students work with the children and help the teachers, earning stipends or college credit. The children are better prepared for kindergarten, and teachers get much-needed support. When the six Fordham University students enter Hisha Ewing’s pre-K classroom at CS92, one of two public schools in Jumpstart, the 18 4-year-olds literally jump up and down. When they sit on the carpet for a story, they drape themselves over the college kids. Wilmarie CintronMuñiz, a sophmore and the team leader, reads the children a story. She is in complete control and clearly loves what she is doing. As the session progresses, you can see why. The 1 hour, 45 minute program is broken into segments just long enough to keep the little ones’ attention. It’s hands-on all the way: after seeing a raccoon in the story looking at his reflection in the water, one group plays with mirrors and prisms, another with glitter paints. There are songs, letter games, and dramatic play, all led by the college kids, who look as happy as their charges. With a $60,000 grant, Jumpstart is ramping up its efforts in District 12, planning to serve 500 children in three years and recruit 400 volunteers from Lehman College and Fordham University.
When Kids Aren’t Able to Jump
past
William Barstow apprenticed with Thomas Edison soon after graduating from Columbia in 1888, eventually founding two public utility companies that served eight Eastern states. Six months before the 1929 crash, he sold both for $50 million. In 1931, Barstow and his wife, Francoise, set up a donor-advised fund in The Trust, the very first fund of its kind, and enjoyed “giving while living.” In their wills, they asked us to make annual grants to a number of nonprofits and use the remainder for the health and education of children.
present
If you have a child with a disability, you may be singing the praises of Resources for Children with Special Needs (RCSN), the go-to agency helping parents get the best education for their kids, teaching them to advocate on their own behalf, connecting them to services, and representing their children. It also helps youth groups include kids with disabilities in their programs. But RCSN discovered that its workshops, printed guides, and online directories weren’t enough. “People are learning differently these days,” says Todd Dorman, director of communication and outreach. “We learn to do things by watching videos and get information on the web, on smartphones, and through social media. And it’s often difficult for parents to get to our workshops.” So with our $100,000 grant, RCSN is responding. Because YouTube is the third most-used search engine, it’s starting a YouTube channel, where parents can watch short “howto” videos on advocating for their children, and other topics. RCSN will offer online training that can be viewed at any time and hold webinars, streamline its website, ramp up its social media
A rare, quiet moment for Amir Alqutaini, who has language and physical disabilities. His mother, Wafa, a refugee from Yemen, got help from Resources.
presence, and develop a mobile version of its site. It may not sound like the sexiest project in our portfolio---until you see the relief on the faces of the parents. “My son hated going to school before I called RCSN. He felt isolated and hopeless. With RCSN’s encouragement and instruction, we were able to gain the supports he needs. But we also gained the confidence to find the answers on our own. Our son likes school now, and we feel ready for what’s next.”
A Door to Creativity
past
DeWitt and Lila Acheson Wallace, founders of the Reader’s Digest, and the private foundations they created, have a long history with The Trust. The Wallaces set up dozens of funds with us, and one lasting legacy is the Dewitt Wallace Fund for Youth, which supports learning and enrichment activities for kids in the City and in Westchester and Long Island (you can read about grants from the Fund made by our Westchester and Long Island divisions on p. 27).
present
Amy Swauger, director of the Teachers & Writers Collaborative, is dedicated to getting students to share her passion for writing---and motivate them to learn. The Collaborative puts professional writers, all of whom have teaching experience, in City public schools to draw students in. “The new Common Core State Standards adopted by New York State have given us a great opportunity to focus on writing across subject areas, and we’re now working in science and social studies classes,” says Swauger. In one class, students wrote Odes to the Ozone Layer after learning about both the poetic form and the effects of environmental pollution. A $100,000 grant is putting writers in 13 middle schools.
Liz Arnold gives Jilani editorial advice at IS392.
The students in Joyelle Rance-Fisher’s seventh-grade English class quickly take their seats at 8:30 a.m. when Liz Arnold of Teachers & Writers walks in. IS392 in Brownsville, Brooklyn, shares a bright, welcoming building with an elementary school---and even the middle school kids are orderly. Arnold starts by reviewing what they’ve learned about the Harlem Renaissance and the themes they are using in their essays. She and Rance-Fisher walk around the room, stopping to check progress and help. “The students are excited,” says Rance-Fisher. “It’s an enhancement to the standard writing program. Plus, Liz brings in materials we don’t have. And the workshops for teachers are a big help.” Jilani echoes his teacher’s sentiment: “It’s a different way of writing. It lets us be creative.”
An Exit from Violence
past
Wheaton Kunhardt, the former chairman of Carpenter Steel, died in 1933. He never married but cared deeply about his family: 2 brothers, 2 sisters, and 15 nieces and nephews. In his will, he provided for all of them, leaving the remainder of his estate to The Trust when each of his beneficiaries had died. Mr. Kunhardt asked us to use his gift to help New York City and it has supported a variety of nonprofits working on a host of City issues.
present
In 2011 there were more than 1,500 shootings in the City, many the result of disputes among 300 youth gangs. Sixty percent occurred in New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) complexes. Sadly, most of the kids involved were between 13 and 19. The Trust and the Partnership for New York City brought together grantmakers, youth leaders,
and City and State officials to discuss gun violence. The group identified central Harlem; Brownsville, East New York, and Crown Heights in Brooklyn; and Far Rockaway and Jamaica in Queens, as having the most troubled projects. In 2012, we used the Kunhardt Fund to get a handle on gang violence. A grant of $90,000 to the Citizens Crime Commission of New York City is coordinating work with NYCHA and seven small community youth groups, which have received grants totaling $135,000. We also made a $100,000 grant to Community Resource Exchange to strengthen the youth groups, who have the street cred to connect with young gang members but often not the organizational structure to operate efficiently. Stephanie Ueberall, associate program director at the Crime Commission, says that the hardest thing is to gain the kids’ trust. “Our focus is on disengaged kids at risk of becoming totally marginalized. But by working with former gang members these service providers are uniquely able to reach them and stop the violence. Our goal is to understand what makes these kids tick and how we can help identify broader remedies for the youth violence problem at large.” Through competitive basketball leagues, talent competitions, peer training, and workers out on the streets at 2 a.m., the program is working with 500 kids. There’s a handwritten sign in the window of a small storefront in East New York: “273 days--no killings or shootings.” That’s a milestone for the 40-block zone where Man Up! works its magic. Andre Mitchell, the group’s founder and director, was born in the neighborhood, as were all the “violence interrupters” who patrol its streets. “We live here. People know us. We’re credible messengers,” Mitchell says. “It’s what allows this program to succeed.” Man Up! offers a variety of services for kids and adults, but Cure Violence, a program started in Chicago, is key. “We have a metric to identify the highest-risk kids, and our guys hit the streets to encourage them to get involved in our programs. We’re about getting kids to understand that there’s another way to deal with problems and to change our entire community’s perception about what is acceptable.” Tim Washington is an imposing young man. As a teenager, he hung out with gang members: “But I was always my own person. When things got hot, I was out of there. A lot of the violence starts with something petty and then explodes. But the kids know me and the team. They trust us. We go to the hot spots and step in when things start to get out of hand.” Andre Mitchell says: “A lot of these kids don’t see past age 18. They have no hope. The doors have been shut on them. We open them.”
future
Growing up poor in New York City has never been easy. Some kids have it harder than others. But because of the compassion and unselfishness of our past and current donors, more of our children have a chance at a better future. With our patient capital, The Trust is able to support effective ways for kids to learn and grow, and not only through better schools and programs. They---and we---need a clean, nontoxic environment, a health system that works, arts that nourish, and neighborhoods that nurture. At The Trust, we and our donors are privileged to play a part in making that happen. Join us!
Tim Washington (center), a violence interrupter with Man Up!, walks the streets of East New York with young residents.
selected grants Members of Selfhelp Innovative Senior Center practice tai chi every morning and performed in Central Park for World Tai Chi Day.
thumbnailsketches sketches The thumbnail will give giveyou youaa below will of grantmaking grantmakinginin flavor of four program programareas. areas. our four urge you you to toread readour our We urge grants newsletters newslettersfor foraa grants view of ofour ourprogram. program. full view
HEALTH & PEOPLE WITH SPECIAL NEEDS Biomedical Research
Cornell University Weill Medical College, $80,000, to study traumatic brain injury and PTSD in veterans. Mount Sinai School of Medicine, $100,000 to start the GENErations Biobank, a repository that will store and test umbilical cord and placental tissues for exposure to environmental chemicals.
Dr. Judith Cukor, Department of Psychiatry at Weill Medical College, in front of virtual reality treatment equipment used for treating vets with PTSD. Her study will determine if traumatic brain injury leads to incurable neuropathy (atrophy of nerve cells). Results will help to develop diagnostic tests and possible treatment.
Health Policy
Medicaid Matters New York, $50,000 to bring consumer voices to Medicaid reform debates. New York Medical College, $60,000 to study if the earned income tax credit gives families enough money to improve their children’s health, decrease hospital visits, and lower health care costs. Health Services
Brooklyn Hospital Center, $50,000; New York Methodist Hospital, $50,000; St. Barnabas Hospital, $50,000; and St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital Center, $50,000 to use patient navigators, staff workshops, and improved discharge procedures to reduce hospital readmissions for patients with heart disease. HealthCare Chaplaincy, $100,000 to assess whether the addition of chaplains to hospital discharge planning teams reduces readmission of chronically ill elders.
At Mount Sinai Medical Center, Drs. Stone and Lambertini describe the goals of the Trust-funded GENErations Project: Pregnancy Biobank to a patient. The repository will store and test umbilical cord and placental tissues for exposure to chemicals.
HIV/AIDS
Amida Care, $100,000 to improve the care of people with AIDS who also have other chronic physical and mental illness, use drugs, or are homeless. Correctional Association of New York, $30,000 to monitor the State Department of Health’s oversight and improvement of HIV and Hepatitis C health care in state prisons.
People with AIDS and mental illness, addiction, and other problems have a hard time staying on the medicines that keep them healthy and decrease their likelihood of passing on the disease. Amida Care uses case managers and patients who have been trained to enroll them in care and help keep them on course. While ideal for jogging and biking, the Brooklyn Greenway is also good for our waterways. With City support, landscaping and spillways along the 14-mile path will absorb and divert storm water from sewers, preventing it from causing raw sewage overflows.
Green Science Policy Institute’s Dr. Veena Singla tests a couch for flame retardant chemicals associated with cancer, hormone disruption, and neurological harm.
Aging
Fordham University Graduate School of Social Service, $130,000 to evaluate newly established, innovative senior centers to determine what aspects are working and worth replicating. UJA-Federation of Jewish Philanthropies of New York, $125,000 to improve the quality of care for homebound elders through better training of home health aides. Children & Youth with Disabilities
Fund for Public Advocacy, $100,000 to study the impact of the City Department of Education’s work to reform special education and make recommendations for improvement. Advocates for Children of New York, $80,000 to help families of children with disabilities make the transition from early childhood services to preschool and kindergarten. Blindness & People with Visual Disabilities
Art Education for the Blind, $65,000 to help the City’s cultural institutions become more accessible to blind and visually impaired people. National Center for Law and Economic Justice, $120,000 to make agencies that administer public benefits more accessible to people with vision problems and for workshops to inform people of their rights. Mental Health & Mental Retardation
Community Health Project, $75,000 to add mental health services to the City’s only health center for gay, lesbian, and transgender patients. Coordinated Behavioral Care, $175,000 to manage care for people with health, mental health, and substance-abuse problems.
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT & THE ENVIRONMENT NYC Environment
Brooklyn Greenway Initiative, $40,000 to develop a 14-mile continuous waterfront greenway from Greenpoint to Bay Ridge, which will also integrate spillways and landscaping along the path to absorb runoff. Natural Resources Defense Council, $100,000 to help regional farmers sell more produce to City consumers by working with GrowNYC to establish a wholesale farmers’ market in the Hunts Point Food Distribution Center.
National Environment
Clean Air Task Force, $100,000 to reduce black carbon and methane emissions from Arctic oil and gas production that are rapidly increasing climate change. Green Science Policy Institute, $75,000 for a toxicity analysis of commonly used flame retardants that will identify the products in which they’re used, the level of human exposure, and the impact on our health, and recommend their regulation as a class of toxins.
The Brooklyn Navy Yard houses 275 artists, manufacturers, and other tenants, some of whom are shown here in its visitors center, BLDG 92. Brooklyn Workforce Innovations is training hard-to-employ New Yorkers specifically for jobs in the yard.
Workforce Development
Brooklyn Workforce Innovations, $50,000 to expand training and services at a jobs center that places workers at Brooklyn Navy Yard companies. Workforce Development Corporation, $150,000 to coordinate the New York Alliance for Careers in Healthcare, a Trust program that increases opportunities in health care for disadvantaged workers and trains them for available jobs. Community Development
City Futures, $40,000 to study Queens County’s economy to identify strategies for expanding the borough’s ability to generate jobs. MHANY Management, $50,000 to rehabilitate and stabilize management of rent-regulated apartment buildings in foreclosure. Civic Affairs
Community Voices Heard, $70,000 to coordinate a project in four City Council districts in which residents propose local improvement projects as ballot initiatives to be voted on for inclusion in the City budget. Human Services Council of New York City, $100,000 to help identify and eliminate systemic inefficiencies in government funding of nonprofit services.
Through a participatory budgeting project coordinated by Community Voices Heard, New Yorkers voted to spend City money on various capital improvement projects championed by others in their districts.
Technical Assistance
Community Resource Exchange, $120,000 to help clusters of nonprofits located in two impoverished communities: Far Rockaway, Queens, and Highbridge, Bronx. SeaChange Capital Partners, $50,000 to establish the New York Merger, Acquisition, and Collaboration Fund, which will provide grants for nonprofit mergers and other formal alliances to increase efficiency.
Community Resource Exchange helped a coalition of groups put together the Highbridge Community Fair in the Bronx. The fair showcased young artists and local health, education, and other resources and services.
ARTS, EDUCATION, HISTORIC PRESERVATION & HUMAN JUSTICE Arts
Pregones Theater, $70,000 for a merger with the Puerto Rican Traveling Theatre Company. Spaceworks, $216,000 to provide visual artists with studio space on Governor’s Island and in the Brooklyn Army Terminal. Historic Preservation
Caribbean Cultural Center African Diaspora Institute, $50,000 to transform a historic East Harlem firehouse into a Caribbean cultural center. National Trust for Historic Preservation, $50,000 for a campaign to promote the importance of historic preservation in the City. Education
Fly Babies performed at the Pregones Theater in the Bronx. A grant is supporting the theater’s merger with Manhattan’s Puerto Rican Traveling Theatre Company. Photo: Erika Rojas
Urban Assembly, $75,000 to start a promising literacy program in six middle schools in the Bronx, Brooklyn, and Manhattan. Sauti Yetu Center for African Women, $40,000 to help eight immigrant groups representing different languages, nationalities, and neighborhoods work with their public schools to help English language learners succeed socially and academically. Human Justice
MinKwon Center for Community Action, $145,000 for a coalition of eight immigrant groups that are helping youth who were brought to this country without papers understand and apply for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, which lets them legally work and study in the United States. Pro Bono Net, $100,000 to work with MFY Legal Services to create online forms and other resources to help volunteer attorneys and unrepresented defendants in the thousands of consumer debt cases now clogging civil courts.
apply for a grant Generous New Yorkers who wanted to make a difference make our competitive grants program possible by setting up endowed funds with us.
Emily Park, 24, graduated from Queens College with a focus in neuroscience. MinKwon Center helped her successfully apply for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals. She is now pursuing a career in medical research.
Through hundreds of permanent unrestricted and field-of-interest funds, The Trust makes grants in four areas: Children, Youth, and Families; Community Development and the Environment; Education, Arts, and Human Justice; and Health and People with Special Needs. We are committed to sticking with significant issues that may not lend themselves to quick or easy solutions, while remaining open to projects that tackle emerging problems and to organizations that may be new to us. For application instructions and forms, please visit the grant seekers section on our website, nycommunitytrust.org. Our generous donor-advisors support an array of charities, but you can’t apply directly to them.
CHILDREN, YOUTH & FAMILIES Social Services & Welfare
Graham Windham, $200,000 to help four foster care agencies use a proven model that helps foster parents develop effective and peaceful ways of preventing and coping with their kids’ bad behavior. National Council for Community Behavioral Healthcare, $345,000 to provide scholarships for graduate social work students in health care.
At our annual donor reception, students from the Getting into Real Life Sciences program at the New York Academy of Medicine discussed their research projects with donors, staff, and board members.
Girls & Young Women
Fund for Public Health in New York, $105,000 to promote a program that reduces teen pregnancy and improves the sexual health of teens in the South Bronx. New York Academy of Medicine, $75,000 for a science and health career program for girls in Harlem middle schools that helps them get into college. Hunger & Homelessness
Brooklyn Housing and Family Services, $50,000 to counsel and give legal help to families in danger of losing their homes. Food Bank for New York City, $800,000 to get more food and benefit assistance into neighborhoods with growing needs for help.
Demonstrators organized by the Correctional Association of New York in front of the Department of Health ask for oversight to ensure care for ill prisoners.
Substance Abuse
Administration for Children’s Services, $265,000 to coordinate and improve services for youth and families affected by substance abuse and mental illness. Outreach Project, $110,000 to improve mental health and other outpatient services for young people being discharged from residential drug treatment programs in Brooklyn and Queens. Youth Development
Juvenile Justice Advocacy and Action Project, $125,000 and Public Interest Projects, $125,000 for advocacy to protect State funding of community alternatives to juvenile detention, advocacy for independent oversight of juvenile prisons, and a campaign to keep juvenile offenders in facilities close to home. New York Civil Liberties Union Foundation, $40,000 to reduce the number of students arrested for minor offenses in City schools.
The number of school suspensions has doubled since 2002. Trust grants to the NYCLU are helping it lead the Dignity in Schools Campaign, which calls for reduced police presence and other broad disciplinary reforms.
become a donor
Since 1924, The New York Community Trust has helped make donors’ charitable wishes come true. We provide people with every kind of philanthropic interest an easy and flexible way to give wisely and receive the maximum tax deduction allowed by law.
Different Funds for Different Donors
An unrestricted fund is a good option for donors who want their gifts used to meet vital needs, expand opportunities for all New Yorkers, and improve the quality of life in New York City. Our staff is expert in identifying community needs and the nonprofits best equipped to meet them. For the donor who cares deeply about particular issues, such as children, education, human justice, or health policy, a field-of-interest fund may be the right choice. The Trust makes grants that meet current needs in the chosen fields. Donors can also establish field-of-interest funds that they advise.
A donor-advised fund is a convenient and effective way to accomplish your giving today. It is an unrestricted fund legally, but the donor recommends the organizations to receive grants. Although we cannot, by law, be bound by these recommendations, we take them very seriously and approve grants to recommended nonprofits that meet charitable standards for programmatic and financial soundness. A designated fund is for donors who want to support specific organizations or programs but recognize that the world may change. They establish a designated fund in The Trust rather than leave it directly to the charity to assure that their gift remains relevant over time and responsive to changing circumstances. (See page 23 for an explanation of the variance power.)
Setting Up a Fund Donors first decide what they want to accomplish with their philanthropy. Our staff is happy to help clarify and refine goals. Then, the donors choose the names of the fund, typically using their own names or the names of individuals to be honored or memorialized. Donors who prefer anonymity can choose a general name.
Three Ways to Establish a Fund
• Give Now: You can set up a fund to support charities during your lifetime and endow it to continue your philanthropy to benefit future generations of New Yorkers. Many of our donors regularly add money to the funds they have established. • Give Later: Donors can set up funds through deferred-giving arrangements. A key feature of many estate plans is a tax advantage now for the commitment of a charitable gift later. Charitable Remainder Trusts, Charitable Lead Trusts, and gifts of life insurance or retirement plan assets can all be used.
Washington Square Park by Paula Diaz, age 11 Paula lives in Madrid, Spain, but has been staying in New York for the past three months. In her free time she likes playing basketball and the flute.
• Give by Will: After providing for personal bequests, you may include provisions for setting up a fund with us or adding to one you already have here. You will save estate taxes and ensure that the charitable work you care about will be continued.
We Accept a Wide Variety of Assets Funds may be established with the following: • cash • securities traded on major exchanges • closely held stock • mutual fund shares • retirement plan assets • real estate • interests in limited partnerships • literature copyrights We are glad to discuss proposed contributions with you. We cannot accept assets that are not readily convertible for the financial benefit of charity or that carry unusual potential liability.
Fund Administration & Fees A fund established with our organization may be held in trust with one of our 11 trustee banks listed on our website here: http://bit.ly/Ykmwn0, or it may be held by Community Funds, Inc., our not-for-profit corporation. Both operate as The New York Community Trust with a single governing body. If a fund is set up in trust, the bank handles the investments. If it is set up in Community Funds, our distinguished Investment Committee (p. 41) oversees the performance of the outside portfolio managers it selects. The determining factor is the inclination of the donor. The service we provide is the same. The administrative fee charged to our funds is competitive. Please visit our website, nycommunitytrust.org, How to Set Up a Fund, to see our current fee. Funds that are held in trust are also charged a trustee’s fee set by the bank; it is negotiated between the bank and the donor and varies from bank to bank. The Internal Revenue Service has classified The New York Community Trust and its affiliate, Community Funds, Inc., as “tax exempt” under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code; as a “publicly supported” organization under Section 170b(1) (A)(vi); and as “not a private foundation” under Section 509(a)(1). This status ensures donors the maximum tax benefit allowed by law. The Long Island Community Foundation and the Westchester Community Foundation (described on pp. 27-29) are divisions of Community Funds.
Kate Weingarten
donor profile
Women make up almost half of the Wharton School’s 2013 MBA class, but when Kate Weingarten, a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, received her MBA from Wharton in 1971, only 4 percent of the graduates were women. She worked as a financial analyst for a number of years and picked up an MPA at NYU’s Wagner Graduate of School of Public Service along the way. When Kate had children, she became an active volunteer, putting her financial background to work. “I want to help nonprofits run efficiently and deliver on their missions,” says Kate. A Westchester resident, she invested time with organizations that help children in the county, serving as the first director of the Institute for School Age Child Care, where she started a program to increase and improve after-school programs. She chaired the board of directors of KEEPS, an after-school program in Mamaroneck, for 20 years. Kate also was a director of the Westchester Children’s Association, where she was a member of the finance committee, and even did a stint with our Westchester division, reviewing grant proposals. With Kate’s children grown, she and her publisher husband, Seymour, who had a pied-àterre in the City, recently made the move to a larger apartment. Their love of theater and music had always drawn them here. They opened a donor-advised fund in The Trust in 2005. “We use it to support the causes we care about, primarily in the City, but also in Westchester,” says Kate. “We are careful also that our money is well spent.” A recent grant from the Seymour and Kathleen Weingarten Fund supports Futures and Options, a youth development program that prepares disadvantaged juniors and seniors in high school for college and the workforce. Its main program offers after-school and summer paid internships with media, technology, health care, and advertising companies. Students get help applying for college and financial aid. Kate has joined the agency’s board of directors.
for attorneys and financial advisors Carnegie Hall by Taina Torres, age13 Taina, who lives in the Bronx, had the opportunity to perform at this iconic theater as a student of the Florentine Music School.
Clients increasingly expect their advisors to provide the same expert charitable guidance that you give them in other areas. Recent studies show that clients also expect their advisors to bring up charity when you’re helping them with financial or estate planning.
Or it may be the sale of a business, an inheritance, locked-up stock, or other complex transaction in which philanthropy might play a part. They need to choose the right vehicle, how to fund it, whether or not to involve family, what they want to support, and a host of other considerations. Do they want to do their giving now, make a deferred gift, leave a bequest, or some combination of them? We have been working with lawyers since 1924 to help clients with their philanthropy. With a seasoned staff, range of giving options, capacity to accept complicated assets, knowledge of our community, and efficient management, The Trust is the right choice for thousands of New Yorkers. You can contact us for print or digital versions of our tax exemption letter, fund information, and suggested language to help you draft the instrument.
Jay D. Waxenberg Donors have the option of setting up funds in The New York Community Trust with a bank as trustee or in our not-for-profit corporate affiliate, Community Funds, Inc. The organizations share a governing board and file a single tax return with the IRS.
Three Important Facts
We are unable to accept a fund unless we have reviewed its terms and found them acceptable. It is particularly helpful if we review the language before the instrument is executed to ensure that we can meet the donor’s purpose. For funds held in trust as part of The New York Community Trust, a co-trustee is not permitted.
Creating a Fund
. . . in The New York Community Trust The Resolution and Declaration of Trust Creating “The New York Community Trust” (the R&D) is a complete trust instrument. It sets out in detail the powers and duties of the trustee bank and the Distribution Committee. In order to establish a fund in trust, the founding document---whether for a bequest or a gift during lifetime---must incorporate the R&D by reference. Please call us for a copy or visit our website.
attorney profile
All our funds enjoy an important advantage: If a change of circumstances makes literal compliance with the terms of the gift instrument “unnecessary, undesirable, impractical, or impossible,” our governing body is able to vary them. Donors are assured that their gifts will never become obsolete; they will remain useful to the community in perpetuity.
. . . in Community Funds Community Funds is a New York State not-for-profit corporation. As with a fund in trust, a fund established in Community Funds becomes part of a publicly supported organization and is not regarded as a private foundation. Unlike a fund in trust, no trustee bank is involved. The fund is held and administered pursuant to the provisions of the New York Not-for-Profit Corporation Law. Please call us for a copy or visit our website for the Certificate of Incorporation and By-Laws of Community Funds. . . . in our Long Island or Westchester Divisions Because the Long Island Community Foundation and the Westchester Community Foundation are divisions of Community Funds, donors have the same options described above. See page 29 for contact information.
“As you know, I heartily favor the making of The Community Trust the medium by which testators may leave their property by will to a trustee for charitable purposes. It is only in this way that such property can be put to the best possible use, and that a testator may be assured that his estate will be administered for the purposes which he has in mind.”---Letter from
Morgan J. O’Brien, Corporation Counsel, NYC, and Justice of the Supreme Court of New York, October 22, 1924
Lawyers were a key factor in helping to create and build The New York Community Trust. Almost 90 years later, they still are. Jay Waxenberg is a partner and chair of the Personal Planning Department at Proskauer Rose LLP. He’s also a member of the firm’s Not-forProfit/Exempt Organizations Group and Fiduciary Litigation Group. Waxenberg’s practice has focused on helping families with estate and tax planning and trust administration. He regularly counsels individuals on charitable giving and advises private foundations and public charities on tax issues. And he’s been doing it for many years---so many, in fact, that he doesn’t remember when he first heard about The New York Community Trust. “I recommend The Trust to many different clients. It’s particularly helpful for people who have a charitable purpose but don’t know which nonprofits to support. The Trust does an excellent job of vetting charities to make sure that they are sound and fill the donor’s purpose.”
In addition to referring clients who set up donor-advised funds, Waxenberg also recommends The Trust to charitable clients who understand the value of legacy. One client who started with a donor-advised fund endowed it in his will. “There are a lot of ways to give to charity. Charitable lead trusts and charitable remainder trusts can be two effective estate planning tools,” he says. When he’s working with clients on their estates, Waxenberg asks if, after taking care of family, they want to leave money to charity. If the answer is yes, we know who he often recommends.
our board The governing body consists of 12 members who serve as the Distribution Committee of The New York Community Trust and as the Board of Directors of Community Funds, Inc. It is their responsibility to oversee our organization’s operations
Six members are nominated by civic authorities representing the public: one by the Mayor of the City of New York; one by the Chief Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit; one by the Chairman of the Partnership for New York City and Chamber of Commerce; one by the Chairman of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts; one by the President of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York; and one by the President of the New York Academy of Medicine. The Distribution Committee selects five members, and the President of The Trust is a member by reason of office. Members serve without compensation. They are selected for their judgment, integrity, and understanding of philanthropic needs.
The Committee meets five times a year; subcommittees meet regularly. The Finance and Audit Committee monitors the financial operations of The Trust. The Investment Committee establishes asset allocation guidelines, recommends investment advisors and vehicles, and monitors investment performance. The Fund Purposes and Suggestion Review Committees assure that the provisions and intent of each donor’s philanthropy are honored, and review grants suggested by donors to ensure that they meet our charitable guidelines.
and grantmaking.
(Top row, L to R) Ann Unterberg, Mary Kay Vyskocil, Roger Maldonado, Valerie Peltier, Jamie Drake, and Anne Moore. (Bottom row, L to R) Nicki Tanner, Jason Wright, Lorie Slutsky, Charlynn Goins, and Buzz Tenny. (Not pictured: Judith Rubin and Raffiq Nathoo.) Charlynn Goins, Chairman Director, Fannie Mae; Member: Council on Foreign Relations, Gracie Mansion Conservancy Advisory Board; Former Senior Vice President, Prudential Securities. Jamie Drake Founder and Principal, Drake Design Associates; Chairman, Alpha Workshops; Fellow, American Society of Interior Designers; Member: Directors’ Council Historic House Trust of New York, Interior Design Hall of Fame; Former Cochairman, Furnisha-Future Industry Committee. Nominated by the Mayor of the City of New York. Roger J. Maldonado Partner, Balber Pickard Maldonado & Van Der Tuin, PC; Member, Departmental Disciplinary Committee for the Appellate Division of the New York State Supreme Court; Chairman, New York City Bar Council on Judicial Administration; Referee, New York State Commission on Judicial Conduct; Vice President and Member, United Neighborhood Houses. Nominated by the President of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York. Anne Moore, M.D. Professor of Clinical Medicine, Joan & Sanford I. Weill Medical College of Cornell University;
Attending Physician, New York Presbyterian Hospital; Medical Director, Weill Cornell Breast Center; Former Director, American Board of Internal Medicine. Nominated by the President of the New York Academy of Medicine. Raffiq Nathoo (as of June 2013) Senior Managing Director, Blackstone Advisory Partners LP; Director, Children’s Museum of Manhattan; Member, Council on Foreign Relations. Valerie Peltier Managing Director, Tishman Speyer; Board Member: American Museum of Natural History, Visiting Nurse Service of New York. Nominated by the Chairman of the Partnership for New York City. Judith O. Rubin Chairman, Playwrights Horizons; Trustee: Mount Sinai Hospital and Medical Center, Laurents/ Hatcher Foundation; Member: Tony Awards Administration Committee, New York State Council on the Arts, Cultural Affairs Advisory Committee of New York City, California Institute of Arts Board of Overseers; Former President and Chairman, 92nd Street Y.
Lorie A. Slutsky Director, The New York Community Trust; President: Community Funds, Inc., The James Foundation; Director: AllianceBernstein LP, AXA Financial, Independent Sector; Trustee Emerita: Colgate University, The New School; Former Director: Council on Foundations (Chairman), Foundation Center (Vice Chairman), BoardSource (Chairman), Hispanics in Philanthropy, United Way of New York City. Member ex officio.
Jason H. Wright Principal, Geer Mountain Holdings, LLC; Former Senior Vice President, Merrill Lynch & Co.; Former President, Nabisco Foundation; Trustee: Museum for African Art, International Center for Journalists; Advisory Board Member, NYU Center for Global Affairs; Former Trustee: Cooper Union, Studio in a School Association, James Beard Foundation, Madison Square Boys & Girls Club.
Estelle (Nicki) Newman Tanner (until April 2013) Trustee: New York Public Radio, Jewish Women’s Archive, Auburn Theological Seminary; Trustee Emerita: Wellesley College, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation.
Consulting Members
Barron (Buzz) Tenny Former Executive Vice President, Secretary, and General Counsel, Ford Foundation. Board Member: City Bar Fund of the New York City Bar Association, International Fellowship Fund, International Center for Transitional Justice (Vice Chairman), Foundation Center (Vice Chairman), Native Arts and Cultures Foundation, Youth Orchestra of the Americas. Ann Unterberg Chairman: Lincoln Center Institute, Monmouth Medical Center Foundation; Vice Chairman: Monmouth Medical Center, International Women’s Health Coalition; Trustee, Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts; former Senior Vice President, L.F. Rothschild, Unterberg, Towbin. Nominated by the Chairman of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts. Mary Kay Vyskocil Partner, Simpson Thacher & Bartlett; Chairman and Director, AIDA Reinsurance and Insurance Arbitration Society-U.S.; Member: Federal Bar Council (Treasurer and Executive Committee), U.S. District Court for the Southern District of N.Y. Judicial Improvement Committee Advisory Group and Judicial Merits Selection Panel, New York Inn of Court; Referee, Lawyers’ Disciplinary Committee; Trustee: St. Joseph’s Seminary, Dominican College of Blauvelt; Director, Judges and Lawyers Breast Cancer Alert. Nominated by the Chief Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
Ernest J. Collazo Managing Partner, Collazo Florentino & Keil LLP. William M. Evarts Retired Partner, Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP; Chairman Emeritus, The New York Community Trust. Charlotte Moses Fischman General Counsel, Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel LLP. Robert M. Kaufman Partner, Proskauer Rose LLP; Vice Chairman Emeritus, The New York Community Trust. Samuel S. Polk Retired Partner, Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy; Chairman Emeritus, The New York Community Trust. Anne P. Sidamon-Eristoff Chairman Emerita: American Museum of Natural History, The New York Community Trust. Lulu C. Wang Chief Executive Officer, Tupelo Capital Management LLC.
Staff For a complete staff list, visit nycommunitytrust.org.
suburban divisions With the belief that grantmaking is most effective when it is done locally, The Trust established divisions that cover the greater metropolitan area:
Each is guided by a board of advisors composed of community leaders and staffed by people expert in grantmaking and donor services. As part of The Trust, Long Island and Westchester enjoy our investment management, legal, financial, and accounting services. For donors who wish to contribute to charities in these communities, our suburban divisions combine sensitivity to local concerns with the economies of scale and expertise of a large organization. Funds in each division are listed on pages 30 and 31.
the Westchester Community Foundation, founded in 1975, and the Long Island
Traveling the World--Artifact by Artifact
Hofstra University Museum educators introduced third graders to the unlimited possibilities for Community Foundation, museums to expand and enrich their world. The Art Travelers program fosters links between classroom founded in 1978. curriculum and the study of authentic cultural objects selected from the museum’s collection. The children had the opportunity to see pieces from the Hofstra University Museum’s permanent collection and works from the current exhibition Toward Greater Awareness: Darfur and American Activism. The children had been learning about Africa in school.
Third graders from the Walnut School in Uniondale had a productive day at the Hofstra University Museum. They took part in the museum’s Art Travelers program. Photo: Marie Smith
A Let’s Get Ready mentor works with students prepping for the SATs.
“Museums and schools are natural partners,” said Hofstra University Museum education director Nancy Richner. “Working in concert with classroom teachers, the program connects artifacts and students in support of the school curriculum, engaging learners in new ways of thinking and problem solving.” With a $25,000 grant from the DeWitt Wallace Fund for Youth in the Long Island Community Foundation, experiencing world art is available to three of the most needy school districts on the Island: Westbury, Roosevelt, and Elmont. Sheza A., a 9-year-old from New Visions School in Freeport, said: “I think this program was fantastic because we got to see great masks and sculptures. Kids can learn a lot about the past through artifacts and sculptures!”
Solve for . . . Educational Achievement Here’s a question you won’t find on the SAT exam: Can college students help high school students get ready for college? Answer: Yes, thanks to Let’s Get Ready, an exciting program that provides free SAT and college preparation classes for low-income and first-generation high school students. The program uses volunteer college students, who help with college applications, writing essays, practicing interviewing, and
preparing for the SAT. They are mentors, inspiring program participants to develop the skills they need to get into and succeed in college. Because SAT scores are an important part of the admission process, prep classes have become ubiquitous. But, on average, SAT prep programs charge between $600 and $4,000, a cost that is out of reach for low-income students. With Let’s Get Ready’s free services, poor kids---who start out disadvantaged---can better their chances of doing well on the test and getting into college. “Going to my dream university will be great because I will be the first of my family to attend. Let’s Get Ready has really made a difference to me,” said Leslie Gallardo, a student from the White Plains program. The atmosphere is one of encouragement and support---a necessity for students, many of whom, like Leslie, are the first in their families to apply to college. The results are impressive: SAT scores of students in the program increase an average of 110 points, and 93 percent of them enroll in college right after high school. Since 2010, the Westchester Community Foundation’s Wallace Fund has provided $75,000 for Let’s Get Ready sites in New Rochelle, Port Chester, White Plains, and Yonkers. All four have waiting lists. With a $15,000 planning grant, Let’s Get Ready will explore opportunities to expand in Westchester. Its goal is to operate a total of 11 programs serving 440 Westchester students annually by 2015. Our grant also will allow the agency to improve other parts of its program, including refresher workshops, college application completion programs, financial aid applications, career-related events, and an alumni network. Long Island Community Foundation
Board of Advisors
1864 Muttontown Road Syosset, New York 11791 (516) 348-0575 For a complete staff list, visit licf.org.
Patricia Galteri, Chairman Ira R. Halperin, Vice Chair Natalie Abatemarco A.J. Caro Cathleen Colvin Roslyn D. Goldmacher, Esq. Robert M. Hoyte, Ph.D.
Westchester Community Foundation
Board of Advisors
200 North Central Park Avenue, Suite 310 Hartsdale, New York 10530 (914) 948-5166 For a complete staff list, visit wcf-ny.org.
Matthew G. McCrosson, Chairman Denise S. Farrell, Vice Chairman Dale Akinla Jack Alemany Venetta Amory James Ausili Theresa Beach Kilman Rosia Blackwell Lawrence Jacqueline Dunbar
Peter J. Klein, CFA Patricia C. Marcin, Esq. William T. Martin John Murcott Edward C. Palleschi Lawrence Scheinthal Phyllis Hill Slater
Wiley Harrison Paul Jenkel Michael Markhoff Judith Matson Jose Reynoso Kathy Rosenthal David Shover Drusilla van Hengel Karen Walsh
Long Island funds Susan Isaacs & Elkan Abramowitz Charitable Fund (2005) Robert & Rhoda Amon Fund (2008) Dennis P. Angermaier Memorial Lifeguard Scholarship Fund (2002) Michael & Christine Arnouse Family Fund (2009) Baldwin Family Fund (2011) Alexander Baldwin Memorial Scholarship Fund for Massapequa High School (2000) Jean Bellia Fund for Nursing Excellence (2004) Stanley & Marion Bergman Family Charitable Fund (1996) Willa & Robert Bernhard Fund (1997) Besemer Family Fund (2010) Ruby & Michael Bornstein Memorial Fund (1978) * James D. Brown Jr. Fund (2012) James & Carole Burns Fund (2006) Vincent J. Cannuscio Memorial Fund (2009) Richard M. Caproni Memorial Scholarship Fund (2001) Helene & Richard Cepler Family Fund (2000) Chakiryan Family Fund (2002) Arthur A. Chaplin GSB Fund (2001) Charity Society Fund (2000) Charlie’s Long Island Fund (1985) Children’s Fighting Chance Fund (2008) * Marie Colvin Memorial Fund (2012) George J. Conklin Scholarship Fund (1989) Ann Caroline Corrody Fund (1999) Matthew T. Crosson Memorial Fund (2011) Rose D’Arpino Scholarship Fund (2005) Davidow Elderly Community Assistance Fund (1996) Deering & Volpicella Family Fund (2007) Percy Douglass Memorial Education Fund (1985) Eiber Family Fund (2000) In Memory of Elissa Fund (2004) ENEE Philanthropic Fund (1994) Martha C. Entenmann Scholarship Fund (1999) Thomas F. & Helen A. Fagan Fund (2007) Farmer’s Daughter Charitable Fund (2005) Tiffani Bea Feldman Children’s Fund (2000) Mark Fischgrund Memorial Fund (2003) Walter & Sandra Fish Charitable Fund (1997) Fishers Island Community Fund (2011) Samuel Francis Fund (2005) Franck Family Fund (2005) Anne & Frank Freeman Fund (1997) Fridman Family Fund (2010) Fund for the Future of Long Island Women & Girls (1997) Fund for Innovative Community Programs on Long Island (1985) Richard H. & Jean E. Gaebler Family Fund (2005) Patricia Galteri Fund (2011) Glenn Gerrato Scholarship Fund (2001) Neil Giske Memorial Scholarship Fund (1985) Gleason Family Fund (2008) Jeanne Going Memorial Fund for Ovarian Cancer Research (2005) Selma Goldmacher Charitable Fund (2006) * Grafer Family Fund (2012) Greenberg Fund (2010) Selma Greenberg Fund (1997) Greentree Foundation Fund (2003) Grundman Memorial Scholarship Fund (1990) Horace Hagedorn Memorial Fund (2005) Kristy Lyn Haley Memorial Fund (2000) Hand & the Spirit Fund (1999)
F. & M. Harris Family Fund (2001) Robert E. & Barbara W. Harrison Fund (1997) Helen’s Fund (1998) Frances Herman Family Fund (2010) Hershenov Family Fund (2007) E.B. Hubbard Fund (2002) Julie Hunnewell Fund (1987) Alma D. Hunt/VCM L.I. Fund (1997) * Hurricane Sandy Long Island Relief & Restoration Fund (2012) Idie Fund (2000) Ann Marsden Irvin Fund (2009) Douglas Jackson Memorial Scholarship Fund (1996) Berenice & Herman Jacobs Family Fund (1997) Lawrence Jacobs Fund (2011) Marie J. Jensen Scholarship Fund (2005) Edith R. Karel Fund (1998) Karish Education Fund of the Horticultural Alliance of the Hamptons (2000) Karma411 Matching Fund (2007) David & Dale Karp Family Charitable Fund (2003) Kenneth L. & Veronica K. Katz Advisory Fund (1999) Kenneth L. & Veronica K. Katz Fund (1999) Always Loved Never Forgotten Katz-Goldblatt Fund (2011) Leo & Freda Keller Memorial Fund (2000) Kids Making a Difference Fund (2000) Morton L. Kimmelman Fund (2001) Kingfisher Fund (1998) David & Paula Kirsch Family Fund (2004) Beverly & Harvey Klein Fund (2001) Krasnoff Family Fund (1985) Krasnoff Charitable Fund (2011) Patricia Kucinski Memorial Fund (2003) Arthur H. Kunz Memorial Fund (2005) Ruth Kurzweil Fund (2009) Ed & Lee Lawrence Fund (1988) Donna Levien Memorial Fund (2004) Levin Family Fund (1997) Robert & Phoebe Lewis Family Fund (2006) Long Island Affordable Housing Project Fund (2011) Marian & William Littleford Fund (1993) Debra Lobel/Beverly Dash Fund (2004) Long Island Community Foundation (1977) Long Island Fund for the Arts (1985) Long Island Fund for Youth Programs (1987) Long Island Unitarian Universalist Fund (1992) John F. Loverro Memorial Fund (2004) Lowry Family Charitable Fund (2008) Roselle Patricia Luciano Literacy Fund for Women (1996) Kendall Madison Leadership Fund (1995) * Kevin G. Mahony Charitable Fund (2012) Mallouk Family Fund (2006) Mancino Family Fund (2003) William T. & Lynn Steppacher Martin Fund (2001) Massapequa Community Fund (2001) Helen P. & Randall P. McIntyre Fund (1986) Alan P. Mendelsohn Memorial Scholarship Fund (1999) Shelley Metzenbaum & Steven Kelman Family Fund (1999) John D. Miller Fund (2001) Millie Fund (2000) William E. Mintzer Memorial Fund (1999) Miracle-Gro Fund (2001) Joseph & Marion L. Mitola Family Fund (1999) Morris Fund (2006) Michael Moverman Memorial Fund (1998) Nassau County Red Cross Fund (1998) Nassau/Suffolk Fordham Law Alumni Scholarship Fund (1991)
NCJW South Shore Section Community Fund (1995) North Country Community Association Fund (2002) North Fork Fund (2003) Northrop Grumman Endowment Fund for L.I. Women & Girls (1996) Okorn Family Fund (2010) Diane J. Owen Memorial Fund (2005) Sylvia & Morris Paley Fund (2002) Kenneth E. Paskoff Fund (2011) Paul’s Fund (2002) Peconic Stewardship Fund (1984) Perry Persichilli Memorial Fund (1996) James & Margaret Philbin Scholarship Fund (2003) Harriet B. & Edward Everett Post Fund (1986) Elizabeth Pritzker Endowment Fund (1985) Raymond C. & Diane F. Radigan Fund (2005) Rhodebeck Long Island Fund (1998) Richards Family Fund (1987) Charlotte S. & Richard D. Rockwell Fund (1999) Rose Fund (1998) Judith Rubertone Fund (1987) Cheryl & Stephen Rush Fund (1999) Saltzman Fund (1987) Arnold Saltzman Family Charitable Fund (2001) Joan & Arnold Saltzman Fund (1989) * SAR Family Fund (2012) Sidney Schiffman Fund (1996) Schneidman Family Fund (2000) Caroline & Sigmund Schott Fund (1999) John S. Schrader Memorial Fund (2004) Schwabian Fund (2009) Schwartz Family Fund (1991) Selig Fund (1991) Samuel & Stella Seligsohn Memorial Fund (1996) Henry H. Shepard Fund (2008) Shinnecock Bay Restoration Fund (2011) Jerry & Cecile Shore Fund (1995) Meredyth H. Smith Charitable Fund (1997) Colonel William Smith Foundation (1984) E. & R. Smits Fund (2001) Song of Songs Fund (2002) Staller Scholarship Fund (1987) Erwin P. & Pearl F. Staller Charitable Fund (1992) Adam E. Stark Memorial Scholarship Fund (2001) Nancy Steinman Fund (2003) Helen, Emily & Margaret Stevens Fund (2004) Suzy’s Fund (2009) Carol & Jim Swiggett Fund (1997) Taca Family Fund (1996) Ruth Saltzman Taishoff Fund (1996) Gail Talent Memorial Fund (2003) Brian & Danielle Tane Charitable Fund (2007) Stuart & Jill Tane Charitable Fund (1997) James & Marie Taormina Fund (1999) Tealison Fund (1998) Tealison Two Fund (2001) Joseph Vigilante Fund for the Adelphi School of Social Work (2000) Phyllis S. Vineyard Fund (1996) Vishnick Family Charitable Fund (2001) Voices from the Heart Fund (1997) * Dr. Robert & Olga Von Tauber Fund (2012) Amah Vought Memorial Health Fund (2005) WAC Lighting Fund (2004) Elizabeth & Eugene Wadsworth Charitable Fund (1999) Hilda S. & Theodore T. Weiser Memorial Fund (1998) Charles J. Williams Fund (1986) Work Long Island Fund (2003) Yang Family Fund (2006)
Westchester funds Joseph Acocella, Jr. Memorial Fund (2011) Apoyo Fund (2002) Arfa Family Fund (1997) Aronian Family Fund (2008) Artrepreneur Fund (2010) Ascher Fund (1999) Linda Ashear Fund (2001) * Gianna Marie Balog Memorial Fund (2012) Douglas H. & Sarah G. Banker (2008) Barringer-Spaeth Fund for Change (2002) Joan Bartels Memorial Fund (1997) Beverly Bender Fund (2000) Helen Benedict Fund (2000) Howard & Grace Benedikt Fund (2002) Carol Berger Scholarship Fund (2005) Richard A. Berman Fund (2004) K. M. Bialo Family Fund (1986) Bianco Family Fund (2003) Michael Blank Memorial Fund (2010) Blecher Family Fund (1986) Albertina Bloom Memorial Fund (1985) Samuel & Beatrice Marks Bloom Memorial Fund (1998) Blumer Family Fund (1998) Jack Brennan Fund (2002) Buerger Fund (2001) Elizabeth G. Butler Angel’s Fund (2005) Tony Carlucci Scholarship Fund (1999) Jesse L. Carroll, Jr. & Judith B. Carroll Fund (1986) Barbara & Walter Ceconi Charitable Fund (2008) H. M. & T. Cohn Fund (1977) Larry Cole Memorial Fund (2003) Colson Fund (2006) Michael A. Correa Memorial Fund (2002) CPM Fund (2007) Stephanie Crispinelli Humanitarian Fund (2010) Nancy & Robert DeLigter Boy Scout Memorial Fund (1991) Michele & Concetta DeRosa Fund (2000) Alyson & Parker Drew Fund (2000) Linda A. & James H. Ellis Fund (1999) Marion C. & James E. Enright Scholarship Fund (2005) Ernie, Louise & Jeffrey Early Childhood Fund (1995) Esplanade Fund (2003) * Ann M. Fagan Charitable Fund (2012) Falk Family Fund (1986) Family Fund (2011) Francis & Denise Farrell Family Fund (2006) Celia Malbin Feinstein Fund (1992) Arnold E. & Olga C. Feldman Fund (2003) First Decade Fund (2009) Brendan M. Frail Memorial Fund (2010) Cira S. Francovilla Memorial Scholarship Fund (2010) Jane Franke-Molner Fund (2008) Virginia Franklin Journalism Scholarship Fund (2004) Peggy Friedman Memorial Fund (1989) Fund for Westchester’s Environment (2001) Fund for Westchester’s Future (1987) Gallagher Family Charitable Fund (1999) Charles Gamper Fund (1985) J.F. & M. Gelband Fund (1995) Rita & Bruce Gilbert Fund (1992) Lloyd & Lonya Gilbert Fund (1991) Glassberg Family Fund (1997) Rachel Greenstein Memorial Fund (1988) Edward Handelman Fund (2010) Helen & Nancy Handelman Fund (2010)
Handelman Memorial Education Fund (2010) Mattie M. Hardee Memorial Fund (2011) Carol & Frank Headley Family Fund (1996) John & Marilyn Heimerdinger Fund (1994) Russell Hexter Filmmaker Fund (1997) Julian H. Hyman Memorial Fund (1985) Alice & Warren Ilchman Fund (2000) Karen Cromer Isaac Fund (2007) Izard Fund (1997) Jade Fund (1999) Paul & Barbara Jenkel Fund (1998) Edwin Irving Johnson Scholarship Fund (1985) Janet A. Johnson Scholarship Fund (2003) * James R. Johnston Fund (2012) Margaret Jourdan Fund (2005) JWHands Charitable Legacy Fund (2010) Kadejay Fund (1998) Kern Charitable Fund (2011) Kidney Transplant Fund (2007) Kilman Family Fund (2008) Kimerling Career Development Fund (2000) Kotval Shroff Family Fund (2011) Learning Center Fund (1994) Dorothy & John Lebor Fund (1999) James L. Leinwand Fund (1998) David F. & Dorothy W. Linowes Fund (1999) Linville Fund (1993) William J. & Helen Z. Lippincott Fund (1994) John A. Lombardi Scholarship Fund (2006) Karin Lopp Fund (1998) Elizabeth Lorentz Fund (1986) Lester & Helen Levinthal Lyons Fund (1994) John F. Maloney Memorial Fund (1998) McCrosson Family Fund (2011) * Dapper McDonald Memorial Fund (2012) Patrick J. McNeill Scholarship Fund (1997) Menzies Fund (2002) Merrill Lynch Fund for Children with Disabilities in Memory of Christopher Herndon (2006) * Michel Family Fund (2012) Middleton Family Fund (2001) Asa Uyeda Mitsudo & Sumi Lynn Koide Memorial Fund (1996) Model/Falkowski Fund (2010) David & Katherine Moore Family Foundation Fund (2000) Katherine C. & David E. Moore Fund for Community Development (2005) Nathan Moscow Fund (1985) Munson Family Fund (2000) * Neubart/Rosenthal Family Fund (2012) Eda & Stanley Newhouse Fund (1983) James L. Newhouse Fund (1986) Thomas J. & Margaret Lynch O’Connor Scholarship Fund (1994) Olmezer Westchester Fund (1998) Pammy Fund (1989) Passionist Fund (1995) Lawrence R. Jr. & Thelma Dale Perkins Fund (1993) Perry Family Fund (1988) Roger Perry Memorial Fund (1999) Roger & Isobel Perry Memorial Fund (2000) Pine Hill Fund (2010) Pisacano Family Fund (1995) Raymond M. & Alice M. Planell Fund (2006) Pottinger Fund (1994)
Sal J. Prezioso Fund for Westchester’s Future (2001) Putnam Fund (1999) Muriel L. & Stephen B. Randolph Fund (2004) George E. & Elizabeth A. Reed Fund (1997) Reiman Brothers Fund (1999) Elsie Reinhart Memorial Fund (1991) Renal Clinical Fund (2007) Renal Research Fund (2007) Nathan Rosen Memorial Fund (1996) Vito & Diana Russo Fund (1988) R.W.K. Charitable Fund (2011) Elaine & Edmund Schroeder Fund (2002) Dr. Lester J. Schultz Memorial Fund (1984) Robert & Lynne Schwartz Fund (1986) Shea Family Fund (2004) Carl Slater Memorial Fund (1998) Bradford & Pamela Smith Charitable Fund (2000) Michelle Sobel Literacy Fund (2006) Karena Somerville AWC Scholarship Fund (1992) Dr. John B. Sommi Fund (2003) Jerry Spitz Charitable Fund (2008) Stepinac Fiftieth Reunion Scholarship Fund (2006) Andrew Stewart Memorial Fund (1999) Sturmer Family Fund (1996) Sullivan Family Fund (1994) Kalyan Sundaram Fund (2006) James A. & Katherine D. Sutton Fund (1999) Martin Tackel & Abbe Raven Family Fund (1998) Alfonso Tapia & A. L. Rose Memorial Fund (1994) Tarrytown & Sleepy Hollow Children & Youth Fund (2009) Tarrytown/Sleepy Hollow Fund for Kids (2010) Technical Support Fund (1998) Threerandomwords Fund (2003) Jodie Torigian Charitable Fund (2000) Trabout Fund (2006) Triantafillu Fund (1983) W. Lee Tuller Memorial Education Fund (1983) W. Lee Tuller Memorial Fund (1983) Arno & Peppi Ucko Family Fund (1998) Emily & Harold E. Valentine & Evelyn Gable Clark Scholarship Fund (2005) Bernice & Irwin Warshaw Fund (1990) Nicholas C. Wasicsko Scholarship Fund (1993) Westchester Community Foundation (1975) * Westchester Critical Needs - Hurricane Sandy Fund (2012) Westchester Fund for Women & Girls (1992) Westchester Health Fund (2003) Westchester Poetry Fund (2000) Westchester Wilderness Walk Fund (2001) Frank E. Wigg Charitable Fund (1993) Wilstock Fund (1994) Evelyn G. Zamboni Fund (1986) Madeline & Sanford S. Zevon Fund (1995)
Please know that we do our best to ensure the accuracy of these lists, but errors may still occur. If you find an error, please accept our apologies and contact us so that we may correct it. *Funds with an asterisk were created in 2012.
financials Consolidated Statements of Financial Position
December 31, Assets Cash and cash equivalents Investments (note 3) Receivables Fixed assets, net Total assets
2012
2011
$ 105,500,489 2,017,388,923 23,541,706 1,494,596
$
$ 2,147,925,714
$1,908,884,580
Liabilities and Net Assets Liabilities: Accounts payable Grants payable Deferred rent credits (note 4) Pension liability (notes 3 and 5) Accrued postretirement medical benefit obligation (note 5) Total liabilities
Net assets: Unrestricted: Endowment Available for grants Available for administration Total net assets Total liabilities and net assets
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
$
795,638 27,593,622 2,211,579 7,030,090 2,996,986
$
68,514,196 1,837,830,478 821,895 1,718,011
1,194,054 27,532,518 2,410,221 6,988,199 2,682,997
40,627,915
40,807,989Â
2,052,842,377 53,201,877 1,253,545
1,817,590,472 48,499,310 1,986,809
2,107,297,799
1,868,076,591
$ 2,147,925,714
$1,908,884,580
Consolidated Statements of Activities
Years ended December 31, Changes in net assets: Revenues: Contributions
Investment return Less: Investment expenses Provision for unrelated business income taxes
Other
2012
$ 191,951,786
2011
$ 202,179,455
207,260,677
(20,399,786)
(11,209,090) (393,465) 195,658,122
(10,775,404) (880,987) (32,056,177)
67,265
51,000
387,677,173
170,174,278
135,740,478 4,977,625 5,339,025 2,270,256 148,327,384
137,497,141 4,692,331 5,047,859 2,107,462 149,344,793
Increase in net assets before other pension and postretirement medical changes
239,349,789
20,829,485
Other pension and postretirement medical changes (note 5) Increase in net assets
(128,581) 239,221,208
(3,354,028) 17,475,457
1,868,076,591 $2,107,297,799
1,850,601,134 $1,868,076,591
Total unrestricted revenues Expenses: Grants and services to beneficiaries Grantmaking expenses Administrative expenses Development expenses Total expenses
Net assets at beginning of year Net assets at end of year
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
2012 financials Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows 2012
Years ended December 31, Cash flows from operating activities: Increase in net assets Adjustments to reconcile increase in net assets to net cash provided by operating activities: Net (appreciation) depreciation in fair value of investments Depreciation and amortization expense Increase in receivables (Decrease) increase in accounts payable Increase in grants payable (Decrease) in deferred rent credits Increase in pension liability Increase in accrued postretirement medical benefit obligation
2011
$ 239,221,208
$ 17,475,457
(160,745,207) 232,081 (22,719,811) (398,416) 61,104 (198,642) 41,891
64,348,583 232,698 (176,462) 551,872 9,331,670 (198,642) 3,655,224
313,989
183,437
55,808,197
95,403,837
(506,993,013) 488,179,775 (8,666)
(680,043,424) 616,394,229 (42,903)
Net cash used in investing activities Net increase in cash and cash equivalents Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year Cash and cash equivalents at end of year
(18,821,904) 36,986,293 68,514,196 $105,500,489
(63,692,098) 31,711,739 36,802,457 $ 68,514,196
Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information: Taxes paid on unrelated business income
$
Net cash provided by operating activities Cash flows from investing activities: Purchases of investments Proceeds from sales of investments Capital expenditures
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
393,465
$
880,987
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements December 31, 2012 and 2011 (1) Organization The New York Community Trust and Community Funds, Inc. (including its Long Island and Westchester Divisions) (The Trust) are community foundations created to build permanent charitable endowments for the greater metropolitan region. The Trust, as the consolidated foundations are hereinafter referred to, is tax exempt under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code (the Code) and has been determined not to be a private foundation under Section 509(a)(1) of the Code. The Trust administers more than 2,000 individual charitable funds, each established with an instrument of gift describing either the general or specific purposes for which grants are to be made, usually from income only, but in some cases from principal. (2) Summary of Significant Accounting Policies Accounting standards provide that if the governing body of an organization has the ability to remove a donor restriction, the contributions should be classified as unrestricted net assets. However, under New York State law and The Trust’s governing instruments, the assets are held as endowment funds until such time (if ever) as the governing body deems it prudent and appropriate to expend some part of the principal or appreciation. Accordingly, the consolidated financial statements classify all net assets as unrestricted, but segregate the portion that is held as endowment from the funds that are currently available for grants and administration. Cash equivalents represent short-term investments with original maturities of 90 days or less, except for those short-term investments managed as part of long-term investment strategies. Fixed assets are recorded at cost and are depreciated on a straight-line basis over the estimated life of the respective asset. Leasehold improvements are depreciated over the life of the respective improvement or the remaining term of the lease, whichever is shorter. Fixed assets are reported net of accumulated depreciation of $2,398,000 in 2012 and $2,165,919 in 2011. Investment expenses include fees for bank trustees, investment managers, and custodians. Grants and services to beneficiaries are expensed with approval of the Distribution Committee of The New York Community Trust (NYCT) or the Board of Directors of Community Funds, Inc. (CFI), and usually paid within one year. The Trust has adopted a constant growth spending plan for many of its funds. This approach allows spending to increase at a steady rate within the confines of a floor, a ceiling, and a cap. The spending plan is not applied to funds in CFI that are considered to be underwater, as defined by New York State law. At December 31, 2012, no fund was considered to be underwater. Accounting estimates are an integral part of the consolidated financial statements prepared by management and are based upon management’s current judgments. Actual results could differ from those estimates. (3) Investments and Fair Value Measurements Fair value is defined as the exchange price that would be received for an asset, or paid to transfer a liability (an exit price), in the principal or most advantageous market for the asset or liability in an orderly transaction between market participants on the measurement date. A fair value hierarchy requires The Trust to maximize the use of observable inputs and minimize the use of unobservable inputs when measuring fair value. The three levels of the hierarchy are:
2012 financials • Level 1 inputs are quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities. • Level 2 inputs are inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1 that are observable for the asset such as quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities.
• Level 3 inputs are unobservable inputs for the asset or liability. Accounting Standards Update 2009-12 (ASU 2009-12), Investments in Certain Entities That Calculate Net Asset Value Per Share (or Its Equivalent), allows The Trust, as a practical expedient, to estimate the fair value of investments in investment companies for which the investment does not have a readily determinable fair market value using net asset value. Most of The Trust’s investments are in publicly traded securities or in commingled funds, including common trust funds, which are invested in publicly traded securities. Fair value for these investments is based on quoted market prices and observable net asset values. The Trust also invests in hedge funds, private equity, and certain real estate investments. The fair value of these investments has been determined primarily through independent appraisals using an income-based approach and the net asset values provided by the fund managers utilizing quoted market prices of the underlying securities, market values of comparable companies, and discounted cash flow projections. These valuations are reviewed for reasonableness by management of The Trust. CFI invests for long-term growth of principal and income in real terms, consistent with a reasonable degree of risk. Donor advised funds that require a high degree of liquidity are invested in cash equivalents. The investments of NYCT are held in individual trusts at the bank designated by the donor in the instrument of gift. The following tables present The Trust’s fair value hierarchy at December 31, 2012 and 2011, respectively: 2012 U.S. large cap equities International equities Cash equivalents Fixed income/mutual funds U.S. mid/small cap equities Hedge funds Private equity Fixed income/corporate bonds Fixed income/government bonds Real estate Balanced funds Other Fixed income/common trust funds
Fair value $ 503,392,991 318,976,843 293,074,785 179,964,893 157,397,779 145,791,426 99,044,341 95,714,166 80,331,081 73,287,897 32,035,444 22,217,354 16,159,923 $2,017,388,923
Level 1 $ 471,726,533 183,990,342 293,074,785 179,964,893 121,411,729 ----79,089,141 44,471,885 32,075,178 32,035,444 15,052,047 --$1,452,891,977
Level 2 $ 31,466,436 134,986,501 ----35,986,050 145,791,426 --16,625,025 35,859,196 ----2,215,636 16,159,923 $ 419,090,193
Level 3 200,022 ----------99,044,341 ----41,212,719 --4,949,671 --$ 145,406,753
$
2011 Fair value U.S. large cap equities $ 434,868,878 Cash equivalents 320,708,610 International equities 214,190,363 Fixed income/mutual funds 179,137,004 U.S. mid/small cap equities 138,709,947 Hedge funds 128,441,972 Fixed income/corporate bonds 105,058,199 Private equity 93,766,134 Fixed income/government bonds 73,966,242 Real estate 65,243,069 Balanced funds 48,431,942 Fixed income/common trust funds 24,255,933 Other 11,052,185 $1,837,830,478
Level 1 $ 394,960,748 320,708,610 124,637,671 179,137,004 92,744,618 --81,352,409 --40,996,734 26,833,991 29,855,622 --3,084,998 $1,294,312,405
Level 2 $ 39,908,130 --89,552,692 --45,965,329 128,441,972 23,705,790 --32,969,508 --18,576,320 24,255,933 2,389,516 $405,765,190
Level 3 $ --------------93,766,134 --38,409,078 ----5,577,671 $137,752,883
The Trust’s alternative investments include: Equity Oriented Hedge Funds – These consist of four funds that seek to achieve equity-like returns with lower volatility than the equity markets. Three funds invest in a broad range of industries while the fourth specializes in real estate related companies. Although all the funds invest primarily in common stocks, their portfolios may also include preferred stocks, debt securities, options, futures, and other financial instruments. All four funds employ long/short strategies and use leverage and derivatives. Absolute Return Hedge Funds – These consist of three multistrategy funds that attempt to generate consistent positive returns by focusing on opportunities that are not correlated to the returns of the overall markets. The main strategies include merger arbitrage and other event-driven investments, distressed securities and securities of companies undergoing various types of restructurings, and convertible and capital structure arbitrage. Some funds also invest in leveraged loans, real estate equity and debt, and private equity. Real Estate – This includes an investment in a fund that holds properties that are net leased to tenants with below investment grade credit ratings. The fund’s holdings are analogous to high-yield bonds collateralized with real estate. As the result of a gift, there is also an investment in a limited liability company that owns land in New York City leased to the owner of a high-rise office building. Private Equity – Although the investments are largely in funds of funds, they also include two direct investments in private equity partnerships. Both the funds of funds and the two partnerships focus on buyouts---primarily of midcap companies. Three of the funds of funds also have a small allocation to venture capital. In addition, The Trust through gifts acquired interests in a limited partnership investment holding company and a limited liability company. The assets of the LP holding company consist almost entirely of publicly traded common stock in one company. The Trust’s investments in hedge funds may be redeemed at the net asset value as of the measurement date and at least annually thereafter, in certain cases more frequently. Advance notice of 30 to 90 days is required to redeem these investments. As such, these investments have been categorized as Level 2 assets.
2012 financials Capital invested in Level 3 assets is returned as the underlying investments are liquidated. The liquidation will occur over the term of the individual investment with the termination of these investments scheduled at various times between 2013 and 2019. Certain of The Trust’s investments in private equity and real estate involve future cash commitments which amount to approximately $15 million at December 31, 2012. The following table presents reconciliation for all Level 3 assets measured at fair value for the period January 1 to December 31: Level 3 assets Fair value at January 1 Realized losses Unrealized gains and losses Purchases Sales Capital calls Capital distributions
2012 $ 137,752,883 --9,148,005 234,937 --9,201,324 (10,930,396)
2011 $127,384,988 39,162 8,039,961 --(941,857) 10,732,382 (7,501,753)
Fair value at December 31
$145,406,753
$ 137,752,883
The following tables present The Trust’s fair value hierarchy for the investments of its defined benefit pension plan (note 5) as of December 31, 2012 and 2011, respectively: 2012 U.S. large cap equities Corporate bonds International equities U.S. Treasury and Agency Cash equivalents Preferred stock Municipal bonds
Fair value $11,380,983 1,566,389 1,267,686 1,135,642 522,158 271,417 66,986 $ 16,211,261
Level 1 $ 11,380,983 1,347,019 1,267,686 370,447 522,158 271,417 --- $ 15,159,710
Level 2 --- 219,370 --- 765,195 --- --- 66,986 $1,051,551
Level 3 --- --- --- --- --- --- --- $ ---
$
$
Level 2 --- 959,558 233,616 --- --- --- 66,394 $1,259,568
Level 3 --- --- --- --- --- --- --- $ ---
2011 U.S. large cap equities U.S. Treasury and Agency Corporate bonds International equities Cash equivalents Preferred stock Municipal bonds
Fair value $ 9,850,931 1,588,383 1,060,046 985,217 498,378 206,168 66,394 $14,255,517
Level 1 $ 9,850,931 628,825 826,430 985,217 498,378 206,168 --- $12,995,949
$
$
(4) Commitments On March 30, 2004, The Trust entered into a lease agreement for office space expiring March 31, 2020. Future minimum rental payments are approximately $1.3 million in 2013 through 2014, $1.4 million in 2015, $1.5 million in 2016 and 2017, and a total of $3.3 million thereafter through 2020. Rental expense is recognized on a straight-line basis, in accordance with ASC 840, Accounting for Leases. The excess of recognized expense over actual rent payments as well as landlord-provided improvements has been recorded as deferred rent credits. Rent expense for the years ended December 31, 2012 and 2011 amounted to $1,302,491 and $1,298,653, respectively. (5) Pension and Postretirement Medical Benefit Plans The Trust administers a noncontributory defined benefit pension plan covering substantially all employees. Benefits are based on years of service and the employee’s compensation during the five highest consecutive years during the last ten years of employment. The Trust also provides medical insurance benefits for its eligible retired employees. Obligations and funded status at December 31 are as follows: Postretirement medical benefits
Pension benefits 2012
2011
2012
2011
$23,241,351
$21,243,716
$ 2,996,986
$ 2,682,997
16,211,261
14,255,517
---
$ (7,030,090)
$ (6,988,199)
$(2,996,986)
$ (2,682,997)
Benefit costs
$
973,657
$
861,297
$
216,489
$
178,850
Benefits paid
$
629,880
$
828,921
$
62,883
$
60,780
Plan contribution
$
914,656
$
510,930
$
14,692
$
16,196
Benefit obligation Fair value of plan assets Funded status
---
The accumulated amounts not yet recognized as a component of net periodic benefit cost was $7,827,126 and $280,457 at December 31, 2012 for the pension and postretirement medical plans, respectively. The estimated amount that will be amortized into net periodic benefit cost in 2013 is $446,000 and $(39,000), respectively. The discount rates used to value the pension and postretirement medical benefit plans range from 3.8% to 4.5%. The weighted average expected return on plan assets and rate of compensation increase for the calculation of the pension benefits is 8% and 4%, respectively, as of December 31, 2012. The health care cost trend rate assumption for 2013 is 7.3% declining to 5.6% in 2018. The pension plan is invested in a balanced portfolio of equity and fixed income securities. Annual projected benefit payments for the pension and postretirement medical benefit plans are expected to average $1,181,000 and $102,000, through 2022, respectively. The Trust also sponsors a defined contribution retirement plan for employees, in which contributions are based upon a specified percentage of salaries. The expense for this retirement plan was $569,133 and $517,753 in 2012 and 2011, respectively. (6) Subsequent Events The Trust evaluated its December 31, 2012, consolidated financial statements for subsequent events through May 14, 2013, the date the consolidated financial statements were available to be issued. The Trust is not aware of any subsequent events that would require recognition or disclosure in the consolidated financial statements.
Independent Auditors’ Report Distribution Committee of The New York Community Trust and Board of Directors of Community Funds, Inc.: We have audited the accompanying consolidated financial statements of The New York Community Trust and Community Funds, Inc. (including its Long Island and Westchester Divisions) (collectively, The Trust), which comprise the consolidated statements of financial position as of December 31, 2012 and 2011, and the related consolidated statements of activities and cash flows for the years then ended, and the related consolidated notes to the financial statements. Management’s Responsibility for the Consolidated Financial Statements Management is responsible for the preparation and fair presentation of these consolidated financial statements in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles; this includes the design, implementation, and maintenance of internal control relevant to the preparation and fair presentation of consolidated financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error. Auditors’ Responsibility Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these consolidated financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States of America. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the consolidated financial statements are free from material misstatement. An audit involves performing procedures to obtain audit evidence about the amounts and disclosures in the consolidated financial statements. The procedures selected depend on the auditors’ judgment, including the assessment of the risks of material misstatement of the consolidated financial statements, whether due to fraud or error. In making those risk assessments, the auditor considers internal control relevant to the entity’s preparation and fair presentation of the consolidated financial statements in order to design audit procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the entity’s internal control. Accordingly, we express no such opinion. An audit also includes evaluating the appropriateness of accounting policies used and the reasonableness of significant accounting estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the consolidated financial statements. We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our audit opinion. Opinion In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements referred to above present fairly in all material respects, the financial position of The New York Community Trust and Community Funds, Inc. (including its Long Island and Westchester Divisions) as of December 31, 2012 and 2011, and the changes in its net assets and its cash flows for the years then ended in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.
May 14, 2013
Financial Highlights Scholarships 4%
Designated 12%
Unrestricted: 53% Donor-Advised 40% Non-advised 13%
Assets
Field of Interest 31%
by fund type
$2,147,925,714
Community Development and the Environment 14%
Children, Youth, and Families 19%
Health and People with Special Needs 16%
Trustee Banks Eleven banks and trust companies have adopted the Resolution and Declaration of Trust Creating “The New York Community Trust.” Representatives of these financial institutions constitute the Trustees’ Committee, and each bank is authorized to receive funds in trust for The New York Community Trust. For a list of these banks, please visit our website, nycommunitytrust.org. Donors can set up funds in trust with one of the banks or in Community Funds, Inc., our not-forprofit corporate affiliate. For more information see page 23.
Investment Committee
Grants
by Program Area $135,740,478
Bruce W. Calvert, Chairman
Special Projects 3% Education, Arts, and Human Justice 48%
Development 2% Administration 7%
Kevin R. Byrne Senior Vice President, Chief Finance & Risk Officer Retirement Solutions Division Pacific Life Insurance Company Elizabeth B. Dater Managing Director Angelo, Gordon & Company Donald R. Kurtz Retired Managing Director General Motors Investment Management Corporation
Total
Expenditures $148,327,384
Grants 91%
Rosemarie Liu Shomstein Retired Senior Vice President & Deputy Chief Investment Officer AXA Equitable Life Insurance Company Lorie A. Slutsky President The New York Community Trust
2012 funds A
Janice E. Abbott Scholarship Fund (1999) Abdalla Stern Fund (2003) Jane Schwab Abel & Elise Schwab Clemenger Memorial (1946) Abrams Family Fund (2006) A.B.Y. Fund (1960) A. Bernard Ackerman Fund (2011) Ackman Family Fund (1997) Acorn Foundation Fund for Beautification in Memory of Barbara Foster Vietor (2004) Acorn Foundation Fund for History in Memory of Alexander Orr Vietor (2004) Ada Fund (2010) John & Laurie Adams Fund (2004) Hall Adams Fund (1972) Adel & Leffler Families’ Fund for Queens (1993) Frederica M. & Morton L. Adler Trust (1941) Adopt-a-Monument Fund (1987) Benigno M. Aguilar & Gerald A. Erickson, Jr. Fund (2011) M. Bernard Aidinoff Fund (1986) M. Bernard Aidinoff & Elsie V. Aidinoff Fund (1998) Seth G. Aidinoff Fund (1986) Akabas Family Fund (1986) Albin Family Arts Fund (1999) Barbara Albisser Memorial Fund (1981) Oakey L. & Ethel Witherspoon Alexander Fund (1977) Allegra-Tanner Fund (1995) Robert Mack Allen & Wendel Fentress Ott Fund (1989) AllianceBernstein Foundation Fund (1998) Franz & Marcia Allina Fund (1994) Alouette Fund (1993) B. Altman Fund (1985) Carl Altman Fund (2007) Emily H. Altschul Charitable Fund (2002) Arthur G. Altschul, Jr. Charitable Fund (1996) Altschul Family Fund (1980) Arthur Altschul Memorial Fund (2002) Altschul Overbrook Fund (1994) Elizabeth & Peter Altwater Fund (1974) American Seamen’s Friend Society Designated Fund (1986) American Seamen’s Friend Society Discretionary Fund (1986) Anne Anastasi & John Porter Foley, Jr. Fund No. 1 (2006) Anne Anastasi & John Porter Foley, Jr. Fund No. 2 (2006) Anbinder Family Charitable Fund (2003) J. R. Anderson Fund (1981) Patricia Anderson Fund (2005) Matthew & Krista Annenberg Fund (2006) Anonymous Fund (2006)
Patricia L. Anslinger Memorial Fund (2007) Eileen & William Araskog Charitable Fund (2001) Arc of Circumstance Fund (1978) G.W. Archer Fund (2001) Joseph Arena Charitable Fund (1995) Walter & Marsha Arnheim Fund (1986) Esther Jean Arnhold Fund (1966) * Arts & Culture Research Fund (2012) Arundel Fund (1988) Marcia Ashman Fund for Children (1999) Larry Ashmead Editorial Award Fund (2010) Michael J. Ashworth Fund (2007) Robert R. Asiel Memorial Funds (1972) Winifred A. Aste Fund (2011) * Brooke Astor Funds for New York City Education (2012) Astor Fund for Public School Libraries (1997) ASW Fund (2007) ATS-1 Fund (2010) Auburn Citizen Fund (1999) Michael Avery Social Justice Fund (2010)
B
B Fund (1990) Babbitt Family Fund (1990) Babsan Fund (1992) William M. Backer Fund (1985) Backman-Niesz Fund (1999) Isabelle Bacon Fund (1985) Ellen & Henry Baer Fund (1986) Honorable Harold Baer & Dr. Suzanne Baer Fund (1989) Sara & Roy Bahat Family Fund (2007) Lee Bailey Fund (1991) S. Prentiss Bailey Fund (1960) Baird Family Fund No. 2 (2007) Baker Family Fund (2003) Allyson Maya Collazo Baker Fund (1984) Fern Ann Ballard Memorial Fund (1986) Dr. Holly M. Bannister & Douglas L. Newhouse Fund (1984) Peleg S. Barber Fund (1960) Bardel Family Fund (2007) Ruth Plofsky Barish & Irving Barish Fund (1996) Renee A. Barnes Fund (2010) Barns Fund (1971) Parker W. Barnum Funds (1979) William & Françoise Barstow Foundation No. 1 (1931) William & Françoise Barstow Foundation No. 2 (1959) Christopher S. Bartels Fund (1998) Katherine N. Bartels Fund (1998) McDonald C. Bartels Fund (1998) Todd C. Bartels Fund (1998) Harriett M. Bartlett Funds (1987)
Arlene Bartlow Fund (2006) Arthur L. Baruch & Rosalie K. Baruch Fund (1979) Paul Ludwig Baruch & Aimee Mayer Baruch Fund (2008) Conor Bastable Charitable Fund (2010) Baudo-Sillerman Scholarship Fund (1989) BDEK Fund (2011) Beacon Group Fund (2011) Alice D. Beal Trust (1955) Bear Stearns Award (2008) Raymond R. Beatty Scholarship in Memory of Andrew Wilson (1984) Hubert Park Beck Literacy Fund (2004) Bernadine Becker Commemorative Trust (1984) Ruth Bedford Fund (1963) Beech Fund (1975) David A. & Gail G. Bell Fund (2008) Thomas D. Bell Charitable Fund (2011) Bellevue Nursing Committee Fund (1976) Eleanor Robson Belmont Fund (1980) Selim & Luna Benardete Charitable Fund (2005) Lillian Z. Bender Fund (2002) Bendheim-Von Wiskow Fund (2010) Claire B. & Lawrence A. Benenson Fund (1987) Herbert & Edythe F. Benjamin Fund (1976) Benner Family Fund (2006) Bento Fund (2004) Maureen Duffy Benziger Fund (2005) Berelle Fund (2009) Andrew N. & Gail D. Berg Fund (1999) Berger Family Memorial Fund (2008) Berger Memorial Fund (2008) Alexander & Eleanor Berger Memorial Fund (2008) Sharon & Edward Bergman Charitable Fund (2008) Edward Bergman Fund (2005) Paul Bergman Fund (2005) Sarah & Paul Bergman Youth Empowerment Fund (2005) Lancelot M. Berkeley Fund (2007) Berkshire Fund (2000) Viola W. Bernard Fund for Psychosocial Health (1993) T. Roland Berner Fund (1972) Charles L. Bernheimer Fund (1924) Theresa E. Bernholz Fund (1924) Sylvia Bernstein Fund (1994) Richard & Katherine Berresford Fund (1997) William H. Berri Funds (1966) Betlor Foundation (1978) Beverly Hills Fund (1972) BGM Fund (1971) Anil & Pandora Po Bharvaney Fund (2007) Melanie S. Bialis Fund (2007) Philip A. & Carol Bilotti Fund (2010) June R. & Jonathan Bingham Fund (1980)
Please know that we do our best to ensure the accuracy of this list but errors may still occur. If you find an error, please accept our apologies and contact us so that we may correct it. *Funds with an asterisk were created in 2012.
Henry Birnbaum Fund (2000) Gladys A. Bishop Memorial Fund (1987) Anne & Walter C. Bladstrom Philanthropic Fund (1988) Richard & Margaret Blanchard Fund (1983) Nancy & Robert S. Blank Fund (2003) Blitzer Family Fund (2005) E.H.R. & N.M. Blitzer Fund (1984) Amy Bloch/Gregory Horowitz Fund (2005) Lida & David Bloom Fund (1989) Robin Bloom Fund (1991) Blum Family Fund (1990) Paul & Lauren Blum Fund (2006) Sidney & Elaine Blumenthal Fund (1980) Jesse Smith Blydenburgh & Josephine Vail Blydenburgh Fund (1958) Ernst P. Boas Memorial Fund (1955) Alice Boerner Fund (1988) Beau Bogan-Elliot Friedman Arts & Charities Fund (2007) Bohemia Fund (1971) Bolin Fund (1986) Peter A. Bonanni Scholarship Fund (1996) M. Alida Bonynge Memorial Fund (1940) Lillian G. Booth Fund (1976) Janet & James Bostany Memorial Fund (1999) Charles Bouman Charitable Trust (1977) Bove Fund (1986) John Perry Bowditch Memorial Fund (1956) Clothilde de Veze Bower Fund (1989) Philip & Suzanne Bowers Charitable Contribution Fund (2003) Blair A. & Elizabeth J. Boyer Family Fund (2006) George T. & Francele Boyer Fund (1976) William B. & Jane Eisner Bram Fund (1995) William M. Bramwell, Jr. Fund (1995) Brause Fund (1986) Barry & Geraldine Brause Fund (1986) Jack & Ruth Brause Memorial Fund (2010) R. S. Brause Fund (1986) Roberta Brause Fund (1986) Catherine & Robert Brawer Fund (1996) Annie Grant Breath Memorial Fund (1939) * Briar Patch Fund (2012) Brivio Family Fund (2003) Beatrice & Douglas Broadwater Fund (1986) Edward Brodsky Fund (1997) Brooklyn Fireman’s Medal Fund (1981) J.F. & S.S. Brown Family Fund (2006) Dee & Dickson G. Brown Fund (1986) Meredith & Sylvia Brown Fund (2004) Nikki Brown Fund (2011) Orville Gordon Browne Foundation Fund (2011) Adon H. Brownell Memorial Fund (1985) Browning Fund (1998) Edward W. Browning Fund (1969) Brownstein Family Fund (1995) Betty E. Brugger Fund (1986) William H. & George R. Brunjes Memorial Fund (1988) John & Josephine Bruno Memorial Fund (2011) May Evans Bryant Fund (1989) BTW Fund (1973) Emily G. Buck Fund (1994) Bucks Harbor Fund (2006) Bucky Fund (2006) David A. Budd Fund (2008) Alexandru & Sonia Bunescu Fund (1993) Walter & Martha Burchard Family Fund (1988)
Burford Fund (2007) Richard A. Burgheim Fund (1999) Burkhart Fund (2004) Frantzes D. Burkhart Fund (2004) William H. Burkhart Fund (2004) Burnett Family Fund (2004) John U. & Minnie M. Burt Inter Vivos Fund (1974) John U. & Minnie M. Burt Testamentary Fund (1974) Ernest Brooks Burton Fund (2003) William B. Butz Memorial Fund (1999) Judith Byrd Fund (2009) Monsignor Harry J. Byrne Scholarship Fund (1998) Patrolman Edward R. Byrne Substance Abuse Fund (1988)
C
Hans & Ruth Cahnmann Family Fund (2009) * Ruth & Hans Cahnmann Memorial Fund (2012) Patricia A. Caldwell Fund (2002) Jean C. Caldwell Fund (1950) Calman Fund (2007) Calvert Family Fund (2000) Frances T. Campbell Fund (1959) Cannon Educational Fund (1981) Cantor Family Fund (2005) Ralph & Stella Caporale Fund (1995) Carillon Fund (1998) Carlson Fund (1994) Carnegie Corporation Fund No. 1 (1936) Carnegie Corporation Fund No. 2 (1936) Carnoy Family Fund (2011) Carolina Fund (1986) Alys Sinclair Carreau Memorial Fund (1929) Carson Family Charitable Trust Fund (1985) Sybil Carter Memorial (1930) * Cascadilla Fund (2012) Cashin Family Fund (1989) Bonnie Cashin Fund (2002) * John Krob Castle Fund (2012) Cecelia Trust Fund (1996) CFDA-Vogue Initiative/New York City AIDS Fund (1991) Ronald & Carole Chaimowitz Fund (1995) David & Miriam Chalfin Fund (1985) Maria Bowen Chapin Scholarship Fund (2005) Chapman Fund (2000) Charlie’s Fund (1975) Gerald L. Chasin Fund (1986) Richard & Ellen Chassin Charitable Fund (2000) Chatham Fund (1984) Patrick S. Cheng & Michael J. Boothroyd Fund (2000) Cheng-Kingdon Fund (2007) Herbert & Phyllis Chernin Fund (1996) Ettie Chin Hong Fund (2006) Christiansen/Shuchman Fund (1987) Christie Fund (2010) Francis & Catherine Christy Fund (1975) Patricia Cirillo Charitable Fund (2007) Clark Family Fund (2000) Cameron Clark Memorial Fund (1998) Edith M. Clark Fund (1944) Fenton Clark Fund (1986) Valerie G. Clark Memorial Fund (1978) Clarke-Kammerer Family Fund (2003) Cline Foundation Fund (1995) Clinton Community Garden Fund (1985) CND Fund (2010)
Coco Fund (2000) Helen Cohen Fund (1995) Lisa E. Cohen Memorial Scholarship Award Fund (1991) Paul T. Cohen Fund (2009) Coleman Family Fund (2003) John & Ann Coleman Fund (1984) Warren Coleman Fund (1986) Richard M. Colgate Fund (1959) * Faith Colish Fund (2012) Collazo Family Fund No. 1 (2007) Irene D. Collia Trust (1980) Columbus Circle Fund (1976) Thomas J. Concannon Memorial Internship Fund (2006) Georgianna B. Conlin Fund (1998) Kevin P. Connors Fund (1986) Conroy Family Fund (1999) Cook Family Fund (1986) Joan Ganz Cooney Fund (2010) Lane Cooper Fund (1960) Gertrude Corbitt Bequest (1959) Barbara Fatt Costikyan Fund (1999) Jennifer L. Costley & Judith E. Turkel Fund (2005) Melinda & James M. Cotter Fund (1986) Counterpoint Fund (1996) J. E. Covington Fund (2007) Valery Craane Fund (2004) Karen L. Cramer Charitable Fund (2010) Critchlow/McCormick Family Fund (2005) Charlotte L. Crittenden Fund (1932) A. Evelyn Cronquist Fund (1991) Winifred Crost Fund (1981) Andrew Crystal & Family Fund (2004) CSF Family Fund (2007) Charles E. Culpeper Fund (1999) Kay Cummings Fund (2008) Curbstone Fund (2006) Cushman Family Fund (2003) Paul & Paulette Cushman Fund (1998) CWR Partners Fund (2008)
D
John Da Silva Memorial Fund No. 1 (1988) John Da Silva Memorial Fund No. 2 (1988) John Da Silva Memorial Fund No. 3 (1988) DAL Fund (1984) * Florence S. Daniels Fund (2012) Danziger Family Fund (1973) Abraham L. Danziger Fund (1979) Ellen & Sabin Danziger Fund (1997) Darlington Fund (1973) * Darlington Memory Fund (2012) Elizabeth B. Dater & Wm. Mitchell Jennings Jr. Fund (1999) Davis Polk & Wardwell Fund (1997) Donna Scher Davis Fund No. 1 (1993) Donna Scher Davis Fund No. 2 (1996) Dawn Fund (2005) Day Memorial Fund (1948) DBC Fund (2008) DBS Fund (2009) Eugenia Ortuno de Bartels Fund (2002) G. Louise Robinson de Dombrowski Fund (1991) Adam de Havenon Fund (2004) Georgia & Michael de Havenon Fund (1986) Peter J. De Luca Family Fund (1991) Pierre de Menasce Fund (2010) Georges & Lois de Menil Charitable Fund (1977)
2012 funds Jay & Ruth De Soto Mayor Fund (2004) Ellen A. Dearborn Fund (1969) David & Diane DeBell Family Fund (2003) Richard & Barbara Debs Fund (1986) Deerdodds Fund (1997) Defliese Family Fund (1971) DEL Fund (2007) George Delacorte Center for Magazine Journalism Fund (1998) Delacorte Fund (1994) Albert P. Delacorte Fund (2005) George & Valerie Delacorte Fund (2011) Valerie Delacorte Fund (1993) Delafield Fund (1975) John & Patricia Delany Memorial Fund (2006) Delany Sisters Fund (1994) David W. Denton U.S. Attorneys’ Fund (2010) Derby Fund (1983) Charles Desmarais & Katherine Morgan Fund (2010) Deutsche Bank Fund (2010) Brian & Silvija Devine Fund (1986) Brooke Katherine Devine Fund (2006) Mary Wheeler Dewart Fund (1976) Diacre Family Fund (2003) Harris & Amy Diamond Fund (2007) Hester Diamond Fund (2002) Robert S. & Susan A. Diamond Fund (1986) DiBlasi Fund (2000) Ruth & Gerald Dickler Fund for Early Childhood Education (2010) Esther Baiyla Dinner Memorial Fund (1999) Dogwood Fund (1979) Eugene, Bridget & Tommy Dolphin Scholarship Fund (1992) Susan Wells Donnell Fund (1984) William W. Donnell Fund (1994) William W. Donnell Fund for Parks (2003) A. James Donohue Fund (1986) Donors’ Education Collaborative of New York City Fund (1992) Dora Fund (2001) Mr. & Mrs. Stephen M. Dowicz Fund (1994) John & Hebe Dowling Fund (1986) Nathan & Miriam Drachman Fund (1989) Jamie Drake Fund (2007) Jamie Drake Future Fund (2007) W. Christopher Draper Fund (2003) Dream Team 25 Fund (2011) Bruce Dresner Fund (1993) Leon Drew Fund (2001) Drexel Burnham Lambert Fund (1995) Dreyfus Charitable Fund (2001) Beatrice L. Drossman Fund (1998) Dr. James R. Dumpson Fund for Social Services (2009) William M. Duncan Family Fund (1986) Wolcott & Joan Dunham Fund (2010) Mary Ann Dunn Charitable Fund (2010) Dutch Kills Civic Association Fund (1994) Solomon Dutka Fund (1999) Suzanne L. Dyer Development Fund (2007) Dyer Family Fund (2010)
E
East Harlem Tutorial Program Fund (1997) EAM II Fund (2010) Evelyn & Jack Eber Fund (1995) E.C.B. Fund (1960)
Economic Justice Fund (1989) Julius & Margarete Edelstein Fund (1991) Edlow Fund (1996) Eel River Fund (2007) Eleanor Franklin Egan Memorial Fund (1927) E.H.C. Foundation (1967) Julie Ehrlich & Noam Elcott Fund (2009) Dr. Moses Einhorn Fund (1964) Einhorn/Lasky Family Fund (1999) Eiseman Altschuler Fund (2003) Irving & Blanche Eisenberg Charitable Fund (1995) Carole & Richard Eisner Fund (1980) EisnerAmperCares Fund (2010) EJP Fund (2007) Claudio Elia Fund (1997) Dr. Deborah Elkins Fund (1993) Gertrude Elkins Memorial Fund (1993) Howard L. Ellin Charitable Fund (2003) Nancie Ellis Fund (2004) Victor Elmaleh Fund (2010) ELSAM Fund (1999) Elsie, Ubaldo & Vivian Cardia Fund (2008) Lita & Walter Elvers/Zipperian Fund (1999) Emy Fund (2007) Henry C. Enders Funds (1976) Henry C. Enders Fund No. 2 (1977) Mildred F. Englander Fund (1985) Enos Fund (1983) Samuel Epstein Lecture Fund (1999) Josephine L. Erwin Fund (1935) James A. Essey & Nina Zakin Essey Fund (1994) Evans Family Fund (1995) Bradford & Barbara Evans Fund (1986) Brittain Anderson Ezzes Fund (2007)
F
Fahnestock Family Fund (1980) Fahs-Beck Fund for Research & Experimentation (1986) Fahs-Beck Fund II for Research & Experimentation (1993) Edgar W.B. Fairchild Fund (1992) Fairway Fund (1987) Falk, Lichten & Rosenstein Fund (1995) Susan Meyers Falk Fund (1996) Joseph Fancher Fund (1983) Farrand Family Fund (1993) Fashion Targets Breast Cancer Fund (2010) Emanuel & Bertha Feder Memorial Fund (1994) Federal Bar Council/U.S. Attorneys’ Offices Fund (2001) Fegan Family Fund (2008) Feinsod Herz Fund (1980) Feldman Family Fund (1982) Nancy & Michael Feller Fund (2007) Louise & Marvin Fenster Family Fund (1999) Anthony & Vanda Ficalora Fund (1988) Judith & Norman Fields Fund (1992) Raymond H. Fiero Fund (1984) Brian Keith Fifield Memorial Scholarship Fund (1987) Filak Family Fund (1999) Simon Finck Fund (1959) Golda & Mollie Fine Fund (1977) Harriet Finkelstein Family Fund (2007) Kelly Ann Finley Memorial Fund (2008) Fishbein Family Fund (1998) Mitchell S. Fishman Donor-Advised Fund (1999) Desmond Gerald FitzGerald Charitable Fund (1986)
Kirsten Flagstad Memorial (1964) William E. Flaherty Family Fund (1998) Clementina Santi Flaherty Fund (2007) Flanagan Fund (2006) Sam Flax Memorial Scholarship Fund (1964) Fletcher Fund (1999) Josephine Flood Memorial (1973) Francis Florio Funds (1974) Flushing Females Association Scholarship Fund (1992) Michel Fokine Memorial Fund (1985) Walter B. Ford Funds (1972) Fortune Society Education Fund (1994) Fosdick Fund (1986) John H. Foster Fund (1984) Ben Fox Memorial Fund (1962) Ellen Sydney Fox Fund (1994) * Nicholas T. Franco Fund (2012) * Patrick L. Franco Fund (2012) Frank Fund (1995) Abraham B. & Sarah Frank Funds (1955) Martin M. Frank Scholarship Fund (1990) Thomas W. & Claire W. Frank Fund (1977) Katherine M. Franke Fund (2006) Bethenny Frankel Charitable Fund (2011) Ross Frankel Family Fund (2007) Frankel-Freedman Fund (2007) Corinne R. Frear Fund (2000) Arthur & Elinor Fredston Fund (2004) David & Paula Freedman Fund (1994) Freilich Fund (2011) Ernest Grey Frerking/Sharon Frerking Philanthropic Fund (2005) Friends of The Atlantic Philanthropies Fund (2007) L. W. Frohlich Charitable Fund (2011) L. W. Frohlich Family Fund (2011) Frunzi/Wachtel Fund (2011) James Fuld Jr. Family Fund (1991) Kenneth & Margo Fuld Fund (2001) Fun On 2 Wheels Fund (1998) Fund for Autistic Children (2000) Fund for the Delacorte Theatre in Central Park (1998) Fund for Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Arts (1983) Fund for New Citizens (1987) Fund for Performances at the Delacorte Theatre in Central Park (1999) Future of Design Jewelry Education Fund (1997)
G
Laly & George Gallantz Fund (1991) Gallogly Strickler Family Fund (2003) Donald R. Gant Fund (1979) Colin Gardner Fund (2011) William T. Gardner Theatre Internship Fund (1992) Garfinkel Family Fund (2007) Gloria & Barry H. Garfinkel Fund (1986) Barbara Gauntlett Scholarship Fund (1986) Barbara Gauntlett Scholarship Fund No. 2 (2001) Paul Edward Gay Fund (1990) Benjamin & Rachel Geballe Fund (2007) Geduld Fund (1993) Jane C. Geever Fund (2008) Bruce S. Gelb Fund (1995) Ida & Benjamin Gelber Fund (2009) Gemini Fund (1998) General Charitable Fund (1971) Generation Fund (2010)
Ruth E. & Timothy M. George Charitable Fund (1986) Jacques A. Gerard Fund (1987) Pierce Gerety Memorial Fund (1998) GIA Fund (2010) Clara A. Gierisch Fund (1975) Clarence H. Gifford Fund (2008) Clarence H. Gifford Fund No. 2 (2008) John N. & Gillett A. Gilbert Family Fund (1999) Elena Gildersleeve Fund (1982) Stephen Gillen Family Fund (2004) Frank J. Gillespie Fund (1985) Gilmore Human Rights Fund (1980) Sonia Raiziss Giop Literature Fund (1994) Santina Giordano Memorial Fund (1985) Girls Write Now Fund (2010) Glaser Family Fund (1994) Robert J. Glenn Memorial Fund (1974) Rose N. Glenn Memorial Fund (1990) Richard & Barbara Ziet Glickman Fund (2007) Madeline Shobrys Glosten Fund (1999) Goins Family Fund (2003) Steven & Jan Golann Fund (1998) Rita & Herbert Z. Gold Education Fund (1993) Gold-Schiff Fund (1994) Goldberg/Burke Family Fund (2006) Golden Family Fund (1992) Jacob & Helen Goldfein Fund (2009) Goldman Schachar Charitable Fund (2006) Jane & Budd Goldman Charitable Gift Fund (2010) Diane Goldman Fund (2008) Jack Goldring Fund (1986) Oliver & Barbara Goldstein Charitable Fund (2007) Eric L. Goldstein Fund (1999) Patricia & Bernard Goldstein Fund (1985) Good Samaritan Fund (1993) Maurice & Georgine Goodman Fund (1998) Roger & JoAnn Goodspeed Fund (1986) Goodwin Family Fund (1999) Everett F. & Ann P. Gordon Memorial Fund (1991) Gail Gordon Charitable Fund (2011) Gail Gordon Fund (2000) William J. Gossen Fund (1985) Josh Gotbaum & Joyce Thornhill Fund (1991) Lee Gottlieb Fund (2005) Deborah Gottlieb-Shapiro Family Fund (2006) Lynda Gould Fund (2006) Gouverneur Hospital Fund (1958) Eugen Grabscheid Fund (1992) Howard E. Grace Fund (1998) Maggie & Gordon Gray Family Fund (1998) Green Fund (1985) Lawrence & Barbara Green Fund (2005) Orland S. & Frances S. Greene Fund (1962) Greenebaum Fund (1984) Richard Greenebaum Fund (2007) John Robert Gregg Fund (1985) J & J Gribetz Fund (1983) Linda A. Griffith Fund (1970) Arthur Griggs Fund (1947) Emily Griggs Fund (1944) Stephanie Fairchild Griswold Fund (2010) Gross Family Fund (2003) Charles & Carol Grossman Family Fund (2009) W. R. Gruver Fund (1986) GSLW Fund (2007) Rudolph Guenther Fund (1977) Sydney A. Guggenheimer Memorial Fund (1949) Sarah G. Gund Fund (2005) Gwertzman Family Fund (2004)
H
Haas Foundation Fund (2000) Leopold Haas Fund (1984) Katherine & Morris Hadley Trust (1968) Horace & Amy Hagedorn Fund (1995) Emil & Zerline Hahnloser-Richard Bak Fund (1975) Hajim Family Fund (1983) Luke Halpin Memorial Scholarship Fund (2002) Carol D. & S. Sutton Hamilton Charitable Fund (2003) Mike Handy Memorial Fund (2003) Lola G. Hanna Fund (1995) Gwenda & John Hanson Fund (1986) Lee Hanson & Don Scherer Fund (1986) Harbor Watch Fund (2000) William Barclay Harding Fund (1979) Augusta Lehman Harlem & Lillian Harlem Martin Fund (2000) Harmony Fund (1986) Elisabeth Scott Harms Fund (1982) Harris Family Fund (1992) Charlotte Daniels Harris Memorial Fund (2002) Elsie & Chelsea Harris Memorial Fund (1996) Jeff & Judy Harris Fund (2003) Katharine S. Harris Fund (1965) William Harris Fund (2000) Kim & Alan Hartman Fund (2006) Alana Hassan Fund (2009) Hastings Peace & Justice Fund (1993) Haupt Family Fund (2000) Harry & Eugénie Havemeyer Fund (2001) Hawk’s Nest Fund (2000) Hawthorne Lane Fund (1986) Steve Hayden Fund (2004) Hayes Family Fund (1996) Ralph Hayes Memorial Fund (1968) Constance Laibe Hays Journalism Fund (1994) Thomas Healy & Fred P. Hochberg Fund #1 (1995) Thomas Healy & Fred P. Hochberg Fund #2 (1995) Thomas P. Healy Fund (2003) Nicholas C. Heaney Memorial Fund (1997) Broderick J. Hehman Memorial Fund (2006) Heiser Grant (1972) Hejaz Tree Conservation Fund (2007) Hemlocks Fund (1978) Paul & Ann Henegan Fund (1986) Ruth Hennig Fund (2003) Lucy Henning Memorial Fund (1995) Lucy & George Henning Fund (1974) Alexander S. Henry, Sr. & Ann S. Henry Memorial Fund A (1989) Alexander S. Henry, Sr. & Ann S. Henry Memorial Fund B (1995) Doris & Milton Hepner Fund (2000) Herbster Family Fund (1990) Jane R. & Andrew L. Herz Fund for Criminal Justice (1986) Frances A. Hess Fund (2005) Don & Marilyn Berger Hewitt Fund (1998) Leo & Ethel Heymann Memorial Fund (1954) Murray Hidary Fund (1998) High Exposure Fund (1993) High School of Commerce, Class of 1911 Scholarship Fund (1967) Ann & Leon Himelberg Fund (2006) Hintz Family Fund (1991) Peter M. Hirsch Memorial for Thyroid Cancer Research Fund (2001) Steven Hirsch Fund D (1973)
Steven J. Hirsch Fund (2002) Susan Hirschman Fund (1999) Martin Hirschorn IAC Fund (1995) Margaret M. Hitchcock Fund (1946) Hive Digital Media Learning Fund (2010) Ho/Ching Charitable Fund (2003) Mary & David Hoar Trust for the Honor & Glory of God (1975) Rita & Irwin Hochberg Charitable Fund (1982) Hodgson Fund (1995) John J. Hoffee Fund (1996) Jane & Michael Hoffman Charitable Gift Fund (2003) Peter & Daphne Hoffman Donor Advised Fund (2006) Hoffman Fund (2011) Gloria & Joel S. Hoffman Fund (2001) Marion O. & Maximilian E. Hoffman Fund (1984) Lillian & William Hoffmanns Fund (1990) Sharon King Hoge Fund (2000) Holmén Family Fund (2002) Britt Holmén Family Fund (2002) Mark Holmén Family Fund (2002) Robert C. Holmén Family Fund (2002) Homeless Outreach & Assistance Fund (1997) Horing Family Fund (2001) Katie Danziger Horowitz & Steven G. Horowitz Family Fund (1995) John & Sandra Horvitz Fund (1996) Norris Houghton Theatre Fund (1988) Howard Friedman Fund (2006) Ralph N. Hubbard Fund (1948) Doctor Joseph E. Hughes Scholarship Fund (1984) Margaret J. Hughes Memorial Fund (1990) W. Ockham Hume Fund (2003) Christine Hunsicker Charitable Fund (2007) Lisette Verea Ruegg Hunter Fund (2011) Mildred K. Hurson Fund (2003) Rene K. & Samuel M. Hyman Memorial Fund (1978)
I
I Get Fund (1991) Charles F. Iklé Scholarship & Research Funds (1965) Indian Mountain School Fund (1993) George A. Ingalls & Ann C. Ingalls Fund (1957) Ingraham Fund (1986) Innovative Design Fund (1988) Intercultural Interdisciplinary Initiatives Fund (2008) Paul J. Isaac Fund (1981) ISES/Leonard M. Greene Memorial Fund (2009) Island Fund (1975) John Paul Itta & Tony Murray Fund (2008) Isabel C. & Walter T. Iverson Fund (1986)
J
J B Fund (1985) F. Jackson Fund (2007) Jackson Fabrics Associates Fund (1986) Frederick Jacobi Memorial (1952) Jamaica Fund (1989) Lucy Wortham James Fund (1935) Lucy Wortham James Memorial (1939) Walter B. James Fund No. 1 (1927) Walter B. James Fund No. 2 (1927) Jamestown Fund (1990) Warren S. & Florence L. Jampol Fund (2006)
2012 funds * Jane Fund (2012) JCK Fund (2008) Jeanne d’Arc Foundation (1927) Daniel J. Jenks Memorial Fund (2005) Kayce Freed Jennings Fund (2007) Jenny-Hiteshew Fund (1994) Elise Jerard Environmental & Humanitarian Trust (1981) JM Legacy Fund (2000) Harry J. & Teresa H. Johnson Undergraduate Scholarship Funds (2001) Harry J. & Teresa H. Johnson Graduate Scholarship Funds (2001) Laura & Ray Johnson Fund (2003) Jophed/Thomas Fund (1975) JQW Fund (2006) JTS Fund (2011)
K
KAL 007 Victims Memorial Fund (1988) Seth & Barbara Lewis Kaplan Fund (1998) Susan Grant Kaplansky Fund (2001) Barbara & William Karatz Fund (1986) Roberta & Brad Karp Family Fund (2004) Hagop, Arousiag & Arpy Kashmanian Scholarship Fund (1999) Robert A. Kasner Fund (2005) Jonathan Ned Katz Fund (2008) Judy Katz/Oren Rudavsky Fund (1996) Dr. Martin R. Katz Fund for Culinary Arts (1988) Glenn & Kim Kaufman Fund (2004) Robert M. Kaufman Fund (1988) Robert M. Kaufman Fund No. 2 (2002) Sheila Kelley Kaufman Fund (2009) Marion Esser Kaufmann Fund (1985) Walter & Selma Kaye Fund (1994) Hamilton F. Kean Fund (1985) Kearney Family Fund (2004) Robert Prior Kehoe Fund (1974) Richard Keim Family Fund (1983) William Wilson Kelchner Memorial Fund (1972) Jane & Donald Seymour Kelley Fund (1997) Peter L. Kellner Fund (1986) Kelner Family Fund (1996) Carl & Doris Kempner Fund (1996) Michael C. Kempner Fund (1997) Kenary Fund (2004) Kenilworth Fund (1970) Kenner-Smith Family Fund (2007) Gilbert & Rebecca Kerlin Fund (2005) Jonathan O. Kerlin Fund (2005) * Kerlin Tucker Donor-Advised Fund (2012) Kern Family Fund (2011) * Dr. Leo Kesner Fund for the Advancement of Science (2012) Ellen Kheel & Arnold S. Jacobs Fund (1998) Caren & Thomas Kilgore Charitable Fund (2011) King Family Fund (2000) Harold Thomas King Jr. & Lisbeth King Fund (1986) Kira Fund (1992) Joseph M. Kirchheimer Fund (1989) John H. Kirst Memorial Fund (1999) Kismet Fund (2005) Susan B. & Donald M. Kitchen Fund (1989) Casey Kizziah Fund (1994) Andrew Bradford Klein Fund (2001) * Edith & Jules Klein Fund (2012) John C. Klein Trust (1981) Morris Kligman Memorial Fund (2000)
Knopp Family Fund (2010) Jane & Richard Koch Fund (1987) KOKORO Fund (2004) Korda Fund (1990) Dr. Joseph M. & Grace Koreen Micha Scholarship Fund, Israel (1986) William A. Koshland Fund (1987) John C. Koster Fund (2003) Ellen Kozak Fund (2011) Patricia Berry Kozak Fund (2004) Kozukai Fund (2003) Henry Phillip Kraft Family Memorial Fund (1996) Kramer & Hallstein Charitable Fund (2007) Elaine & Alison Kranich Fund (2011) Sydney & Marjory Krause Fund A (2004) Sydney & Marjory Krause Fund B (2003) Sydney & Marjory Krause Fund C (2003) Michael & Patricia Kraynak Fund (1986) Eileen S. Krill Fund (2007) Susan J. Kropf Fund (2002) Mark Krueger Charitable Fund (2004) Bernie & Lydia Kukoff Fund (2005) Wheaton B. Kunhardt Fund (1949)
L
Lachance Family Charitable Fund (2003) Benjamin V. & Linda L. Lambert Fund (1996) Lampe Family Fund (2005) Lamport Foundation Fund (1975) Landlocked Fund (1986) Allan Browning Lane Memorial Funds (1980) Lang Fund (1982) Daniel Lang Memorial Fund (1998) Langner Family Fund (2000) Judith & Jean Lanier Fund (1986) Rose Kean Lansbury Fund (2000) May Seton Bayley Large Memorial (1928) William S. & Stanley S. Lasdon Fund (1984) David Lawrence Fund (2000) Blanche E. Lawton Fund (2009) Le Veque Memorial Foundation (1948) Ledges Fund (1996) Lee Family Chinese Immigrant Education Fund (2001) Leede Family Fund (1996) Jeffrey R. & Joan Leeds Fund (2005) Howard Z. Leffel Fund (1970) Lefrak Fund (1999) Lehman Brothers T. Christopher Pettit Memorial Scholarship Fund (2008) Karl H. & Jewel I. Lehmann Fund (2010) Delia & Artemio León Fund (1997) Frederick H. Leonhardt Fund (1979) Leonia High School Class of 1979 Entrepreneurship Scholarship Fund (2001) Reba Q. Lerch Fund (1971) Ursula Lerse Fund (2010) Betty & John A. Levin Fund (1998) David P. & Peggy Levin Fund (1995) Dustin Levine Fund (2000) Ellen Levine Fund for Writers (2007) Robert & Patricia Levinson Fund (1985) Jacob Levy Fund (1990) Carolyn & Edward Lewis Fund (2005) * Hunter Lewis Fund (2012) Wadsworth Russell Lewis Trust Fund (1989) Henry & Janine Lichstein Family Fund (1992) Lichtenstein-Miller Fund (1994) Barbara & Richard Lieberman Fund (1979)
Dawn Lille Dance Award Fund (1994) Ken Lin Fund (2002) Robert & Maria Lin Fund (1992) Linden Memorial Fund (1994) Adolf G. & Eloise Linden Scholarship Fund (1995) Alexander & Ella Lindey Fund (1991) Lindgren Family Fund (1999) George N. & Mary D. Lindsay Fund (1996) Linwood Fund (1983) Lion and Hare Fund (1970) Lissner Charitable Fund (2011) Literacy in Early Childhood Fund (2000) Edward H. Little Memorial Trust (1982) Royal Little Fund (1992) Nancy Liu Memorial Fund (1995) Livingston Fund (1995) * LJTJ Fund (2012) John L. & Frances L. Loeb Fund (2011) Loewenberg Family Philanthropic Fund (1983) Wilhelm Loewenstein Memorial Fund (1940) Michael Lomax Memorial Fund (2001) Peter C. Lombardo MD Fund (2006) Peter Lomonte Fund (2009) Jane P. Long Fund (1991) Longview Fund (1990) Lookout Foundation Fund (2010) Elizabeth Meyer Lorentz Fund (2002) Thomas H. Loughman Memorial Scholarship Fund (1978) Ellee J. Lovelace Fund (1970) Ruth Norden Lowe & Warner L. Lowe Memorial Fund (1990) Lowenstein Fund (2002) * Lowenthal Family Fund (2012) Patrocinia Lu Fund (2008) Rena M. Lucardi Fund (1997) Melvin Ludwig Memorial Fund (1993) Edna Wells Luetz/Frederick Riedel Fund (2009) * Edna Wells Luetz/Frederick Riedel Fund No. 2 (2012) Judge J. Edward Lumbard U.S. Attorneys Fellowship Fund (1977) LW Fund (2006) Lynford Family Fund (1988) Amelia & George Lyons Memorial Fund (1994)
M
M & N Fund (2000) Clara L. Macbeth Funds (1977) Nancy G. & C. Richard MacGrath Fund (1996) Afifie & Richard Macksoud Foundation (1975) Lloyd F. MacMahon Fellowship Fund (1989) John D. Macomber Fund (1999) Camp Edith Macy Fund (1926) Edith Carpenter Macy Memorial Fund (1926) Wilson H. Madden, Jr. Fund (1993) Brian & Florence Mahony Fund (1997) Major Fund (1971) Maldonado Fund (2007) Thomas G. Malone Donor Advised Fund (2009) Terry & Arielle Maltese Fund (1998) Manheim Fund (2011) Mann-Wheeler Fund (2010) Jan W. Mares Fund (1978) Mark Family Fund (1986) Dora, Edythe K. & Sylvia Marks Family Fund (1999) Royal S. Marks Foundation Fund (1992) * Alison Billie Marks Fund No. 2 (2012)
Alison Billie Marks Memorial Fund (1993) Dorothy Marks Fund (1997) Lory & Carol Marlantes Family Charitable Fund (2005) Marlin-van Stockum Fund (1995) Alfred J. Marrow Fund (1974) Erika & Peter Marsh Charitable Fund (2008) Patricia T. Marshall Fund (1998) Vincent James Mastronardi/Thomas J. Fahey Memorial Fund (1993) * Mathews Fund (2012) MacDonald Mathey Fund (2001) Mathys Fund (2000) Michael & Paula Maturo Family Fund (2009) Joyce Matz Fund (2006) Edward Maverick Fund (1963) Maxwell Family Fund (1991) Claudia Kress Mayberry Fund (2000) Jessica Kress Mayberry Fund (2000) Paul M. Mazur Fund (1945) McAfee Foundation Fund (2003) Sarah S. McAlpin Fund (1996) Townsend Martin McAlpin Fund (1983) Blanche & Edwin D. McArthur Fund (1999) McCaffrey Family Fund (1985) McClendon Fund (1999) Cyrus McCormick & Florence S. McCormick Memorial Fund (1995) Colonel & Mrs. Henry Bayard McCoy Memorial Fund (1957) Ruth McCreary Fund No. 1 (2001) Ruth McCreary Fund No. 2 (2001) Alonzo L. McDonald Family Fund (1983) Donald Wesley McDougall Memorial Fund (1991) John Todd McDowell Environmental Fund (2004) Michael R. McGarvey Fund (2001) Richard E. “Rusty” McGivney Memorial Fund (1999) John F. & Jean C. McIlwain Fund (1995) Mark McInerney Fund (1986) Emily McIntyre Means Fund (1995) Dave McKennan Memorial Fund (2003) Isabel C. McKenzie Fund (1952) Janet H. McPherson Memorial Funds for Children (1984) McWhelan Fund (2011) Kurt A. & Therese A. Melden Fund (2006) Melzer Fund (1994) Toni Mendez Fund (2003) Friedrike Merck Fund (2002) George W. Merck Fund (1987) John Merck Fund (1981) Helen Merrill Fund (1998) * Marjorie Merryman Fund (2012) Ralph D. Mershon Trust (1953) LuEsther T. Mertz Advised Fund (1995) LuEsther T. Mertz Fund (1995) Charles Merz & Evelyn Scott Merz Memorial Fund No. 1 (1984) Charles Merz & Evelyn Scott Merz Memorial Fund No. 2 (1984) Merz Supplemental Fund (1986) Albion & Natalie Metcalf Fund (2010) Sharon Metrick Memorial Fund (2001) Helen F. & Alfred S. Meyer Fund (2008) Michaels Fund (1979) Jeanne Michaud Gift (1964) Middle Road Fund (1983) Midnight Mission Fund (1974)
Midtown Fund (1997) Gregory Millard Memorial Fund (1985) Earl Miller Fund (2006) M.J.H. Fund (1964) MLW Advised Fund (1998) Mobility Rehabilitation Fund (1964) Leo Model Fund (1988) Moles Scholarship Fund (1996) Molly & Carl Fund (2000) Moore Family Fund (1994) AF Moore Fund (2010) Anne L. Moore Fund (2010) Anne Moore & Arnold Lisio Fund (2008) Barbara F. & Richard W. Moore Fund (1997) Deborah W. & Timothy P. Moore Fund (2007) Elisabeth Moore Fund (2010) Meredith C. Moore & Abhijit Gurjal Fund (2010) Shirley I. Moore Fund (2002) Zachary Moore Fund (2010) Terence W. Moore Memorial Fund (2004) Moosehead Fund (1996) Arthur G. Moraes Memorial Fund (1999) Marie Morgello Book Fund (1993) Jenny Morgenthau & Eugene R. Anderson Fund (1992) Morningside Retirement & Health Services, Inc. Fund (1993) Helene & Bruce Morrell Fund (1999) Lawrence Morris Charitable Trust (1992) Robert C. Morris & Aline B. Morris Fund (1939) Alice V. & Dave H. Morris Memorial (1958) Jennifer Emily Morris Memorial Fund (1985) Ray Mortenson - Jean Wardle Fund (1996) George T. Mortimer Foundation (1970) Morvillo Abramowitz Grand Iason & Anello, P.C. (2006) Moses Fund (1992) Henry & Lucy Moses Fund (2011) Hanna & Jeffrey Moskin Family Fund (1997) Sam & Fanny Moskowitz Fund (1986) James Mossman Fund (2000) Daniel Motulsky & Caitlin Pincus Fund (2006) Mount of Olives Fund (1989) Suzanne C. & Carl M. Mueller Charitable Fund (1999) Frieda Mueller Fund (1981) Joanna Mufson Memorial Trust Fund (1983) Mulber Fund (1947) Stephen Mulderry Memorial Fund (2001) T.F. Mulvoy Charitable Fund (2008) Alexandra Munroe Fund (2002) Munson Foundation (1978) Marjorie Oatman Munson Memorial Fund (1980) William & Janice Murphy Charitable Fund (2003) Thomas W. & Florence T. Murphy Fund (1984) Thomas W. Murphy, Jr. Fund (2011) Virginia Murphy Memorial Scholarship Fund (1954) Musical Arts Fund (1939)
N
Joseph Nacmias Fund (2011) Nager-Wentworth Fund (1993) Anni P. Nalbandian Memorial Scholarship Fund (1997) Nana & Annie’s Fund (1999) * Naskeag Fund (2012) Murray L. & Belle C. Nathan Fund (1996) Walter W. Naumburg Memorial No.1 (1960)
Walter W. Naumburg Memorial No. 2 (1960) Navesink River Group Fund (2002) Gabe & Beth Nechamkin Fund (1997) Richard H. Needham Fund (1995) Nancy F. & Daniel A. Neff Charitable Fund (2011) Ilse Nelson Fund (1986) Ness Fund (1972) Neuberger Berman Fund (1980) Daniel Neubourg Fund (1999) Nicole & Mark Neuhaus Fund (2000) Never Done Fund (2005) New York City AIDS Fund (1988) New York Critical Needs Endowment (2004) New York Critical Needs Fund (1975) *New York Critical Needs Fund - Hurricane Sandy (2012) New York Keller Family Fund (2004) New York Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund (1983) Annalee Newman Fund (1998) * Nancy A. Newman Fund (2012) Reverend & Mrs. R. Heber Newton Fund (2006) Hally & James Nicol Fund (1998) Herbert Nidenberg Scholarship Fund (1993) Nimble Waiter Fund (2004) Nolan Family Fund (2005) Nollmann Fund (2004) Olivia Schieffelin Nordberg Fund (1996) Northcliff Philanthropic Fund (1979) Northwest Harbor Fund (2007) Adelaide Walker Nugent Fund (1974) NYC Workforce Development Fund (2001) NYCN Fund (2010)
O
Lindsay & Terry O’Brien Fund (2002) Sheila J. O’Connell Advised Fund (1999) Sheila J. O’Connell Fund (2007) A.P.J. O’Connor Fund (1996) Robert K. & Jean O’Connor Fund (1979) Thomas & Maureen O’Connor Fund (2007) William B. O’Connor Fund (1996) Elizabeth & Brian O’Kelley Charitable Fund (2007) Charles R. O’Malley Fund (2009) Frederick J O’Meally Charitable Fund (2006) Oak & Acorn Fund (2000) Dennis Oakes & Debra Rahn-Oakes Fund (2006) Oasis Fund (1984) Octagon Fund (1978) Mary P. Oenslager Foundation Fund (1996) Abraham Oestreicher Fund (1972) John Ogden Memorial Fund (1986) Bilge Ogut-Cumbusyan Achievement Fund (2007) Florence C. Oliveira Memorial (1969) Olmezer Family Fund (1998) Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis High School Fund (1997) One NYC One Nation Fund (2010) One Region Fund (2006) Open Door Fund (1996) Oppenheim Family Fund (2000) Martin & Suzi Oppenheimer Philanthropic Fund (1998) Origo-Levy Animal Care Fund (1993) Origo-Levy Child Welfare Fund (1993) Susan Orkin Fund (2005) Maxwell Orloff Fund (1998) Linda W. Osanik Fund (2010) Donald R. Osborn Fund (1986) Courtlandt Otis Fund (1973)
Longfunds 2012 Island Funds Jeanne Marie Otter Scholarship Fund (1989) Outdoor Life Conservation Fund (1998) Overlook Fund (1971) Owen Fund (1986)
P
Bishop Robert L. Paddock Fund (2010) F. LeMoyne Page Memorial Fund (1977) Mary LeMoyne Page & Romaine LeMoyne Billings Memorial Fund (1980) Manfred Pakas Scholarship Fund (1981) Heidi Paoli Fund (1987) Katharine A. Park Funds for the Elderly (1982) William Hallock Park Research Fund (1976) Parkinson Fund (1995) Lorenzo & Isabelle Parsons Scholarship Fund (1998) Mary Sherman Parsons Fund (2005) Patricof Family Foundation Fund (1979) Robert P. Patterson Memorial (1952) Oliver H. & Lola G. Payne Fund (1994) * Barbara & Morris B. Pearl Fund (2012) Pedowitz Family Fund (1999) Peltier Family Fund (2010) Peltier Fund (2009) Pennies from Heaven Fund (2001) Penobscot Fund (1993) Donald & Miriam Marya Perkins Charitable Fund (1989) Perlman Philanthropy Fund (2009) Dorothy Perlow Fund (1996) Jacob Perlow Memorial Fund (1983) Irene Peron Fund (2000) CB Perrette Fund (1999) Virginia & Jean R. Perrette Fund (1997) Richard L. Perry Memorial (1935) Leonard L. Perskie Memorial Fund (1980) Petersmeyer Family Fund (1973) Susan Petersmeyer Fund (2009) Peter G. Peterson Fund (1977) Peter G. Peterson & Joan Ganz Cooney Fund (1980) Seymour & Beverly Peyser Fund (1986) Phil Fund (2001) Hal Philipps Fund (2003) Kenneth A. & Helen Clark Phillips Fund (1972) Charles M. Phinny Fund (1987) John P. Picone Charitable Foundation Fund (2004) Picower Fund (2011) Pilkington Family Fund (1996) Donaldson C. Pillsbury Fund (2009) Marnie S. Pillsbury Fund (2006) Pilot House Fund (1985) Pine Cone Fund (2000) Pinkerton Trust (1979) Marietta C. Pino Memorial Fund (1982) Emanuel & Nora Piore Fund (2002) Emanuel & Nora Piore Memorial Fund (2002) John Polachek Fund (1958) Samuel S. & Anne H. Polk Charitable Fund (2000) Sam & Anne Polk Family Fund (2006) Maxwell A. Pollack Fund (1986) Leo L. Pollak Memorial Fund (1984) Helene Pomerantz Memorial Fund (1991) Robert & Ellen Popper Scholarship Fund (2010) Amy & Martin Post Fund (2011) Michele Potlow Fund (2010)
Katharine Sloan Pratt Fund (2002) Robert & Barbara Preiskel Memorial Fund (2002) Sidney S. Prince Trust (1964) Thomas Pringle Memorial/Margaret Pringle Fenton Fund (1957) Thomas Pringle Memorial/Samuel Pringle Fund (1957) Robert & Ilse Prosnitz Fund (1999) Publishing Triangle Literary Fund (2004) Valerie & Michael A. Puglisi Fund (2003) Pyewacket Fund (1997)
Q
Q Fund (1996) Alan Grant Quasha Fund (2011) Diana Ronan Quasha Fund (1995) Queens College Speech & Hearing Center Fund (1999) Alan G. Quitko Fund (1997)
R
* Rabinowitz Family Fund (2012) Radin Family Fund (2005) R.A. Radley Fund (1994) Ragin Family Fund (2002) Raiziss/de Palchi Translation Award Fund (1994) Neera & Deepak Raj Fund (2007) Calvin Ramsey Scholarship Fund (2003) Addison C. Rand Fund (1940) Lynne S. Randall Charitable Fund (2009) Ralph J. Rangel Fund (1989) Rankin-Smith Fund (1985) Rawson Family Fund (2010) Katharine Rayner Fund for The New York Public Library (2009) RDG Fund (2011) Reach Fund (2007) Jeanne & Norman Reader Better English Award Fund (1997) Susan Cohen Rebell Fund (1998) Rebold Family Fund (2000) Red Dog Hill 2010 Fund (2010) Redstone Fund (1997) Philip D. Reed Fund (1996) Thomas D. & Natalie B. Rees Family Fund (1996) Helen Rehr Fund (2011) Joseph E. Reich Fund (1986) Henry H. Reichhold Scholarship Fund (1968) Reid Family Charitable Fund (2007) Cordelia & David Reimers Fund (2002) Rudyard & Emanuella Reimss Memorial Fund (2001) Reingold Family Fund (2000) Jerilyn Hayes Reiter Memorial Scholarship Fund (2001) * Remaley deBary Charitable Trust Fund (2012) Rembrandt Fund (1977) Eugene H. & Patricia C. Remmer Fund (1986) Remo Fund (2009) Karl F. Reuling Fund (1993) * Louis & Mary ReuschĂŠ Fund (2012) Reynwood Fund (1986) R. Rheinstein Fund (1999) Audrey Rheinstrom & Anne Blevins Fund (2003) Rhodebeck Central Park Conservancy Fund (1999) Rhodebeck Charitable Fund (2004) Rhodebeck Fund for the Elderly (1989) Rhodebeck Fund for the Homeless (1989)
Rhodebeck Prospect Park Fund (2005) Rhodebeck Fund for St. George’s Society of New York (2001) * Richard & Mildred T. Rhodebeck Fund (2012) Grantland Rice Fellowship Fund (1951) Marion & George Riley Fund (1968) Rinaker Family Fund (1983) Henry P. Riordan Fund (1990) James & Gloria Riordan Fund (1983) Jordan Carlson Riordan & James Quentin Riordan III Memorial Fund (2003) Rippe Family Fund (2001) Virginia S. Risley Family Fund (1995) Virginia S. Risley Fund (2004) Rita Fund (2008) Kimberly Ritrievi Fund (2004) RME Fund (2007) RMT Family Fund (2010) Emilie D. Robb Fund (1938) Patricia & Yves Robert Fund (1998) Roberts Family Fund (1999) Robinson-Morrill Fund (1992) Barbara Paul Robinson & Charles Raskob Robinson Fund (1996) Marguerite P. Roche Fund (1972) Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial Fund (1928) Mary French Rockefeller Fund (1997) Rogers Family Fund (1995) Sarah & Harry Rogers Fund (1994) Dr. Joseph Richard Rongetti Scholarship Fund (1996) Hugh & Katherine Roome Charitable Fund (2003) Curtis Roosevelt Fund (1989) Jonathan F.P. Rose & Diana Calthorpe Rose Fund (1996) Richard Rose Fund (1981) Rose/Margulies Fund (1997) Jack & Mae Rosenberg Fund (1997) Rosenbloom Family Fund (2011) Rosenfeld Family Fund (1986) June S. Rosenfeld Memorial Fund (1989) Susan Rosenfeld Fund (1998) Allen Rosenshine Minority Education & Training Fund (2000) John P. Rosenthal Fund (1973) Rosenthal-Schneier Fund (2009) Ida Ross Memorial Fund (1986) Lila & Arnold S. Ross Charitable Fund (2000) Clara Lewisohn Rossin Trust (1949) Robert & Amy Rothman Family Fund (2007) Steven & Barbara Rothman Fund (2011) Edmond de Rothschild Fund (2000) Lynn Forester de Rothschild Fund (2002) Roxbury Fund (1997) RSVP---For The Children Fund (2006) Paul & Pam Rubin Family Fund (2007) Lisa Cordell Rubin Fund (1995) Samuel N. & Charlotte Rubin Fund (1996) Frederic A. & Susan A. Rubinstein Fund (1986) Helena Rubinstein Fund (2011) Harry J. Rudick Fund (1988) Rue de Reves Fund (1987) G & M Rufrano Fund (2007) Thomas Ruotolo Scholarship Fund (1985) William D. Russell Fund (1971) Guy G. Rutherfurd Fund (2011) Rx Foundation Fund (2006) Rye Scholarship Fund (1977)
S
Myrten G. & Lillian V. Saake Memorial Fund (1994) Daniel Saccomanno Fund (1996) Bonnie & Peter Sacerdote Family Fund (1975) Samuel Sacks Funds (1975) Safer-Fearer Fund (1998) Nola Safro Fund (2011) Dr. Abraham & Shirley Saifer Fund (1992) St. Christopher’s School Fund (1974) David G. Salten Fund (2007) Samaratrophia Fund (1995) Nathan & Nancy Sambul Fund (1997) Stacey Sanders Fund (2001) Sarah A. Sanford Fund (1949) Linda U. Sanger Charitable Fund (1999) Louis & Carolyn Sapir Family Fund (1998) Matthew P. Sapolin Fund (2011) * Sare-Krevolin Fund (2012) Michael Sasse Charitable Fund (2001) James & Sarah Scanlon Fund (2003) Brigitte Holmen Schattenfield Family Fund (2002) Dossie Schattman Fund (2007) Marielle J. Scheff Fund (2002) Robert & Mae Scheff Fund (2007) Scheide Fund (1971) Schein Family Memorial Fund (1987) Henry Schein Inc., Company Fund (2003) Ruth & James Scheuer Fund (2010) Jacob H. Schiff Memorial (1924) Jacqueline Schiller Fund (1998) * David L. Schlapbach Charitable Fund (2012) Max G. Schlapp Mental Hygiene Fund (1979) Schlegel Family Fund (2005) Shain Schley Fund (1999) Grace & Edith Schneider Memorial Fund (1949) Schneiderman Family Fund (1994) * Estella J. Schoen Charitable Fund (2012) Anna E. Schoen-Rene Fund (1942) Frederick K. Schoff & Maureen A. Mackey Charitable Gift Fund (2009) Scholarships For Kids Fund (1993) School Fund (2007) Lillian Schulman Memorial Fund (2007) John W. Schulz Memorial Fund (2000) Stephen A. Schwarzman Fund (1999) Robert J. Schweich Fund (1981) Alfred H. Schwendtner Fund (1996) Sandra Scime Charitable Fund (2007) Isabelle Scott Fund for the Arts (2010) Gail Aidinoff Scovell & Edward P. Scovell Fund (1986) Sea Cliff Fund (1986) Seal Point Foundation (1966) Sealion Charitable Fund (1998) Selby/Vail Fund (2001) Selig Family Fund (2009) Mamie Seller Memorial Fund (1978) Jerome & Joan Serchuck Fund (1971) Serena Foundation Fund (2010) Alfred M. Serex Fund (1999) Severinghaus Fund (2011) J. Walter & Helen C. Severinghaus Fund (1988) William H. Seward, Jr. Fund (1962) Sewell Fund (2007) Shah-Domenicali Family Fund (2005) Harris Shapiro Fund (1996) Shaw Foundation Fund (1964) Sheinberg Family Fund (1996) Serena Fairchild Sheldon Fund (2009)
Lola J. Sherman Fund (1937) Fannie Sherr Fund (2006) * Shiffman Family Fund (2012) Jack & Dorothy Shulman Memorial Fund (1984) Anne P. & Constantine Sidamon-Eristoff Fund (2007) Catherine & Andrew Sidamon-Eristoff Family Fund (2003) Elizabeth Sidamon-Eristoff Fund (2003) Simon Sidamon-Eristoff Fund (2003) Siebert Family Fund (2001) Shari Siegel Fund (2007) Jayne M. Silberman Fund (1986) Lois & Samuel Silberman Grant Fund (1992) Ruth & Marvin Silberman Memorial Fund (1967) Al & Rosa Silverman Fund (1994) Alan Silverman Charitable Fund (2004) Lynn Silverman Family Fund (2006) Marty & Dorothy Silverman Fund (2001) Silverstein Family Fund (2007) Arlene B. Simon Fund (1986) Suzanne Cohn Simon Fund (2003) Robert M. Sims/Robert L. Albright Fund (2009) Simpson Thacher & Bartlett Fund (1995) Cecile Singer Fund (2000) Stephen Sirkin Memorial Fund (1984) Skilen Fund (1996) Skipjack Fund (2006) * Charitable Fund of Law Offices of Regina Skyer & Associates (2012) Randy Slifka Philanthropic Fund (2006) * Bowen & Janet Smith Family Fund (2012) Deborah A. Smith Fund (1986) Jacqueline & Albert Smith Fund (1993) Richard L. Snyder Fund (1991) Laura Solinger Fund (1993) L. & S. Soll Fund (1998) David & Nancy Solomon Fund (2000) Hannah Fox Solomon Fund (2002) John D. Solomon Fund for Public Service (2010) Solow Foundation Philanthropic Fund (1988) Abe, Lena & Irin Soskis Memorial Fund (1984) Abe, Lena & Irin Soskis Memorial Fund No. 2 (1984) Fernando Soto, Jr. Fund (2000) Alireza Soudavar Fund (1986) Mammadi Soudavar Memorial Fellowship Fund (1982) Patricia & Michael Sovern Fund (2003) Rose M. Soybel Rose Garden Fund (1997) Carol & Charles Spaeth Memorial Fund (1986) * Spanky Tomato Fund (2012) Special Fund No. 11 (1968) Special Fund No. 14 (1950) Special Fund No. 20 (1962) Tivy Spence Achievement Fund (1999) Arthur L. Spencer Memorial Scholarship Fund (2002) Sperry Van Ness/Joe French Endowment Fund (2004) Marion R. Spinnler Education Fund (1970) Spurlino Family Fund (2006) Squadron A Fund (1983) Nicholas Warren Squires Family Fund (1991) Stack Family Fund (1994) Stadler Fund (1997) Ilma Stafford-Greene Fund (1977) Stankard Family Fund (2010) Alma Timolat Stanley Fund (1987)
Stanley, Story, Crane Fund (2010) Staples Family Fund (2008) Stars & Stripes Fund (1988) Betty J. Stebman Fund (2003) Ellen & David Stein Fund (2009) Steinberg Charitable Fund (2005) Albert & Marie Steinert Fund (1991) Stemland Family Fund (1991) Stephens Bequest (1942) Sterling Fund (1985) Douglas Stern Philanthropic Fund (2007) Henry J. Stern & Robert F. Wagner, Jr. Fund (1982) Ettie Stettheimer Memorial Fund (1961) Gertrude Stewart Memorial Scholarship Fund (1971) Kate H. Stiassni Fund (1999) * Nancy J. Stockford Donor-Advised Fund (2012) Stonehome Fund (1956) Samantha Fairchild Storkerson Fund (2009) Edward K. Straus Fund (1951) Joan Fuld Strauss Charitable Fund (2011) Lise Strickler & Mark Gallogly Charitable Fund (2010) Stronach-Buschel Fund (1995) Carole Stupell Travel Award Program (2003) Sunlight Fund (2009) Billy Sunshine Memorial Scholarship Fund (1985) Surrogate’s Court Fund (1991) John & Mary Suydam Family Fund (2007) R. Swayze Gay & Lesbian Youth Fund (1996) John & Devereux Swing Philanthropy Fund (1998)
T
Hazaros Tabakoglu Scholarship Fund (1994) Robert A. Taft Institute of Government Trust (1969) W. Pike Talbert Charitable Fund (1986) Peter Talbert Charity Fund (1999) Nancy & Jay Talbot Fund (2009) James Talcott Fund (1974) Helen S. Tanenbaum Award Fund (2004) Helen S. Tanenbaum Fund (1954) Nicki & Harold Tanner Fund (2001) Rachel Tanur Memorial Fund (2002) * Tate Family Fund (2012) Dave Taylor Memorial Fund (1995) William J. Taylor Fund (1939) TechnoServe Fund (1993) B. & U. Tenny Fund (2009) Buzz Tenny Fund (2011) William Clark Terry Scholarship Fund (1983) Thackeray Fund (2005) Third Millennium Fund (1973) Thomas COPD Fund (1996) Thomas Fund (1995) Marvin & Doris Thomas Fund (1996) Grandchildren of Fred & Florence Thomases Fund (1999) Suzanne Thompson Fund (2007) Judith Dana Thorne Fund (1990) Nathan C. & Margaret Y. Thorne Fund (2004) Nathan & Nicholas Thorne Fund (2003) Olaf J. & Margaret L. Thorp Fund (1987) 316th Association Memorial Fund (1994) 316th Infantry Monument Fund (1969) Three Ninety Fund (1972) Jane M. Timken Charitable Fund (1987) Tobacco Pink Fund (1977) Carol H. Tolan Fund (1997)
Long Island Funds Nathaniel & Sarah Tooker Fund (1972) Tor Family Fund (1999) Arnold & Caren Toren Fund (2004) Raymond & Beverly Tower Fund (1997) Town Hill School Fund (1993) Tozer Family Fund (1987) Traer Fund (1976) Traub-Dicker Rainbow Fund (2010) Charles Welford Travis Trust (1981) Joseph Michael Tremarco Memorial Fund (2007) Trevor Fund (1986) Harry D. Triantafillu Fund (1986) Harry D. Triantafillu Fund No. 2 (2001) Trinity Chapel Home Fund (1960) Tripod Fund (1979) Jean L. & Raymond S. Troubh Family Fund (1998) John B. & Louisa S. Troubh Fund (1993) Elizabeth D. Trussell Fund (2005) Ruth Hung-Fang Tung Memorial Fund (2011) Turanski Family Compassionate Acceptance Fund (2004) Turner Fund (1999) Christopher Turner & Tracy Turner Charitable Fund (2005) Paul N. Turner Bequest (1960) Charles P. Twichell Fund (1995) 2005 Charitable Trust Fund (2005) 2007 Charitable Trust Fund (2007)
U
Beth M. Uffner Arts Fund (1998) Umbrella Fund (2009) Don & Patricia Underwood Fund (2003) * Marjorie & Clarence E. Unterberg Foundation, Inc. Fund (2012) Up-town Fund (2008)
V
Vacolo Fund (2000) Gilad Vaday Fund (2000) Anne van Biema Fund (1996) van Hengel Family Fund (1980) Edward & Sally Van Lier Fund (1988) Lottie Grace Vanderveer Fund (2003) Lottie Grace Vanderveer Fund No. 2 (2003) Nancy Veith Fund (2003) Rudolf & Anna Marie Vetter Memorial Fund (1977) R.G. Viault Family Fund (1999) Viburnum Trilobum Fund (2003) Victory Fund (2010) John L. Vigorita, M.D. Memorial Fund (1991) Vinmont Fund (2006) Vo Van Jacques & Thai Thi Tam Memorial Fund (2004) David & Johanna Voell Family Fund (2001) Gregory & Elyzabeth Voell Family Fund (2001) Jeffrey & Stephanie Voell Family Fund (2001) Richard & Virginia Voell Family Fund (1986) Vogel Family Charitable Fund (2006) Hans A. Vogelstein Memorial Scholarship Fund (1982) Mrs. Claus von Bulow Fund (1971) Enders M. Voorhees Fund (1973)
W
Michael & Marcy Wade Family Fund (2006) Marian Marcus Wahl Memorial Fund (1985) * Wainwright Fund (2012) Bayard Walker, Jr. Charitable Fund (2003)
Christina Walker Fund (2003) J. Miller Walker Fund (2005) Walker-Pratt Family Fund (2003) DeWitt Wallace Fund for Youth (1982) Frederick J. & Theresa Dow Wallace Fund (1977) Lila Acheson Wallace Fund for the Arts (1984) Theresa Dow Wallace Scholarship Fund (1975) Wallace Special Projects Fund (1991) Waller-Davidson Fund (1980) * John J. Walsh Fund (2012) Anthony W. & Lulu C. Wang Fund (1996) N.T. & Mabel Wang Charitable Fund (2004) Moritz & Charlotte Warburg Memorial (1925) Elizabeth & Andrew Ward Charitable Fund (2006) David Warfield Funds (1951) David & Mary Warfield Funds (1973) Mary Warfield Fund (1971) Bradford A. & Nancy H. Warner Fund (1985) Watcha Fund (1988) Wattles Family Charitable Trust Fund (1981) Alice W. Wattles Fund (1974) James Howard Wattles Fund (1947) Jordan & Caren Waxman Charitable Fund (2010) Weatherhead Foundation Fund (2007) Albert J. Weatherhead III Foundation Fund (2010) Weber Family Fund (2002) Damon Weber Fund (2005) Weigel Family Fund (1999) John L. Weinberg Family Fund (2003) Alex E. Weinberg Fund (2007) Edna & Frederick Weingarten Fund (1984) Seymour & Kathleen Weingarten Fund (2005) Seymour & Rose Weinstock Fund (1999) Weintz Family Foundation (1980) Weintz Family Fund (1995) Mabel W. Weir Trust (1978) Raphael & Julia Weis Fund (2011) Nathan H. Weiss Memorial Fund (1999) Rebecca & Nathan Weiss Fund (1997) WellMet Group Fund (1999) William E. Welsh Jr. Family Fund (1978) West End Road Fund (1988) Herbert B. West Fund (1989) Florence & Elliot Westin Fund (2010) Wheeler Fund (1992) Betty Wheeler Fund (1991) * Where There’s A Will Fund (2012) Letitia M. Whipp Memorial Fund (1972) Bill Whitehead Award Fund (1993) Edward B. Whitney Fund (1986) Frederic J. Whiton Fund (1960) Wiccopee Fund (1986) Mary L. Wiener/Sanford M. Cohen Fund (1986) Carleton Wiggins & Donald Bain Trust (1982) Donna Bain Wiggins Trust (1982) Robert O. Wilder Fund (1989) Mason Wiley Memorial Fund (1995) Cynthia & Alan Wilkinson Fund (2003) Henry K. S. Williams Trust No. 1 (1944) Henry K. S. Williams Trust No. 2 (1944) Mildred Anna Williams Fund (1940) Oscar Williams & Gene Derwood Fund (1971) Robert I. & Lucille B. Williams Fund (1996) Sarah Williams & Andrew Kimball Fund (1999) Bruce R. Williamson Fund (1998) Douglas Williamson Fund (1997) Willkie Farr & Gallagher Fund (1984) Sam Wilner Fund (1997) John H. T. Wilson Fund (1988)
William Ross Reid Wilson Memorial Fund (1991) Wilton-Risdon Fund (1994) Wiltwyck School Fund (1988) Wind Down Fund (1989) Windie Knowe Fund (2003) Windsor Fund (1977) Jay Winston Scholarship Fund (1997) John Winston Fund (1999) Winterer Fund (1986) Winthrop Family in America Fund for Groton Church (1982) John Winthrop Fund (1970) Margaret S. Winthrop Fund (1972) Leone Scott Wise Fund (1986) Witches’ Fund (1998) * Witherspoon Fund (2012) Witkin Family Fund (1988) Kate & Richard Witkin Family Fund (1988) Joanne Witty & Eugene Keilin Fund (1986) C. Theodore Wolf & Francis X. Decolator II Fund (1996) Wolfe/Inadomi Fund (2007) Ross Wollen Charitable Fund (1997) Women First Fund (2007) Jadin Wong Fund (2011) Wood Thrush Fund (2004) Joseph Woolfson Fund (2010) World Trade Center Hoboken Memorial Scholarship Fund (2002) World-Wide Fund (2002) World-Wide Holdings, Inc. Fund (2002) Clara Kennon Worley Fund (1973) Worth Fund (1992) Wray Family Fund (1986) Wrede Fund (2009) Thomas & Maureen Wright Family Fund (2005) Seymour B. Wurzler Bequest (1963)
Y
J. Ernest Grant Yalden Memorial Fund (1956) Yamin Family Fund (1994) Yancey Family Fund (1986) Dr. Walter M. Yannett Memorial Fund (2011) Yaseen Lectures on the Fine Arts (1971) Millicent B. Yinkey Fund (2007) Samuel McC. & Lizora M. Yonce Fund (1986) H. R. Young & Betty G. Young Fund (1979) Nancy Young & Paul B. Ford, Jr. Fund (1986) Thomas & Elsie Young Fund (2000) Stephane Yulita Children’s Fund (1989) Stephane Yulita & Inge Kadon Fund (2000)
Z
Judith & Stanley Zabar Fund (1993) John & Catherine Zacharias Family Fund (2003) Eileen E. Zaglin Scholarship Fund (1993) Steve Zang Fund (1999) Zarin Family Fund (2009) Ziano Fund (2007) Zimmerman Family Fund (2002) Joel Zimmerman Fund (1996) Zofnass/Ring Family Fund (1991) ZPM Fund (1986)
2012 grants The organizations listed below received grants of $20,000 or more. Included in the list are grantees specifically recommended by advisors to individual funds. Organizations are in New York State unless otherwise indicated. A
A Better Chance, $31,200 Academy of American Poets, $41,000 Academy of Mount Saint Ursula, $25,250 ACCION USA, $30,396 Actors Fund, $34,300 Adelphi University, $87,500 Adhikaar for Human Rights and Social Justice, $25,000 Adventure Unlimited (Colo.), $81,000 Advocates for Children of New York, $257,350 African Services Committee, $50,000 African Wildlife Foundation (D.C.), $43,500 Afro Latin Jazz Alliance, $70,000 AFS-USA, $168,000 After-School Corporation, $80,000 Aging in New York Fund, $200,000 AgitArte (Mass.), $30,000 AIDS Community Research Initiative of America, $90,000 Alvin Ailey Dance Foundation, $28,250 Akindale Rehabilitation & Land Conservation Fund, $25,000 Ali Forney Center, $51,250 Allen-Stevenson School, $31,251 Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound (Mass.), $25,000 Alliance for Quality Education, $246,963 Alliance of Resident Theatres/New York, $300,850 Allied Community Enterprises, $22,000 Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorders Association (Ill.), $41,900 Amazon Conservation Team (Va.), $40,000 American Associates of the Royal National Theatre, $22,580 American Astronomical Society (D.C.), $22,000 American Bird Conservancy (Va.), $60,000 American Cancer Society Eastern Division, $42,856 American Civil Liberties Union Foundation, $69,400 American Diabetes Association (Va.), $32,500 American Farm School, $77,300 American Folk Art Museum, $69,000 American Foundation for AIDS Research, $22,000 American Foundation for the Paris School of Economics, $30,000
American Friends of the Hebrew University, $63,990 American Friends of Georgia (Mass.), $20,000 American Friends of the Rabin Medical Center, $50,000 American Friends Service Committee (Pa.), $24,750 American Friends of Tel Aviv University, $84,000 American Geriatrics Society, $100,000 American Heart Association, Founders Affiliate, $309,160 American Heart Association, Westchester/ Putnam Region, $26,840 American Himalayan Foundation (Calif.), $20,000 American Hospital of Paris Foundation, $25,000 American Jewish Committee, $412,050 American Museum of Natural History, $217,250 American Red Cross in Greater New York, $60,838 American Red Cross/National Headquarters (D.C.), $62,060 American Rivers (D.C.), $35,000 American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (D.C.), $46,650 American Textile History Museum (Mass.), $100,000 American University (D.C.), $33,000 American University in Cairo, $26,000 Americans for Campaign Reform (N.H.), $25,000 Americas Society, $150,000 Amida Care, $612,000 Amnesty International of the USA, $32,600 Anti-Defamation League, $100,730 Apollo Theater Foundation, $20,000 Appalachian Community Fund (Tenn.), $168,000 Appeal of Conscience Foundation, $50,000 Arab American Association of New York, $40,000 Armory Foundation, $60,250 Art Education for the Blind, $65,000 Arthritis Foundation, Northeast Region, $49,250 Asia Society, $41,500 Asian American Coalition for Children and Families, $52,250 Aspen Institute (D.C.), $302,000 Asphalt Green, $25,000 Association of the Bar of the City of New York Fund, $116,200 Association of Graduates of the United States Military Academy, $57,473 Atlantic Council of the United States (D.C.), $25,000
B
B Lab Company, $50,000 Bahamas Environment Fund (Fla.), $20,000 Baldwin-Wallace College (Ohio), $25,000 Ballet Hispanico of New York, $48,050 Ballet Theatre Foundation, $253,070 Bang On A Can, $35,000 Bank Street College of Education, $179,500 Barium Springs Home for Children (N.C.), $70,260 Barnard College, $46,000 F. D. Barstow Memorial School (Vt.), $25,000 Baruch College Fund, $225,750 Janada L. Batchelor Foundation for Children (Okla.), $20,000 Battery Conservancy, $25,250 Bay Shore Schools Arts Education Fund, $25,000 Bay Street Theatre Festival, $23,500 Vivian Beaumont Theater/Lincoln Center Theater, $77,500 Becket Athenaeum (Mass.), $25,900 Bed Stuy’s Project Re-Generation, $20,000 B.E.L.L. Foundation (Mass.), $20,000 Beth Israel Medical Center, $25,300 Beverly Bootstraps Food Pantry (Mass.), $37,900 Bhutan Foundation (D.C.), $26,000 Big & Lil Marsh Productions, $26,000 Big Apple Circus, $52,450 Big Brothers Big Sisters of New York City, $90,750 Blue Card, $25,750 Blue Planet Foundation (Hawaii), $26,000 Blue Wave Public Interest Foundation (N.J.), $25,000 Boca Grande Women’s Club (Fla.), $20,000 Boston College (Mass.), $69,500 Boston Symphony Orchestra (Mass.), $44,850 Boston University (Mass.), $137,000 Bowdoin College (Maine), $31,500 Boy Scouts of America, Greater New York Councils, $115,620 Breakthrough Cambridge (Mass.), $25,000 BRIC Arts/Media/Bklyn, $79,000 Brick Presbyterian Church, $20,667 Bridge Fund of New York, $971,000 Bridge Fund of Westchester, $51,600 Bridgeport Child Advocacy Coalition (Conn.), $20,000 Brigham and Women’s Hospital (Mass.), $25,000 Bronx Center for Science & Mathematics, $22,000 Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center, $80,000 Bronx Museum of the Arts, $23,400 BronxWorks, $70,000 Brookings Institution (D.C.), $152,500
2012 grants Brookline Community Mental Health Center (Mass.), $21,500 Brooklyn Academy of Music, $173,185 Brooklyn Arts Council, $75,000 Brooklyn Blizzards Youth Organization, $35,000 Brooklyn Botanic Garden Corporation, $32,300 Brooklyn Childcare Collective, $30,000 Brooklyn Children’s Museum Corporation, $21,300 Brooklyn Conservatory of Music, $20,000 Brooklyn Greenway Initiative, $40,250 Brooklyn Hospital Center, $50,500 Brooklyn Housing & Family Services, $50,000 Brooklyn Museum, $137,610 Brooklyn Navy Yard Development Corporation, $65,000 Brooklyn Public Library, $42,650 Brooklyn Workforce Innovations, $50,150 Brooks School (Mass.), $218,250 Brookville Reformed Church, $20,000 Trisha Brown Dance Company, $70,000 Brown University (R.I.), $506,750 Browning School, $101,250 Brownsville Community Development Corporation, $35,000 Bryant University (R.I.), $101,250 Bryn Mawr College (Pa.), $29,783 Buckley Country Day School, $20,000 Bucknell University (Pa.), $68,000 Building Preservation Foundation (Md.), $25,000 Winifred Masterson Burke Rehabilitation Hospital, $22,950 Jacob Burns Film Center, $96,170 Business Executives for National Security (D.C.), $25,000
C
Callen-Lorde Community Health Center, $77,500 Cambridge in America, $50,000 Camera Club of New York, $25,000 Camp DeWolfe, $20,000 Campaign for Atlantic Offshore Wind (Va.), $200,000 Cancer Care, $823,030 Cancer Research Institute, $60,500 Canterbury School (Conn.), $106,500 Caramoor Center for Music and the Arts, $85,594 CARE USA Northeast Region, $26,060 Career Transition for Dancers, $266,100 Caribbean Cultural Center African Diaspora Institute, $50,000 Carnegie Hall Society, $35,050 Carnegie Mellon University (Pa.), $87,500 Carter Burden Center for the Aging, $83,000 Carthusian Foundation in America (Vt.), $111,480 Carving Studio and Sculpture Center (Vt.), $50,000 CAST Resources (Mass.), $400,500 Cathedral Church of Saint John the Divine, $30,500 Catholic Charities Community Services, Archdiocese of New York, $40,250
Catholic Charities Brooklyn and Queens, $75,000 Catholic Relief Services of the U.S. Catholic Conference (Md.), $173,990 Catholic Schools Foundation (Mass.), $50,000 Catholic University of America (D.C.), $48,250 Cave Canem Foundation, $34,000 Center for Advancing Health (D.C.), $25,000 Center for Alternative Sentencing and Employment Services, $80,000 Center for American Progress (D.C.), $100,000 Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (D.C.), $51,000 Center for Biological Diversity (Ariz.), $75,000 Center for Children’s Initiatives, $63,000 Center for Economic Opportunity, $350,000 Center for Governmental Research, $60,000 Center for Large Landscape Conservation (Mont.), $82,000 Center for the National Interest (D.C.), $35,000 Center for New Community (Ill.), $41,667 Center for Public Integrity (D.C.), $50,000 Center for Puppetry Arts (Ga.), $50,000 Center of Theological Inquiry (N.J.), $25,000 Center for Working Families, $81,000 Central American Refugee Center - CARECEN NY, $20,500 Central Park Conservancy, $300,647 Central Synagogue, $31,580 Centurion Ministries (N.J.), $50,000 Champion Access, $20,000 Chapin School, $26,250 Chatham United Methodist Church (N.J.), $36,000 Chesapeake Bay Foundation (Md.), $95,000 Child Abuse Prevention Services $25,000 Child Advocates of Connecticut, $35,000 Child Care Council of Nassau, $32,500 Child Mind Institute, $81,500 Children of Fallen Patriots Foundation (Conn.), $25,500 Children’s Environmental Health Center of the Hudson Valley, $25,000 Children’s Health and Research Foundation, $25,000 Children’s Aid Society, $159,930 Children’s Foundation of Memphis (Tenn.), $70,260 Children’s Museum of New Hampshire, $20,000 Children’s Rights, $70,750 Children’s Storefront, $97,250 Choate Rosemary Hall Foundation (Conn.), $205,850 Chocolate Factory Theater, $43,000 Choice for All, $20,000 Christodora, $86,000 Church of the Heavenly Rest, $29,250 Church of the Immaculate Conception, $25,000 Cinterandes (Fla.), $30,000 Citizens Campaign for the Environment, $25,000 Citizens’ Committee for Children of New York, $37,950
Citizens Committee for New York City, $163,000 Citizens Crime Commission of New York City, $100,000 Citizens Housing and Planning Council of New York, $79,344 Citizens Union Foundation of the City of New York, $31,500 City College of CUNY, $54,622 City Futures, $85,000 City Harvest, $207,300 City Health Works, $50,000 City Limits, $40,000 City Lore, $84,250 City Parks Foundation, $36,500 City Seminary of New York, $120,000 City University of New York, $285,000 Citymeals-on-Wheels, $112,700 Citywide Council of Presidents of the New York City Housing Authority, $35,000 Clean Air Task Force (Mass.), $100,000 Clean Energy Group (Vt.), $100,000 CLL Global Research Foundation (Texas), $250,000 Coalition for the Homeless, $163,350 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, $124,800 Colgate University, $35,423 College at Brockport, SUNY, $25,000 College of William and Mary (Va.), $22,500 College of Saint Elizabeth (N.J.), $112,480 College Summit (D.C.), $25,000 Collegiate School, $115,450 Colorado State University, $82,000 Columbia Land Conservancy, $78,850 Columbia University, $922,650 Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, $188,160 Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, $81,470 Columbia University, Mailman School of Public Health, $83,000 Columbia University, Teachers College, $25,800 Committee for Economic Development (D.C.), $30,000 Committee for Charlotte 2012 (N.C.), $51,000 Committee to Protect Journalists, $25,000 Common Sense Media (Calif.), $25,000 Community Foundation of New Jersey, $324,660 Community Health Action of Staten Island, $65,000 Community Health Care Association of New York State, $150,000 Community Healthcare Network, $50,000 Community Partners (Calif.), $25,500 Community Resource Exchange, $233,860 Community Rowing (Mass.), $25,000 Community Service Society of New York, $123,990 Community Solutions, $182,000 Community Voices Heard, $70,000 Concern Worldwide U.S., $27,000 Concert Artists Guild, $196,828 Congregation Emanu-El of the City of New York, $37,318 Congregation Emanu-el of Westchester, $28,450 Congregation Kol Ami, $50,999
Congregation Rodeph Sholom, $24,800 Connecticut Fund for the Environment, $96,000 Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, Smithsonian Institution, $60,860 Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art, $45,950 Coordinated Behavioral Care, $175,000 Cornell Cooperative Extension - Suffolk County, $21,000 Cornell University, $87,605 Joan and Sanford I. Weill Medical College of Cornell University, $330,820 Coro New York Leadership Center, $110,000 Correctional Association of New York, $36,500 Council of Churches of Greater Bridgeport (Conn.), $30,000 Council on Foreign Relations, $92,500 Council on Foundations (Va.), $44,500 Council of Senior Centers and Services of New York City, $50,500 Covenant House New York, $21,100 CPC Behavioral Healthcare (N.J.), $25,000 Crisis Ministries of Princeton and Trenton (N.J.), $50,000 Crossnore School (N.C.), $70,260 CUNY School of Law Foundation, $245,000 Cystic Fibrosis Foundation (Md.), $44,000 Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, Greater New York Chapter, $48,590
D
Dalton School, $196,850 Damayan Migrant Workers Association, $20,000 Dance/USA (D.C.), $30,000 Dancewave, $58,500 Danspace Project, $95,500 Darrow School, $50,000 Dartmouth College (N.H.), $554,033 DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park (Mass.), $95,000 Deerfield Academy (Mass.), $134,500 DEMOS: A Network for Ideas & Action, $100,000 Denison University (Ohio), $25,250 Dental Lifeline Network (Colo.), $40,000 Dicapo Opera Theatre, $40,000 DKMS Americas, $25,000 Doctors Without Borders USA, $132,838 Domestic Workers United, $30,000 Frederick Douglass Academy V, $28,500 Dryden Ensemble (N.J.), $25,000 Duke University (N.C.), $44,500 Dvorak American Heritage Association, $45,000
E
Earthworks (D.C.), $74,000 Eastern Farm Workers Association, $21,000 Echoing Green Foundation, $254,000 Education Through Music, $100,250 Educational Alliance, $30,750 Educational Broadcasting Corporation/ Channel 13, $425,694 1199SEIU/League Training and Upgrading Fund, $79,000 El Puente de Williamsburg, $60,000
Elmira College, $35,500 Emelin Theatre for the Performing Arts, $64,250 Empathetics Education, $26,000 Empire Justice Center, $20,000 Empire State Future, $150,000 Martha Entenmann Tinnitus Research Center (Vt.), $75,000 Enterprise Community Partners (Md.), $100,000 Environment Northeast (Maine), $77,500 Environmental Advocates of New York, $110,750 Environmental Defender’s Law Center (Mont.), $25,000 Environmental Health Fund (Mass.), $100,000 Environmental Investigation Agency (D.C.), $20,000 Episcopal Social Services of New York, $27,390 ERASE Racism, $27,400 Esperanza Academy (Mass.), $20,000 Exodus School, $25,000 Exodus Transitional Community, $407,925 Extera Public Schools (Calif.), $85,000
F
Facing History and Ourselves National Foundation (Mass.), $48,000 Fairfield County Community Foundation (Conn.), $1,155,000 Family Centers (Conn.), $45,000 Family and Children’s Association, $136,750 Family ReEntry (Conn.), $20,000 Family Service League of Suffolk County, $37,275 Family Services of Westchester, $90,367 Farmingdale State College, SUNY, $36,000 William A. Farnsworth Library & Art Museum (Maine), $37,000 FDNY Foundation, $93,500 The Field, $77,000 Field Museum of Natural History (Ill.), $33,627 FIERCE, $25,000 Financial Clinic, $90,000 First (N.H.), $26,300 Fiscal Policy Institute, $47,000 Fitzie Foundation (Mass.), $35,000 564 Park Avenue Preservation Foundation, $27,000 Five Towns Community Center, $42,000 Flanbwayan Haitian Literacy Project, $24,000 Flea Theater, $23,800 Flushing Town Hall, $60,000 Folksbiene Yiddish Theatre, $155,000 Food Bank for New York City, $944,500 Food Bank for Westchester, $81,000 Food for the Poor (Fla.), $35,887 Fordham University, $91,725 Fordham University Graduate School of Social Service, $256,000 Forest Ethics (Calif.), $75,000 47 Palmer (Mass.), $25,000 Foundation Center, $25,000 Foundation Fighting Blindness (Md.), $55,000 Foundation for Jewish Culture, $48,000
Foundation for the People of Burma (Calif.), $20,000 Foundation for PSP CBD and Related Brain Diseases (Md.), $35,000 Foundation for the Public Schools of the Tarrytowns, $28,100 Foundation for Sustainability and Peacemaking in MesoAmerica (Texas), $30,000 Fountain House, $85,400 Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research, $30,250 Franklin and Marshall College (Pa.), $29,000 Frederick Douglass Academy, $62,000 Freer Gallery of Art of the Smithsonian Institution (D.C.), $130,000 French-American Foundation, $20,000 Fresh Air Fund, $31,925 Frick Collection, $31,000 Friends in Deed, $25,000 Friends of the High Line, $88,850 Friends of Island Academy, $65,500 Friends of LIMSAT, $50,000 Friends of the New York City Fire Department Collection, $20,000 Friends of Hilltop Hanover Farm and Environmental Center, $20,000 Friends of the Saint Andrew’s School Foundation, $30,000 Friends Seminary, $40,500 Friends of Van Cortlandt Park, $25,000 FSH Society (Mass.), $63,000 Fund for the City of New York, $237,000 Fund for the Republic (Mass.), $25,000 Fund for Modern Courts, $21,000 Fund for Public Advocacy, $100,000 Fund for Public Health in New York, $105,000 Fund for Public Schools, $200,000 Future Project (D.C.), $25,000 Futures and Options, $43,200
G
Giulio Gari Foundation, $26,000 Gateway Classical Music Society (Conn.), $22,350 General Board of Global Ministries, Women’s Division, $37,198 George Washington University (D.C.), $31,750 Georgetown University (D.C.), $32,750 Ghetto Film School, $60,000 Girl Scout Council of Greater New York, $153,250 Girls Incorporated of Westchester County, $26,500 Girls Write Now, $105,000 GirlTrek (N.J.), $115,000 Global Action Project, $50,495 Global Fund for Children (D.C.), $52,000 Global Kids, $25,870 Glynwood Center, $114,350 God’s Love We Deliver, $162,100 Good Shepherd Services, $153,000 Good Sports (Mass.), $50,000 Gordon School (R.I.), $100,000 Grace Church Community Center, $28,500 Graduate Center of the City University of New York, $130,000 Graduate Center Foundation, $171,750 Graham Windham, $225,000
2012 grants Grameen Foundation USA (D.C.), $100,000 Grand Teton National Park Foundation (Wyo.), $28,500 Grandfather Home for Children (N.C.), $70,260 Great Plains Institute for Sustainable Development (Minn.), $75,000 Greater New York Hospital Foundation, $75,000 Green Science Policy Institute (Calif.), $75,000 Greenhope Services for Women, $52,000 Greenwich Academy (Conn.), $118,070 Greenwich Country Day School (Conn.), $82,263 Groundwork Hudson Valley, $20,000 GrowNYC, $30,000 Guidance Center, $81,750 The Gunnery (Conn.), $25,750
H
Hackley School, $20,000 Hadassah, the Women’s Zionist Organization of America, $29,040 Haitian American Family of Long Island, $20,000 Hamilton College, $51,500 Hamptons International Film Festival, $20,000 Harbor Lights Theater Company, $30,000 Harlem Academy, $26,312 Harlem Children’s Zone, $30,000 Harlem RBI, $191,000 Harlem School of the Arts, $20,500 Harrison Medical Center Foundation (Wash.), $40,000 Harvard College (Mass.), $615,617 Haverford College (Pa.), $35,700 HealthCare Chaplaincy, $120,500 HeartShare Human Services of New York, $70,000 Hebrew Home for the Aged at Riverdale, $21,500 Hebrew Institute of Riverdale, $223,200 Hebrew Union College - Jewish Institute of Religion, $24,250 Herreshoff Marine Museum (R.I.), $76,000 Herstory Writers Workshop, $40,500 Hetrick-Martin Institute, $65,000 HIAS, $39,500 Hillel: Foundation for Jewish Campus Life (D.C.), $41,250 Historic Districts Council, $85,500 HIV Law Project, $30,000 Hoff-Barthelson Music School, $33,750 Hofstra University, $78,525 Homefront (N.J.), $20,000 Homeless Animal Rescue Team of Maine, $29,000 Hopkins School (Conn.), $34,668 Hospice Care Network, $37,750 Hospital for Special Surgery, $93,250 Eugenio Maria de Hostos Community College of CUNY, $100,000 Hotchkiss School (Conn.), $76,688 Hour Children, $100,000 Hudson Highlands Land Trust, $27,400 Hudson River HealthCare, $20,000 Hudson River Museum of Westchester, $26,000
Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art, $27,000 Human Development Services of Westchester, $46,950 Human Rights First, $145,250 Human Rights Watch, $132,500 Human Services Council of New York City, $60,000 Hunter College of CUNY/Bellevue School of Nursing, $215,000 Hunter College Foundation, $41,500
I
IAA Education Program, $68,000 Ifetayo Cultural Arts Academy, $61,750 Immanuel Evangelical Lutheran Church, $30,000 Independent Sector (D.C.), $32,000 Indian Mountain School (Conn.), $22,000 Infectious Disease Research Institute (Wash.), $35,000 inMotion, $51,500 Inner-City Scholarship Fund, $127,700 Institute for Advanced Study (N.J.), $20,100 Institute of International Education, $37,100 Interfaith Committee of Remembrance, $80,000 Interfaith Nutrition Network, $90,250 International Center for the Disabled, $75,000 International Center of Photography, $55,250 International Crisis Group, $25,000 International Documentary Association (Calif.), $270,000 International League of Conservation Photographers (D.C.), $25,000 International POPs Elimination Network (Calif.), $100,000 International Rescue Committee, $40,950 International Sephardic Education Foundation, $40,000 International Social Service, United States of America Branch (Md.), $69,200 International Women’s Health Coalition, $28,000 International Youth Leadership Institute, $40,000 Internationals Network for Public Schools, $80,000 Intersection (Md.), $25,000 Investor Environmental Health Network (Va.), $50,000 Inwood House, $276,250 Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, $200,000 Iridescent, $50,000 Iris House: A Center for Women Living with HIV, $52,000 Irish Repertory Theatre Company, $31,500 Isabella Geriatric Center, $73,000 Island Harvest, $61,000
J
J Street Educational Fund (D.C.), $50,000 Jackson Laboratory (Maine), $31,000 Jackson Memorial Foundation (Fla.), $30,000 James Foundation (Mo.), $922,000 Jazz at Lincoln Center, $511,000 Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation, $75,000
Jewish Board of Family and Children’s Services, $38,400 Jewish Child Care Association of New York, $41,050 Jewish Community Center of Staten Island, $60,000 Jewish Community Relations Council of New York, $55,000 Jewish Home Lifecare, $293,000 Jewish Outreach Institute, $20,000 Jewish Theological Seminary of America, $21,100 Joan Ganz Cooney Center for Media and Research, $100,000 Johns Hopkins Hospital (Md.), $1,050,605 Johns Hopkins University (Md.), $4,050,375 Joyce Theater Foundation, $46,250 Juilliard School, $311,250 Jumpstart for Young Children (Mass.), $85,000 Just Food, $70,000 Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation International, $64,250 Juvenile Justice Advocacy and Action Project, $125,000
K
Katahdin Foundation (Calif.), $100,500 Elaine Kaufman Cultural Center/Lucy Moses School for Music and Dance, $61,750 Keewaydin Foundation (Vt.), $20,000 Helen Keller International, $36,650 Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights (D.C.), $30,000 Kids’ Club of Tarrytown & Sleepy Hollow, $36,800 Kids in Distressed Situations, $25,000 King of Kings Foundation, $35,000 Kingsborough Community College Foundation, $20,000 Kneisel Hall (Maine), $28,800 Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation, $63,678 Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation (Texas), $26,750
L
La Fuerza Unida CDC, $20,000 La Jolla Playhouse (Calif.), $25,000 Lafayette College (Pa.), $42,000 Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund, $42,250 The Lamp, $50,565 Larchmont Temple, $177,590 Latino International Theater Festival of New York, $70,000 Ralph Lauren Center for Cancer Care and Prevention, $40,000 Lawrenceville School (N.J.), $100,471 Lawyers Alliance for New York, $400,500 Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law (D.C.), $115,000 Leadership Enterprise for a Diverse America, $30,000 Learning Leaders, $31,550 Learning Through an Expanded Arts Program, $38,000 Legal Action Center, $105,000 Legal Aid Society, $511,500
Legal Information for Families Today, $30,500 Legal Momentum, $75,600 Legal Services of the Hudson Valley, $65,000 Legal Services NYC - Bronx, $55,000 Legal Services NYC - Staten Island, $60,000 Lehigh University (Pa.), $20,600 Lenox Hill Hospital, $27,900 Lenox Hill Neighborhood House, $59,000 Lesbian and Gay Community Services Center, $50,000 Let’s Get Ready! $40,250 Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, $26,020 Library of American Landscape History (Mass.), $151,000 Library of America, $100,500 Lighthouse International, $392,550 Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, $204,325 Literacy Partners, $32,750 Littig House Community Center, $40,000 Live Free or Die Alliance (N.H.), $29,500 Live and Let Live Farm (N.H.), $20,000 Local Initiatives Support Corporation, $155,000 Francis J. Logan, Jr. Foundation, $20,000 Long Beach Reach, $28,000 Long Island Arts Alliance, $30,000 Long Island Cares, $53,000 Long Island Children’s Museum, $57,500 Long Island City Cultural Alliance, $45,000 Long Island Community Agriculture Network, $20,000 Long Island Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, $40,250 Long Island Council of Churches, $30,000 Long Island Jobs with Justice, $20,000 Long Island Progressive Coalition, $20,000 Long Island University, $65,000 Long Island Volunteer Center, $20,250 Long Island Wins, $20,000 Long Term Care Community Coalition, $38,000 Lowell School (D.C.), $70,000 Lower East Side Tenement Museum, $30,000 Louisiana State University, $25,000 Lymphoma Foundation, $25,000 Lymphoma Research Foundation, $26,500
M
Macula Foundation, $134,500 Madison Square Boys and Girls Club, $101,000 Maimonides Medical Center, $45,250 Make a Difference Media (Fla.), $20,000 Make the Road New York, $183,000 Make a Wish Foundation of Metro New York, $21,250 Man Up! $35,000 Manhattan Legal Services, $55,500 Manhattan School of Music, $45,750 Manhattan Theatre Club, $1,220,635 Mardy Fish Foundation (Fla.), $100,000 Marlboro School of Music (Pa.), $27,750 Martha’s Vineyard Hospital (Mass.), $20,000 Mary Louis Academy, $200,000 Mary Queen of Heaven Church, $50,000 Maryknoll School (Hawaii), $33,500 Massachusetts General Hospital, $20,750 Massachusetts Institute of Technology, $67,800
Massapequa Public Schools, $155,730 Masters School, $351,000 Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City, $82,250 McCarter Theatre Company (N.J.), $25,250 Ronald McDonald House of New York City, $34,500 Media Matters for America (D.C.), $287,000 Medicaid Matters New York, $50,000 Medicare Rights Center, $80,000 Meeting Street Center (R.I.), $125,000 Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, $92,850 Memorial United Methodist Church, $26,090 Mental Health Association of Nassau County, $27,500 Mercer Street Friends Center (N.J.), $25,000 Mercy Learning Center of Bridgeport (Conn.), $20,500 Mercy Medical Center, $50,000 Metropolitan Council on Jewish Poverty, $41,000 Metropolitan Museum of Art, $379,575 Metropolitan Opera Association, $470,891 Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance, $40,000 MFY Legal Services, $46,250 MHANY Management, $50,000 Mid-Bronx Senior Citizens Council, $50,000 Middlebury College (Vt.), $161,750 Middlesex School (Mass.), $80,500 Mind-Builders Creative Arts Center, $40,000 MinKwon Center for Community Action, $177,500 Miracle Corners of the World, $179,500 Miss Hall’s School (Mass.), $35,000 Missionaries of Charity, $173,080 Mr. Holland’s Opus Foundation (Calif.), $20,000 Molloy College, $30,000 Monmouth County Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (N.J.), $25,500 Monmouth Medical Center Foundation (N.J.), $50,000 Monmouth University (N.J.), $75,000 Montessori Development Partnerships (Ohio), $100,000 Montreat College (N.C.), $70,260 Montrose School (Mass.), $25,000 Morgan Library & Museum, $202,000 Morningside Retirement and Health Services, $326,780 Mount Sinai Hospital, $171,478 Mount Sinai Medical Center, $21,820 Mount Sinai School of Medicine, $188,000 Multiple Sclerosis Center of New York, $20,000 Multiple Sclerosis Resources of Central New York, $30,000 Municipal Art Society of New York, $121,750 Muscular Dystrophy Association, $71,450 Museum of Arts and Design, $61,000 Museum of the City of New York, $112,000 Museum of Modern Art, $176,710 Museum of Science, Boston (Mass.), $350,000 Museum of the Moving Image, $52,511 Music Conservatory of Westchester, $21,250 Myrtle Avenue Commercial Revitalization and Development Project, $70,000
N
NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, $258,550 Nalanda Institute for Contemplative Science, $80,000 Nantucket Lighthouse School (Mass.), $50,000 Nantucket Maria Mitchell Association (Mass.), $26,000 NARAL Pro-Choice America Foundation (D.C.), $37,360 Nassau County AHRC Foundation, $40,500 Nassau County Coalition Against Domestic Violence, $54,900 Nassau Presbyterian Church (N.J.), $500,000 National Advocates for Pregnant Women, $30,000 National Alliance on Mental Illness of New York City, $112,500 National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (Md.), $31,000 National Association of Women Judges (D.C.), $25,000 National Audubon Society, $97,370 National Center for Law and Economic Justice, $121,750 National Child Labor Committee, $100,000 National Council for Community Behavioral Healthcare (D.C.), $345,000 National Dance Institute, $79,100 National Economic and Social Rights Initiative, $245,000 National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (D.C.), $50,000 National Gallery of Art (Md.), $20,000 National Jazz Museum in Harlem, $25,000 National Multiple Sclerosis Society, $66,540 National Multiple Sclerosis Society, New York City, $255,070 National Park Foundation (D.C.), $100,000 National Rowing Foundation (Conn.), $250,000 National September 11 Memorial & Museum, $51,000 National Society for Gifted and Talented (Conn.), $35,000 National Trust for Historic Preservation (D.C.), $54,500 National Writing Project (Calif.), $100,000 National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering, $132,500 National Development and Research Institutes, $90,000 Natural Resources Council of Maine, $27,000 Natural Resources Defense Council, $391,168 Nature Conservancy (Va.), $52,925 Naumburg Orchestral Concerts, $56,010 Walter W. Naumburg Foundation, $57,520 Neighborhood Network Research Center, $22,000 Neighborhood Opportunities Fund, $75,000 Neighborhood Studio of Fairfield County (Conn.), $25,000 Neighbors Link, $21,650 Nepperhan Community Center, $75,000 New Alternatives for Children, $81,150 New Canaan Library (Conn.), $25,250 New Energy Foundation (N.H.), $175,000
2012 grants New England Thoroughbred Retirement Center (N.H.), $55,000 New Hampshire Catholic Charities, $25,000 New Haven Symphony Orchestra (Conn.), $50,000 New Jersey Audubon Society, $30,500 New Jersey Future, $75,000 New Jersey Symphony Orchestra, $50,400 The New School, $268,244 New Song Urban Ministries (Md.), $50,000 New Visions for Public Schools, $284,750 New York Academy of Medicine, $92,000 New York Academy of Sciences, $105,000 New York Association of Training and Employment Professionals, $66,000 New York Botanical Garden, $1,372,416 New York Cares, $20,250 New York City Administration for Children’s Services, $265,000 New York City Ballet, $311,620 New York City Center, $35,000 New York City Department of Probation, $80,000 New York City Employment and Training Coalition, $75,000 New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation, $77,000 New York City Housing Authority, $110,000 New York City Mission Society, $94,130 New York City Opera, $38,920 New York Civil Liberties Union Foundation, $74,500 New York Communities for Change, $46,000 New York Gilbert & Sullivan Players, $40,000 New York Hall of Science, $672,500 New York Immigration Coalition, $308,500 New York Landmarks Conservancy, $85,000 New York LawHelp Consortium, $50,000 New York Legal Assistance Group, $170,000 New York Medical College, $116,495 New York Methodist Hospital, $50,000 New York Philharmonic, $84,500 New York-Presbyterian Hospital, $1,313,160 New York Preservation Archive Project, $70,000 New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations, $2,173,160 New York Public Radio, $296,745 New York Restoration Project, $26,500 New York Society Library Trustees, $22,000 New York State Gas Drilling Protection Project, $150,000 New York State Tenants & Neighbors Information Service, $58,000 New York State Youth Leadership Council, $30,000 New York Stem Cell Foundation, $137,150 New York Taxi Workers Alliance, $30,000 New York Theological Seminary, $25,000 New York Times Neediest Cases Fund, $47,450 New York University, $126,068 New York University, Graduate School of Arts & Science, $33,000 New York University School of Law, $22,000 New York University School of Medicine, $310,000 New York University, Silver School of Social Work, $58,000
New York Women’s Foundation, $44,250 Newark Academy (N.J.), $56,000 Newark Museum Association (N.J.), $55,000 92nd Street Y, $40,250 Nonprofit Westchester, $20,000 Nonprofit Finance Fund, $200,000 Nontraditional Employment for Women, $41,000 North Country School and Camp Treetops, $21,750 North Shore Child and Family Guidance Association, $26,500 North Shore - Long Island Jewish Health System Foundation, $58,750 Northeast Historic Film (Maine), $25,000 Northeastern University (Mass.), $50,500 Northern Manhattan Coalition for Immigrant Rights, $35,000 Northern Manhattan Improvement Corporation, $50,000 Northside Center for Child Development, $41,750 Northwestern University (Ill.), $114,786 Norton Gallery and School of Art (Fla.), $69,650 NOW Foundation (Va.), $31,000 NYC Coalition for Educational Justice, $150,000 NYCRx, $50,000 NYU Hospitals Center, $241,173
O
Ocean Bay Community Development Corporation, $25,400 Ohel Children’s Home and Family Services, $230,800 Old Dartmouth Historical Society/New Bedford Whaling Museum (Mass.), $1,000,000 Omprakash Foundation (Conn.), $50,000 Open Door Family Medical Center, $30,300 Open Space Institute, $28,000 Opera New Jersey, $50,000 Orchestra of St. Luke’s, $115,000 Oregon Environmental Council, $100,000 ORT America, $50,000 Orthopaedic Scientific Research Foundation, $25,000 Osborne Association, $61,806 Outreach Project, $110,000 Oxfam America (Mass.), $193,784
P
Pace Law School, $45,250 Pace University, $56,390 Paley Center for Media, $126,700 Paraprofessional Healthcare Institute, $75,000 Parish of Trinity Church, $22,214 Parkinson’s Disease Foundation, $24,750 Parrish Art Museum, $92,750 Parsons The New School for Design, $46,500 Partners in Health (Mass.), $44,750 Partnership for Strong Communities (Conn.), $75,000 Passionist Fathers (N.J.), $53,500 Peabody Essex Museum (Mass.), $31,000 Peace Action Education Fund (N.J.), $25,000 Peconic Baykeeper, $20,000
Peconic Green Growth, $25,000 Peer Health Exchange (Calif.), $80,500 People for the American Way Foundation (D.C.), $72,250 Per Scholas, $40,000 Person-to-Person (Conn.), $21,000 Peterson Institute for International Economics (D.C.), $60,000 Phelps Memorial Hospital Center, $24,800 Phi Beta Kappa Society (D.C.), $31,060 Philanthropy New York, $39,250 Phillips Collection (D.C.), $25,000 Phoenix House Foundation, $101,278 Pig Iron Theatre Company (Pa.), $25,000 Pine Creek Valley Watershed Association (Pa.), $75,000 Ping Chong & Company, $70,000 Pingree School (Mass.), $50,000 Planned Parenthood Federation of America, $25,300 Planned Parenthood Hudson Peconic, $75,000 Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts, $54,000 Planned Parenthood of Nassau County, $58,000 Planned Parenthood of New York City, $172,064 Playwrights Horizons, $30,250 THE POINT Community Development Corporation, $50,000 Noel Pointer Foundation, $20,000 Points of Light Institute (Ga.), $25,000 Pomona College (Calif.), $36,000 Population Council, $31,000 Miss Porter’s School (Conn.), $25,500 Potomac School (Va.), $24,000 Potsdam College Foundation, $32,299 Pratham USA (Texas), $25,000 Pratt Institute, $94,500 Pregones Theater, $70,000 Prep for Prep, $184,198 Presbyterian Church USA Foundation (Ind.), $44,340 Presbytery of New York City, $29,560 Preservation Trust of Vermont, $25,000 Primary Care Development Corporation, $306,000 Primary Stages Company, $30,900 Princeton Senior Resource Center (N.J.), $20,000 Princeton Area Community Foundation (N.J.), $353,500 Princeton Day School (N.J.), $24,850 Princeton Healthcare System Foundation (N.J.), $530,000 Princeton Pro Musica (N.J.), $25,000 Princeton University (N.J.), $355,550 Pro Bono Net, $115,000 Pro Bono Partnership, $27,000 Project Hospitality, $50,000 Project Impact Arts in Education Foundation (N.J.), $25,000 Project ORBIS International, $60,500 Project Renewal, $60,500 Prospect Park Alliance, $139,930 Prostate Cancer Foundation (Calif.), $25,000 Proteus Fund (Mass.), $20,000 Providence Public Library (R.I.), $35,000
Providence St. Mel School (Ill.), $50,000 Provincetown Art Association and Museum (Mass.), $23,480 Public Interest Projects, $125,000 Public Policy and Education Fund of New York, $247,500 Public Preparatory Network, $51,000 Public/Private Ventures (Pa.), $125,000 Public Theater, $260,300 Licia Albanese Puccini Foundation, $50,000 Purchase College Foundation, $20,125 Putnam Hospital Center, $41,700
Q
Queens College Foundation, $37,570 Queens College, CUNY, Kupferberg Center for the Arts, $50,000 Queens Community House, $100,000 Queens Congregations United for Action, $20,000 Queens Council on the Arts, $60,000 Queens Legal Services, $55,000 Queens Library Foundation, $70,400 Queens University of Charlotte (N.C.), $70,260
R
Rainforest Alliance, $123,250 RAND Corporation (Calif.), $25,000 Reader to Reader (Mass.), $25,000 Rectory School (Conn.), $25,500 Red Hook Initiative, $84,000 Redemption Center, $96,000 Reel Lives, $20,000 Reel Works, $100,100 Reformed Church of Bronxville, $28,500 Regional Plan Association, $161,000 Regional YMCA of Western Connecticut, $30,000 Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press (Va.), $25,000 ReServe Elder Service, $120,000 Residents for Efficient Special Districts, $20,000 Resilience Advocacy Project, $40,000 Resources for Children with Special Needs, $116,250 Rhode Island School of Design, $202,000 Rhodes College (Tenn.), $70,260 Rippowam Cisqua School, $21,000 River Network (Ore.), $35,000 Riverkeeper, $41,550 Roanoke College (Va.), $20,500 Robin Hood Foundation, $358,925 Rockaway Waterfront Alliance, $55,000 Rockefeller University, $146,105 Rocking the Boat, $70,250 Rosie’s Theater Kids, $60,000 Roulette Intermedium, $50,000 Roundabout Theatre Company, $44,010 Row New York, $53,500 Rubin Museum of Art, $75,300 Russell Sage College, $23,500 Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, $54,000 Rye Country Day School, $25,500 Rye Free Reading Room, $35,500
S
Sacred Heart Academy, $25,000 Sailors for the Sea (R.I.), $25,000 St. Andrew’s Presbyterian College (N.C.), $70,260 St. Ann’s Warehouse, $50,000 St. Athanasius Roman Catholic Church, $100,000 St. Barnabas Hospital, $50,000 St. Catherine University (Minn.), $250,000 St. Christopher’s, $28,800 St. Edward’s Church (Fla.), $21,350 St. Francis Hospital, $112,000 St. Ignatius Loyola Church, $61,000 St. Jean Baptiste Church, $74,000 St. John’s Episcopal Church of Cold Spring Harbor, $46,000 St. John’s University, $20,750 St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital (Tenn.), $111,110 St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital Center, $55,000 St. Luke’s LifeWorks (Conn.), $102,500 St. Luke’s School (Conn.), $20,750 St. Mark’s Church in-the-Bowery, $25,000 St. Mark’s School of Texas, $21,000 St. Mary’s Foundation for Children, $1,612,000 St. Patrick’s Cathedral Landmark Foundation, $100,000 St. Peter’s Prep (N.J.), $25,000 St. Sebastian’s School (Mass.), $25,250 St. Stephen’s School, $27,500 Sakhi for South Asian Women, $25,000 Salk Institute for Biological Studies (Calif.), $49,874 Salvation Army of Greater New York, $179,300 San Diego Opera Association (Calif.), $25,000 Sanctuary for Families, $116,000 Santa Cruz Valley Art Association (Ariz.), $102,500 Sarah Lawrence College, $177,300 Sauti Yetu Center for African Women, $50,000 Save the Children Federation (Conn.), $108,900 Say Yes to Education, $29,300 SCAN-New York Volunteer Parent-Aides Association, $175,000 Scenic Hudson, $30,600 Henry Schein Cares Foundation, $3,026,000 Scholarship & Welfare Funds of the Alumni Association of Hunter College, $34,180 School of American Ballet, $66,500 School of the Holy Child, $36,825 School Year Abroad (Mass.), $56,750 SculptureCenter, $30,000 Sea Education Association (Mass.), $20,000 Sea Research Foundation (Conn.), $20,000 SeaChange Capital Partners, $50,000 Seamen’s Church Institute of New York and New Jersey, $39,000 Search and Care, $21,750 Second Stage Theatre, $25,340 Second Wind Foundation (N.J.), $75,000 Seed Foundation (D.C.), $50,000 Selfhelp Community Services, $175,750
SEPA Mujer, $20,000 Service Program for Older People, $60,000 Service Women’s Action Network, $75,750 Services and Advocacy for GLBT Elders (SAGE), $59,000 Sesame Workshop, $1,191,000 SHARE: Self-Help for Women with Breast or Ovarian Cancer, $50,000 Shared Interest, $39,000 Shaw Festival Foundation, $25,000 Silent Spring Institute (Mass.), $75,000 Sister to Sister International, $20,000 Sisters of Charity of St. Elizabeth (N.J.), $21,400 651 ARTS, $70,000 Skidmore College, $72,300 Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, $38,400 Smart Growth America (D.C.), $200,000 Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation, $25,000 Smith College (Mass.), $1,177,375 Smithsonian Institution (D.C.), $43,250 Smithtown Historical Society, $26,960 Solar One, $50,000 South Asian Youth Action, $80,820 South Brooklyn Legal Services, $56,000 South Street Seaport Museum, $39,770 Southampton Hospital Foundation, $42,000 Southern Poverty Law Center (Ala.), $54,502 Southern Westchester Energy Action Consortium, $30,000 Southwest Brooklyn Industrial Development Corporation, $40,000 Southwest Health Technology Foundation (Texas), $25,000 Spaceworks, $216,000 Special Olympics International (D.C.), $100,000 Sports and Arts in Schools Foundation, $50,000 Stanford New Schools (Calif.), $100,000 Stanford University (Calif.), $188,500 Stanley M. Isaacs Neighborhood Center, $56,790 Star Kids Scholarship Program (R.I.), $28,000 Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute (Mass.), $25,500 Stevens Institute of Technology (N.J.), $82,500 Stony Brook Foundation, $49,250 Stony Brook University, SUNY, $32,000 S.T.R.O.N.G. Youth, $20,000 Student Advocacy, $51,000 Student Sponsor Partnership, $59,350 Studio in a School Association, $139,500 Stuyvesant Park Neighborhood Association, $20,000 Suffolk County Community College, $33,460 Summer Search (Calif.), $222,500 Sundance Preserve (Utah), $25,000 Survivor Fund, $30,000 Sustainable Long Island, $147,000 Sylvia Rivera Law Project, $50,000 Symphony Space, $71,750 Synergos Institute, $35,000 Syracuse University, $236,500
2012 grants T
University of Massachusetts Foundation, $40,000 University of Miami (Fla.), $27,500 Regents of the University of Michigan, $34,950 University of Notre Dame (Ind.), $49,500 University of Chicago School of Social Service Administration (Ill.), $69,011 University of Kansas School of Social Welfare, $39,998 University of Munich, $35,000 University of Pennsylvania, $154,955 University of Pittsburgh (Pa.), $114,950 University of Rochester, $29,250 University Settlement Society of New York, $63,500 University of Southern California, $42,423 University of Texas, $74,250 University of Virginia, $43,900 University of Virginia Law School Foundation, $45,000 University of Washington, $145,847 University of Wisconsin Foundation, $101,000 University of the Witwatersrand Fund, $35,000 Urban Assembly, $75,250 Urban Green Council, $60,000 Urban Justice Center, $55,000 Urban Teaching Corps, $85,000 Urban Word NYC, $150,000 Urban Youth Collaborative, $75,000
U
V Vassar College, $74,200 Vermont Land Trust, $285,283 Village Academies Network, $23,950 Vineyard Nursing Association (Mass.), $51,000 VISIONS/Services for the Blind and Visually Impaired, $50,000 Visiting Nurse Association of Long Island, $23,000 Visiting Nurse Service of New York Home Care, $101,300 Visual Understanding in Education, $75,000 Volunteers of Legal Service, $45,000
Taft Institute for Government, $39,030 Tapestry Project, $50,000 Teach for America, $50,600 Teachers & Writers Collaborative, $100,000 Teatown Lake Reservation, $27,950 Tenacity (Mass.), $35,000 Tenants Together (Calif.), $100,000 Thalia Spanish Theatre, $62,000 Tides Center (Calif.), $22,500 Tides Foundation (Calif.), $701,300 Tobin Project (Mass.), $50,000 Today’s Students Tomorrow’s Teachers, $35,000 Touro College Jacob D. Fuchsberg Law Center, $20,000 Trees New York, $25,000 Trenton Area Soup Kitchen (N.J.), $25,000 Trevor Day School, $38,000 Trey Whitfield School, $320,000 Tribeca Film Institute, $156,000 Trickle Up Program, $26,250 Trinity Church of Boston (Mass.), $33,100 Trinity College (Conn.), $48,000 Trinity Community Connection, $25,000 Trinity Episcopal School Corporation, $73,141 Tri-State Transportation Campaign, $475,000 Tuesday’s Children, $26,470 Tufts College (Mass.), $175,500 Tulane Educational Fund (La.), $520,500 Turnaround for Children, $32,000
U.S. Squash Racquets Association, $62,250 UJA-Federation of Jewish Philanthropies of New York, $488,516 Union College, $23,750 Union of Concerned Scientists (Mass.), $24,488 Union Square Park Community Coalition, $45,000 United Community Centers, $70,000 United Hospital Fund of New York, $183,500 United Neighborhood Houses of New York, $310,960 U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, National Hansen’s Disease Programs (La.), $70,000 United States Fund for UNICEF, $33,700 United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (D.C.), $20,600 United States Rowing Association (N.J.), $30,000 United Way of Bergen County (N.J.), $20,000 United Way of Long Island, $140,000 United Way of New York City, $350,493 United Way of Westchester and Putnam, $35,680 University of California, Berkeley Foundation, $1,000,550 University of California, San Francisco, $75,000 University of Chicago (Ill.), $184,981 University of Connecticut, $81,000 University of Connecticut Foundation, $40,000 University of Illinois Foundation, $315,000
W Warren Wilson College (N.C.), $70,260 Washington Community Fund (Conn.), $20,500 Washington Institute for Near East Policy (D.C.), $20,000 Washington University (Mo.), $24,250 Watchtower Bible & Tract Society of New York, $710,350 Samuel Waxman Cancer Research Foundation, $270,000 Weeksville Heritage Center, $30,000 Karl Weigl Foundation (Calif.), $83,400 Westchester Children’s Association, $52,000 Westchester Community College Foundation, $155,000 Westchester County Chapter, NYSARC, $21,650 Westchester Jewish Community Services, $48,700 Westchester Not-for-Profit Housing Coalition, $90,000
Westchester Residential Opportunities, $50,000 WGBH Educational Foundation (Mass.), $106,000 Wheeler School (R.I.), $100,000 White Columns, $28,000 White Plains Hospital Center, $54,590 Whitney Museum of American Art, $162,750 WildAid (Calif.), $40,000 Wildlife Conservation Society, $195,474 Williams College (Mass.), $75,000 Winthrop-University Hospital Association, $231,506 Women’s Cancer Resource Center (Calif.), $136,000 Women’s Center for Education and Career Advancement, $60,000 Women’s Fund of Long Island, $32,580 Women’s Housing and Economic Development Corporation, $52,000 Women’s Research & Education Institute (D.C.), $25,000 Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (Mass.), $26,000 Workforce Development Corporation, $160,000 Workforce Professionals Training Institute, $158,910 Working in Support of Education, $68,000 World Golf Foundation (Fla.), $20,000 World Learning (Vt.), $204,250 World Monuments Fund, $20,250 World Resources Institute (D.C.), $100,000 World Union for Progressive Judaism, $46,250 World Up, $25,000 World Wildlife Fund (D.C.), $28,290 Writers in Treatment (Calif.), $24,250 Y Yale University (Conn.), $671,875 Year Up (Mass.), $85,750 YMCA of Central and Northern Westchester, $61,640 YMCA of Greater New York, $417,506 YMCA of Long Island, $566,500 Yonkers Partners in Education, $76,000 Young Audiences, $30,000 Young Audiences New York, $23,140 Young People’s Chorus of New York City, $60,000 Young Women’s Leadership Network, $110,910 Youth Environmental Services, $90,000 YWCA of Brooklyn, $148,140 YWCA of Metropolitan Chicago (Ill.), $45,377
Grants totals:
Grants listed Grants under $20,000
$ 120,631,138 $ 15,109,340
Total
$ 135,740,478
ABOUT THE KID ILLUSTRATORS The Trust commissioned the young reporters and illustrators at IndyKids to draw what they loved about New York City. These illustrations are featured on the inside front cover, pages 2, 18, and 22. A grant supports its Kid Reporter project, which gives young people, ages 9 to 13, free training and print and web outlets to publish their work. IndyKids newspaper, created by kids, for kids, highlights perspectives of working people, people of color, and immigrants on current events, the environment, gender, and politics. indykids.org
Cover Illustration by Coco Masuda Photos of our chairman, president, and board by Enrique Cubillo, 85 Photo Productions, Inc. Jeyhoun Allebaugh, who took the photos on pages 4, 6, 9, and 10, is a documentary photographer based in Brooklyn and a member of the Inspired Storytellers Collective. Through diverse storytelling mediums combining marketing, branding, photography, video, multimedia, web, and events, the Collective “empowers nonprofits to move their communities to action.” theiscollective.org Writer/Editor: Ani Hurwitz Project Manager: Amy Wolf Design: Van Gennep Design Printing: Rasco Graphics A copy of this report filed with the New York Secretary of State may be obtained upon request addressed to: The New York Community Trust, 909 Third Avenue, 22nd Floor, New York, NY 10022 or Office of the Attorney General Charities Bureau, 120 Broadway, New York, NY 10271 This report was printed in New York City on FSC-certified paper at an FSC-certified plant.
THE NEW YORK COMMUNITY TRUST 909 Third Avenue, 22nd Floor New York, NY 10022 (212) 686-0010 www.nycommunitytrust.org
LONG ISLAND COMMUNITY FOUNDATION 1864 Muttontown Road Syosset, NY 11791 (516) 348-0575 www.licf.org
WESTCHESTER COMMUNITY FOUNDATION 200 North Central Park Avenue, Suite 310 Hartsdale, NY 10530 (914) 948-5166 www.wcf-ny.org